Pubdate: Tue, 17 Aug 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Michael Riley Section: page 6A ATTACK ON DRUG CZAR PERPLEXING Mexico Cartels Felt Heat Or Inside Job? MEXICO CITY, Mexico -- Some government officials are viewing an attack against Mexico's drug czar as the clearest sign yet that the country's efforts to fight narcotics must be improving. But other observers outside the government are not so sure. In the incident on Sunday, riders on two motorcycles opened fire on a vehicle driven by Mariano Herran, the chief of Mexico's anti-narcotics unit. But they managed only to wound one of the three bodyguards accompanying him before being chased away by the guards' gunfire. Mexico has rarely seen an attempt by traffickers to kill a government official at Herran's level. At a news conference Sunday, he proclaimed proudly that "narcotrafficking doesn't have the authorities in check. The authorities have narcotrafficking in check, and this is the response." If Herran is right, there has been a sea change in the unwritten rules that have governed the relationship between Mexico's authorities and the country's powerful cartels. The understanding has largely kept the peace between the two sides while the drug trade here has blossomed into an estimated $25 billion-a-year industry. "This is a turning point in the fight against drugs in Mexico," said Jorge Chabat, a political scientist in Mexico City. "This has never happened before. Sometimes it has happened with commanders of the federal police low-level officials, but this guy is very high up." Unlike Colombia -- where a crusading justice minister was assassinated in 1984 and where Supreme Court judges, congressmen, prosecutors and judges have been gunned down by drug lords -- high-ranking Mexican officials had not been targeted by any of the cartels. In exchange, according to some U.S. drug agents, the cartels have been given wide freedom to operate in Mexico. Critics inside U.S. law enforcement and observers outside Mexico's government -- political scientists and former drug prosecutors -- say the Mexicans haven't been attacked, in part, because they haven't imposed much of a threat to the cartels. With an estimated annual budget for bribes in Mexico of up to $7 billion, the traffickers have instead managed to buy impunity and protection from police, judges and even state governors. Herran took over the anti-narcotics unit in 1997 after his predecessor, Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, was arrested on charges of taking payoffs from a drug lord. But analysts say they are puzzled by Sunday's attempt, in part because there doesn't seem to be a good reason to target Herran now. Herran's investigation against a former governor of Quintana Roo state seems to have fizzled. The official, Mario Villaneava, who was suspected of having helped the Juarez cartel ship drugs through Mexico's Gulf coast, has dropped out of sight after he failed to show up for the swearing-in ceremony of his successor. In addition, Herran has said publicly that he wanted to see the alleged kingpins of the country's methamphetamine trade extradited to the United States for trial. But that possibility seems remote, the observers say. "With Herran, you just haven't seen anything in the last three months -- big seizures of cocaine or a big success against a cartel boss -- which would give the cartels a reason to do this now," said Sigrid Arzt, an analyst of Mexico's drug trade and a former member of the country's attorney general's office. "You just haven't seen anything which would make you say `Wow, he's doing a great job.' " Most recently, Herran has been heading an investigation into trafficking in the state of Tamaulipas that implicates the state police as well as the state attorney general's office. Herran said earlier this month that Tamaulipas has become a major thoroughfare for drugs into the United States. He charged that some of the country's biggest traffickers, including members of the Tijuana cartel, Mexico's most violent, were involved. When Sunday's attack occurred, Herran was accompanying his wife on a weekend outing. A uniformed policeman on a motorcycle escorted Herran's Chevrolet Suburban, which was followed by a chase car with two more heavily armed bodyguards. The attempt was botched, and the four assailants -- two each to a motorcycle -- were outgunned by Herran's bodyguards. One motorcyclist was wounded and captured. His partner eluded arrest after carjacking a minibus and speeding away. The two others drove away on their bike, the authorities said. Analysts said the attack may have been more an attempt to send a message to the drug czar rather than to actually kill him. Others suggested that the drug cartels may not have been involved after all. Herran, to cut down on corruption inside his office, has made police and investigators subject to drug and lie-detector tests. Some of those who failed have been reassigned or fired. The fact that the assailants were aware of Herran's movements on Sunday suggests that the attack may have been aided -- or perhaps entirely planned - -- from the inside. "This could have come from members of the judicial police inside the anti-narcotics unit," Arzt said. "These guys got very close to (Herran) and they certainly know his movements and what he's doing." - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder