Pubdate: Sun, 23 Mar 2003 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2003 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Tim Weiner U.S. AND MEXICO COORDINATE EFFORTS FOR MUTUAL PROTECTION CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico, March 21 - The United States and Mexico, after battling over their common border for so many years, are now coordinating military missions to protect it from attack. Mexico is sending thousands of soldiers to patrol the border and help secure it against terrorist threats - an unprecedented move. The Mexicans have never used their army to help defend their neighbor. "It's a new mission: Mexico looking out for the United States," said Sgt. Benito Hernandez, a Mexican soldier on sentry duty here in Juarez, where thousands of travelers and truckers cross the border in both directions every day. Mexico is sending 18,000 soldiers to secure airports, seaports, border posts and bridges with direct links to the United States. At least half will be based within a few miles of the border, many serving as sentries in the desert. Others will serve in the interior, guarding tourist resorts and oil refineries, the two great sources of foreign revenue for Mexico. The United States, for its part, has Special Forces, Army Rangers and Marines to monitor thousands of square miles at the Mexican border with night patrols, electronic sensors, pilotless drone aircraft first used 18 months ago in Afghanistan and helicopters with infrared scopes. They are training their sights away from smugglers of drugs and migrants toward the terrorist threat, erasing the "thin line between counterdrug and counterterror missions" to quote Gen. John Yingling, one of their commanders. The American military is moving closer to using its soldiers as law enforcers, as Mexico has done for years. Soldiers attached to General Yingling's Joint Task Force Six, based just north of Juarez at Fort Bliss, Tex., have orders to support United States drug enforcement. They "could also be effectively employed in the combating terrorism effort," said their spokesman, Armando Carrasco. "Terrorism and drug trafficking are intertwined and use many of the same operational methods." They are under the new Northern Command headquarters in Colorado, which has been given responsibility for overseeing the United States, Mexico and Canada. The Northern Command includes officers of the C.I.A. and the F.B.I., which in turn are sharing border security information with their Mexican counterparts. The Federal Protective Police, Mexico's equivalent of the F.B.I., is heavily involved in the new security mobilization, as is Cisen, Mexico's equivalent of the C.I.A. These linkages and the coast-to-coast mobilization by both nations represents the birth of a international national-security network, American and Mexican officials said. "Mexico is not going to be used as a transit point for any terrorist or anyone who wishes to harm the United States," said Interior Minister Santiago Creel, who oversees Cisen. Mexico said hours after combat began in Iraq that it would deny visas to travelers from a list of Arabic and Asian countries deemed hostile to the war effort. By collaborating against a foreign threat, both nations are crossing a line that they had never breached. "Despite the inherent distrust between both countries' law enforcement and their militaries, they had to find a way to talk to each other and share information," said Ana Maria Salazar, a former Pentagon official and an expert in Mexican national security doctrine. "They were forced to figure out a way to coordinate." Mexico is striving to show political and military support for the United States after rejecting President Bush's demand for its vote at the United Nations Security Council for a war against Iraq. Mexican officials are worried that the United States will extract a price for that rejection by closing off the border, which would severely damage Mexico's economy, or expel thousands of undocumented Mexican migrants in the United States. "You have to give the Americans a sense of security," Ms. Salazar said, "or they will close down the border the moment they get an inkling of some threat." Mr. Creel said Mexico felt "compelled to collaborate with the United States to identify any potential risk" at the border "both against American citizens or assets or here in our own country." Here in Juarez, where four busy border crossings remain open, travelers and truckers are being subjected to a higher level of scrutiny on the American side of the border under the newly re-established Code Orange alert. The level of cross-border trade between Mexico and the United States - more than $250 billion a year - has not changed. What has changed is the greater intensity of the flow of information between the American and Mexican military and intelligence services, officials said. "It is impossible, really, to oversee the border, unless they put the entire United States Army there," said Rafael Fernandez de Castro, a foreign policy analyst in Mexico City. "But the mobilization of 18,000 Mexican soldiers is a very big deal," he said. "And the strategic coordination between the Americans and the Mexicans has never been greater." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D