Source: Washington Post Authors: John M. Goshko & Douglas Farah, Washington Post Staff Writers Page: FRONT PAGE Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jun 1998 NO TRUCE IN DRUG-BLAME WAR AT U.N. Mexico Dismisses Clinton Call for End to Criticism UNITED NATIONS, June 8—President Clinton today urged drug-producing and drug-consuming countries to stop blaming each other for the international narcotics trade and join in a concerted effort to reduce from 190 million the number of people worldwide who use illegal drugs. But in a reminder of the disagreements that trouble even nominal allies in anti-drug efforts, Clinton's call to stop "pointing fingers" was brushed aside by Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo. He rebuked the United States sharply for allegedly violating his country's laws with an undercover money-laundering operation that has become a major diplomatic dispute between the two neighbors. Clinton made his plea to presidents, prime ministers and cabinet officers of 150 nations attending a U.N. drug conference. The president also announced a $2 billion, five-year media campaign that would target American youth with the message that "drugs destroy young lives, don't let it destroy yours." In his keynote speech, Clinton tried to steer around traditional arguments about whether illicit drug traffic is more the fault of largely Third World countries that derive great profits by producing the raw materials of drugs such as heroin and cocaine or industrial states such as the United States with enormous numbers of addicts. "The debate between drug-supplying and drug-consuming nations about whose responsibility the drug problem is has gone on too long," Clinton said. "Let's be frank -- this debate has not advanced the fight against drugs. Pointing fingers is distracting. It does not dismantle a single cartel, help a single addict, prevent a single child from trying and perhaps dying from heroin. . . . Drugs are every nation's problem, and every nation must act to fight them -- on the streets, around the kitchen table and around the world." But the nods of approval that greeted Clinton's appeal did not disguise the fact that some of the countries participating in the conference -- particularly in Latin America and Asia -- are places where some senior officials are engaged in protecting illicit drug trafficking and where, as apparently was the case in Mexico, suspicion between U.S. and local law enforcement officials frequently hampers effective cooperation. While Clinton praised Zedillo both for taking the lead role in initiating the conference and for Mexico's recent anti-trafficking successes, the Mexican president, who spoke immediately after Clinton, responded with words unmistakably aimed at the United States. "We have the right to demand a balanced strategy," Zedillo said. "Balanced so that each country assumes that in the fight against drug trafficking, we are all co-responsible, with the same rights and obligations. We must all respect the sovereignty of each nation so that no one can become the judge of others; and no one feels entitled to violate the other countries' laws for the sake of enforcing its own." Zedillo was apparently referring to a sting operation revealed last month, codenamed Operation Casablanca, in which U.S. narcotics agents conducted a covert investigation inside Mexico and then lured Mexican bankers to a fake casino in the United States. In the aftermath, some 150 people were arrested, $110 million was seized, and three Mexican banks were indicted in the United States. The decision by U.S. authorities to conceal the operation from Mexican officials has touched off a wave of intense anger in Mexico. Mexico has called for the extradition of U.S. customs agents involved in the sting. The situation has been aggravated by publication in Mexico of a letter to Zedillo from Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) expressing "deep disappointment" over the Mexican attitude and accusing Mexico of "broken promises" in the drug war. Later Clinton and Zedillo met in an effort to smooth over differences about the operation and issued a joint statement saying that combating drugs is "best accomplished through improved cooperation and mutual trust, with full respect for the sovereignty of both nations." James Dobbins of the National Security Council said there had been no discussion of extradition of U.S. agents and added that Zedillo told Clinton that the Mexican attorney general's office was investigating to determine whether U.S. authorities had broken any Mexican laws. Acrimony over Operation Casablanca overshadowed other parts of Clinton's message, which included the large anti-drug publicity program. U.S. officials said Congress will be asked to provide $175 million of the $2 billion, with the rest coming from businesses and philanthropies. The conference is set to take up for discussion a controversial plan for anti-narcotics efforts evolved by Pino Arlacchi, the chief U.N. counternarcotics official. The plan would induce farmers in nine drug-producing countries to switch to legal crops. However, U.S. officials have made known that the United States almost certainly would refuse to give money to at least two of these countries: Myanmar, formerly Burma, because of its repressive regime, and Afghanistan, where Muslim fundamentalists have repressed women's rights. In what appeared to be a recognition that U.S. opposition is irreversible, Arlacchi, in talking with reporters, said there were no plans to give these two countries large amounts of money until they made fundamental political changes. Burhanuddin Rabbani, the president of the Taliban, which controls much of Afghanistan, addressed the conference today without addressing this point. President Ernesto Samper of Colombia, another country that would receive funds under the Arlacchi plan, said in his address that no country had done more than his to combat the international drug trade. Samper's U.S. visa was revoked two years ago because of evidence he took $6 million from the Cali cocaine cartel for his 1994 election campaign. "No other country has done more, and under more lonely circumstances," Samper said, adding that drug trafficking "once and for all" had to be recognized internationally as a multilateral problem. © Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake