Future conflicts will
mostly be waged by drug cartels, mafia groups, gangs, and terrorists. It is
time to rethink our rules of engagement.
Wars are on the
rebound. There are twice as many civil conflicts today, for example, as there
were in 2001. And the number of nonstate armed groups participating in the
bloodshed is multiplying. According to the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC), roughly half of today’s wars involve between three and nine
opposing groups. Just over 20 percent involve more than 10 competing blocs. In
a handful, including ongoing conflicts in Libya and Syria, hundreds of armed
groups vie for control.
For the most part,
these warring factions are themselves highly fragmented, and today’s warriors
are just as likely to be affiliated with drug cartels, mafia groups, criminal
gangs, militias, and terrorist organizations as with armies or organized rebel
factions.
This cocktail of
criminality, extremism, and insurrection is sowing havoc in parts of Central
and South America, sub-Saharan and North Africa, the Middle East, and Central
Asia.
Not surprisingly, these
conflicts are defying conventional international responses, such as formal
cease-fire negotiations, peace agreements, and peacekeeping operations. And
diplomats, military planners, and relief workers are unsure how best to
respond. The problem, it seems, is that while the insecurity generated by these
new wars is real, there is still no common lexicon or legal framework for
dealing with them.
Situated at the
intersection of organized crime and outright war, they raise tricky legal,
operational, and ethical questions about how to intervene, who should be involved,
and the requisite safeguards to protect civilians.
Mexico is on the front
lines of today’s metastasizing crime wars. Public authorities there estimate
that 40 percent of the country is subject to chronic insecurity, with homicidal
violence, disappearances, and population displacement at all-time highs. States
such as Guerrero, Michoacán, Tamaulipas, and Veracruz are paralyzed by extreme
organized violence, as routine discoveries of mass graves attest. Since former
President Felipe Calderón ratcheted up the country’s war on drugs in 2006,
violent competition among the Mexican military, police, cartels, and criminal
factions has left at least 200,000 dead. There were more than 29,000 murders in
2017, but 2018 is set to see even more—perhaps the most ever. In Guerrero
alone, more than 2,500 people were killed last year, many of them victims of
clashes between 20 autodefensas (self-defense militias) and 18 criminal
outfits.
Owing to endemic
violence and the government’s slow retreat from crime-ridden areas, some towns
are now run by parallel governments made up of criminalized political and
administrative structures. In what are increasingly labeled “narco-cities,” the
entire political and economic apparatus exists to perpetuate a drug economy.
In Brazil, meanwhile
large portions of some of the country’s biggest cities are under the control of
competing drug trafficking factions and militias.
Some 1,000 low-income
communities, roughly 20 percent of Rio de Janeiro, for example, are controlled
by the Comando Vermelho (Red Command), Amigos dos Amigos (Friends of Friends),
or Terceiro Comando Puro (Third Pure Command). São Paulo, meanwhile, is
purportedly entirely under the authority of the Primeiro Comando da Capital
(First Capital Command, or PCC).
And in smaller cities
across north and northeastern Brazil, gangs and militias are starting to battle
for dominion in the favelas. Already, they effectively administer state
prisons. Some vigilantes have started to try their hands at politics and are
running for office, while others seek to influence elections through buying and
selling votes. Organized and interpersonal violence killed almost 64,000
Brazilians in 2017, much of it concentrated among poorer black youth. The
mayhem has also triggered repeated federal military interventions.
Making matters worse,
Latin American armed groups are going transnational. Some of Brazil’s gangs,
for example, are expanding their reach beyond Brazil. The PCC, now Latin
America’s most infamous drug faction, has operations in at least seven
countries across South America. Groups hatched in the United States, the MS-13
and Barrio 18, have made El Salvador one of the world’s most violent countries
measured by homicide rate. And the Colombian city of Medellín’s fragmented
cartels, criminal gangs, rebel groups, and paramilitary organizations have
metastasized from Mexico to Argentina. Likewise, outside of the Americas, in
metropolises such as Cape Town, Lagos, and Karachi, gangs recruit child
soldiers to fight their battles and service booming cross-border trade in
drugs, minerals, and trafficked people.
