For decades, illegal immigration amounted to a side hustle for Mexico's ultra-violent cartel mafias that control all the southern border smuggling lanes into America.
But no more.
President Joe Biden's election and America's subsequent mass migration crisis
has bestowed such fabulous riches upon these criminal organizations
that traditional drug trafficking is no longer the only prize worth
dying for.
Nowadays, Mexican cartels are battling one another for control of an illegal immigrant smuggling boom.
And the bonanza of illicit gains from it are being spent on growing and
arming the ranks of the cartels' paramilitary armies - creating a
economic and national security threat to the United States.
Yet, no one is talking about it.
Reporting indicates that human smuggling became a multi-billion-dollar
business in 2021 and in 2022 it may have even surpassed drug smuggling
proceeds.
No one knows exactely how
much cartels really make, but Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
intelligence has taken stabs at it.
One
ICE estimate found that prior to 2018 human smuggling generated
somewhere in the neighborhood of $500 million a year. That revenue may
have gone as high as $13 billion in 2021 alone. A lower ICE estimate pinned the revenues between $2 billion to $6 billion per year.
Many of the more than 4.4 million
immigrants from around the world – the most by far in U.S. history –
have paid thousands of dollars each to cross cartel territories during
the Biden administration.
America
has always held the cartels in check by compelling Mexico's military
and justice system to punish these criminal organizations when they
crossed U.S. red lines.
Nearly four
decades after the ghastly torture-murder of U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration agent Enrique 'Kiki' Camarena by a cartel in the 1980s,
Mexican Marines tracked down and captured the infamous drug lord Rafael
Caro Quintero, who America holds responsible for the killing.
But what happens when those cartels can outgun the Mexican government?
The
answer is that America would lose its current imperfect, wanting
reliance on Mexico to do it's bidding. The day that happens is the day
America will face serious security, public safety, and even
wider-ranging economic impacts. And there's plenty of evidence to
suggest that day has already arrived.
The cartels' growing arsenals and Mount
Everest-sized piles of new bribery cash may inalterably compromise
Mexico's central and state governments.
According to recent Washington Post reporting,
Mexico's president has already substantially retreated from its
decades-long symbiotic bi-national security partnership with the United
States, withdrawing almost entirely from efforts to counter
drug-trafficking and intelligence-sharing.
In
large part, that's because Mexico's President Andrés Manuel
Lopez-Obrador chose from the beginning of his term to leave the cartels
alone on every front, even embracing a comical, yet official 'hugs, not
bullets' policy toward them.
So no one is working to degrade the cartels as their strength grows.
It's
impossible to know how much military hardware the revenues from the
Biden border crisis have paid for, but the cartels are clearly
reinvesting their massive profits.
In
March 2022, inside four houses controlled by a faction of the Sinaloa
Cartel in the northern State of Sonora, the Mexican army recovered 2.8
million rounds of ammunition, 89 hand grenades, 20 machine guns, six .50
caliber sniper rifles, more than 150 handguns and automatic rifles, and
bulletproof vests.
In May 2022, U.S.
authorities broke up a Cartel del Noreste scheme to buy $500,000 worth
of machine guns, grenades, and rocket-propelled launchers to be smuggled
south from the U.S. into Mexico.
An
August 2022 report showed that the state of Tamaulipas seized 257
shop-built armored 'narco-tanks' from the cartels in recent years,
so-called 'monsters' made of semis, SUVs, or pickup trucks encased in
thick steel with machine-gun ports. Video shows well-kitted masked
cartel soldiers filling them.
These are
armies, with highly trained special forces units, supported by
professional intelligence operations and run by warlords.
Will the Mexican military be able or willing to bring these cartels under control?
(Above) A burning bus, set alight
by cartel gunmen to block a road, is pictured during clashes with
federal forces following the detention of Ovidio Guzman, son of drug
kingpin Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman in Culiacan, Sinaloa state, Mexico
October 17, 2019
(Above) Dead bodies lie in the street during clashes between Cartel gunmen and federal forces in
Culiacan, Sinaloa state, Mexico on October 17, 2019 Consider
an incident in 2019, when the Mexican army stormed a house in the
Sinaloan city of Culiacan and arrested the 28-year-old son of convicted
Sinaloa Cartel 'Los Chapitos' faction boss Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman.
The eldest son, Ivan Guzman, quickly mustered a very significant private
army and retook the entire city with armored vehicles and .50 caliber
sniper rifles.
They outmaneuvered and
outfought the Mexican forces during hours of gun battles and took
families hostages. They threatened a bloodbath if Guzman's son was not
released. The Mexican government capitulated and released Guzman's son
in what was widely regarded as a humiliating military defeat at the
hands of a mere paramilitary group.
When we see more such defeats — or perhaps worse, no effort to even try — we'll know to worry.
I'm
not alone in my estimation that Biden's cartel-enriching mass migration
crisis poses serious threats to important U.S. national interests,
including many that are rarely discussed out loud, such as Mexican
trade.
'I think the impacts are
massive,' said former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Christopher Landau. 'The
more power these groups have in Mexico, the less we can count on Mexico
as a partner in combatting these groups and therefore the greater the
challenge for us on everything dealing with Mexico: migration,
counter-narcotics and even energy. Our economy is very bound up with
Mexico's.'
Dare anyone finally say this
out loud, but: the more militarily powerful the cartels become compared
to Mexico's military, the more likely they will feel free to press a
thumb down on the 212 million barrels of Mexican heavy crude oil the
U.S. imported in 2021.
Mexico's President Andrés Manuel
Lopez-Obrador (above) chose from the beginning of his term to leave the
cartels alone on every front, even embracing a comical, yet official
'hugs, not bullets' policy toward them.
Perhaps,
for any number of petty reasons of their own — anyone want a prisoner
exchange, say a beloved drug-trafficking relative in a U.S. prison? —
vengeful paramilitary overlords might want to meddle in Mexico's huge
auto part export business upon which American car makers heavily depend.
Cartel
puppet masters less worried about American-ordered retaliations against
them inside Mexico might feel emboldened to make thousands of American
companies feel less secure operating in the country.
Or
they might do the same to the hundreds of thousands of American
expatriates who make their homes and lives in Mexico. More Americans are
concentrated in Mexico than anywhere else outside the U.S., an
estimated 1.6 million.
In the meantime,
anyone who believes all that shooting is just Mexico's problem and that
America's mass migration crisis is really no big deal, the time has
come to think again.
2 comments:
Nice article. Mexico is crooked from top to bottom. The Mordida is king. Cartels already rule the country. If not, why did the Mexican Government give back El Chappo's son?
I don't really feel any military threat from Mexico to the U.S. Any true armed aggression would end up like the Gulf War.
It's true Mexico is slowly destroying us through illegal immigration and the drug trade but that is because we allow it to happen.
Maybe he is getting his 10% so he doesn't care so much.
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