Pubdate: Wed, 11 Apr 2001 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/27 Author: Karen Gullo, Associated Press Writer ASHCROFT OFFERS MEXICO HELP IN COMBATING DRUG TRAFFICKING Attorney General John Ashcroft met Wednesday with Mexico's national security adviser and praised Mexico for dismantling a regional drug trafficking cell operating near the Texas border. "We're aware of what you're doing and willing and ready if our assistance was necessary," Ashcroft told Adolfo Aguilar Zinser and a delegation of Mexican national security officials. "I just wanted you to know that it was noted." A high-ranking lieutenant of a drug trafficking gang once known as the Gulf Cartel was arrested Monday in Tamaulipas state, which borders Texas. Last week, a brigadier general, a captain and a lieutenant were arrested on charges of having provided protection for the gang. Aguilar Zinser said he hoped Mexico and the United States could begin to work more cooperatively to fight organized crime and drug trafficking. "The basis of cooperation has to be construed over a new confidence building between the two countries," Aguilar Zinser told reporters. "Our challenge is to create a system of mutual confidence and that will make us more effective, that will allow us to be closer in our cooperation." Mexico's president, Vicente Fox, was said to be proposing to the Bush administration that U.S. intelligence officials conduct security checks on their Mexican counterparts. The proposal, which Aguilar Zinser was conveying, acknowledges that criminal organizations have corrupted Mexican law enforcement, according to a Washington Post report Wednesday. The history of intelligence sharing between the two nations has been limited, mostly because so many Mexican officials - including Mexico's top anti-drug official at one point - have turned out to be on the payroll of drug traffickers or other criminals. "We want to reverse the unhappy history of intelligence-sharing. ... We can learn so much faster and be much more effective if we could share intelligence," Aguilar Zinser told the newspaper. Ashcroft did not comment on the proposal, but said there are opportunities for the two countries to work together. "I think it's very important that we understand there's challenges on both sides of the border and we have responsibilities on both sides of the border," Ashcroft said. Added Aguilar Zinser: "For us it's a new beginning," Fox's plan for cooperative security clearances is the latest example of his breaking with Mexican policies in place for decades. Fox, whose election in July ended 71 years of uninterrupted rule by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, already has changed long-standing practice. He has allowed extradition of Mexican criminal suspects and offered to do more to reduce the number of Mexicans crossing illegally into the United States. While details of the Mexican proposal must still be worked out in talks with the Bush administration, Aguilar Zinser said presenting it to Ashcroft would be the first step in creating trust between law enforcement agencies in the two countries. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek