Pubdate: Wed, 18 Mar 2009 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: A02 Copyright: 2009 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: R. Jeffrey Smith, Washington Post Staff Writer U.S. EFFORTS AGAINST MEXICAN CARTELS CALLED LACKING U.S. efforts to help the Mexican government battle powerful organized crime networks are falling short, and a recent sharp spike in violence south of the border poses a growing threat to U.S. citizens, senators and independent experts told officials from three federal agencies yesterday on Capitol Hill. Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard (D), who said his state is the principal American gateway for drugs and human smuggling from Mexico, called the Mexican cartels the principal criminal threat for the 21st century. But he criticized Washington's response as disjointed and called for more intelligence-sharing and better coordination. "We are not winning the battle," Goddard told members of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on crime and drugs. Lawmakers joined Goddard in calling for a stronger federal response, including heightened efforts to stanch the illicit stream of thousands of American guns and billions of dollars in cash annually flowing southward across the border. "Mexican drug cartels . . . pose a direct threat to Americans," said Senate Majority Whip Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), the subcommittee chairman, noting that they now operate in at least 230 U.S. cities, up from about 50 in 2006. But their joint alarm over the rising drug-related violence in northern Mexico -- where more than 1,000 people have been slain since the beginning of the year -- was not shared by officials at the hearing from the three principal agencies responsible for helping the Mexican government: the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement branch of the Department of Homeland Security. Anthony P. Placido, the DEA's top intelligence official, said his agency believes that Mexican President Felipe Calderon is still "making important strides" against the cartels. The recently increasing violence mostly reflects the criminal networks' "desperate effort to resist," he said. "The violence we see is actually a signpost of success," Placido said. A darker picture was presented by Denise Dresser, a Princeton-educated professor of political science in Mexico City, who warned that recent U.S. assistance in fighting drug trafficking has had only mixed success. Cocaine traffickers now spend more than twice the attorney general's budget just for bribes; 450,000 citizens are involved in the drug trade; and more than 2,000 weapons a day are smuggled south to fuel the battle between cartels and against the Mexican government, she said. "Mexico is becoming a country where lawlessness prevails, where more people died in drug-related violence last year than those killed in Iraq, where the government has been infiltrated by the mafias and cartels it has vowed to combat," Dresser said. "Although many believe that Obama's greatest foreign policy challenges lie in Pakistan or Iran or the Middle East, they may in fact be found in the immediate neighborhood." Firearms and immigration officials disputed the estimate of 2,000 smuggled weapons a day, saying the number was more likely in the hundreds. But they confirmed that these weapons are becoming more sophisticated and now include .50-caliber rifles with five-inch shells capable of penetrating walls. "Unfortunately, in the past six months, we have noted a troubling increase in the number of grenades . . . seized from or used by drug traffickers, and we are concerned about the possibility of explosives-related violence spilling into U.S. border towns," the Justice Department said in a written statement to lawmakers. Federal officials said their agencies had cooperated well and provided timely intelligence and resources to the Mexican government. But the lawmakers said Mexican officials had told them otherwise, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) sharply criticized delays in providing helicopters and surveillance equipment under a special aid program, the Merida Initiative, begun by the Bush administration. Although the transfer was funded last year, Mexico will not receive the gear until 2011, Feinstein said. This is of "enormous concern to the Mexicans." She also said that federal efforts to stop the smuggling of weapons were "clearly not enough." Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) asked why more border agents were not trained and deputized to make drug arrests. His questions provoked Kumar C. Kibble, a deputy director of investigations for immigration at DHS, to say that the number of such agents had been inappropriately capped at 1,475 instead of 5,000. Placido denied that such a cap existed but warned that heavier involvement by border agents might compromise drug investigations and cause suspects to flee. "I'm afraid, in this country, we tend to segregate by agency," Goddard later complained. "On the border, we can't afford to do that." Separately yesterday, Air Force Gen. Gene Renuart, who oversees the U.S. Northern Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that military planners are working with DHS on how to improve border surveillance operations, and reviewing a request by Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) for 1,000 more federal troops or agents at the border. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake