Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jun 2000
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Henry Chu, Times Staff Writer

U.S., CHINA WILL POOL RESOURCES IN DRUG FIGHT

Asia: Unprecedented accord calls for sharing information and evidence. FBI
might even open a Beijing office, official says.

BEIJING--The first U.S. anti-drug czar to visit China announced Monday that
the two countries have signed an unprecedented agreement to share
intelligence and evidence in combating the narcotics trade and related
crimes.

Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, the White House national drug policy director, said
U.S. law enforcement agencies will begin working more closely with their
Chinese counterparts to ferret out international crime rings dealing drugs,
laundering money and smuggling arms.

McCaffrey even held out the possibility of opening an FBI office in Beijing,
which would require an unusually high level of cooperation between two
nations often on edge in their joint ties.

"We want to see an FBI presence in China" as there is in such countries as
Russia and Mexico, McCaffrey told reporters Monday after two days of talks
in the Chinese capital.

His is the first of two high-profile visits to China this week by Clinton
administration officials. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is expected
to hold talks in the capital Thursday and Friday.

>From Beijing, McCaffrey will head to the southern Chinese city of Kunming
and then to Hong Kong. The retired army general's four-day swing through
China is part of a three-nation tour that will also take him to Vietnam and
Thailand. The tour's purpose is to promote international efforts to curb the
heavy drug traffic emanating from the so-called Golden Triangle countries of
Southeast Asia, where opium poppies are cultivated.

Southern China is a major conduit for drugs from the region--mostly heroin
and cocaine but also, increasingly, methamphetamines, which get smuggled to
Western destinations, including major U.S. cities.

The bulk of heroin seized in the U.S. comes from Mexico and Colombia,
McCaffrey said. But China has become the leading producer of chemicals used
in methamphetamine labs throughout Asia, U.S. officials say.

"Methamphetamine is a new and terrible challenge to the United States,"
McCaffrey said. "These drugs are a threat to all the countries in the
region."

U.S. and Chinese agencies will share "strategic drug intelligence," not just
data on specific cases, he said. The two sides also plan to share
information on drug "signature" analyses to better track drugs' origins.

The exchange stems from a pledge by President Clinton and Chinese President
Jiang Zemin three years ago to increase contact and cooperation in law
enforcement.

Chinese and U.S. authorities have already had sporadic cooperation on
various criminal investigations involving the two countries.

In one case about 1 1/2 years ago, Chinese and U.S. police ran a sting
operation on a shipment of illegal diet pills bound for Los Angeles from
China, a U.S. official here said.

Four agents, two Chinese and two Americans, accompanied the pills to L.A.,
where a fifth agent then nabbed a resident suspected of selling the pills.

The joint law enforcement efforts have sometimes placed the U.S. in the
awkward position of working with the same Chinese police agencies accused of
such human rights abuses as locking up political dissidents.

On Monday, the Beijing Morning Post reported that drug addicts in the
Chinese capital must register with police within a month. Hard-core addicts
who fail to register will be "severely punished" in labor camps, the
newspaper said.

For its part, the Chinese government welcomed U.S. assistance in combating
its rising problem with drugs, particularly heroin--a frightening reminder
of the widespread addiction to opium in China in the 19th century. Illegal
drugs were virtually wiped out after the Communist takeover in 1949, but
they have made a comeback during the past 20 years of market reforms.

"They have ruined the health of our people, including our most precious
national resource, which is our youth," said Yang Fengrui, director of
narcotics control at China's Public Security Ministry.
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