This event will be broadcast live at www.cnas.org/live starting at 5:00 p.m. EST.
Last month, the Mexican government announced that the drug wars have claimed 28,000 lives since 2006. These drug trafficking groups have evolved to pose significant challenges not only to Mexico and the United States, but to governments and societies across the Western Hemisphere.
On September 30, 2010, from 5:00-6:30 p.m., the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) will host an event to launch Crime Wars: Gangs, Cartels, and U.S. National Security, a groundbreaking CNAS report that surveys organized crime throughout the Western Hemisphere, analyzes the challenges it poses for the region and recommends the United States replace the "war on drugs" paradigm with comprehensive domestic and foreign policies to confront the interrelated challenges of drug trafficking and violence ranging from the Andean Ridge to American streets.
At the event on September 30, a diverse panel of experts will discuss this multi-layered national security challenge including:
Dr. Vanda Felbab-Brown Foreign Policy Fellow for The Brookings Institution 21st Century Defense Initiative Author of Shooting Up: Counterinsurgency and the War on Drugs
Roberta Jacobson Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs U.S. Department of State Colonel Robert Killebrew, USA (ret.). Senior Fellow Center for a New American Security
Thomas Ricks Senior Fellow Center for a New American Security
Michael Shifter President Inter-American Dialogue
This event will also be webcast live at www.cnas.org/live. Webcast viewers can submit questions to panelists via Twitter @CNASdc.
As illustrated by the unprecedented violence in Mexico, drug trafficking groups have evolved to not only pose significant challenges to that country, but to governments and societies across the Western Hemisphere, including the United States. Crime Wars: Gangs, Cartels and U.S. National Security surveys organized crime throughout the Western Hemisphere, analyzes the challenges it poses for the region and recommends the United States replace the "war on drugs" paradigm with comprehensive domestic and foreign policies to confront the interrelated challenges of drug trafficking and violence ranging from the Andean Ridge to American streets.
October 5, 2010 - In the midst of a drug war in Mexico that has claimed and estimated 28,000 lives, CNAS launched Crime Wars: Gangs, Cartels, and U.S. National Security, a comprehensive report on the threat posed by organized crime to the entire Western Hemisphere. Moderated by Senior CNAS Fellow Tom Ricks, a diverse panel of experts discussed the domestic and foreign policies the U.S. should enact to mitigate the threat of drug-related crime and violence.
CNAS explores strategies for combating terrorism, violent extremism, and various approaches for tackling the significant challenges posed by insurgencies and irregular warfare in Iraq, Afghanistan and across the globe.
Despite America's superpower status, the U.S. government is not as
effective as it should be in conducting our day-to-day relations with
the rest of the world. Leaders of the U.S. military have been among the most outspoken advocates of boosting our civilian capacity, since they often must fill the gap and perform civilian functions such as reconstruction.
This project aims to support the reinvigoration of America’s capacity and to inform the QDDR and other ongoing efforts to prepare the State Department and USAID for the new challenges ahead.