Today’s crime wars hark
back to a pre-Westphalian era of perpetual conflict involving feudal kingdoms
and marauding bandits.
This partly explains
why the norms developed to regulate armed conflict between modern states don’t
really apply.
In the classical view,
criminal groups (such as mafias, gangs, and cartels) are not political actors
formally capable of waging war. This means they can’t be treated as enemy
combatants, nor can they be tried for war crimes. Yet, increasingly, such
groups do advance tangible political objectives, from the election of corrupted
politicians to the creation of autonomous religious states. What is more, they
routinely govern, control territory, provide aid and social goods, and tax and
extort money from the populations under their control. They also often collude
with corrupt soldiers, police, prison guards, and customs officials to expand
their rule. Put succinctly, cartels and gangs may not necessarily aim to
displace recognized governments, but the net result of their activities is that
they do.
Further, whereas the
human cost of typical gang or mafia activity may be contained, the death and
destruction that result from today’s crime wars are not. Millions of refugees
and internally displaced persons have fled these gray-zone conflicts. But many
of those who are dislocated are stuck in limbo, with most of them having been
refused asylum, which—as codified in international refugee law, international humanitarian
law, and by the International Criminal Court—is typically granted to people
fleeing international and civil wars. Governments have typically been reluctant
to recognize the dislocated as war refugees, because it would grant legitimacy
to the crime wars. Yet with all the civilians killed and maimed, mayors and
journalists attacked, families forced to flee genocide and disappearances, the
violence generated by crime wars is indistinguishable from that generated by
traditional war.
Crime wars are not
going away, which is why the United Nations, its member states, and the
international humanitarian community should clarify whether high-intensity
crime is a purely domestic problem to be dealt with by policing and criminal
justice (as argued by Carlos Iván Fuentes of the U.N. Office of Legal Affairs,
as well as Paul Rexton Kan and Phil Williams of the U.S. Army War College and
the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for International Security Studies,
respectively) or a criminal insurgency (as Christian Vianna de Azevedo, from
Brazil’s Federal Police, and other scholars would have it). And if there is
consensus on the latter view, armed interventions will have to adhere to the
host of protections contained in international humanitarian law.
Whatever the answer, it
is certainly worth debating appropriate rules of engagement. Given that some
cartels and gangs front well-armed and disciplined soldiers, improvised
infantry fighting vehicles, top-of-the-line communications and surveillance
networks, and military-grade weapons (such as rocket-propelled grenades and
antipersonnel mines), as well as use high-intensity tactics (including ambushes
and attacks on police and military forces), the threat cannot be wished away.
And even if a
definition of crime wars is sorted out, observers still need to make
distinctions among today’s belligerents. The key to determining what kinds of
laws such groups are subject to will be their official status—whether they are
designated as rebels, gangsters, or terrorists; how their organization is
structured; and the intensity of their violent interactions. Generally, clear
territorial control and a high intensity of fighting could bump a group up to
the point where it would have to comply with international humanitarian law
under Article 1 of the Geneva Conventions’ Additional Protocol II.
To take just a few
cases, as the Geneva Academy noted in The War Report 2017, armed gang violence
in Colombia, El Salvador, and Mexico is of particular concern. In all three
cases, “armed gangs often use heavy weaponry, and some control sizeable
territory and have the ability to conduct military operations, while the
military is frequently involved in their repression,” a summary of the report
states. “The number of civilian casualties linked to gang violence and state
responses to this violence, might also exceed those of major current armed
conflicts.” The Colombian and Mexican cases, according to the report, should
constitute “non-international armed conflicts.” This does not necessarily mean
that domestic or international military intervention is required, since civil
policing is still a viable option in many situations, but it would bind states
to the norms of international jurisprudence. By contrast, the situation in El
Salvador does not rise to the level of war, since the MS-13 and Barrio 18 are
less organized.
This new breed of crime
conflicts involving cartels, gangs, and militia is challenging established
norms about what is, and what isn’t, war.
The need for binding
international humanitarian and human rights law, domestic obligations, and
constraints for these armed groups is real, even if it is controversial. Some
humanitarian agencies are already testing out new approaches to mitigating the
suffering generated by these conflicts. For more than a decade, the ICRC has
quietly administered pilot programs in Rio de Janeiro, Port-au-Prince,
Medellín, Mexico City, Karachi, and other settings it labels as “situations of
violence.” But a more comprehensive approach is needed, one that is upgraded to
today’s realities. If the world fails to see crime wars as wars, the
humanitarian and political cost of them will only rise.
Sol Prendido Borderland Beat from foreignpolicy
Good read. I would also make the comment that it is interesting what parts of the world do not have these issues. The weaponization of these crime groups should be a topic that is just as worrisome
ReplyDeleteShit I cant imagine how it was like living in juaritos in 2010 more then 3000 killed in that city alone. Not to mention 2009 2011 etc...
ReplyDeleteOverpopulation and inequality are the issues concerning today's world.
ReplyDeleteBingo
DeleteEsto es una crisis. Los propios investigadores admitirán que nunca han leído la historia de grupos como los rurales y las comunidades que prosperaron entre la revolución y el sexenio de Lázaro Cárdenas. Uno de los conflictos más sangrientos fue entre los residentes de villa escalante y los purépechas de las comunidades vecinas. El problema era la tala de madera para ser utilizada en la fabricación de muebles. Otras disputas fueron sobre los derechos de agua y muchos otros involucraron orgullo y salvar la cara. Una famosa disputa involucraba a un joven y una niña que se escaparon. Había un odio perpetuo entre los dos grupos. El Presidente L Cárdenas envió el mensaje de que si las disputas continuaban no obtendrían nada de las reformas que estaban en curso.
ReplyDeleteOnce the violence, corruption, and impunity reach critical mass by adversely affecting significant portions of the population, the resulting tumult becomes identified as an insurrection and civil war between forces that support the justice and the rule of law and those who descend into anarchy and chaos. Mexico needs to test and verify the loyalty of its political
ReplyDeleteand military leaders, sack those suspected of corruption, instill order in military ranks, and create elite military squads to eliminate criminal members. And when confronted in the field, the enemies of the State should be given no quarter. While many non-combatants may be killed, caught up in the cross fire, some killed by misidentification resulting in tragic consequences, a war against the cartles is the shortest means to the end of saving law and order in Mexico and bring justice back to this nation. Easier said than done, when many parts of society,from the top down, have been corrupted.
Much easier said than done. Totally get what you’re saying, but Mexico is stuck between a rock and a hard place no matter what. Maybe civil war, decriminalization of drugs, legalization of firearms for citizens without violent charges/arrests, or state run narcotics 🤷🏻♂️
DeleteCorruption runs so deep no matter what’s done it will be a constant struggle
Exactly right...
DeleteCalderon was doing that and the people gave up. They voted in dipshit from the old PRI party with some idea about being nice to the criminals and they'll be nice back. Drug laws are the same and people are still unarmed. Cartels have spread crime everywhere and now Mexico has a much bigger problem.
DeleteIt is much easier said than done but how bad does it have to get before people are fed up enough? When EVERY SINGLE FAMILY has personally lost a child? You have criminal elements firmly in control of massive swaths of country and literally NO ONE has even proposed a solution. This is the only way.
DeleteYes while cartels continue to grow, the government of Mexico does only 10 percent of action, very minimal, AlMO get up at do something.
ReplyDeleteSo yeah like I was telling you guys some time back. Wars will continue. Get rid of all those dumb rules that protect these bad actors and I’m more than sure that the criminality can be contained. Better this than the majority of the people who speak longingly and yearn for a past that was considered so good. As if the good times were meant to last forever. - Sol Prendido
ReplyDeleteDoubt that greed can be contained.
DeleteGreed can't be contained but their greed is exactly what must be used against them. Make it unprofitable for them to continue this level of indiscriminate violence. Drugs won't stop. No one really wants them to in the government. But the violence must. Look at Colombia. Has the cocaine stopped? No. But they realive terrorizing civilians was very bad for business
DeleteHow can one separate greed from being unprofitable? The 2 go hand in hand. One cannot sustain itself without the other.
DeleteI see what you're trying to get at.
There is greed and there is greed, nobody can match Thomas Alva Edison or Henry Ford or many other great men of industry and entrepreneurship, each in their own field, living off, whatever contracts or grants they could from their rich and powerful until they were able to, finance their own projects.
DeleteThese days most entrepreneurs and businessmen are all bent trying to find the richest investors to steal all their investment, some times in suspicious gambles in their own guaranteed benefit.
This part here:
ReplyDeleteThe need for binding international humanitarian and human rights law, domestic obligations, and constraints for these armed groups is real, even if it is controversial.
is absolute and utter bullshit, and why nothing is being done to stop the problem.
Thesis, Anti-thesis, Synthesis.
9/11 happened and Latin America was forgot. Foreign policy, or lack thereof, has shitty consequences
ReplyDelete6:16 LatinAmerica is not ever forgotten,
Deleteit is considered in—the-bag-bounty, and taken for granted.
But Bolivia, Guatemala, Ecuador, Peru Nicaragua, Uruguay, and Cuba among others did not sleep on their laurels, Mexico had 4 of the last 6 elections stolen by a continuously progressively more corrupt state that decided who would be king with presidential powers, until AMLO finally won a decisive victory.
LatinAmerica did not forget themselves, but there are extreme rightist regimes now too, like Argentina, Chile, Brazil etc, trying to "Make 'their' America Great Again",
great, for themselves only.
I 100% blame Chapo Guzman and Felipe Calderon for the violence and insecurity. Chapo pushed into all the other territories because he wanted to be the boss/famous, and Calderon's cutting off the heads strategy. Destabilized pretty much all of Mexico and at best it will still take years to bring the violence down. 100,000+ dead, ridiculous.
ReplyDeleteBlame others too from all sides for these atrocities.
DeleteAwesome article that addresses what I believe to be of utmost relevance to resolving the problems in Mexico. I firmly believe a complete change in the rules of engagement and an aggressive and brutal military campaign is the only way to alter the trajectory of Mexico's crime rate. And I don't mean like in Michoacan or Juarez. I mean targeted assassinations of the leaders who are responsible for this senseless violence.
ReplyDeleteI know this will never happen but I find it INCREDIBLY demoralizing to hear AMLO speak of human rights violations as it pertains to El Chapo. These people have tuned Mexico into something worse than a war zone. Until the dynamics change to where indiscriminate violence against civilians is no longer a sound business decision it will not change but rather progress. The only way I can think of to make that happen is to do things which I'm afraid the Mexican public would never go for.
Has Syria worked for its citizens?
DeleteA divided country where some oppose and others are content. Change will require action. And those actions are not always pretty.
Civil war torn countries are still unstable (economically, human rights speaking).
Its Drugs it ruin the hold World. Not just the U.S. AND MEXICO. Mexico ten years ago had no drug problem with the people
ReplyDeleteThank your government for not taking a harder stance on drug trafficking.
Delete10 years ago many had better employment opportunities with better annual incomes. Economic factors have played a role in majority of our issues.
DeleteOverpopulation and inequality!
10:58 importing corn from the US left Mexican farmers without sources, of income, they were ripe for mariguana farming and criminal lives, also pushed for by "Our Men In Mexico" alumni.
Delete