Memo From Mexico, By
Allan Wall
Mexico and the Rio Treaty - Why Withdraw Now?
On September 6th,
2002, the government of
Mexico
withdrew from the Rio
Treaty—the
Inter-American treaty of
Reciprocal Assistance.
The Rio Treaty
binds the
signatory nations of the
Western Hemisphere to protect
the Americas from
outside attack.
The heart of the Treaty is Article 3,
which states that “an armed attack by any State
against an American [Western
Hemisphere] state shall be
considered as an attack
against all the American
States, and, consequently, each
one of the said
Contracting Parties undertakes to
assist in meeting the attack
in the exercise of the
inherent right of individual
or collective self-defense...”
(Rio Treaty, Article 3).
A year ago,
speaking to the Organization
of American States (the
treaty’s repositary organization)
Mexican President Vicente Fox
called the Rio Treaty “useless”
and “obsolete.” The U.S.
State Department, however,
wants to convince Mexico not
to pull out of the
treaty.
What will come
out of all this? Probably
not much, in and of
itself. The real question
is, what diplomatic signal
is the Mexican government
trying to send?
After all, Fox
has a point. In a
way, the Rio Treaty is
“useless.” It was a
rather
ineffective protection against
Fidel Castro. The Treaty
has been
invoked on other occasions,
but who can doubt that
the U.S. can act
unilaterally in the Western
Hemisphere if need be, to
protect its own interests,
with or without a Rio
Treaty?
Basically, the Rio
Treaty can provide a
legal justification for U.S.
intervention in
Latin America. But now
that the
Cold War is over, why
should the U.S. intervene
in Latin America anyway?
Such interventions are likely
to be counter-productive,
and should only be
reserved for a really
good reason, like saving
the
Panama Canal or something
like that.
The bottom line
is, if the U.S. has
to intervene, it can do
so with or without the
Rio Treaty.
Mexico realizes this
also. That’s the real
reason it has a
comparatively
small (for its
population) military. Mexican
strategic planners realized
long ago that they couldn’t
defeat the U.S. militarily,
and if Mexico were
invaded by a third country
the U.S. would defend
Mexico to protect its own
interests.
The real question
is, what signal is Fox
trying to send to the
United States by withdrawing
from the Rio Treaty, and
why specifically is he
withdrawing now?
One possibility is
that Fox is withdrawing
now in case of a U.S.
war against Iraq. It
could be a signal, in
other words, to the U.S.
to not ask for
symbolic support in case
of a war against Iraq.
Another possibility
is that the withdrawal is
a signal to the U.S.
government that Mexico’s
support is
negotiable. Fox’s
foreign policy goal is a
migratory accord with the
United States. Such an
accord would
legalize illegal aliens,
increase Mexican emigration to
the U.S., and give
Mexico
more control over U.S.
immigration policy. Such an
accord has thus far failed
to come to fruition. But
Fox refuses to give up
and
plans to begin a new
push for it after the
November U.S. elections.
Although the
practical, strategic effects of
Mexico’s Rio Treaty withdrawal
are practically nil, the
Mexican government may be
hoping to use it as a
bargaining chip with the
U.S.
From the American
point of view it would
be best to just not
worry about Mexico’s withdrawal
from the Rio Treaty.
Maybe the Treaty is, as
Fox calls it, “useless”
and “obsolete.” If such is
the case, it’s not worth
turning U.S. immigration policy
over to the
Mexican government in order
to keep Mexico in a
“useless” and “obsolete”
treaty.
Besides, the
principal
invasion in the Western
Hemisphere is the ongoing
invasion of the
United States by Mexico.
And there's not much the
Rio Treaty can do to
put a stop to that!
American citizen Allan Wall has lived in Mexico since
1991,and is permitted to live and work there thanks to a
legal work permit issued by the Mexican government.
VDARE.COM articles are archived
here; his
FRONTPAGEMAG.COM articles are archived
here.
Readers can contact Allan Wall at
allan39@prodigy.net.mx
October 04, 2002