Pubdate: Mon, 18 Mar 2002
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2002 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Gretchen Peters

US, MEXICO LAUD 'NEW ERA' IN ANTIDRUG WAR

The death and arrest of two drug cartel leaders breaks up ring.

MEXICO CITY - When President George Bush heads to Mexico this week to 
attend a UN conference with Mexico's President Vicente Fox, they'll have a 
major law enforcement achievement to celebrateUS and Canadainn.

Late last week, Mexican authorities confirmed that the man gunned down 
during a Feb.10 police shootout in the western city of Mazatlan was Ramon 
Arellano Felix, the notoriously brutal enforcer of a Tijuana drug cartel he 
ran with his brother Benjamin. For years, a grainy photo of Ramon had 
appeared next to Osama bin Laden's on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list.

A month after Mr. Arellano Felix's shooting came the second coup for 
Mexico's antidrug forces: Benjamin Arellano Felix, believed to be the 
mastermind of the Tijuana drug gang, was captured in Puebla, east of Mexico 
City, while reportedly praying over a shrine to his fallen brother.

The death of one sibling and the capture of the another, along with the 
arrests of several other key players in the Arellano Felix organization, 
have authorities on both sides of the border rejoicing over the demise of 
one of the world's bloodiest and most powerful drug cartels. The cartel was 
estimated to have smuggled as much as one- third of the marijuana and 
cocaine that entered the US market.

US officials are heralding the fall of the Tijuana cartel as a first major 
victory in a new era of cooperation between US and Mexican antidrug forces.

"Clearly, we think this is terrific," says one senior US official, adding 
that officials in Washington were highly impressed by the improved antidrug 
efforts in Mexico since Mr. Fox took power in late 2000. "You keep hearing 
the word 'unprecedented' here when people are talking about [Fox] and his 
administration."

That's good news for Fox, who has seen his domestic popularity wane since 
he toppled 71-years of single-party rule on a promise to bring clean 
government and fight endemic crime.

Antidrug officials said it was unlikely the Arellano Felix gang could 
survive the blow, since the two brothers were essentially the glue that 
held the cartel together.

"And I have never seen a more ruthless bunch of people," says Donald 
Thornhill Jr., an official with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) 
in San Diego who has worked on the Arellano Felix task force for years. 
"They were cold-blooded thugs."

Ramon Arellano Felix had been personally linked to more than 100 murders, 
Mr. Thornhill says, and it was estimated the gang paid more than $75 
million annually in bribes on both sides of the US-Mexico border.

Many here are hoping continued success on the antidrug front could mean 
further US government funds to fight organized crime in Mexico. They also 
hope for an end to the annual and much-resented process of certification, 
in which Washington blacklists or rewards foreign governments depending on 
Washington's assessment of their efforts to stop the flow of narcotics.

Analysts agree, however, that it is too soon for Mexico to relax 
enforcement. By all estimates, the narcotics trade dwarfs all of Mexico's 
other major industries, including tourism, petroleum, and 
manufacture-for-export.

Another problem is the evidence of high-level official complicity across 
the trade. Last year another major trafficker, Joaquin Guzman, escaped from 
a high-security prison, allegedly with the help of senior prison authorities.

Even the demise of the Arellano Felix gang wasn't without embarrassment for 
the Fox government. It took Mexican authorities days to figure out that is 
was Ramon Arellano Felix who had died in Mazatlan on Feb. 10.

People posing as his relatives had already claimed his body and cremated 
it, which left the government without key evidence.

"The question is whether this represents a sustained effort, or was it just 
a one-shot victory," says James Riley of the Rand Corporation's Drug Policy 
Research Center. "Are there resources to sustain this level of effort? 
These questions can only be answered in the long term."

The demand for narcotics on the American side of the border is a key 
obstacle, a problem Fox has raised repeatedly with the US.

Moreover, some think there could be renewed violence as Mexico's remaining 
cartels battle for control over the void left by the Arellano Felixes.

"The bad news is that this won't make a dent in the flow of narcotics. 
Someone will fill that void," says the DEA's Thornhill.
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