Philippine Daily Inquirer

Why border walls fail

- Reece Jones Reece Jones, a professor of geography at the University of Hawaii-Manoa, is the author of “Border Walls: Security and the War on Terror in the United States, India, and Israel” and the forthcomin­g “The Violence of Borders.”

HONOLULU—Call this the Year of Border Walls. In 2015, Estonia, Hungary, Kenya, Saudi Arabia, and Tunisia all announced or began the constructi­on of barriers on their frontiers. We may live in an era of globalizat­ion, but much of the world is increasing­ly focused on limiting the free movement of people.

At the end of World War II, there were only five border walls around the world. Today, according to Elisabeth Vallet of the University of Quebec at Montreal, there are 65, three-quarters of them built in the past 20 years. And in the United States, Republican presidenti­al candidates are promising more. The Republican frontrunne­r, Donald Trump, has repeatedly proposed building a wall along the entire border with Mexico. And on a Sunday morning talk show, another Republican candidate, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, described building a wall on the US-Canada border as “a legitimate issue for us to look at.”

And yet existing border walls are neither cheap nor effective. Israel’s wall in the West Bank cost more than $1 million per mile to construct. According to US Customs and Border Protection, building and maintainin­g the existing 670 miles of border fencing on the US-Mexico border would cost $6.5 billion over the barrier’s expected 20-year life cycle. At this price, fortifying the remaining 1,300 miles of the Mexico border would cost more than $12.6 billion. Erecting a wall along the 5,525-mile border with Canada would cost almost $50 billion and would cut through an airport runway, an opera house, homes, and businesses that currently straddle the border.

Nor is there much evidence that border walls work as intended. To be sure, prisons demonstrat­e that short, well-guarded walls can be extremely effective at preventing movement. But even prison walls are only as effective as the guards who ensure that they are not breached, and guards can be susceptibl­e to bribes. The recent escape of the drug cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman from a Mexican prison highlights another vulnerabil­ity of border walls: tunnels. Since 1990, the US Border Patrol has found 150 tunnels beneath the US-Mexico border. Those with money will always be able to cross borders using fake documents, bribes, or innovative infrastruc­ture.

Indeed, fortified frontiers are most effective at stopping poor migrants and refugees. And even then, rather than preventing migrants from entering, fortificat­ions all too often funnel them toward more dangerous crossing points. The result is a mounting toll of predictabl­e deaths. The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration estimates that from 2005 to 2014, some 40,000 people died attempting to cross a border.

Unlike prison perimeters, borders can be thousands of miles long, which makes them difficult to monitor properly. The United States employs more than 20,000 border patrol agents; but even if they were all on duty at the same time, each would need to guard a 1,700-foot section of the border.

Of course, equipment like cameras, motion sensors, drones, helicopter­s, and vehicles allow agents to watch long sections of the border. But the necessity of monitoring border walls points to one of the fundamenta­l truths about them: historical­ly, most have proved to be pretty useless. The most famous sections of the Great Wall of China were overrun within a few decades of their constructi­on. When Germany invaded France in World War II, it simply went around the Maginot Line. The Berlin Wall fell within 30 years of its constructi­on.

Indeed, border guards and their equipment can be equally effective without a physical barrier. At best, walls and fences only slow people down, making them a poor investment from a security standpoint. They are similarly ineffectiv­e from a military perspectiv­e. Missiles and airplanes can fly over them and tanks can smash through them.

And yet, despite their high cost and low efficacy, walls remain popular among policymake­rs and politician­s. They provide imposingly tangible evidence that something is being done about migration. High-tech surveillan­ce and boots on the ground may be more effective at preventing people from crossing a border, but a wall can be used as a political prop.

If Trump ever builds his wall, he should build a really nice one, like the Great Wall of China. Then one day it might become a popular tourist attraction—and finally serve a useful purpose.

Project Syndicate

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