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57 Redaccion, “Honduras: La lista de policías vinculados a delitos es escalofriante,”
El Heraldo,
February 5, 2014, http://www.elheraldo.hn/content/view/full/217348.

58 Meyer, “Honduras-US Relations,” 11.

59 G. Ramsey, “Cable: Honduran Military Supplied Weaponry to Cartels,”
InSight Crime
, April 25, 2011, http://www.insightcrime.org/news-analysis/cable-honduran-military-supplied-weaponry-to-cartels.

60 Sarah England, “‘Worse than the War’: Experiences and Discourses of Violence in Postwar Central America,”
Latin American Perspectives
39, no. 6 (November 2012), 246–247.

61 K. McSweeny and Z. Pearson, “Prying Native People from Native Lands: Narco Business in Honduras,”
NACLA
, February 4, 2014, http://nacla.org/news/2014/2/4/prying-native-people-native-lands-narco-business-honduras.

62 Annie Bird and Alex Main, “Collateral Damage of a Drug War,”
Center for Economic and Policy Research
, August 2012, http://www.cepr.net/documents
/publications/honduras-2012-08.pdf.

63 “The Drug War: Policing and US Militarism at Home and Abroad,” event, February 20, 2014.

64 CRLN, “229 Politically Related Murders in Honduras Under President ‘Pepe’ Lobo,”
Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America
, November 20, 2013, retrieved March 11, 2014, http://www.crln.org/story
/229_Murders_Honduras.

65 Annie Bird, “Human Rights Violations Attributed to Military Forces in the Bajo Aguan Valley in Honduras,” February 20, 2013, http://rightsaction.org/sites/default/files/Rpt_130220_Aguan_Final.pdf, 4.

66 UN Working Group on Mercenaries, “Report of the Working Group on the Use of Mercenaries as a Means of Violating Human Rights and Impeding the Exercise of the Right of Peoples to Self-determination on its Mission to Honduras,”
UNHR
, 18–22 February 2013, 13.

67 Michael R. Fowler, “Honduras,” in
Bribes, Bullets and Intimidation
, eds. Julie Bunck and Michael Fowler (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2012), 265.

68 Ibid., 273.

69 Ibid., 307.

CONCLUSION: THINKING THROUGH PEACE IN WARTIME

1 Immanuel Wallerstein,
World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004), ix.

2
R. Gomis, M. Romillo, and I. Rodríguez, “Reflexiones sobre la politica del terror: El caso de Guatemala,”
Cuadernos de Nuestra América
, Vol 1. (1983).

Index

“Passim” (literally “scattered”) indicates intermittent discussion of a topic over a cluster of pages.

A

Abarca, Mariano, 158
Abt Associates, 92, 244n43
Acapulco, Mexico, 125, 163
ACC.
See
Autodefensas Campesinas del Casanare (ACC)
Achi people, 170, 171
aerial spraying (drug interdiction).
See
crop eradication (drug interdiction)
aerospace industry, 94, 106
Afghanistan, 38, 63, 92, 98, 128, 186
African Americans, 41
African palm tree, 65, 66, 175, 220
Afro-Colombians, 62, 66–71 passim
agriculture.
See
farmers and farming
Agua Azul, Colombia, 54
Ahuas, Honduras, 185, 212, 213
AirScan, Inc., 12–13
alcohol, 43–45 passim, 144.
See also
Prohibition (1920–33)
Alexander, Michelle, 41
Alliance for Progress, 196
Almendarez, Juan, 198, 204
Alvarado, Leobardo, 122–23
Álvarez, Oscar, 211–12
Álvarez, Rudel Mauricio, 182–83
amphetamines, 46.
See also
methamphetamines
Amnesty International, 133
Andres, Peter, 45
Anglo American, 65, 67
Anglo Gold Ashanti, 68, 69
anticommunism, 170–71
anti-Semitism, 203
Aportela Rodríguez, Fernando, 97
Arabs in Honduras, 203
Arauca, Colombia, 11–14, 58, 78, 221
Árbenz Guzmán, Jacobo, 169, 186
Árevalo, Juan José, 169, 170
Argentina, 103, 258n17
Ariza Aguilar, Jhon Carlos, 221
arraigo
, 105
Asociación Hondureño Maquiladores.
See
Honduran Association of Manufacturers (AHM)
Asociación Nacional de Industriales de Honduras.
See
National Industrial Association (ANDI) (Honduras)
assassinations and assassination attempts: Colombia, 54, 58–68 passim; Guatemala, 170; Honduras, 209, 216; Mexico, 113, 114, 122, 143, 145, 153–58 passim.
See also
“false positive” assassinations,
Atala, Camilo, 202
Atala family, 203
atrocities, 65–66, 70, 165
Australia, 24, 40, 67, 90
Autodefensas Campesinas del Casanare (ACC), 54
Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC), 55, 61, 65–67 passim, 70, 79
automobile industry, 23, 94, 103
avocadoes, 164–65, 166

B

“Bacrim” (label), 55, 78–79, 168
Baja California, Mexico, 26, 147
Bámaca, Efraín, 173, 259n30
Banacol, 67
banana industry, 65, 67, 169, 181, 195
banks and banking, 95, 96, 106–7, 183, 196, 199.
See also
World Bank
Barnes, Earnest, 188
Barrera, Abel, 135–36
Barry, Tom:
Zapata’s Revenge
, 22
Bartholow, Lydia Anne, 39–40
Barzón movement, 155
Ba Tiul, Kajkok Maximo, 173–74, 190, 191–92
Bayer, 45–46
Belize, 37, 129
Beltran Leyva, Arturo, 139, 253n1
Benito Júarez, Mexico, 155–58
Berdal, Mats, 16
Berganza, Byron, 189
berry industry, 164
Beyond the Horizon (military exercises), 188
BHP Billiton, 65, 67, 68
Binns, Jack R., 198
black Americans.
See
African Americans
blackberries, 164
black Colombians.
See
Afro-Colombians
Blackfire, 158
Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras (OFRANEH), 213
blockades (direct action), 133–34, 159, 166, 177, 214
Boggs Act, 39
Bolivia, 21, 27, 28
bombings, 11–15 passim, 21, 165
Bonilla Valladares, Juan Carlos, 205
border control, 18, 32, 40, 128–29.
See also
US Customs and Border Protection; US Department of Homeland Security
Border Patrol Nation
(Miller), 127
borders, Mexican.
See
Guatemala-Mexico border; US-Mexico border
Bowden, Charles, 114
BP, 54, 62–63, 64, 65
Britain.
See
Great Britain
Brownfield, William, 32, 87–88, 189
Buenaventura, Colombia, 69–71
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF).
See
US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF)
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, 48, 125
Burgess, Luke, 75
Burgos Basin, Mexico, 152–53
Burma, 38
Bush, George H. W., 41
Bush, George W., 30, 57
businesses, multinational and transnational.
See
multinational and transnational corporations
businesses, small.
See
small business
Buxton, Julia:
The Political Economy of Narcotics
, 40

C

Caballeros Templarios.
See
Knights Templar (Mexican gang)
Cáceres, Berta, 194, 212, 214
CACM.
See
Central American Common Market (CACM)
caffeine, 43–44
Calderón, Felipe, 3, 25, 31, 37, 90, 106, 114, 129; Chihuahua violence and, 110–11; detention policy, 105; energy reform, 99; labor legislation, 93; security policy, 118; Sicilia view, 139–40; US relations, 30
Cali, Colombia, 60, 71
Callejas, Rafael, 199, 200
Campbell, Howard, 34–35
Canada, 71, 78, 90, 116, 185, 204, 233n72; mining industry, 101, 135, 154–58 passim, 175; oil industry, 77, 181, 183
BOOK: Drug War Capitalism
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