Pubdate: Sun, 5 Dec 2003 Source: North County Times (CA) Copyright: 2003 North County Times Contact: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: Robert Kahn, Staff Writer HOW DRUGS CORRUPTED EVERYBODY - DOWN BY THE RIVER "Every book ever written about the U.S.-Mexico border is a lie," Charles Bowden told me 10 years before he started the research for "Down by the River: Drugs, Money, Murder, and Family" (Simon & Schuster, 2002, 433 pp., $27). Now there is one book that's true. Here's what it's like to read it: Bowden invites you in and sits you down and pours you a whiskey on ice and tells you a story. Drug traffickers and murderers have taken over the Mexican government, at all levels, from the street cops to the presidential palace. Tortured corpses litter the streets along the U.S. border -- 600 murders in one city, 200 in another, within a short period of time. And the U.S. government? They know all about it. They know how many hundred millions the president of Mexico has siphoned off from the tons of cocaine that disappear up noses in the United States. But the cops on this side are dirty too, and even if one is not, if a tough and reasonably honest cop wants to avenge, say, the murder of his brother, the good cop will be jacked around, threatened by his bosses in Washington, D.C. U.S. politicians don't want to rock the boat, because they are in the boat. You listen to all this and it's incredible, but Bowden talks so calmly, so convincingly, and he backs everything up with names and dates, places and smells. Then you look at the glass of whiskey he handed you and you see it is not whiskey, it's blood. You see blood draining out the bottom of the glass. Then it is whiskey again and there is no blood on the floor. But a moment ago it was blood. And Bowden keeps talking softly, convincingly, clearly, backing everything up. And you believe him. Now you could really use a drink. But not that one. Not the one you are holding in your hand. On Jan. 20, 1995, a young man who sold suits for a living was murdered in a parking lot in El Paso, Texas. The man's brother, Phil Jordan, was a high-ranking DEA agent, so high-ranking he was about to take over the El Paso Intelligence Center, the computerized brain of the so-called war on drugs. A 13-year-old Mexican kid was convicted of killing Bruno Jordan. Almost certainly the kid was working for Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the cartel leader who bought presidents as easily as he bought the commercial airliners he filled with tons of cocaine. Phil Jordan had put together an indictment against Carrillo in the United States. Almost certainly, Carrillo killed Jordan's brother just to show him he could. Then for some strange reason the Mexican consulate takes a great interest in the young assassin. Tens of thousands of dollars are funneled to a U.S. lawyer who gets the kid off. Jordan's bosses tell him to forget it. When he doesn't forget, his career unravels. Or perhaps it is unraveled for him. By the time Phil Jordan's career is over, his life in ruins, and the punk assassin is back in Ciudad Juarez, working his way up in the cartel, Bowden has run down a lot of information about the drug business. * Drugs bring Mexico, conservatively, $30 billion in U.S. dollars a year -- more than its three leading official sources of foreign exchange combined. * In the 1990s U.S. banks laundered about $300 billion a year in drug money. That's just about the amount of the annual U.S. trade deficit. So drug money helps keep the U.S. economy afloat. * According to a study by Mexico's internal security agency, CISEN (Centro de Investigacion y Seguridad Nacional), if the drug business vanished, the U.S. economy would shrink by about 20 percent and Mexico's by 63 percent. * As the Mexican economy imploded in the 1980s, President Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado cut a deal with Carrillo and other cartel leaders: If they kept their narcodollars in Mexican banks to keep the economy from collapsing, the government would make accommodations for them. So drug money helped rescue Mexico. * Then Mexican President Carlos Salinas and his brother, Raul, decided to take the money for themselves. * The U.S. government knew all this, and let it go, for reasons of state. In fact, Washington dabbles in the odd ton of cocaine and marijuana too, for reasons of state. Washington calls off its drug dogs when they get too close to the Mexican presidency -- or to U.S. political interests -- and even makes public apologies to Mexico when our drug agents turn up a teaspoon of the tons of evidence that links mass murderers like Carrillo to the Mexican presidency. The main thing about the drug war, Bowden says, is that there is no drug war. There are skirmishes. Not only does the United States government refuse to fight the war -- except in the newspapers --- it may not even be in the U.S.' economic interest to fight it. "Drugs are a business," Bowden writes, "one of the largest on the surface of the earth, and this business exists for two reasons: the products are so very, very good and the profits are so very, very high. Nothing that creates hundreds of billions of dollars of income annually and is desired by millions of people will be stopped by any nation on this earth." "Down by the River" is a heartbreaking, frightening story, courageously reported and wonderfully told. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk