Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jan 2009 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2009 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mVLAxQfA Website: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Josh Meyer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico U.S., MEXICO AT ODDS OVER $1.4 BILLION AID PACKAGE TO BATTLE DRUG CARTELS Distrust Sullies Initiative Designed To Battle Drug Cartels Doubts are growing about whether the United States and Mexico's $1.4 billion aid package can successfully combat increasingly violent drug-trafficking cartels. There are mounting questions about whether the so-called Merida Initiative is too little, too late and too compromised by competing and misplaced priorities, according to interviews with current and former officials and outside experts, and a review of government documents. Both nations agree that the Mexican cartels have morphed into transnational organized crime syndicates that pose an urgent threat to national and regional security. But there is little agreement over where the U.S. aid money should go. That uncertainty, which comes at a time of intensifying violence on the border, is likely to present the incoming Obama administration with hard choices in deciding how to work with Mexico to fight drug trafficking, gun running, corruption and other crime that has spread into the United States. When Congress passed the first installment of the three-year aid package in June, after much debate, it contained at least 33 programs in four categories, giving about $400 million to Mexico for this fiscal year and another $65 million to various Central American countries, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. The first transfer of money was delayed until early December, and continued squabbling and other problems have held up delivery of most direct assistance. A senior State Department official confirmed that Mexico will have to wait more than a year for the delivery of at least two U.S. transport helicopters and two reconnaissance planes that the U.S. ally says it needs desperately for interdiction and rapid response. Meanwhile, some senior U.S. counter-narcotics officials and lawmakers say that the U.S.-Mexico relationship has been so polluted for decades by mistrust, neglect and failure to collaborate that the two countries must build much of their anti-drug strategy from scratch, at a time when more than 5,000 people have died in drug-related slayings this year in Mexico. They fear that the cartels are so strong and well-funded that Mexican government forces will continue to be under-trained, under-equipped and outgunned for years, despite U.S. aid. "You need a robust internal capacity to identify the cancer, cut it out and move on while checking the margins to make sure it hasn't spread. And they have never done that. They never institutionalized law enforcement at any level," Michael A. Braun, former assistant director and chief of operations for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, said of the Mexican government. U.S. authorities also are deeply troubled that corruption in the top echelons of Mexican President Felipe Calderon's administration could undermine the Merida effort. Some said the recent arrest of Mexico's former drug czar, Noe Ramirez Mandujano, shows that Calderon's effort to root out corruption is working. But while some U.S. officials maintain that they now share more information than ever with Mexico, others confirmed that they are urgently conducting damage assessments following Ramirez's arrest, and after Mexico revealed that cartel operatives had infiltrated Interpol, the U.S. embassy in Mexico City and even DEA operations in the country. Calderon will probably find more corruption within his government and even his own administration, but he deserves credit for battling the cartels since his election two years ago, said Braun, now managing partner at the Spectre Group International security consulting firm. "They know they have a monumental undertaking, but you have to start somewhere," he said. "If you don't, in another five years the cartels will be running Mexico." Since it was first unveiled in the Mexican city of Merida in October 2007, the latest bilateral drug plan has been criticized as a confusing patchwork of dozens of questionable programs, ranging from military and law enforcement training and high-tech drug detection scanners to gang-prevention programs. Many have complained that no one is coordinating the initiative. "You've got so many different agencies involved, who would you even put in charge of it?" said a State Department International Narcotics and Law Enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Privately, Mexican officials are furious with President George W. Bush for not doing more to interdict the flood of assault weapons coming in from U.S. gun shops and gun shows; one senior Washington-based Mexican official said they now comprise about 90 percent of the cartels' arsenals. And Mexico continues to accuse Washington of doing far too little to diminish the southbound flow of billions of dollars in laundered drug proceeds and drug precursor chemicals, even though both are addressed in the initiative. Arturo Sarukhan, Mexico's ambassador to the United States and a former senior counter-narcotics official, cautioned that Merida is only a first step. It won't be easy to improve cross-border interdiction efforts, intelligence sharing and integration of both countries' counter-narcotics efforts after so much neglect, he added. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin