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Sal L k Tribune BOO KS Sunday, April 13, 2003 <br />D5 <br />Water for the Taking <br />Tapped out: `Border Oasis' <br />plumbs the politics behind <br />governance of the once - mighty <br />Colorado River -- and why <br />Mexico was left high and dry <br />Border Oasis <br />By Evan R. Ward; <br />University of Arizona Press; $45 <br />BY MARTIN NAPARSTECK <br />Special to The Tribune <br />The subtitle of Evan R. Ward's Border <br />Oasis is revealing: "Water and the Po- <br />litical Ecology of the Colorado River <br />Delta, 1940-1975." The key phrase in un- <br />derstanding Ward's basic argument is <br />"political ecology ": The powerful <br />United States government, influenced <br />by rich farmers and industrialists, <br />adopted policies that damaged the lives <br />of poor Mexicans while a hapless Mexi- <br />can government complained <br />ineffectively. <br />Only 90 miles of the <br />1,450 -mile Colorado <br />River are in Mexico, <br />where the river empties <br />into the Gulf of Califon <br />nia. In his introduction, <br />Ward summarizes what <br />has happened to that <br />delta: "Cut off from the <br />river's replenishing <br />waters by the grasp of <br />large western cities, <br />power companies, and <br />agricultural interests, <br />the delta's biologically <br />rich wetlands quickly <br />deteriorated. Major <br />dams upriver endan- <br />gered numerous plant <br />and animal species and also threatened <br />the livelihood of the Cocopah Indians, <br />who rely on the river for sustenance." <br />Then he quotes journalist Stan <br />Grossfield of The Boston Globe as writ- <br />ing that the river's water was "diverted <br />to leaky irrigation channels, pipelines, <br />swimming pools in Los Angeles, golf <br />courses in Palm Springs; to cities like <br />Denver, Salt Lake City, Albuquerque, <br />San Diego, Tucson, Phoenix, and Las <br />Vegas." Grossfield quotes an unnamed <br />Mexican writer as saying, "In exchange <br />for all these swimming pools, dams, and <br />lakes the [Cocopah] people are dying." <br />Ward uses William Walker, the 19th - <br />century American adventurer who <br />tried to start his own country in Baja <br />California (later he would briefly take <br />THE WEST <br />UN CO VER <br />Books of regional interest <br />over Nicaragua), as a metaphor for U.S. <br />attitudes toward the delta (which abuts <br />the Baja peninsula): To many Ameri- <br />cans, the delta and its water were there <br />for the taking. <br />The key event resulting in great eco- <br />logical damage to the delta would come a <br />century after Walker's failure. Ward <br />writes, "During the fall of 1961, the U.S. <br />Bureau of reclamation (USBR) began <br />draining salt - saturated irrigation water <br />from the Welton- Mohawk Valley in <br />eastern Yuma County, Arizona. It was <br />carried through a drainage channel that <br />emptied into the Gila River. The Gila <br />River then carried the contaminated <br />water in the Colorado River near Yuma, <br />where the USBR believed that the river <br />would dilute the high level of salinity <br />before the water reached the U.S. - <br />Mexican border. In- <br />stead the contaminated <br />water immediately <br />touched off an ecologi- <br />cal crisis, killing crops <br />and damaging farm- <br />land in Mexicali Val- <br />ley. The saline water <br />also polluted domestic <br />water supplies on both <br />sides of the border." <br />Ward adds, in an <br />unusual interpreta- <br />tion, that "Arizona pol- <br />itics made the disaster <br />possible." While his <br />analysis is complicat- <br />ed, it amounts to this: <br />Farmers and others in <br />Arizona successfully <br />put pressure on state politicians to do <br />something about the salt in the irriga- <br />tion water, and they in turn put pres- <br />sure on the U.S. government to get rid of <br />it. <br />In 1965, the United States and Mexico <br />signed a document known as Minute 218 <br />that was supposed to solve the problem. <br />The United States built a 13 -mile <br />"drainage bypass to carry toxic runoff <br />water to a location" where it wouldn't <br />enter the Colorado. It did not solve the <br />problem. In 1972, Mexican President <br />Luis Echeverria, speaking to the U.S. <br />Congress, asked "why the United States <br />does not use the same boldness and <br />imagination that it applies to solving <br />complex problems with its enemies to <br />the solution of simple problems with its <br />In 1972, Mexican President <br />Luis Echeverria, speaking to <br />the U.S. Congress, asked "why <br />the United States does not use <br />the same boldness and <br />imagination that it applies to <br />solving complex problems <br />tenth its enemies to the <br />solution of simple problems <br />with ikfiiends. " <br />friends." As Ward writes, "Echeverria <br />successfully transformed a regional is- <br />sue into an international platform of <br />Mexican nationalism." <br />Although Ward presents far more <br />examples of Americans doing things to <br />damage the delta region than of Mexi- <br />cans, in the end, he calls for a shared <br />sense of responsibility: "Compartmen- <br />talizing responsibility for these prob- <br />lems only breeds fear and mistrust be- <br />tween Mexicans, Americans, and native <br />groups in the delta." <br />Still, the Colorado River Delta is <br />haunted by the ghost of William Walker. <br />Ward writes, "Methods of conquest <br />changed from physical force to legal and <br />engineering maneuvers." He adds, "Al- <br />though Walker's scheme for coloniza- <br />tion met an early end, his `ghost' reap- <br />peared in the form of new plans on both <br />sides of the border to initiate different <br />models of regional development. Walk' <br />er's legacy reveals a theme that unifies <br />the history of the Colorado River Delta: <br />the conquest and control of land and. <br />water." <br />The ghost metaphor is not as power- <br />ful, however, as a full-page photograph <br />that first ran in National Geographic in <br />1973 and that appears near the middle of <br />Ward's book. It shows a Mexican farmer <br />in the midst of a dry field, dry clumps of <br />claylike soil in his hands. More so than <br />Walker's ghost, it is an image of death. <br />Martin Naparsteck reviews books <br />from and about the West for The Salt <br />Lake Tribune. <br />