Source: Seattle-Times (WA) Pubdate: Friday 12 June 1998 Contact: http://seattletimes.com/ Author: Stanley Meisler, Los Angeles Times ALBRIGHT BOTH PROTECTIVE, CRITICAL OF U.S. STING IN MEXICO WASHINGTON - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright admonished Mexico yesterday to refrain from carrying out its threat to indict U.S. agents who delved into Mexican territory to catch Mexican bankers in the Operation Casablanca money-laundering sting. Despite her public defense of the U.S. agents, new evidence suggests that, behind the scenes, Albright has been highly critical of the Treasury Department handling of this matter. In a letter to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, published yesterday in the Congressional Record, Albright complained about his failure to notify her office and Mexico before announcing the sting three weeks ago. "We might have achieved more favorable results," Albright wrote, "if we had brought (Mexican) Attorney General (Jorge) Madrazo and a few others into our confidence a few days before the public announcement. "In this regard," she went on, "I believe State should have been consulted. We would have been able to offer some advice that could have ameliorated the negative reaction." Her admonition to the Mexicans about the threatened prosecution of U.S. agents came at a news conference closing the annual meeting of the two nations' Cabinets. "I do think that prosecution and extradition would be counterproductive," she told reporters. "We need to concentrate on the criminals. That is the point of this." But Mexican Foreign Secretary Rosario Green insisted the Mexican attorney general had no choice but to keep investigating whether U.S. agents broke Mexican law by staging a sting in Mexico. Green noted, however, that Operation Casablanca would not prompt Mexico to rule out future U.S.-Mexican anti-drug actions, so long as Mexican sovereignty was respected. After a meeting in New York Monday, President Clinton and President Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico told Attorney General Janet Reno and Madrazo to work out procedures for future operations. Mexican officials were incensed that U.S. agents operated on Mexican soil without Mexican authorization and lured Mexican bankers into a sting that is regarded as illegal entrapment under Mexican law. But U.S. Treasury officials continue to express pride in the operation. In testimony before the House Banking Committee yesterday, Undersecretary of the Treasury Raymond Kelly called Operation Casablanca "the largest drug money-laundering investigation in U.S. history" and "a significant step forward to curb money laundering." Albright's letter to Rubin was inserted in the Congressional Record by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who attacked the secretary of state for complaining about the sting instead of praising it. The senator did not say how he had obtained the letter, dated May 22. - --- Checked-by: (trikydik)