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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT, MARCH 1996: MEXICO
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
I. Summary
Because of the porous 2000-mile U.S./Mexican border and daunting volume
of legitimate cross-border traffic provides near-limitless opportunities
for smuggling activities and escape for fugitives, no country in the
world poses a more immediate narcotics threat to the United States than
Mexico. It is the principal transit route for cocaine entering the U.S.
as well as a major source country for heroin, methamphetamine and
marijuana. Mexican criminal groups facilitate the movement of hundreds
of metric tons of cocaine from South America, 50-70 percent of the total
movement from South America to the U.S., and are expanding their own
role in sale and distribution in the U.S. Traffickers continued a trend
noted in 1994 of using cargo jets to ferry multi-ton loads of cocaine
from South America into Mexico. Drug traffickers used their vast wealth
to corrupt police and judicial officials as well as project their
influence into the political sector, as recent Mexican investigations
have revealed. Mexico's banking and financial sector lacks adequate
controls on money laundering and has become one of the most important
money laundering centers in the Western Hemisphere. During 1995, the
first year of the administration of President Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de
Leon, the Government of Mexico (GOM) took some steps to enhance
bilateral cooperation and to root out official corruption, but endemic
corruption continued to undermine both policy initiatives and law
enforcement operations.
Drug seizures lagged for much of the year, although several surge
operations in late 1995 brought the total up to 1994 levels (but still
considerably down from the record levels of 1992-3). The illicit crop
eradication campaign improved, resulting in measurable increases over
1994. Drug-related arrests declined, but there were many significant
arrests, including 11 key members of the Gulf Cartel; this effort
culminated in the arrest of its leader, Juan Garcia Abrego, in January
1996. Much of the Zedillo Administration's anti-crime efforts in 1995
were devoted to reorganizing the Attorney General's Office (PGR),
implementing sweeping reforms to the judicial system, and preparing
draft legislation to reform the criminal code, including initiatives to
strengthen money laundering control and combat organized crime. While
this draft legislation was submitted in late 1995, the Mexican Congress
will not resume debate upon it until the spring session in 1996. The
PGR, which leads Mexico's anti-drug campaign, was also deeply involved
in investigations into the assassinations of a leading presidential
contender and a senior official in the ruling political party and
related allegations of official corruption. Ongoing investigations led
to the arrest of Raul Salinas, brother of former President Carlos
Salinas and a senior official in the Salinas Administration.
There was extensive law enforcement cooperation between Mexican and US
law enforcement agencies during 1995. The US and Mexican Attorneys
General established a Senior Law Enforcement Plenary group which met
four times during 1995, to oversee law enforcement cooperation and
mutual legal assistance. The US provided training and technical advice
to personnel of the PGR, the National Institute to Combat Drugs (INCD),
and the Mexican armed forces. Secretary of Defense Perry's visit to
Mexico in November resulted in a series of bilateral discussions on
military cooperation and support in such areas as counternarcotics and
support to civilian law enforcement authorities.
Despite cooperation and some positive results in drug enforcement,
Mexico faces serious problems. The most daunting is narcotics-related
corruption, which is endemic. A GOM review revealed, for example, that
Mexican Federal Judicial police personnel in Baja California were
involved a multi-ton cocaine shipment aboard a cargo jet in November.
Police and military personnel are further hampered by continued lack of
appropriate legal tools or authority to combat modern organized crime
and chronic shortages of resources and equipment. The Mexican Congress
began its review of a draft legislative package on organized crime
submitted by Attorney General Lozano in late 1995, but will not be acted
upon until it reconvenes in March 1996. Passage of this legislation
would enhance the GOM's legal capabilities but resource restraints and
corruption are likely to continue to limit operational effectiveness.
II. Status of Country
The porous 2000-mile U.S./Mexican border and daunting volume of
legitimate cross-border traffic provides near-limitless opportunities
for smuggling activities and escape for fugitives. Most Mexican drug
trafficking organizations are involved in trafficking of more than one
illicit substance and other illegal activities. These groups facilitate
the movement of hundreds of metric tons of cocaine from South America,
50-70 percent of the total movement from South America to the U.S., and
are expanding their own role in sale and distribution in the U.S. While
most of the marijuana consumed in the US is produced domestically,
Mexico is the primary producer of foreign-grown, marijuana up to 80
percent of what is imported. Approximately 18,650 hectares of cannabis
were cultivated in Mexico in 1995, which could have produced over 5,000
mt of marijuana. Mexican traffickers also produce approximately 20-30
percent of the heroin consumed in the US; they cultivated approximately
13,500 hectares of opium poppy in 1995. The USG and GOM cooperate
actively in interdicting cocaine shipments from South America.
Mexico produces or imports many of the precursor and essential chemicals
used in illicit drug production. Most of the imported chemicals, such
as ephedrine which is used to manufacture methamphetamine, come from
Europe. Mexican trafficking organizations now dominate the manufacture,
sale and distribution of methamphetamine in the United States.
Methamphetamine abuse is increasing rapidly in the U.S. Mexico is also
an important source of designer drugs and illicit steroids. Drug abuse
in Mexico remains low; alcohol, marijuana, inhalants and abuse of legal
pharmaceuticals present the most serious problems. Drug use surveys
conducted over the past several years with USG support revealed, a
noticeable increase in illicit drug abuse in Mexico along the U.S.
border and in large metropolitan and tourist areas.
Mexico has become one of the most important money laundering centers in
the Western Hemisphere. It is also the most important transit point for
bulk money shipments of U.S. drug proceeds of Mexican and other South
American drug traffickers being moved south. The Mexican financial
system remains highly vulnerable to drug-related financial transactions.
Foreign and domestic currency movements are unmonitored. Any amount of
deposited currency can be transferred by wire between domestic banks or
between foreign and domestic institutions. There are no mandatory
reporting requirements relating to cash deposited in banks or wire
transfers. In 1994, the GOM imposed a requirement that individuals
entering the country declare currency or financial instruments worth
10,000 dollars or more, but not for those leaving the country. The U.S.
is not aware of the results in application of this requirement.
A severe, ongoing economic crisis following the peso devaluation in
December 1994 had a serious effect on the ability of the GOM to allocate
sufficient resources to many of its antidrug programs.
III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1995
Policy Initiatives. The GOM views drug trafficking as serious threat
to national security as well as the health of its people. President
Zedillo has publicly declared drug trafficking "Mexico's number one
security threat." The GOM related in October, its "National Program for
Drug Control 1995-2000". In addition to interdiction, eradication,
demand reduction, and international cooperation, the strategy seeks to
improve the GOM's ability to address money laundering and chemical
diversion, improve aerial surveillance, professionalize and modernize
law enforcement, enhance intelligence capabilities, and eliminate
official corruption.
Mexican authorities made some progress in fighting drug-related official
corruption in 1995. Attorney General Lozano said in August that Mexico
is committed to terminating the power of drug lords and the corrupt
police who help them to undermine social stability. In October the PGR
released the results of probes into illicit police activities as part of
an initiative to clean up and professionalize the public security
institutions. Due to corruption in the ranks, Lozano ordered a clean
sweep of the 60 Federal Judicial Police (MFJP) in the state of Chihuahua
in November and its replacement by a contingent of Mexican Army officers
on detail to the PGR. While the first phase of the PGR restructuring
was completed at mid-year, AG Lozano stressed that addressing the deep-
rooted problems of corruption, would take all six years of the Zedillo
term.
Seeking to broaden the GOM's front against narcotraffickers, President
Zedillo formally raised the profile of the Mexican military in
counternarcotics activities during the summer of 1995. The military's
previous counternarcotics mission had been limited to illicit drug
crops, surveillance and destruction of clandestine landing strips, and
responding to reports of aircraft landing and narcotics air drops.
Zedillo enhanced the military's involvement in interdiction. A pilot
program in the state of Chihuahua, save the Army oversight
responsibilities in drug operations carried out with civilian law
enforcement authorities.
Defense Minister Cervantes has taken a strong stance against corruption,
especially with units conducting drug control missions, regularly
rotating officers of units stationed along the border to inhibit the
formation of relationships with smugglers. The U.S. and Mexican
militaries initiated a series of technical discussions and exchanges in
1995 to improve bilateral cooperation in areas such as support to
civilian counter-drug law enforcement.
A strong bilateral relationship with the United States is the
cornerstone of President Zedillo's foreign policy. He has also
reaffirmed the GOM's commitment to combatting drug trafficking and
judicial reform. In the larger national context, President Zedillo is
attempting to establish a greater degree of separation of powers between
executive, legislative and judicial branches, to rationalize Mexico's
duplicative systems of public security, and to eliminate corruption from
the law enforcement and justice sectors and make them more accountable
to the public. President Zedillo's first State of the Nation address
September 1 stressed the rule of law, fighting narcotrafficking, and
legislative initiatives. Cooperation in combatting international drug
trafficking was one of the principal issues discussed by President
Clinton and President Zedillo and other high-ranking officials during
Zedillo's state visit to the U.S. in October.
The Zedillo Administration submitted several important legislative
reform packages relating to combatting narcotrafficking and related
crimes to the Mexican Congress during 1995, including:
- Money Laundering: In November, the Mexican Congress passed a series
of changes to the fiscal codes, which established regulations for
financial institutions aimed at combatting money laundering.
- Public Security: The Congress approved in December a Public Security
law which provides for coordination of the national system of public
security and professionalization of varied police entities.
- Organized Crime: The PGR submitted a criminal code reform package
aimed at overcoming legal obstacles to attacking sophisticated criminal
organizations, including provisions for use of modern investigative
techniques such as electronic surveillance. The package was
controversial and has been held over for further debate when the Mexican
Congress reconvenes in March 1996.
The PGR conducted a series of seminars in Mexico City and six regional
cities in August to educate legislators on the intricacies of money
laundering and how to combat it. The Autonomous Technological Institute
of Mexico (ITAM) and the USG co-sponsored a seminar on criminal
conspiracy case studies in November to promote public debate on pending
legislation by bringing together Mexican legislators with U.S., German,
and Italian experts on anti-conspiracy laws. Late in 1995 the Mexican
Chamber of Deputies analyzed the possibility of offering plea bargains
to low-ranking narcotics suspects whose information might lead to the
arrest of major drug traffickers, reducing the sentences of traffickers
surrendering voluntarily, and rewarding citizens who contributed
valuable information in fighting organized crime.
Accomplishments. Mexican authorities seized 22.2 mt of cocaine during
1995, on par with 1994 seizures, while marijuana seizures increased to
780 mt. The GOM seized 223 kgs of opium gum and 203 kgs of heroin. The
expansion of the federal highway checkpoint program around the country
helped to increase drug seizure results. GOM personnel also located and
destroyed nine clandestine drug laboratories (7 methamphetamine, 1
cocaine and 1 MDMA/Ecstasy). The GOM reported eradicating 21,573
hectares of marijuana (252,622 plants) and eradicating 15,389 hectares
of opium poppy (191,263 plants), more than 40 percent over 1994 rates.
USG analysts examining the impact of this eradication effort, or
"effective eradication" rate, determined that the GOM effort effectively
eradicated 8,450 hectares of opium poppy and 11,750 hectares of
marijuana in 1995, respective increases of 27 percent for marijuana and
22 percent for opium poppy (see chart). Aerial eradication operations
by the PGR consumed a significant claim on PGR resources. In addition,
manual eradication continued as the single biggest claim on Mexican army
resources.
Mexico's air interdiction program, Operation "Halcon" (falcon), known in
the U.S. as the Northern Border Response Force (NBRF), continued to
build on strong U.S./Mexican cooperation in its operations against
general aviation aircraft used by traffickers. The program also
continued to expand its capabilities to move against overland and
maritime trafficking as well. NBRF/Halcon operations resulted in the
seizure of 18.5 mt of cocaine, as well as a 13.5 mt maritime seizure of
Asian hashish, the largest ever in Latin America. They also resulted in
the seizure of 11 aircraft, 13 vessels, and the arrest of 886 suspected
traffickers.
Among the most significant traffickers arrested by GOM authorities in
1995 were: Hector Luis Palma Salazar, aka "El Guero," one of the most
wanted criminals in Mexico and an important member of the Sinaloa Cartel
headed by Amado Carrillo Fuentes; Jose Adolfo de la Garza-Robles (aka
"El Borrado") believed by U.S. officials to be the principal contact
between the Gulf Cartel and Colombian narcotraffickers; and Jose Luis
Sosa Mayorga, aka "El Cabezon," a high-ranking Gulf Cartel member
suspected of being the principal coordinator for narcotics flights
coming into Mexico from Colombia and Guatemala. Humberto Garcia Abrego,
considered to be the brains of the Gulf Cartel headed by his brother
Juan Garcia Abrego, received a five-year and two-month prison sentence
for money laundering. Joaquin Guzman Loera, aka "El Chapo," the target
of the May 1993 attack at the Guadalajara airport by the Arellano Felix
drug trafficking organization that killed Cardinal Posadas, was
sentenced to 15 years in prison for charges stemming from June 1993 when
he was apprehended in possession of cocaine in Guatemala and turned over
to Mexico. The GOM confiscated suspected trafficker assets and froze
local and regional bank accounts in order to further drug-related
criminal investigations.
The PGR/DEA bilateral working group on precursor chemicals carried out
investigations and seizures during 1995 which documented the large scale
diversion of ephedrine in Mexico by polydrug cartels. Mexican drug
cartels find the ephedrine/methamphetamine business attractive because
the profit margins exceed those of cocaine and they are not dependent on
Colombian or other trafficking groups for their supply. Although the
GOM proposed legislation in 1993 based on the CICAD model regulations on
precursor chemicals, the Mexican Congress adopted only minor changes in
the general health law, which still lacks sufficient penalties to be an
effective control on precursor chemicals.
Mexico initiated and coordinated two international counternarcotics
surge operations in 1995. Operation "Triangle," brought Mexico,
Guatemala and Belize together in a tri-border effort in June. Together,
these governments seized over 1.5 mt of cocaine and set the stage for
the follow-on Operation "Unidos." "Unidos" brought the entire
Mexico/Central American region together, including police and military
forces, for a ten-day operation in November which resulted in seizure
of almost 5 mt of cocaine. These types of regional operations are
unprecedented in Mexico's counterdrug efforts, especially in terms of
the massive logistics and international cooperation required to
implement them. One of the most important drug seizures by the Mexican
Navy took place in August when 1,125 kg of cocaine was confiscated as a
result of a firefight with narcotraffickers trying to cross the
Usumacinta river from Guatemala into Mexico.
In May, following a six-month PGR investigation into money laundering
activities, authorities arrested three individuals, presumed to be
members of the Cali Cartel, at the Mexico City airport carrying 1.529
million dollars.
In May 1995, Mexican authorities arrested Raul Salinas, brother of
former Mexican President Carlos Salinas and a senior official in his
administration. He was arrested on charges of involvement in the murder
of a senior ruling party official and graft. In an important
development in November, Swiss authorities arrested Raul Salinas's wife
when she attempted to withdraw funds from an account opened under an
alias. Since then, Swiss officials have provided many additional leads
to Attorney General Lozano's investigations. GOM investigations of Raul
Salinas and former Deputy Attorney General Mario Ruiz Massieu, brother
of the slain political official, are likely to lead to dramatic
revelations about official corruption.
Cultivation and Production. Mexico is a leading supplier of marijuana
and a significant supplier of heroin to the United States. The highest
percentage of illegal drug cultivation was in the states of Sinaloa,
Michoacan, Durango, Chihuahua, and Guerrero. The GOM does not prepare
nation-wide crop estimates, but the Secretariat of National Defense uses
imagery from aerial survey flights conducted by the Air Force to plan
manual eradication operations by the Army. Mexico pursued UN Convention
objectives aimed at reducing and eliminating illegal drug cultivations.
Agreements and Treaties. Mexico has bilateral narcotics accords with 21
countries and is a party to the 1988 UN Convention, the 1961 UN Single
Convention on Narcotic Drugs and its 1972 Protocol, and the 1971 UN
Convention on Psychotropic Substances. Mexican and Guatemalan
representatives met in August to review their narcotics accord and
exchange information on how the two countries could improve the fight
against drugs. Mexico has signed several other international anti-drug
agreements, such as the Declaration and Program of Action of Ixtapa
(1990), which commits signatories to enact money laundering and chemical
control legislation.
The United States and Mexico are parties to numerous treaties and
agreements relating to cooperation in law enforcement. The Financial
Information Exchange Agreement (FIEA), which went into effect in
February 1995, provides for sharing of information on currency
transactions through financial institutions. The two governments also
signed an Asset Sharing Agreement. The Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty
(MLAT) facilitates the exchange of evidence in connection with criminal
matters; it functioned satisfactorily during 1995. The U.S./Mexico
extradition treaty, which entered into force in 1978, provides the basis
for cooperation on the return of fugitives. Although both countries are
improving the mechanics of this system, extradition proceedings in
Mexico are generally slow Mexican law bars the extradition of Mexican
nationals except in exceptional circumstances. Mexico extradited four
U.S. fugitives in 1995. The USG currently has several requests for the
extradition of suspected drug traffickers. But extradition and/or
domestic prosecution for narcotics offense is made extremely difficult
(or impossible) because Mexico does not accept much of the evidence
gathered against the defendants by USG authorities. At USG request,
Mexico continued to arrest and deport a few undesirable aliens (U.S.
citizens) to the United States in 1995, who otherwise would have been
subject to lengthier, costlier extradition procedures.
Drug Flow/Transit. Traffickers continued to react quickly in 1995 to
successful operations targetted at their transportation networks. U.S.
and Mexican officials worked together to thwart the use by traffickers
of jet cargo aircraft to smuggle multi-ton loads of cocaine into Mexico
from Colombia. The smugglers' jet aircraft travel at speeds which
easily outrun the overmatched detection and monitoring aircraft
available to Mexico. They also complicate identification by blending
with commercial cargo and passenger aviation. The payload capacity of
these jet aircraft permit one flight to replace 10-15 general aviation
flights. But traffickers continued to use general aviation flights as
well, as seen by the capture of a Turbo Commander and over 800 kilograms
of cocaine in the state of Jalisco in November. The USG is providing
equipment and instruction to the PGR to enhance its night operation
capabilities.
Demand Reduction Programs. The number of government, voluntary and
community organizations involved in drug prevention, research,
treatment, and education in Mexico increased in 1995, although many were
forced to work with minimal resources. Mexico's drug treatment
authorities are concerned that the depressed economy could lead to
increased drug use. Mexican prevention programs, based on U.N.
Convention demand reduction objectives, focused on educating, training
and mobilizing the community. A program of surprise drug tests was
implemented among the Mexico City auxiliary police in June in response
to a series of accidents in which citizens had been injured by auxiliary
police suspected of being under the influence of drugs. Mexico also
pursued comprehensive drug abuse prevention programs by cooperating with
other hemispheric nations through multilateral organizations.
IV. US Policy Initiatives and Programs
Policy Initiatives. USG narcotics control policy seeks to strengthen
the political commitment and institutional capability of the GOM to
enable it to take effective action against drug production, trafficking,
and related crimes, to work with the GOM to cripple the trafficking
organizations that operate in Mexico by apprehending and prosecuting the
trafficker leadership and disrupting or dismantling their operations, to
develop cooperative initiatives along our common border, to increase the
effectiveness of each nation's counternarcotics programs, and to
strengthen U.S. interdiction efforts on our southwest border to
complement Mexico's efforts.
Bilateral Cooperation. In February, senior US and Mexican law
enforcement and diplomatic officials began an unprecedented series of
law enforcement plenaries. Six such meetings were held through the
year, as well as a host of working group meetings stemming from the
plenaries. Among the topics regularly discussed were counternarcotics
cooperation, extradition, and related fugitive issues, prisoner
transfer, money laundering, arms smuggling, and white collar crime. In
October, U.S. Secretary of Defense Perry proposed the establishment of a
Bilateral Working Group and the Mexican Government agreed. The purpose
of the group is to determine areas for increased cooperation in areas of
mutual interest, such as counternarcotics. In addition, GOM and USG
officials also met often during the year on a formal and informal basis
to discuss how to improve and increase cooperation in various areas of
mutual interest.
