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Drug War Capitalism

Page 38

by Dawn Paley


  protests: Guatemala, 101, 177; Honduras, 201, 204; Mexico, 133–34, 154, 155, 159, 160, 167. See also marches

  Prudential Financial, 162

  public opinion, Mexican, 26

  Puebla, Mexico, 117

  Purépecha people, 166–67

  Putumayo, Colombia, 47–48, 70, 76, 77

  Q

  Quattro Exploration and Production, 183

  queer people, violence against. See LGBTI people, violence against

  Querétaro, Mexico, 94

  Quintana, Victor, 113

  R

  racialization of drug war, 41

  Rafael, Vicente L., 85

  Ramírez, Trinidad, 166

  Ramírez Cuellar, Francisco, 64–65, 66, 69, 222

  RAND Corporation, 87, 116

  rape, 161, 163, 187

  Raudales Varela, Marta de Jesús, 206

  Reagan, Ronald, 41, 116, 197

  real estate business, 16, 162, 163

  Recetor, Colombia, 54–55

  refugees, internal. See internally displaced people (IDPs)

  Regional Coordinator of Community Authorities (CRAC) (Guerrero, Mexico), 137

  Regional Training Command for Peacekeeping Operations (Guatemala). See CREOMPAZ

  remittances from United States, 210

  resistance and self-defense groups. See self-defense and resistance groups

  resistance to construction projects, 171, 175, 177, 214

  resistance to extractive industries, 154–60 passim, 166, 176, 177, 212

  resource extraction. See extractive industries

  retail industry, 16, 89

  Reuter, Peter, 48

  Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. See Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC)

  Reyes Beltran, Maria Antonia, 11–12, 13

  Reyes Salazar, Saul, 153–54

  Reynosa, Mexico, 127, 130, 131, 144, 152

  rich people, 73, 163, 202–4 passim

  right of association. See freedom of association

  Rios Montt, Efraín, 172–73

  Rivas, Yoni, 215–16

  Rivera, Diego, 257n2

  Roa, Fernando, 14–15

  Robinson, William I., 24–25, 33–34, 119, 147, 197, 199

  Rodríguez, I., 221–22

  Rodríguez Sánchez, Mauricio, 172

  Roman Catholic Church. See Catholic Church

  Román Morales, Luis Ignacio, 96

  Romano, Silvina María, 38

  Romillo, M., 221–22

  Russell, Bertrand, 9

  S

  Salazar, Gustavo, 28

  Salguero, Otto, 20, 180

  Salinas de Gortari, Carlos, 22, 120, 131

  Samayoa, Claudia, 176–77, 180

  San Agustín, Mexico, 162

  sanctions, 61

  San Luis Potosi, Mexico, 8, 117, 153

  San Miguel de Aquila, Mexico, 161

  San Pedro Sula, Honduras, 193, 196, 202, 209, 210

  Santo Domingo, Colombia, 11–15

  Santos, Juan Manuel, 58, 187, 191, 221, 237n14

  scandals, 58–59, 106–7, 163

  School of the Americas, 173

  Scott, Peter Dale, 50

  security guards, 175, 176, 186, 215–16

  self-defense and resistance groups: Colombia, 55, 61, 65–67 passim, 70, 79; Mexico, 136, 161, 166–68

  Los Señores del Narco (Hernández). See Narcoland (Hernández)

  September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, 55, 75, 127

  shale oil, 99, 153, 220

  The Shock Doctrine (Klein), 21

  Sicilia, Javier, 17, 139–40

  Sicilia Ortega, Juan Francisco, 139

  Serra del Lacandón National Park. See Lacandón National Park, Guatemala

  Silva, Gloria, 72

  silver, 24, 101, 135, 154, 156

  Simons, Geoffrey Leslie: Colombia: A Brutal History, 62–63

  Sinaloa, Mexico, 26, 32, 46, 47, 147

  Sinaloa Cartel, 28, 107, 119–21 passim, 133, 145, 162

  Skye Resource, 175

  Slim, Carlos, 107, 163

  small business, 142–47, 200

  Smith, Kline & French, 46

  smugglers and smuggling, 47–49 passim

  Solano, Luis, 173

  Solís, Siria Letitia, 157

  Solís Bustamante, Martin, 154, 155

  Solís Contreras, Manuela, 154–58 passim

  Solorio Urrutia, Ismael, 154–58 passim

  Solway Investment Group, 175

  Sonora, Mexico, 101

  Sony, 23

  Sota Mirafuentes, Alejandra, 131–32

  Spain, 40, 44, 116, 169

  special forces, Mexican. See GAFEs

  spraying of crops (drug interdiction). See crop eradication (drug interdiction)

  Standard Oil, 74

  State Department, US. See US Department of State

  Stokes, Doug, 19

  Stratfor, 36, 233n71

  Suasnávar, José Samuel, 171–72

  Suazo, Miguel Enrique, 215

  Suazo Córdova, Roberto, 197

  subsidies, 101, 106, 155, 164

  sugar and sugarcane, 44, 164, 171, 181

  T

  Tabasco, Mexico, 145, 148, 151, 177

  Tamaulipas, Mexico, 4, 83, 131, 142–53 passim; city hall bombings, 83; corruption, 120, 232n50, 248n106; displacement of farmers, 163–64; militarization, 8, 118, 127; oil deposits, 153. See also Nuevo Laredo, Mexico; Reynosa, Mexico

  taxation, 186, 204; Britain, 44; Honduras, 200, 204; Mexico, 86, 93, 95, 100–102 passim

  teachers, Mexican, 94, 201

  Técu Osorio, Jesús, 170, 171

  Tecun Uman (Guatemala), 191

  Tegucigalpa, Honduras, 195, 202–11 passim

  Televisa, 107, 248n10

  Tepalcatepec, Mexico, 165

  Ternium, 161

  Texaco, 48, 74

  Texas, 128, 153

  Texas-Mexico border, 109–14 passim, 127, 128

  theft of coal and iron ore, 160

  Tijuana, Mexico, 28, 29, 130

  Time, 97

  tobacco, 43–44

  Torres Rivas, Edelberto, 196

  torture, 65, 66, 105, 116, 122, 151, 172, 198, 204

  tourism, 179, 183, 199

  tourists, kidnap and rape of, 163

  trafficking in humans. See human trafficking

  trains, migrants use of, 149–50

  transgender, bisexual, and gay people, violence against. See LGBTI people, violence against

  transnational and multinational corporations. See multinational and transnational corporations

  Trans-Pacific Partnership, 90

  Treviño-Morales, Miguel, 49

  trials, genocide, 172–73

  Twitter, 233n66

  U

  UDEFEGUA, 176

  Undoing Border Imperialism (Walia), 128–29

  unions, 64, 65, 69, 74–75, 152

  United Fruit Company, 196, 257n2

  United Kingdom. See Great Britain

  United Nations, 42, 177, 211

  United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia. See Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC)

  Uribe, Álvaro, 58, 59, 61, 73–74, 77, 78, 173

  Uribe, María Victoria, 63

  Uribe Chacon, Alejandro, 68

  Uruguay, 42

  USAID, 73, 89–93 passim, 103–4, 196, 199

  US aid: to Colombia, 15, 56–57, 58, 62, 76, 87, 89, 140; to El Salvador, 197; to Haiti, 89; to Honduras, 194–200 passim, 217; to Mexico, 2, 86–87, 89, 115–17. See also Mérida Initiative; Plan Colombia

  US Air Force, 258n14

  US Army Special Forces, 19, 75

  US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), 120, 128

  US-Colombia Action Plan on Regional Security Cooperation, 80

  US-Colombia free trade agreement, 59, 79–80

  US Customs and Border Protection, 50, 128

  US Department of Defense, 87, 89, 116, 186, 188, 194. See also Western Hemisph
ere Defense Policy Statement

  US Department of Homeland Security, 89, 115, 127

  US Department of State, 48, 71–72, 80, 84, 91, 104, 198, 217

  US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), 37–42 passim, 47, 115, 120, 144, 189, 212

  US-Guatemala relations, 184–92 passim

  US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), 128

  US imports, 90, 95, 106, 199–200

  US Marines, 27, 184–90 passim, 195

  US-Mexico border and region, 4, 23, 34, 99, 126–29, 220; crossings, 106, 145, 162. See also Texas-Mexico border

  US military, 27, 57, 75; bases, 27, 78, 208, 217. See also US Air Force; US Army Special Forces; US Marines; US Navy; US Northern Command; US Southern Command; US Special Operations Command

  US Navy, 186, 188, 189

  US Northern Command, 50, 188

  US Prohibition. See Prohibition (1920–33)

  US Southern Command, 50, 80, 185, 188, 217

  US Special Operations Command, 216

  US training of Latin American police and military, 115–17, 144, 188–89, 196, 253–54n11

  V

  Váldez Jimenez, Dante, 132–34 passim

  Valencia, Guillermo, 165

  Valle de Juárez. See Juárez Valley

  Vallejo, Fausto, 165

  Vancouver, British Columbia, 42

  Vásquez, Bernardo, 158–59

  Veloza García, Éver, 67

  Venezuela, 27, 100, 101, 105, 202

  Veracruz, Mexico, 118, 126, 145, 148, 149–50

  Vianovo, 97–98

  Videgaray, Luis, 95

  Vietnam, 40, 90, 188

  Villeda Morales, Ramón, 196

  violence against LGBTI people. See LGBTI people, violence against

  violence against women. See femicide; rape

  Viviescas, Nikolai, 70

  W

  Walia, Harsha: Undoing Border Imperialism, 128–29

  Walker, William O., III, 56

  Wallerstein, Immanuel, 220–21

  Walmart, 16, 107

  “war on drugs” (term), 29–30, 39, 43

  Washington, D. C., black incarceration rate in, 41

  waste disposal, 153–54

  Watt, Peter, 47, 49

  Weissman, Deborah M., 104–5

  Western Hemisphere Defense Policy Statement, 184

  Wikileaks, 115, 144, 233n71

  Wildlife Conservation Society, 183

  Wolf, Greg, 186

  women, killing of. See femicide

  Women’s Coordinating Network (RMM) (Mexico), 112

  World Bank, 104, 115, 171, 199, 200

  Wright, Melissa, 113

  Y

  Yarrington Ruvalcaba, Tomás, 248n106

  Ydígoras Fuentes, José Miguel, 187

  Z

  Z-40. See Treviño-Morales, Miguel

  Zacatecas, Mexico, 101

  Zambada García, Ismael (“El Mayo”) 121, 134

  Zapata’s Revenge (Barry), 22

  Zapatistas, 25, 144

  Zaragoza, Ignacio, 117

  Zavala, Daniel, 13

  Zelaya Rosales, Manuel, 201–5 passim

  Zepeda, Roberto, 49; Drug War Mexico, 47

  Zetas (paramilitary group), 17, 20, 28, 31, 49, 120, 143–52 passim, 232n50; coal theft, 160; Guatemala, 28, 180–81, 190, 191, 232n49; Kaibiles in, 120; origin, 120, 144; use of abandoned farmland, 164

  Zibechi, Raúl, 18

  Drug War Capitalism

  © 2014 Dawn Paley

  Foreword © 2014 Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera

  This edition © 2014 AK Press (Oakland, Edinburgh, Baltimore).

  ISBN: 978-1-84935-193-5 | eBook ISBN: 978-1-84935-188-1

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2014940826

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  Cover design by John Yates | stealworks.com

  Index by Chris Dodge

  Printed in the USA on acid-free paper

  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Foreword

  Chapter 1: Drug War Capitalism

  Chapter 2: Defining The Drug War

  Chapter 3: A Look South To Colombia

  Chapter 4: Mexico’s Drug War Reforms

  Chapter 5: Plan Mexico And Militarization

  Chapter 6: Mexico, Paramilitarization & The Drug War

  Chapter 7: Drug War Capitalism In Guatemala

  Chapter 8: Drug War Capitalism In Honduras

  Conclusion: Thinking Through Peace In Wartime

  Acknowledgments

  Notes

  Index

  Copyright

  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Foreword

  Chapter 1: Drug War Capitalism

  Chapter 2: Defining The Drug War

  Chapter 3: A Look South To Colombia

  Chapter 4: Mexico’s Drug War Reforms

  Chapter 5: Plan Mexico And Militarization

  Chapter 6: Mexico, Paramilitarization & The Drug War

  Chapter 7: Drug War Capitalism In Guatemala

  Chapter 8: Drug War Capitalism In Honduras

  Conclusion: Thinking Through Peace In Wartime

  Acknowledgments

  Notes

  Index

  Copyright

 

 

 


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