Evidence
by
William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
Two recent
news stories added important evidence to issues raised in my columns.
The first concerns a Fourth Generation war taking place on America’s
doorstep, that between the Mexican state and drug gangs. The July
14 Financial Times, one of the world’s best newspapers, reported
that the head of Mexico’s intelligence agency
Told a small
group of foreign media recently: "Drug traffickers have become
the principal threat because they are trying to take over the
power of the state."
Mr. Valdes
said the gangs…had co-opted many members of local police forces,
the judiciary, and government entities….
Those efforts,
he said, could now also be targeting federal institutions such
as Congress itself. "Congress is not exempt…we do not rule
out the possibility that drug money is involved in the campaigns
of some legislators," Mr. Valdes said.
The news
here is not the "possibility" that some Mexican legislators
are on drug traffickers’ payrolls. The news is that a prominent
Mexican official, one whose position gives him a good look at what
is going on, was willing to go public about the threat to the state
itself. The fact that he took that risk suggests the cancer is far
advanced. For intelligence officers, going public is usually an
act of desperation.
From the
perspective of 4GW theory, it is beginning to look as if the drug
traffickers/Hezbollah model may be more sophisticated and more successful
than the al Qaeda model. Al Qaeda seemingly is on the ropes in Iraq,
not because of the "surge" but because of its own blunders.
To at least some extent those blunders proceed from its strategy,
which faces the state with a life-or-death struggle. In contrast,
all Hezbollah and the Mexican drug gangs demand is a deal with the
state: we’ll leave you alone if you leave us alone. The state’s
real sovereignty bleeds away, but the structures remain, allowing
the politicians to do what they want, i.e. continue to line their
own pockets.
The Lebanese
state recently cut a deal with Hamas along exactly these lines,
and the Mexican state will have to do the same at some point. The
Financial Times reports that under the Merida Initiative,
the U.S. will give Mexico $400 million this year for counter-narcotics
operations, but the Mexican state is already too deeply suborned
to use such aid effectively. Mexican politicians, cops, and military
officers will happily accept the U.S. money with their right hands
while their left hands take the drug gangs’ payoffs. If the Mexican
state wants to restore order, it will have to offer the gangs a
"live and let live" deal.
The other story
moves from tragedy to farce. It seems Iraq’s pretend Prime Minister,
Mr. al-Maliki, gave an interview to Der Spiegel in which
he said Obama’s timetable for pulling U.S. troops out of Iraq is
about the right one. Not surprisingly, the Bush White House went
ballistic. I suspect Iraqi officials had not heard the f-word used
so many times in one sentence since they last had to pass a roadblock
manned by Marine lance corporals.
Here
the Bush administration is hoist on its own petard. On the one hand,
it wants "democracy" in Iraq. On the other hand, it wants
to keep U.S. troops there indefinitely, using Iraq as a base from
which the U.S. can dominate the region. But the Iraqi people want
the American troops to go home, so "democracy" leads to
an American withdrawal at Iraq’s demand. Squaring that circle would
take a Bismarck, and Miss Rice isn’t even a Holstein.
Poor
Mr. al-Maliki, whose only goal is survival, is left twisting in
the wind, an awkward position for a marionette. He remains dependent
upon American support, without which he would be either an exile
or dead in 48 hours. But he must also grasp at such shreds of legitimacy
as he can, which requires setting a date by which the Americans
will leave. The two requirements contradict each other fatally.
Meanwhile, Muqtada al-Sadr, whose demand for an American withdrawal
is unambiguous, follows Iraq’s "government" like Captain
Hook’s crocodile. I suspect that if he survives, he will in time
enjoy his dinner.
One man could
cut the knot and free both Iraq and America from its entanglements.
Were Ayatollah Sistani to say what Mr. Maliki said, that Obama’s
timetable for withdrawal is about right, no one could gainsay him.
The Shiite Iraqi government dare not contradict him, nor could George
W. Bush (or John McCain) without risking all-out war between American
troops in Iraq and the Shiites. For the sake of both countries,
let’s hope he is listening.
July
24, 2008
William
Lind is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2008 William S. Lind
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