Pubdate: Sat, 10 Aug 2002 Source: News, The (Mexico) Copyright: 2002 The News Contact: http://www.thenewsmexico.com/contact.asp Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2513 Website: http://www.thenewsmexico.com MEXICO: US DRUG CZAR CONCERNED OF POTENTIAL LINKS BETWEEN MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS, TERRORISTS U.S. drug czar Asa Hutchinson said on Thursday that the George W. Bush administration is concerned that Mexican drug money could end up financing terrorist activities, Reforma daily reported. The head of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) said there is a possibility that terrorist groups would ally themselves with organized crime groups in Mexico, as has been the case in Colombia. "Mexican drug traffickers have been the base of drug mobilization in Colombia and the U.S., and...three terrorist organizations in Colombia receive financing from narcotrafficking," Hutchinson was quoted by the daily. "We are watching very carefully and understand that there is a danger that this connection could become a growing problem," Hutchinson, the head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), added. At the same time, Hutchinson praised the work and cooperation of President Vicente Fox in cracking down on drug cartels. Earlier this year, the Mexican government dealt a heavy blow to the nation's most powerful drug cartel, run by the Arellano Felix brothers. Authorities gunned down the cartel's enforcer, Ramon Arellano Felix, and arrested his brother, Benjamin, the group's operations chief. Still, analysts have said that smaller organizations are likely to take the place of the drug kingpins. Hutchinson said the U.S. government was aware that the elimination of the two Arellano Felix brothers does not mean the U.S.-led war on drugs would end. "Even if we have had some success, there is so much money involved with the drug trade that a new organization could appear at any moment," he said.