Legal Concerns Regarding US Action Against Drug Cartels: A Summary
A legal expert is raising serious concerns about the Biden AdministrationS justification for using force against Mexican drug cartels. The core of the issue revolves around the administration’s claim, recently communicated to Congress, that the US is engaged in a “non-international armed conflict” with these cartels.
The expert argues this designation is legally problematic on multiple fronts. Firstly, even if one accepts the Administration’s claim of armed conflict, actions taken against cartel members would still likely constitute murder and potential war crimes under both international and US domestic law. This is because the law of armed conflict doesn’t grant blanket permission to kill; it still requires adherence to specific rules of engagement.
Secondly, the expert finds the Administration’s reasoning for invoking this ”armed conflict” designation inconsistent and factually weak. Initially,the justification centered on equating drug importation to an armed attack,allowing for self-defense. later, the claim shifted to a broader ”non-international armed conflict” status.
To qualify as such a conflict,a non-state actor must demonstrate a notable level of association – command structure,resupply capabilities,operational planning – and the violence must reach a certain intensity. The expert believes the cartels, as they currently operate, don’t meet these criteria. They are fragmented, often rivals, and lack the cohesive structure seen in groups like Al Qaeda. Furthermore, the Administration’s reliance on the indirect effects of drug use as justification for the intensity of violence is deemed too tenuous.
The expert also points out a conflict between the legal justifications being used. The Administration is simultaneously relying on Office of Legal Counsel (O.L.C.) opinions that allow the President to use military force for limited, nationally-interested actions and claiming an ongoing armed conflict, which implies a broader and potentially indefinite engagement.
While acknowledging that a “non-international armed conflict” scenario isn’t theoretically unfeasible,the expert concludes the Administration has not presented sufficient factual evidence to support its legal analysis and that the current situation appears more akin to a law enforcement matter than a state of war.