Source: (1) San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Source: (2) Washington Post (DC) Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Pubdate: Wed, 9 Sep 1998 Author: Douglas Farah and Molly Moore, W.P. GRAFT PROBE HAUNTS ANTI-DRUG FORCE U.S.-trained Mexican troops under suspicion Two years ago, U.S. and Mexican officials, frustrated by corruption in Mexican law enforcement agencies, pushed the Mexican army to take the lead in fighting the drug war. Forming the backbone of the effort were new units trained by U.S. Special Forces and given helicopters for mobility. But now the program, begun with high hopes and effusive praise from senior officials of both countries, is facing the same evil it was formed to combat. About 80 members of the elite units have been under investigation in recent weeks on allegations that some of them took hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes to sneak cocaine-filled suitcases and illegal aliens through the Mexico City airport on their way to the United States. Nine of these Mexican soldiers have been jailed on formal charges, and five more have been detained. On Sunday, Mexican civilian anti-drug authorities removed 40 of the troops - -- all trained under the Special Forces program -- from their assignments at the airport as a result of the corruption investigation. The episode, which has left some U.S. drug enforcement officials newly disillusioned, comes amid a rapid and widespread expansion of training of foreign armed forces by U.S. special operations troops, an initiative that has proceeded largely without public debate or congressional oversight. In Mexico, as in much of Latin America, the operational focus is on combating the drug trade. The Mexican units, whose leaders were given Special Forces training at Fort Bragg, N.C., are called Airmobile Special Forces and widely known by their Spanish acronym GAFE. The United States pays $28 million a year for the program, and 252 Mexican officers were trained in its first 18 months, with another 156 officers scheduled for training by the end of fiscal 1998, according to the Pentagon. The U.S.-trained officers then train other groups in Mexico, and by now there are supposed to be 42 100-man units stationed around the country. Mexico army's elite Candidates for the GAFEs, supposedly the cream of the Mexican army, are sent for training in the United States have their names checked against databases of suspected drug traffickers kept by the Drug Enforcement Administration, the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency. They also receive higher salaries than troops outside the units to make bribes less tempting. The GAFE troops who worked at the Mexico City airport were trained by Mexican trainers, not directly by U.S. Special Forces. But U.S. officials said the indications of possible graft were a blow to their efforts to establish corps of uncorruptible drug fighters on both sides of the border. `No one . . . we can trust' ``After a while you wonder what the hell you are doing there,'' said one law enforcement official. ``There is no one there we can trust completely. This was supposed to be the group we could trust and work with.'' Of equal concern with the arrests themselves, U.S. and Mexican officials said, was the fact that the elite troops, whose mission was to be deployed around the country as combat-ready shock troops to attack drug cartels, were being broken up, seconded to other agencies and given routine duties such as patrolling the airport. ``I don't know why those troops were there. That is not what they were supposed to be doing,'' one Mexican official familiar with the program said of the airport arrests. ``They are supposed to be the door-kickers and have the capacity to go after the drug traffickers and offer the best support available.'' 1997 - 1998 Mercury Center. The information you receive online from Mercury Center is protected by the copyright laws of the United States. The copyright laws prohibit any copying, redistributing, retransmitting, or repurposing of any copyright-protected material. - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan