Pubdate: Wed, 09 Aug 2000 Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX) Copyright: 2000 Austin American-Statesman Contact: P. O. Box 670 Austin, Texas 78767 Fax: 512-445-3679 Website: http://www.austin360.com/statesman/editions/today/ Author: Susan Ferriss, MEXICO GETS KUDOS FROM U.S. DRUG CZAR MEXICO CITY -- U.S. drug policy czar Barry McCaffrey on Tuesday praised what he said appears to be an open transition of power here after 71 years of one-party rule. McCaffrey is in Mexico on a trip that will also take him to Colombia, which he said faces staggering challenges. President Clinton is to travel to Colombia later this month for a drug strategy session. "It's a pretty positive atmosphere," McCaffrey told U.S. correspondents in Mexico after meeting with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo, justice officials and members of Mexican President-elect Vicente Fox's transition team. McCaffrey, who frequently has visited Mexico as the White House's director of National Drug Control Policy, said Fox's representatives participated in meetings between U.S. and Mexican officials Monday and Tuesday. Fox last month defeated Mexico's ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, the PRI, and will take office Dec. 1. Fox has pledged to clean up corruption in Mexico, the transit point for as much as 60 percent of the South American cocaine sold in the United States. The politician has suggested that he will dramatically revamp Mexican police agencies and the attorney general's office. Because one party has controlled Mexico's presidency for seven decades, speculation is rampant over how smoothly this can be accomplished and how organized crime groups will react. "The transition team we've been exposed to is pragmatic and looking for creative, new solutions," McCaffrey said. "They are determined to go down in history as Mexican patriots," he added. "I cannot believe they will do anything that doesn't make sense to them." Fox will reportedly review the role of the Mexican military and whether troops should be used for police work. The Mexican military is involved in eradication of drugs as well as intelligence and law enforcement work. He declined to comment on whether Mexico should continue to use the military in the drug war. "I'm positive of one thing. The United States should not have a hand in any way in shaping how . . . nations in the hemisphere organize themselves internally to confront these issues," he said. McCaffrey did say, however, that Mexican and U.S. officials will recommend that Fox and the next U.S. president should try to preserve the agreements for cooperation on drugs that have been established under Zedillo and Clinton. McCaffrey is to head to Cartegena, Colombia, today to talk about the United States' $1.3 billion anti-drug aid package to Colombia. Colombia is a cocaine-producing country overwhelmed by violent traffickers and rebels that control about 40 percent of the nation's territory. "Colombia is in a risky position," he said. "We're committed to standing with them. Hopefully the region will, also, along with the Europeans and the Japanese. He (President Andres Pastrana) has to solve several problems at the same time: an economy in the dumps; a peace process that's going nowhere; and a drug-production problem that's skyrocketing." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk