Pubdate: Tue, 23 Mar 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: David Luhnow MEXICO AND U.S. PLOT NEW ANTIDRUG STRATEGY Merida Initiative Offers $1.3 Billion for Equipment, Training, 'Smart' Border Enforcement and Institutional Reform MEXICO CITY-U.S. and Mexican officials are expected to finalize a new strategy on Tuesday on how to use some $1.3 billion in U.S. aid under the so-called Merida Initiative to try to control growing drug-related violence in Mexico. Officials hope the plan, which mixes military aid such as Black Hawk helicopters with "softer" money such as investments in local communities, can have the same success in turning around Mexico's troubles as Plan Colombia, another U.S. antidrug aid package, did for that country. Officials caution that solving Mexico's problems could be a tougher battle than helping Colombia, where U.S. aid helped the government beat back insurgencies tied to the drugs trade. "Mexico is nowhere near as bad as Colombia was at the height of its problems. But to get Mexico to where Colombia is now will require a concerted and sustained effort," said one U.S. official. To stress the U.S. commitment to Mexico, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will visit the country on Tuesday along with an unusually large U.S. delegation that includes Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. The visit is aimed at supporting Mexican President Felipe Calderon and the country's struggle against the drug gangs responsible for some 18,000 murders in the past three years. It also comes less than two weeks after the brutal murders of three people tied to the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, including an American couple. The killings raised awareness of the deepening battle on the U.S. doorstep, and underscored how the violence continues to grow despite U.S. aid and the deployment of some 45,000 troops by Mr. Calderon to contain vicious feuds between rival drug gangs. Underscoring the challenge faced by both countries, the bodies of two missing police officers were found early Monday morning outside police headquarters in the capital of the southern state of Guerrero, law-enforcement officials said, according to the Associated Press. In the nearby resort of Acapulco, police later Monday found two mutilated bodies and a threatening message outside the house of the city's former deputy traffic-police chief. The Merida Initiative, which began under the administration of George W. Bush, is a three-year aid plan that is likely to be extended. While it has been under way since 2008, the money has been slow in coming-as has the broader plan for how to use it. The strategy will focus on four areas: helping disrupt drug gangs through better equipment, training and technology; helping create stronger institutions for the rule of law; creating a "smart" border that stops drugs, guns and drug money but allows commerce to continue; and trying to address the underlying problems that fuel drug violence, such as a lack of job creation. "The strategy sounds good. The question is can both sides implement it," said Andrew Selee, director of the Mexico Institute at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington. Mexico, Mr. Selee said, will have to force disparate agencies like the military and police to work together. Washington will have to keep a sustained focus on Mexico that has proved hard to maintain in the past, he added. In fact, only $128 million of the Merida money has been delivered to Mexico, leading to criticism from some analysts that Washington is moving too slowly to help its beleaguered neighbor. But U.S. officials point out that U.S. antidrug assistance to Mexico used to be roughly $25 million a year before the 2008 Merida plan, making such a ramp-up in aid hard to pull off faster. Officials on both sides of the border say cooperation has never been better. Mrs. Clinton, like President Barack Obama, is expected to stress that U.S. demand for drugs is what drives the violence in Mexico. That kind of rhetorical support for Mexico has allowed the U.S. to operate much more closely with Mexican officials, including having U.S. instructors at Mexico's top police academy. Officials say the new Merida strategy partly comes from lessons learned in Colombia, where billions of U.S. aid under Plan Colombia and direct U.S. military training helped turn the tide. "We're beginning further down the curve here than in Colombia, which also had a much more noxious mix of insurgencies and drugs," said the U.S. official. But Mexico could prove more difficult to help than Colombia, partly because Mexico, with a population of more than 110 million, is much bigger than Colombia, a nation of 45 million. Another complicating factor: Colombia is a centralized country and Mexico is a federal republic, making action much more difficult to coordinate and slower to implement. Colombia has a national police force, while Mexico has more than 1,300 local, state and federal law enforcement bodies. Both Mexico and the U.S. also remain hamstrung in dealing with the drug problem by internal political factors, according to Peter Hakim, president of Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank in Washington. Mexican nationalism prevents the kind of direct U.S. military training and deployment that helped Colombia turn the tide in its fight against guerrilla groups there, he said, while the U.S. culture of loose gun laws, for instance, makes it harder to slow the flow of guns to Mexico that end up in the hands of cartels. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake