Everybody in the whole world is well aware of Mexico's reputation of a country controlled by the drugs cartels, not to the extent of Colombia, but to a great degree. News about violence, decapitations, corruption, and murders in general appear in the headlines every day. This week, it was announced the death of lord drug Arturo Beltrán Leyva at a marine operation in Cuernavaca, Morelos, a few minutes from the country's capital.
What does this event mean? Abroad, Felipe Calderón, Mexico's President, has been praised for his labor in fighting the drug cartels. In Mexico, this successful operation will helped him to bolster his weakened government –by his limited management of the financial crisis and the lack of structural reforms–and to keep financing the millionaire anti-drugs operations.
The war against drugs is a lost war. Even with the support of the richest and most powerful planet in the world, Mexico has not been able to wipe out the drug cartels in Mexico. The most visible result from the attacks is the generalized violence in the territory. This fact combined with the meager results of the operations strengthened the voices claiming for other alternatives to combat the drugs. For some Mexicans, such as the ex President Ernesto Zedillo (1994-2000), the solution is to legalize drugs, an action that would be completely incompatible with the dictates of the U.S.
The very fact that this has been proposed by a political party, the extinct Social Democratic Party, and that it's being discussed right now as an alternative, leads us to think that in the near future this could be the possible.
But with this successful operation, the government is just getting time before the Mexican society and, more important, the political and economical elites demand a change in the strategy. So, for now, the result will be more wasted money and more murders resulting from the confrontations between the army and the drug cartels, and less money to develop the country.
But there is not only bad news. From this position of power, the President could negotiate with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the political organization with the majority of representatives at the Mexican Congress, the structural reforms, which are necessary to reach higher rates of economic growth. In addition, the PRI is aiming for the Presidency at 2012, and better conditions to govern are a key factor to reconstruct the PRI regime.