Over halfway through his six-year term, the president has often talked vaguely about bringing peace to Mexico but, so far, he has only branched out from the established strategy in weak, ineffective, and often superficial ways."On drug policy policy, they're talking the talk but they're not really walking the walk," said Alejandro Hope, a leading security expert in Mexico.Hope pointed toward the government's continued focus on heavy-handed militarized actions aimed at taking down high-level capos and then "bragging" about the captures later — a staple tactic of the Peña Nieto administration, just as it was for Calderón.Related: The Mexican Government Isn't Thrilled With a New Report on Torture and Illegal Killings
The so-called "kingpin strategy," meanwhile, has a downside that has been acutely visible since the start. Some of the most severe bouts of violence in Mexico's drug wars have appeared to be directly-linked to the arrests or deaths of high-ranking cartel figures. Such actions tend to trigger attempts by lower-level cartel members to move up in the organization, or incursions by other cartels into territory they believe is weak and leaderless.The death of Arturo Beltrán Leyva in 2009 triggered a string of internal power struggles that are behind some of today's bloodiest conflicts in the beleaguered southern state of Guerrero. The current government's destruction of the brutal Knights Templar cartel by capturing or killing all the major leaders has done little to cement peace in the group's old bastions either.Related: Why Chapo's Capture Won't Stop the Flow of Weed, Meth, Cocaine, and Heroin
Peña Nieto's applauded announcement in New York on Tuesday that his government will back reforms to permit medical marijuana and to raise the threshold for individual possession only followed a landmark decision by the supreme court last November that forced the government to do something. The ruling permitted four individuals to use cannabis any way they please, on the grounds that prohibition was a violation of their constitutional right to do what they want with their bodies.The government responded by announcing five public forums to debate the merits of marijuana use. Peña Nieto also said that, while he opposed legalization, he was open to being convinced otherwise. His new enthusiasm for some limited decriminalization remains, however, far less audacious than a legalization proposal put before the senate earlier this month. That measure, proposed by a member of a conservative party, has little hope of getting very far without the backing of the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party.'On drug policy policy, they're talking the talk but they're not really walking the walk'
Perhaps the only area where the federal government is considering pushing the boundaries is related to a dramatic growth in heroin production in Mexico as it supplies the consumption boom ripping through much of the United States.An internal government report leaked to the news magazine Proceso earlier this month discusses creating a legal market for opium poppies used in the production of morphine-based medication. It is still, however, just a leaked report with no official backing. President Peña Nieto said nothing about it to the UN National Assembly on Tuesday.Meanwhile, the government's biggest claim to be changing something fundamental about the way the drug wars are fought in Mexico lies in the proposal to replace the country's 1,800 municipal police forces with a single force for each of Mexico's 32 states — a system called mando único, or single command.The announcement of the single command initiative came three months after the September 2014 disappearance of 43 student teachers in the southwestern state of Guerrero, a crime allegedly committed by municipal police officers in league with a local drug cartel. Though the law itself remains stuck in legislative purgatory, it has been implemented in several states.Related: Medical Marijuana, Decriminalization, and Opium: 2016 Looks Big for Drugs in Mexico
The plan is far from new. It was close to former president Calderón's heart, but blocked by Peña Nieto's party. According to Guillermo Valdés, the chief of Mexico's intelligence agency under Calderón, that original plan paid much more attention to the need to "clean out" policing of all kinds, rather than simply blaming the problems on the municipal level.Related: Mexico's Efforts to Tackle Police Corruption Keep Failing
Valdés pointed out that Peña Nieto embraced the idea of the mando único in response to the outrage triggered by the disappearance of the 43 students. But the government's insistence on blaming that particular horror, and by extension most of the country's security crisis, on corrupt municipal forces took a major blow this week when the national human rights commission revealed new evidence pointing to the direct involvement of federal police agents as well.'The same people come up with the same ideas'
The analyst also recalled Peña Nieto's pledges to put unprecedented focus on crime prevention programs, but he claims the funds have been largely syphoned off to different state and municipal leaders. Meanwhile, there is little to suggest the initiative is doing much to stop young vulnerable people getting sucked into the cartels.Meanwhile, the biggest problem of them all — political corruption — is being left unattended, Buscaglia insists."They are not addressing the core of organized crime because the core is politics and its links with political campaign financing," Buscaglia said, stressing that the same legal enterprises that are funding campaigns are often in league with cartels.Related: New Evidence Points to Federal Police Role in the Disappearance of 43 Mexican Students
According to Buscaglia, in order to address this issue, Peña Nieto needs to create economic investigative units at the state level that coordinate with the federal intelligence unit. They must focus not just on finances, but on legal businesses that are working in tandem with illegal businesses, such as bus companies that may also be moving drugs."You need to clean up the state, the rules of the game have to change, and basically Peña Nieto has not shown in any way that he and his administration is willing to move in that direction," he said. "When it comes to going after the core of the organized crime businesses — human trafficking, drugs, arms trafficking, counterfeiting — the administration has not done anything new since Calderón."'Basically what Peña Nieto has done is provide a better show, much better window dressing…But the same amount of political sewage keeps going.'
Mexican crime analyst Raúl Benítez doubted that UNGASS would have any impact on the government's prioritizing of a strategy based on force. He particularly bemoaned the lack of more efforts to go after money laundering."There's very few investigations at all. The government of Peña Nieto doesn't want to investigate because a lot of PRI politicians are very involved in Narcocorruption. It would surely affect his party a lot," Benítez said. "We're going to see them fight organized crime in the streets, but there's no attempt to catch the real financiers behind drugs."Hope, the security analyst, also highlighted that Mexico's president has little to gain in changing tack at this stage of the game — whatever direction the prevailing wind blows at the UN meeting — because he never wanted to make the fight against drugs a focal point of his presidency.The Peña Nieto government spent much of its first two years in office trying to get the media not to talk about drugs and security, until it became impossible to keep the issue out of the news."I don't think the administration sees much upside in shifting policies, because (the drug war) is not their issue," said Hope. "Even if they were to now try to own this issue, they would come off as passive Johnny-come-latelys."
Follow Nathaniel Janowitz on Twitter: @ngjanowitzRelated: Here's What to Expect at the Big Drug Meeting This Week at the UN