Mexico’s President-Elect Peña Nieto Wants to Expand Drug War

The War on Drugs cost you thiiiiiis much!

The long-awaited end to Mexico’s deadly War on Drugs may be

farther off than hoped
, reports New America Media.
Advisors to President-elect Enrique Peña Nieto have signaled that
the rebirth of the PRI party means the
$50 billion
 war is going international. Well, at least
more international than it already is:

Far from “re-envisioning” the approach taken by outgoing
President Felipe Calderon, credited with having launched the
crackdown on the country’s drug cartels in 2006, Peña Nieto is
preparing the Mexican people for a major escalation. It is a shift
that could draw in military forces from Mexico’s neighbors,
including the United States.

“A transnational phenomenon requires a transnational strategy,”
Óscar Naranjo, Colombia’s former director of the National Police
and current advisor to Peña Nieto, told reporters last week. 
“No country can succeed in an insular and isolated manner if it is
to achieve timely or definitive victories.”

This “internationalization” of the war that’s cost Mexico about

50,000 deaths
has come just a few weeks after leaked reports
revealed increased surveillance of Mexican citizens under the guise
of combatting cartels. Between March 2011 and March 2012, the
Secretariat of National Defense awarded five secret contracts to
surveillance companies—without opening them up to bidders. On
Saturday, Slate reported that under these contracts,
spyware companies provided the Mexican government with
over $350 million USD
worth of surveillance technology, from
cell phone interception devices to radar scannars that actually
allow officals from Mexico’s Department of Defense to see through
walls: 

Aside from purchasing mobile phone surveillance technology, the
Mexican Department of Defense also reportedly splashed out on a
kind of radar scanner that allows them to see through walls. These
devices have been available to law enforcement agencies for several
years, but little is known about where or when they are used.
Similar technology was designed by a British company in 2006, and
last year researchers at MIT announced that they had developed an
“urban war fighter” radar to detect movement through walls from up
to 60 feet away.

Unfortunately, these futuristic Peeping Tom scanners seem to be
the only display of transparency in this multimillion dollar spy
deal. According to Slate, Mexican officials have been
anything but clear with the details of what could be a very
expensive violation of human rights. The contracts were negotiated
in secret, and when reporters attempted to find any information
about the companies involved, they got nowhere:

Mexican reporters have also been focusing on the shadowy company
named in the contracts as the provider of the technology. Security
Tracking Devices, which does not appear to have a website, is
listed online as being based near Guadalajara in the state of
Jalisco. But El Universal tracked the address to a
run-down residential area, where it reported it found no evidence
of the company’s existence.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation last week criticized the
purchase of the technology disclosed in the secret contracts,
saying it builds upon a trend of Mexico increasing its surveillance
capacity. Mexico has had ongoing help from the United States to
install up to 107 monitoring stations for intercepting
communications nationwide.

The lack of information surrounding these spyware purchases,
along with known corruption in Mexico’s judicial system could mean
a privacy nightmare for Mexicans, from political opponents to
journalists investigating the costly-on-so-many-levels war.

For more on the Mexican drug war, click
here
, here,
and
here
.