When Mitt
Romney’s immigration advisor Kris Kobach boasts that 5.5 million “illegals” could
be forced out of the U.S. during the first term of a Romney presidency, it is
no idle claim. There is a model for “self-deportation” that led to the
expulsion of up to 700,000 Mexicans during the mid 1950s: Operation
Wetback. This quasi-military nationwide effort launched by the Eisenhower
administration in 1954 is a clear example of how the constitutional rights of
U.S. citizens can be trampled when hysteria and prejudice reach a fever pitch. The offensive name was only the beginning of its xenophobic nature.
Operation Wetback
In less than
a year Operation Wetback led to the arrest of over 80,000 people of Mexican
origin in the U.S. and is credited with forcing the voluntary expulsion of up
to 700,000 others. The operation targeted Mexican-American communities in
California and Arizona and employed roadblocks along with the cordoning off of
entire neighborhoods to indentify “illegal aliens.” Random stops of persons who appeared to be "Mexican" were also employed. These indiscriminate interrogations of people based
purely on their ethnicity were organized and fully sanctioned by the federal
government. Allegations of widespread harassment
and beatings were later supported by lawsuits settled in favor of U.S. citizens
victimized during the operation. Many of those detained were released hundreds
of miles inside the Mexican border to discourage their return.
The
motivation behind the draconian Operation Wetback reflects the bipolar nature of U.S./Mexico labor relations.
After the
massive “Mexican
Repatriation” during the Great Depression, the entry of the U.S. into WWII
brought a new round of labor shortages. Again
in need of cheap labor, the U.S. and Mexico entered into the Bracero
Program which brought a new wave of Mexican workers to American farms and
factories. Although the demand for cheap labor continued after GIs returned
from the war, tensions mounted. After complaints of labor law violations by
some Bracero workers, a backlash arose claiming that "uncontrolled
immigration" by undocumented workers were depressing wages and creating
unwarranted employment competition. Thus,
Operation Wetback was born.
Will the Romney/Kobach “self-deportation”
work today? Not likely, according to a recent
study by the Center for American Progress. The study indicates that many of the
undocumented today have been in the U.S. for decades and will not easily
abandon their strong family ties forged here. The study also cites a lack of opportunities
in the migrants’ native countries and the high cost of returning as additional
factors against self-deportation. However, this will not likely deter nativists
from attempting a repeat of Operation Wetback, making the human costs of such a
scheme all the more tragic.
“If America could deport the illegal invaders back then, they
can sure do it today!” boasts a nativist
website in reference to Operation Wetback and the Repatriation of the Great
Depression. These incidents and others like the unlawful Japanese
interment during WWII, prove that fear and prejudice have often trumped the guaranteed constitutional rights of U.S. minority citizens in the past.
Ironically,
nativists are especially fond of invoking the “rule of law” to justify punitive
legislation like Arizona’s SB-1070. Yet the concept of a “rule of law” in the
U.S. was created to prevent mob rule from violating the rights of individual
citizens. This is exactly the opposite of what occurred with Operation Wetback
when U.S. citizens were harassed and arrested purely on the basis of their
ethnicity.
The overwhelming
majority of the nation’s nearly 50 million Latinos are here legally. Simplistic
solutions like Romney/Kobach self-deportation scheme will not just fail, they
will very likely antagonize a large portion of the Latino community. That is
not a good recipe for domestic tranquility. For proof, one need only look at
the ugly side of similar scenarios such as the Chechens in Russia, the Basques
in Spain, the Tamils in Sri Lanka and the mother of all ethnic conflict, the
Balkans.
The solution
to the presence of some 11 million undocumented people in the U.S. will likely
be messy and involve compromise. But the alternative could be something no one
except the far-right militias want.
Sources:
Encyclopedia of Latino popular culture - Cordelia Candelaria, Peter J. GarcĂa,
Arturo J. Aldama
Operation
Wetback: The Mass Deportation of Mexican Undocumented Workers in 1954 -
Juan Ramon Garcia
Race,
gender, and punishment: from colonialism to the war on terror - Mary Bosworth, Jeanne Flavin
Wikipedia – Operation
Wetback
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