March 23, 2010 6:21 PM

Obama Officials Tie U.S. Drug Habit to War

(AP)  Updated at 4:22 p.m.

A cast of senior U.S. security officials pledged long-term support for Mexico's drug war while acknowledging Tuesday that an insatiable U.S. appetite for illegal narcotics is at the core of the problem.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who led the U.S. delegation, told the meeting that the drug cartels responsible for increasing violence in the border region are fighting not just Mexican military and law enforcement forces but also the United States.

"There is no question that they are fighting against both of our governments," she said, according to a copy of her closed-door remarks. "Tragically, that fact was underscored on March 13th," with the murders of two Americans and a Mexican affiliated with the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez, Clinton said.

Clinton pledged U.S. efforts with Mexico and at home to reduce demand for drugs in the United States and the flow of guns and drug proceeds to Mexico.

U.S. officials see a strategic problem with their neighbor's surging violence and unstable judicial and law enforcement systems. Mexican officials blame that instability on the insatiable U.S. demand for lucrative and illegal narcotics.

The U.S. has sent helicopters, x-ray vans and sniffer dogs to help Mexico tackle drug cartels, but Mexican leaders attending the one-day session with the visiting U.S. officials say that to really help, the Americans must tackle their problem of drug consumption.

Both President Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderon have repeatedly stressed that theirs is a "cooperative effort" to disrupt Mexico's powerful drug cartels, whose power struggles with each other and authorities have led to the killings of 17,900 people since Calderon took office in late 2006.

Clinton was scheduled to meet separately with Calderon before returning to Washington.

Attending with Clinton were Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Joint Chiefs chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair and John Brennan, Mr. Obama's counterterrorism and homeland security adviser. Senior officials from the departments of Justice and Treasury also participated, along with officials from the Drug Enforcement Agency and the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

The Mexican delegation was led by Foreign Secretary Patricia Espinosa.

Napolitano said the U.S. shares blame for the enormity of the drug violence problem.

"We need to keep focusing on that drug demand reduction issue," she told reporters aboard the U.S. government jet that ferried her, Clinton and other senior officials from Washington.

In the Ciudad Juarez attacks, an American who worked at the consulate and her American husband, as well as a Mexican national employee of the consulate, were gunned down in separate vehicles after leaving a children's party. U.S. officials say it appears unlikely that the victims were targeted as U.S. diplomats, but the circumstances of the shootings are still under investigation.

Napolitano said Calderon made the right decision to use military force against the drug organizations, but in the U.S. view it will take a broader effort, to include more civilian law enforcement agencies and deeper U.S. assistance, to prevail in the long run.

As a reminder of the scope of the problem of drug-related violence, Mexican authorities arranged outside Tuesday's meeting room a table full of weapons that had been smuggled through the U.S. and confiscated from drug cartels in Mexico. They included dozens of pistols and automatic rifles, including gold-plated AK-47s.

To improve cooperation and coordination between Washington and Mexico City, the Bush administration in 2008 promised $1.3 billion in aid under the Merida Initiative. But with just $128 million delivered so far, Tuesday's meeting was designed to discuss ways to refocus some of that spending in more effective ways.

"This new agenda expands our focus beyond disrupting drug trafficking organizations - which will remain a core element of our cooperation," Clinton told the group.

The administration's 2011 budget request includes about $330 million for Merida projects.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has 10 border enforcement teams along the southwest frontier working with U.S. and Mexican law enforcement to slow the smuggling of firearms, ammunition and explosives into Mexico. Napolitano said that effort will be reinforced as the Mexican government develops its own customs and border patrol services to perform more sophisticated checking of vehicle movements into Mexico.

Tuesday's meetings were focusing on strategies for breaking the power of the drug trafficking organizations, creating a more secure and flexible border, strengthening communities in the border region and building more effective law enforcement institutions.

The sessions in Mexico City were planned months ago.

"The tragic events in Juarez are just a reminder of the challenges that both countries face," U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Arturo Valenzuela said during a press briefing in advance of the talks.

He said that while the situation in Juarez - the murder capital of Mexico with 2,600 cartel-related killings last year - is very serious, "Juarez is not the only place where there is a serious problem. There's a problem throughout the northern part of Mexico and through the border areas."

Monday afternoon, in advance of the talks, Mr. Obama spoke with Calderon, reiterating his pledge to work with Mexico against narcotraffickers, according to at White House statement.

One item not up for discussion, said Mexico's ambassador to the United States, is the sensitive notion of using U.S. law enforcement agents in Mexico.

"There is no intention to authorize U.S. military deployment in Mexico," Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan told reporters Monday, "neither in operational tasks or in intelligence work or intelligence gathering."

Beto O'Rourke, who sits on El Paso's city council, was not optimistic that the talks could reduce the spate of grisly slayings in Juarez, one of its sister cities.

"Secretary Clinton's visit will do nothing to fundamentally change the long-term outlook for our region's peace and prosperity if she does not tackle the politically difficult issues of consumption and prohibition in the U.S.," he said.

David Shirk, director of the University of San Diego's Transborder Institute, said the U.S. needs to fund programs and projects well beyond the equipment and law enforcement training paid for under the Merida Initiative.

"The U.S. aid budget for Mexico is embarrassingly low, particularly compared to other countries in the region," said Shirk. "We have to begin moving more resources toward institution-building and comprehensive development strategies for Mexico."

Observers expect the meetings will produce a new joint approach on tackling organized crime.

"A future strategy will have to look at effective ways to track criminal organizations and their finances, reduce the demand for narcotics and build dialogue with communities that are under stress from the current violence," said Andrew Selee, director of the Woodrow Wilson Center's Mexico Institute.

Following the March 13 attacks that killed the three with ties to the Juarez consulate, U.S. authorities launched an offensive against a border gang suspected in the slayings.

On Monday, El Paso officials announced that "Operation Knock Down" had led to 25 arrests, including 10 confirmed members of the Barrio Azteca gang.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 78 Comments
by tsigili March 24, 2010 10:06 AM EDT
That's so much BS! Mexico's trafficking, is why we HAVE a drug problem.

That's just a lie.....pure and simple. Stop the source, and stop the problem.
Reply to this comment
by inketolstoy March 24, 2010 10:13 AM EDT
Your wrong here, tsigili. Stop consuming, and you won't have a source for long. The blood of Mexican murder victims is on the hands of American drug users. There is no difference in responsibility between a drug user and someone buying a blood diamond. They both are giving money to terrorist organzitions that use that money to kill.
by afmcalax March 24, 2010 9:48 AM EDT
America is such a wonderful neighbor ... we buy their drugs and we arm their thugs. As long as the havoc stayed south of the border we do not really care. Accountability and responsibility are not high on the list of most Americans.
Reply to this comment
by dragon8me March 24, 2010 9:11 AM EDT
Only ending prohibition will have an effect on the violence. Prohibition has and never will work. It's a scam. A big money making scam. The majority of Americans want cannabis legal. We will be voting on this issue, if not directly then on politicians who have the guts to stand up and be counted.
Reply to this comment
by consciousnes March 24, 2010 8:35 AM EDT
The only way to stop the drug wars is to make all the drugs legal and tax the hell out of them to pay for the enforcement and control like we have for booze all these years.
The ATF started out trying to get rid of alcohol, now all they do is make sure the taxes are paid. Sure we have a few deaths from drinking and driving, but we don't have gangs shooting each other over who was going to deliver to whom.
Reply to this comment
by infantryman1968 March 24, 2010 8:20 AM EDT
I Command You To Purchase Obamacare!

Let It Be Written, let It Be Done!

Pharaoh Obama 23 March 2010 AD
Reply to this comment
by prajaowain March 24, 2010 7:27 AM EDT
What rubbish! It is not drugs causing the problem. It is drug prohibition that is causing this mess. One example from history to help support my point is Al Capone during alcohol prohibition.
Reply to this comment
by endurorob_5 March 24, 2010 8:08 AM EDT
Drug prohibition came about because of the problems caused by legal drug use. Read some history.
by dragon8me March 24, 2010 9:14 AM EDT
endurorob_5 there were no problem with cannabis. Read some history. Americans knew what hemp was and would never have allowed it to be prohibited. They knew what cannabis is, it was in most medicines, they never would have banned it. It was because Husrst in his newspapers branded it marajuana, and people thought it was some new dangerous substance that they went along with it. Now they know better and want it legal.
by clydealan2 March 24, 2010 7:27 AM EDT
It has been my long held observation that there is no war on drugs. There is supply and demand. Until we as a nation face up to the this fact a big segment of our population will continue to be eaten alive by addiction. No demand? Problem solved. Our resources, money and creative solutions directed to PREVENTING drug addiction would do little immediately, but it would produce huge benefits to our country in the future.
Reply to this comment
by longtree-2009 March 24, 2010 6:57 AM EDT
americans, those living here in the usa, are probably the best customers of drug cartels since americans are either addicted to drugs in one form or another. sometimes it seems americans are either obese or drug addicts, one or the other or both. if all drug cartels united it would surely doom the usa, not that the usa isn't already doomed by its own citizens.
Reply to this comment
by AttentionDeficit March 24, 2010 7:42 AM EDT
it's not the citizens that are dooming it, it is the politicians
by endurorob_5 March 24, 2010 8:09 AM EDT
And what country do you call home.
by ivehadit9 March 24, 2010 3:29 AM EDT
"A cast of senior U.S. security officials pledged long-term support for Mexico's drug war while acknowledging Tuesday that an insatiable U.S. appetite for illegal narcotics is at the core of the problem."

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Then, and I kept saying this over and over again, now is the time to put up a 50-foot electrified wall along the border and have the military patrol it, end of problem!!!

When the Berlin Wall was up, were there lots of gun and drug smuggling between East and West Germany??? NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
Reply to this comment
by gwjackie March 24, 2010 2:10 AM EDT
Well lets all get us a piece pipe and pass it around like the Indians use to do surely you don't think there were smoking corn silk.
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