Pubdate: Mon, 30 Mar 2009
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Times
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/bc7El3Yo
Website: http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: John Kerry, Writing From Washington
Note: John Kerry (D-Mass.) chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)

MEXICO'S WAR MUST BE OUR WAR

Helping Mexico Take on the Drug Cartels Helps Us, but the Effort Will 
Require Unprecedented Cooperation Between Our Two Countries.

Last month, a hit squad sent by a Mexican drug cartel brazenly broke 
into the homes of nine police officers in a ranching town in northern 
Mexico. They kidnapped the officers, piled them into a convoy of SUVs 
and sped off into the night.

After being summoned by local authorities, troops from Ciudad Juarez, 
80 miles to the north, located the convoy and fought a running gun 
battle with the kidnappers. When the smoke cleared, 21 people were 
dead, including six policemen who had been tortured and murdered 
before the soldiers could save them.

Even in Mexico, where a spiraling drug war has claimed more than 
7,000 lives in the last 15 months, the scale of the violence was 
shocking. But in one respect, the shootout represented a breakthrough.

Soon after the bullets stopped flying, a Mexican military officer 
called a trusted U.S. contact and offered to let American officials 
inspect the weapons taken from the hit men. The guns were mostly 
AK-47 knockoffs, and U.S. agents traced them to a dealer in El Paso, 
just across the Rio Grande from Ciudad Juarez. The dealer was already 
on trial for arming the cartels. He now faces new charges.

Mexico is not the failed state that some pundits have warned about, 
but the crisis is undeniable -- and it cannot be addressed without 
the United States and Mexico working together to combat crimes that 
respect no border. But our response must be respectful of our long 
partnership with Mexico.

Today, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will hold a field 
hearing in El Paso to hear from U.S. and Mexican officials about ways 
to develop a better joint response to the border violence.

Our two countries are already cooperating at an unprecedented level. 
President Felipe Calderon has approved the extradition of a record 
178 drug traffickers to the U.S., and he deserves praise for his 
courageous stand in going after the drug cartels. But there is more 
that can be done on both sides.

Too often the kind of cross-border cooperation seen in the recent 
kidnappings is the result of personal relationships rather than 
institutional partnerships. Mexico's military and government should 
allow the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to 
examine every gun seized to identify and shut down the sellers, who 
are almost always on our side of the border.

We must stop the flow of handguns, assault rifles and machine guns, 
which pass from the U.S. to Mexico at a rate of 60,000 a year. Right 
now, southbound traffic crosses the border essentially uninspected. 
That cannot continue. The Obama administration's decision to increase 
resources assigned to interdict guns at the border is a good first 
step, but other actions must be taken as well. For instance, we must 
enforce existing laws against exporting weapons across international 
borders. We should revive the ban on assault rifle imports to the 
U.S., which was mistakenly allowed to expire in 2004.

The U.S. government needs to greatly improve its efforts to shut down 
demand for drugs on this side of the border. Too many Americans are 
the consumers of drugs that transit Mexico, and that trade will exist 
as long as there is demand.

We also need better intelligence-sharing to alert both sides to the 
movement of drugs, arms and cash in both directions. We should aim to 
unify our databases of suspicious vehicles and deploy license-plate 
readers and other surveillance systems. To do this, both sides must 
build the trust that allows information against a common enemy to be 
shared in a timely and effective manner.

Beyond the border, we need to use our extensive intelligence 
resources to develop a better strategic picture of how the cartels 
operate in the U.S. This is our turf, and we have an obligation to 
attack the trade more aggressively and share the findings with our 
Mexican counterparts.

Finally, we should ratify the Inter-American Convention Against the 
Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Weapons and Explosives. 
The U.S. was one of the first countries to sign the convention after 
it was adopted by the Organization of American States in 1997. But we 
are among the few that have failed to ratify it, even though it fully 
respects U.S. law with regard to the legal sale and use of guns.

We've heard politicians repeat the mantra that we must "fight them 
over there so we don't have to fight them here." When it comes to 
Mexico's drug cartels, this happens to be true. We should help our 
neighbors reclaim their streets -- and keep ours safer in the process. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake