Source: Survey of German Language Press Pubdate: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 Courtesy: Harald Lerch Pat Dolan SURVEY OF GERMAN LANGUAGE NEWSPAPERS "GOOD MARKS FOR POOR PERFORMANCE; CLINTON PRAISES MEXICO FOR ITS 'PHANTOM-STRUGGLE' AGAINST DRUGS" Under the above headline, The Swiss Tages Anzeiger (http://www.tages-anzeiger.ch/) Washington correspondent Thomas Ruest criticizes in remarkably blunt fashion the imminent decision to commend Mexico for its efforts as 'off the mark', since 'it is a country through which two thirds of Columbia's US-bound cocaine passes, and where tons of heroin are produced for the US market.' In reality, he says, Mexico has shown, according to US figures, a poorer performance in 1998 than in the previous year: 'fewer drugs seized; no big fish caught, and fewer prosecutions completed despite the peak level of drug industry trafficking'. The Mexican authorities even failed to step in when 'Big Brother CIA serves them up addresses of the Mexican Mafia on a silver platter.' US sources name corruption - not lack of police personnel or high-tech equipment - as the main reason for the failure to press investigations. Clinton ignored all that on Monday when he said Mexico "would not be punished" for its poor results in the war on drugs. Even before his visit, the government had clearly indicated that Mexico would be commended as a 'reliable partner' in the struggle. The opposite, the refusal to recognize Mexico's 'good will', would have meant its decertification and led to a Senate decision to impose far-reaching trade sanctions. 'Such a boycott would have torpedoed the Nafta free trade agreement'. As Mexico's ambassador Jesus Reyes Heroles warned, such an ambiguous exercise as decertification could only 'disturb the balance of mutual relations'. Thus it is that the Clinton administration makes a new and subtle distinction between 'cooperation' in the war on drugs and 'success'. In other words, the Clinton administration is ready to honor 'good will' even where it is not supported by solid evidence. This ambiguity guts the annual distribution of 'censures' in the war on drugs. The process, which represents a kind of impeachment for states with a drug problem, proves to be a blunted weapon in the struggle itself. For the judgment and the associated sanctions tell us nothing about the success achieved in the war on drugs, but are to be understood, rather, as a general political affirmation of bilateral relations. Copyright (c) TA-Media AG - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake