Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Contact: Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Copyright: 1998 Chicago Tribune Company Pubdate: Wed, 23 Dec 1998 Author: New York Times News Service Section: Sec. 1 U.S., MEXICO ADMIT DRUG WAR IS FAILING An ambitious U.S. effort to help train and equip Mexico's armed forces to pursue drug smugglers is a shambles, officials of both countries say, souring American relations with an ally that Washington has worked intensely to court. Three years after the Pentagon began donating dozens of helicopters to the Mexican army and training hundreds of Mexican soldiers in the United States, officials have seen only a handful of the anti-drug operations intended in the program. The helicopter fleet has been grounded by mechanical problems, and angry Mexican generals are sharply cutting the number of troops they will send to train. According to U.S. intelligence reports, the drug flights that the plan was designed to combat have virtually ceased. But that appears to be because the traffickers turned to smuggling schemes like containerized shipping before the enforcement strategy ever got off the ground. The flow of drugs into the United States has continued apace. Tensions over the failed strategy, the faltering equipment and continuing reports of Mexican military corruption have grown serious enough, U.S. officials said, that they have asked Mexico's commanding generals to reassess the program altogether. "The question, basically, is: How do we get out of this box?" a Clinton administration official said. "We will talk about the plan that they come up with, and we will talk about whether we want to support that plan." The conflict underscores the competing agendas that the Pentagon and the CIA have encountered in Latin America as they have tried to use the fight against international drug traffickers to remake their old alliances with military forces in the region. Like its counterparts in Colombia and Peru--and like the Pentagon itself--the Mexican military seized on the drug fight as a mission of growing importance and as a way to protect its budgets after the Cold War. But the Mexican commanders have pursued the effort with secrecy and independence, raising questions about whether the United States is strengthening powerful and sometimes autonomous military forces at the expense of civilian institutions such as the courts and the police. "The answer here is that there is no silver bullet," said Jan Lodal, who, until his recent retirement as the principal deputy undersecretary of defense for policy, oversaw the Pentagon's anti-drug cooperation with Mexico. "You are going to have to build an effective civilian law-enforcement structure, and you're going to have to build it from the ground up." Administration officials contend that, despite the tensions, the United States' relationship with the Mexican armed forces is better than it was several years ago. They say the CIA's collaboration with a small drug-intelligence unit of the Mexican army, although largely secret, has been reasonably successful. And they emphasize that they turned to the Mexican military only after President Ernesto Zedillo did so himself, giving his generals a new public-security role because the corrupting influence of the drug trade had so paralyzed the federal police. Clinton administration officials still are quick to say any long-term solution to Mexico's criminal-justice problems must focus on civilian institutions. But they also continue to spend considerably more on anti-drug training for the military than they have on court officers and the police, and they have largely approved the steady expansion of the Mexican armed forces' influence over a range of law-enforcement programs. "From the start, all of us have believed that, if you don't have a judicial system and a police force that are responsive to the elected civilian leadership, you're in trouble," the White House drug policy director, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, said in an interview. But he added, "You don't produce the Swiss police in a year." - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake