Pubdate: Thu, 16 Aug 2007 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2007 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Alfredo Corchado, Dallas Morning News Alert: Just Say NO To 'Plan Mexico' http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0352.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Plan+Mexico (Plan Mexico) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon MEXICO COULD GET $1.2B FOR DRUG WAR Officials Discussing U.S. Plan Say Funds Would Be Offered Over 3 Years EL PASO - A U.S. plan to help Mexico fight drug traffickers and their widening violence could cost as much as $1.2 billion over a three-year period, U.S. and Mexican officials close to the talks said Tuesday. "That's what's on the table," said one official speaking on condition of anonymity, though the official cautioned that talks are ongoing and anything can change. In May, The Dallas Morning News first reported that the two governments were discussing a counternarcotics plan - known informally among some U.S. and Mexican officials as Plan Mexico - that would expand U.S. assistance, now estimated at about $40 million annually. The plan is aimed at "significantly" enhancing U.S. aid to bolster Mexico's telecommunications and its ability to monitor its airspace. It also would be used to strengthen training programs for Mexico's police; train polygraphers to weed out the country's corrupt federal police force; and provide law enforcement with eavesdropping technologies that would enable them to take on drug traffickers equipped with advanced weapons, electronic monitoring systems and aircraft. And the aid, which Congress is expected to take up this fall, is critical not only for Mexico, but for securing the U.S. border, officials said. "I would like us to be able to monitor some of the ongoing communication on the part of drug cartels up and down the border and in the interior of Mexico," said U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-El Paso, chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Mr. Reyes said the U.S. government is grappling with a critical choice: Provide Mexico with the hefty increase in counternarcotics aid or risk spreading "Nuevo Laredo-style violence" along the 2,000-mile boundary, particularly Texas. Transnational drug traffickers and their gangs pose one of the most serious threats to U.S. security, said Mr. Reyes, who declined to offer specifics on the plan but anticipates a feisty debate in Congress. "Unfortunately there is some kind of cottage industry in the 24-hour news cable cycle where people are whipped up into a frenzy ... and believe there cannot be any beneficial partnership with Mexico," Mr. Reyes said. "All those people need to talk to those of us who actually live along the border, those of us who represent the border." Mr. Reyes is a key proponent of the increased counternarcotics financial initiative and said he believes "it's to our benefit to assist [Mexico]." He hosted the annual border security conference "Securing and Managing Our Nation's Border" that ended Tuesday at the University of Texas at El Paso. "One thing I'm concerned about is that that window of opportunity will close and we will have to face the consequences if we don't take positive steps to address the issues," he said, referring to the violence that's gripped the Mexican border town of Nuevo Laredo and occasionally spilled into Laredo. Mr. Reyes said he favors a "multiyear effort and even if the figure is half of that, say half a billion dollars, that would be a quarter of what we spend on Iraq every month. Can we afford investing in ourselves that kind of money? That's what we're talking about in helping Mexico help us in managing the border security." The plan, formally called a "regional security initiative," would represent a departure for the Mexican government, which has accepted only limited U.S. aid in the past out of a sense of nationalism and fears that more significant aid would come with strings attached. It would also represent an acknowledgment by Mexico that its military-led offensive against drug traffickers is falling short of its goal of controlling violence. Mr. Reyes' comments come as President Bush and his Mexican counterpart, Felipe Calderon, prepare to meet with their Canadian host, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in Montebello, Quebec, on Aug. 20-21 for a series of talks in the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North initiative. Mr. Bush and Mr. Calderon will probably update each other on the ongoing counternarcotics talks, which began during Mr. Calderon's first visit as president-elect to the White House last November and were formalized during their meeting in Merida, Yucatan, last March, officials from both countries said. It's unlikely that any announcement will be made next week because the event is a trilateral meeting and crucial details in the negotiations haven't been worked out, said a U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity. 'This Is Not Colombia' One Mexican official said one sticking point remains: "How wide do we open the door to the Americans? That remains a very sore issue. This is not Colombia." The Colombia reference is to a U.S. effort under President Bill Clinton in which U.S. advisers and special operations troops were heavily involved in anti-cartel operations in that country. Mexican authorities, noting a long history of U.S. intervention, are leery about any comparisons to Colombia, or the idea of any American military, or law enforcement operation on Mexican soil. U.S. taxpayers have spent about $5 billion over the last five years in Colombia. But Armand Peschard-Sverdrup, director of the Mexico Project at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said he believes "both governments will have to come to terms with the realization that if they are to effectively combat powerful transnational organized criminals, they will have to cooperate" at unprecedented levels. Seeing Need for Help Other speakers at the conference in El Paso agreed that more U.S. financial assistance to Mexico is crucial in helping the country's military and strengthening U.S. border security and democracy. Like other Latin American countries, Mexico faces tough challenges from drug traffickers who are battling over a $325 billion global drug market, said Anthony Placido, the Drug Enforcement Administration's chief of intelligence and assistant administrator. The counternarcotics financial plan is "not about money," he said. "This is about what you can do with those dollars." Adm. James. Stavridis, commander of the U.S. Southern Command, said fighting drug trafficking is linked to securing the United States. "I am very concerned about the ability of monies, and the infrastructure and the poisonous impact on systems of governance in central America and parts of South America and certainly in the Caribbean," Adm. Stavridis said. Joseph Donovan, acting assistant director of the National Drug Intelligence Center, added that any new agreement between Mexico and the United States "must respect the sovereignty of both countries. This is important for Mexico and the United States as well." The two-day border conference featured Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who expressed hope that Congress will revisit immigration reform for economic and security reasons. Mr. Chertoff said his department is faced with the extra burden of going after maids, gardeners and farmworkers, which pull away resources from dealing with security threats and harms employers dependent on illegal immigrants. "I'm still hopeful that it may be revisited," he said of the immigration bill, which died in the senate this summer. "In the end, it's very hard to secure the border with only brute force. It can be done, but it's going to be a labor-intensive and time-consuming way to do it." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman