The Merida Initiative is a security aid package
to Mexico and parts of Central America that was recently approved.
It has been dubbed Plan Mexico and is a three year $1.4 billion “Regional
Security Cooperation Initiative.” Some have described it as
more of a partnership as oppose to a foreign aid package. Plan Mexico
is tied to the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) and the continued
integration of the U.S. , Canada and Mexico into a North American
Union.
Much of Plan Mexico is based on the American war on drugs model, which
has been costly and ineffective. This model relies primarily on military
and law enforcement measures, leading to more surveillance, domestic
spying, and further advancing the police state. Plan Mexico will see
the transfer of equipment, technological support, and training in
an effort to combat Mexico ’s growing drug trade. Some believe
that this military approach will further escalate drug related violence
and human rights’s abuses. There is a push for more military
cooperation and the future development of a hemispheric police force
that would be able to cross borders. This might not be necessary with
creation of a North American Union, as our borders are being systematically
erased and our sovereignty sacrificed.
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Plan Mexico goes well beyond trying to stop the flow of illegal drugs.
At a press conference from the third SPP Leader Summit in Montebello
, Quebec in August of 2007, President Bush referred to Mexico ’s
drug trade as a continental problem that demanded continental solutions.
Laura Carlsen, the director of the Americas Program at the U.S.-based
Center for International Policy, stated that Plan Mexico is intimately
linked to the SPP. She said, “It would fundamentally restructure
the U.S.-Mexico binational relationship, recast economic and social
problems as security issues, and militarize Mexican society. “
She went on to say, “Through the SPP, the Bush administration
has sought to push its North American trade partners into a common
front that would assume shared responsibility for protecting the United
States from terrorist threats, promoting and protecting the free-trade
economic model, and bolstering U.S. global control.”
As much as half of Plan Mexico funding will go to the military, with
later money allocated to law enforcement and judicial agencies. Drug
cartels have managed to infiltrate the judicial system and almost
every facet of Mexican law enforcement and military. There has been
an undeclared border war for some time, with Mexican drug gangs and
cartels vying for control. It has been reported by the mainstream
media that some Mexican troops who received U.S. training have now
switched sides and joined the cartels. There have also been reports
of Mexican rogue military incursions across the border. The national
media blackout surrounding the border violence has been lifted, as
there are fears the violence could further spillover across on to
the U.S. side.
Some might recall Plan Colombia , which was launched by the Clinton
administration back in 2000. Since its inception, it has failed to
reduce the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S. and has lead to more
violence and corruption. New equipment, training, and strategy was
later shifted from targeting drug cartels and used against those who
oppose the government. Plan Columbia later morphed into the war on
terror. There were up to 800 American trainers, including Special
Forces, and up to 600 private contractors in Columbia . There are
fears that Plan Mexico will result in more U.S. military involvement.
The Merida Initiative threatens Mexican sovereignty, will broaden
presidential powers, and promote militarization of the country.
The Plan Mexico strategy is part of the SPP and further integration
into a North American Union. It will help in creating a fortress North
America while spreading the SPP to other parts of the region. This
is in an effort for the U.S. to further extend its foreign policy.
There has been much speculation about possible American troop involvement,
which both U.S. and Mexican authorities have adamantly denied. The
U.S. is further merging its military and law enforcement with Canada
and Mexico . Are we on the verge of a North American Union army? There
are still many unanswered questions surrounding the U.S.-Canadian
military agreement that was signed several months back.













