GOOD COMPROMISE; SEN. HUTCHISON LED FIGHT AGAINST DECERTIFICATION Copyright (c) 1997, The Houston Chronicle Publishing Company The Houston Chronicle March 21, 1997 a; Editorials; Pg. 40 Contact Info for The Houston Chronicle: Content Manager Coordinator Content Content HOUSTON CHRONICLE HOUSTON TX 17132207171; Kay Bailey Hutchison deserves credit for leading the successful effort in the Senate to retain Mexico's certification while carefully pointing out that nation's failures in the war on drugs and requiring a report on improvements by Sept. 1 It was a nice bit of compromise work aided by the Texas senator and far preferable to the House vote last week to overturn President Clinton's Feb. 28 certification of Mexico. The House has suspended its override for 90 days to give Mexico time to respond and show improvement, although, in effect, its decertification vote is now largely symbolic since the Senate has refused to go along. It would be better for this country and Mexico if the conference committee signed off on the Senate bill and had it approved by the House. The reasons the compromise measure should be supported are simple. While Mexico is obviously suffering from shocking government corruption in its battle against drugs, economic hardships and political turmoil resulting from decertification would only aggravate the situation. The United States shares a long border with Mexico, and the futures of both nations are linked. Decertification would erode support for Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo and his political reforms and undoubtedly raise the level of Mexican nationalism and antiAmerican sentiment. Hutchison's compromise, supported by the White House, requires President Clinton to report on the progress of U.S.Mexican efforts to break up drug trafficking cartels, improve border enforcement and deny traffickers safe havens. It also requires the White House to report on its progress toward increasing drug interdiction, expanding antidrug education and adding 1,000 U.S. Border Patrol agents in this country, after all, is where the demand for illegal, dangerous drugs is out of control. Hutchison's compromise gets a tough message across without decertifying Mexico, which would have been detrimental to Texas, the United States and Mexican political reform. The House should add its approval.