In addition to ongoing cooperation on the Halcon/NBRF interdiction
program, the US and Mexico worked together on a broad range of legal and
law enforcement issues. Several major bilateral money laundering
investigations were conducted by the GOM's treasury department
(Hacienda) with USG counterpart agencies. These investigations involved
suspect money laundering transactions totaling hundreds of millions of
dollars.
Based on the Asset Sharing Agreement signed in May, the US transferred
six million dollars in seized trafficker assets to the GOM in October
for its support of a major money laundering investigation in the United
States. President Zedillo earmarked the windfall for strengthening the
continuing fight against drug trafficking and money laundering. During
1995, Mexico participated in three working-level conferences on money
laundering during which a Communique was drafted; the Communique was
issued at the Summit of the Americas ministerial-level money laundering
conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina on December 2.
While the GOM has declined direct US assistance to its counternarcotics
programs since 1993, the current economic crisis in Mexico, compounded
by a perceived worsening of the drug threat to Mexican national
security, led the GOM to accept some equipment and technical support to
enhance programs such as Operation Halcon/NBRF. Remaining US funds from
prior years were spent on enhancements to the PGR aviation maintenance
base at Guadalajara, improvements to communications systems used in the
interdiction program, and to conduct an administration of justice
seminar in Mexico on successful conspiracy laws in three other nations.
The GOM complied with its commitment to bilateral agreements and project
memoranda of understanding covering these areas of bilateral
cooperation. The two governments are also discussing the development of
a pilot program in the area of administration of justice which would
provide training and equipment for judges, prosecutors, and
investigators.
To further strengthen its interdiction and eradication programs, the PGR
leased 12 UH-1H's from the USG in October and extended the lease of 18
others. The PGR sent 29 of its pilots to the U.S. for advanced night-
flight training at Ft. Rucker, Alabama to enhance the NBRF's ability to
respond to nighttime trafficking. PGR UH-1H mechanics received training
at the Interamerican Air Forces Academy, Lackland AFB, Texas. In
November the PGR accepted a USG aviation training proposal for 1996 that
will help prepare additional air crews and mechanics needed to operate
and maintain the 12 UH-1H helicopters leased to the GOM in 1995.
The USG provided law enforcement training programs for GOM officials
that focused on air, land, and sea interdiction, money laundering and
precursor chemical investigative techniques, and customs procedures.
Mexico hosted narcotics-related working visits from the U.S. Attorney
General and Secretary of Defense and other high-ranking US officials in
1995.
The Road Ahead. While important steps were taken in Mexico during 1995
to counter the effect of drugs moving from and through Mexico into the
United States, these efforts did not result in the level of disruption
or deterrence desired by either government. The Mexican drug cartels
are growing in wealth, sophistication, and the ability to project
operations internationally. Despite improvements in eradication,
illicit cultivation of opium poppy and marijuana continue to provide a
significant source of raw material for the US drug market. The Mexican
financial system facilitates money laundering and GOM officials lack the
training and legal framework to effectively curb the diversion of
chemicals. Despite determination at senior levels in the GOM to stop
it, official corruption remains deeply entrenched and resistant, and
comprises the major impediment to a successful counternarcotics program.
The USG will continue to pursue cooperative investigations and
information sharing, and it will seek to provide technical and material
assistance to the GOM to strengthen its counternarcotics infrastructure,
its institutions, its domestic interdiction and eradication capabilities
and its demand reduction programs. The USG will look to Mexico for even
greater political commitment and greater openness to effective bilateral
and multilateral cooperation and will expect to see greater progress,
principally against major drug trafficking organizations and in
development of effective national counternarcotics institutions. In its
first year, the Zedillo Administration proposed a number of worthwhile
initiatives that would contribute towards an effective anti-drug program
and a productive bilateral partnership. It remains to be seen if
Mexican governmental institutions can muster the capacity and will to
carry through fully on these initiatives. The Garcia Abrego arrest and
expulsion was an encouraging beginning to 1996.
[Editor's Note: EXCEL file; see Charts and Graphs Directory]
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