Source: Dallas Morning News Contact: Mon, 25 Aug 1997 Control of Mexican border inadequate, drug czar says U.S. official begins tour, seeks overhaul By Douglas Holt / The Dallas Morning News EL PASO To illustrate what he thinks is wrong with the way the United States patrols its border with Mexico, U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey points to tractortrailer trucks. About 3.5 million big rigs enter the United States from Mexico yearly, and authorities think they are a prime conveyance for drug traffickers. The U.S. Customs Service inspected 911,000 of them last year. But out of those hundreds of thousands of trucks, only 56 were found to contain illegal drugs. Slapping a table sharply, Mr. McCaffrey, a retired fourstar Army general and combat veteran of the Vietnam and Persian Gulf wars, said, "That tells me we've got the wrong system." Accompanied by more than 40 top officials from dozens of federal agencies, Mr. McCaffrey began a sixday border tour Sunday. The goal of the trip is to gather information for what aides describe as a major proposal to reorganize U.S. antidrug efforts on the border, the entry point of an estimated 50 percent to 70 percent of illegal drugs in a $49 billionayear black market. "We told the president we're going to pull together a new concept to organize the federal effort on the Southwest border," Mr. McCaffrey, 54, told The Dallas Morning News. "Nobody would argue the way we're doing it makes sense." The new plan to fight drug trafficking, which will be completed this fall, is expected to advocate an end to armed military troops operating on the border. The Pentagon temporarily shut down that mission after a U.S. Marine shot a Redford, Texas, teenager to death. The plan probably will reflect Mr. McCaffrey's belief in the need for a greatly expanded Border Patrol perhaps tripling in size to 20,000 agents along with greater use of hightech gizmos such as Xray machines for semitrucks. Eight of the devices, originally developed for nuclear arms control needs, have been deployed at international bridges. In addition, Mr. McCaffrey is using the trip to underscore what he argues is a need for greater cooperation between the United States and Mexico in the drug war. He has maintained that stance despite the arrest earlier this year of General Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, Mexico's former top drug fighter, who is accused of aiding the country's biggest drug trafficker at the time. On Sunday, Mr. McCaffrey and his group made one of their first stops on the border tour at the El Paso Intelligence Center, a clearinghouse for drugtrafficking information worldwide. Mr. McCaffrey's schedule also includes stops across the border in Ciudad Juarez and Tijuana, where he plans to deliver prepared statements in Spanish. In Juarez, six people were gunned down in a restaurant earlier this month, and four bodies showing signs of torture turned up near the U.S. border Saturday. Observers say the killings appear to indicate a power struggle among the followers and rivals of Amado Carrillo Fuentes, a Mexican drug lord who died in July. "I think the criminal organizations are devouring themselves over succession to the death of Amado Carrillo Fuentes and the Gulf cartel's partial destruction," Mr. McCaffrey said. Twelve law enforcement officials were gunned down last year in Tijuana, and most of the city's 200 killings are blamed on warring drug traffickers. "We're determined to demonstrate that we are not going to back off confronting drug criminals who prey on the population of both sides of the border," Mr. McCaffrey said about the stops on his border tour. On a countrytocountry basis, Mr. McCaffrey said, the United States has no choice but to work with Mexican authorities to fight drugs. He urged improved U.S. training, technology transfers and intelligencesharing with Mexican law enforcement. "Mexico is our secondbiggest trading partner today," he said. "If Mexico doesn't make it, if they go down the tubes, then we ought to assume we're going to have 20 million Mexicans in the United States." Two former Drug Enforcement Administration officials said they agree that cooperation with Mexico is key to pursuing major traffickers, but they urged caution. Mexico should be required to build a professional law enforcement system and an "authentic judiciary" before it gets more technological help, said Donald Ferrarone, former special agent in charge of the DEA's Houston office, which oversees the Texas border. "The last thing you want to do is, for example, give them advanced electronic surveillance capabilities," he said. In the last 20 years, U.S. officials have watched with dismay as technology shared with Mexican police is handed over by corrupt officials to traffickers, he said. Phil Jordan, a former head of the DEA's El Paso Intelligence Center, said Mexico too often has failed to fulfill promises, such as to extradite drug suspects. "In many instances in my career, their promises have been empty," Mr. Jordan said. "Cooperation should be a twoway street." Despite unprecedented federal antidrug spending from $1.5 billion in 1981 to $15 billion this year the government has little evidence that it has succeeded in making illegal drugs scarcer on American streets. For example, the purity of cocaine available in the United States has remained stable since 1988, and its price fell from 1993 to 1995. Meanwhile, the use of illicit drugs among eighthgraders has risen 150 percent in the last five years, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy, which Mr. McCaffrey directs. Although the revised Southwest border plan is a work in progress, Mr. McCaffrey said a clear message emerged from a federal antidrug meeting last year in El Paso that the drug war is fragmented, uncoordinated and inefficient. At international bridges, for example, he said, "nobody is in charge." Duties are split among customs, the Immigration and Naturalization Service and other agencies that use separate intelligencegathering and communications systems. And to improve drug seizure rates from semitrucks, Mr. McCaffrey said, customs agents should have better intelligence and more hightech tools. Although five federal departments share major responsibility for the 2,000mile Mexican border, only the Defense Department has a unit that looks at the frontier as a whole. To further complicate matters, Mr. McCaffrey said, the federal agencies on the border maintain distinct boundaries that do not correspond to other agencies'. In a jarring sidelight to a series of cordial briefings, U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes, a former El Paso Border Patrol sector chief, said Sunday that he was not happy to have been excluded from closeddoor briefings with Mr. McCaffrey. A spokesman for Mr. McCaffrey said that there had been a misunderstanding and that no elected officials had been included in the meetings. © 1997 The Dallas Morning News