Pubdate: Fri, 01 Dec 2000 Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT) Copyright: 2000 The Salt Lake Tribune Contact: 143 S Main, Salt Lake City UT 84111 Fax: (801)257-8950 Website: http://www.sltrib.com/ Forum: http://www.sltrib.com/tribtalk/ Author: Mark Stevenson, Associated Press MCCAFFREY SAYS HE HAS FAITH IN FOX MEXICO CITY -- Outgoing U.S. drug policy director Gen. Barry McCaffrey said police corruption is helping keep drug traffickers out of jail in Mexico, but expressed confidence the country's new government is up to the task of combating narcotics. McCaffrey, who arrived in Mexico on Thursday to attend President-elect Vicente Fox's inauguration, also said the United States must do more to help Mexico overcome drug and immigration problems. He cited the case of the Tijuana-based Arellano Felix brothers, Mexico's most wanted traffickers, who have managed to escape arrest for the past five years. "The corruption of state-level and local police, in particular, is so intense, these people are so well armed and dangerous that it's very difficult to get at them," McCaffrey said in a telephone interview before his arrival in Mexico. But he said federal police have made good-faith efforts to capture the brothers, who he said run "one of the most dangerous criminal organizations on the face of the earth. Literally hundreds of Mexicans get murdered by these people on an annual basis." McCaffrey said he was encouraged by the law enforcement officials Fox has chosen, calling them "a pretty solid team, pragmatist, bright as can be." Fox has said he wants to gradually decrease the army's role in law enforcement, but McCaffrey said the Mexican military should continue to patrol for drug shipments and eradicate drug crops. "It's hard to imagine that Mr. Fox will want to walk away from the enormous good being done by the Mexican armed forces," McCaffrey said. Money Laundering? He brushed aside a local newspaper report that an alleged money launderer may have used an airplane owned by Fox's proposed federal police chief, Alejandro Gertz, to fly to the United States. "You never know what to make of this stuff," McCaffrey said, noting that honest officials are sometimes linked to such reports. "As you vet new names, if the druggies are worried about the guy, when the name comes up, they kick up an objection." McCaffrey has been burned before: He praised former Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo when he was appointed Mexico's drug czar in late 1996. A few weeks later, Gutierrez Rebollo was jailed for taking bribes from a Mexican drug cartel. McCaffrey said traffickers appear to have come up with a new route to the U.S. market, flying small planes below radar cover to land at properties bought by Mexican traffickers in the United States. But Mexico is suffering as much or more from the drug trade. "Their drug use rates are skyrocketing among their own domestic population, both in Mexico City and along the border," he said, saying more must be done to stop U.S. weapons and drug profits flowing south. McCaffrey, who will leave his post in January to teach at West Point and write a book about the drug war, also said the United States should address the wider aspects of relations with Mexico. "We need to come up with a political way for the United States to have the labor it so desperately needs move across that border legally, in buses with minimum wage, with protection, with health care, minimal standards of housing," McCaffrey said. "We ought to be ashamed on both sides of the border that we accept food on our plates given us to by Mexican labor, and we haven't come up with a way to ensure they're sleeping on cots and have sanitation." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck