El Dorado News-Times

Mexico seeks revamp of U.S. deal

Foreign minister declares $3B security aid initiative dead

- MARY BETH SHERIDAN AND KEVIN SIEFF

MEXICO CITY — Frustrated by raging violence, the Mexican government is seeking to overhaul the Merida Initiative, a $3 billion U.S. aid program that’s been the centerpiec­e of security cooperatio­n between the two nations for more than a decade yet has failed to reduce bloodshed.

Mexican officials say they have been meeting with Biden administra­tion officials since late spring to refocus their cooperatio­n against drug cartels and other criminal groups, amid growing concerns that such gangs are expanding their control over Mexican territory.

“The Merida Initiative is dead. It doesn’t work, OK?” Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard told The Washington Post in the government’s first detailed comments on the discussion­s. “We are now in another era.”

Launched during the presidency of George W. Bush, the Merida Initiative initially provided hundreds of millions of dollars for aircraft, helicopter­s and other hardware for Mexico’s security forces. In recent years, the funding shifted to technical aid and training to strengthen Mexico’s police and justice system.

The plan represente­d a historic departure for Mexico, which had long been wary of allowing the United States to get too involved in its affairs.

But despite the billions of dollars in aid, there has been a “huge, huge increase in violence,” Ebrard noted. Homicides in Mexico have quadrupled since the initiative was announced in 2007. Drug overdose deaths in the United States, meanwhile, soared to a record 93,331 last year, fueled by the rising use of fentanyl, much of it smuggled across the southwest border.

“We haven’t reduced either traffickin­g or drug abuse,” Ebrard said. “So we have to do something else.”

He said Mexico’s priorities include a greater focus on reducing homicides rather than capturing cartel kingpins; stepped-up efforts to seize chemicals used to make fentanyl and other drugs; and slashing the number of U.S. guns trafficked over the border.

Mexican officials say they didn’t attempt to renegotiat­e Merida with the Trump administra­tion because the sides had clear disagreeme­nts over security strategy. The divergence became especially obvious in 2019, they say, when then-President Donald Trump offered to send troops to Mexico to “wage WAR” on drug cartels after the massacre of nine people with dual U.S.-Mexican nationalit­y.

The bilateral relationsh­ip under Trump was focused largely on illegal migration. The Biden administra­tion is eager to “engender more robust cooperatio­n” on security, said a senior State Department official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss diplomacy.

U.S. authoritie­s have proposed a Cabinet-level meeting with their Mexican counterpar­ts this fall to discuss a revamped initiative. “We do want to see this sooner rather than later,” the official said.

The talks come amid heightened tensions between the neighbors.

Mexico’s Congress passed a law in December that curbed the ability of U.S. law enforcemen­t agents to work in the country. That was in retaliatio­n for the arrest in Los Angeles of a former Mexican defense minister, Salvador Cienfuegos, on drug-traffickin­g charges. The Justice Department subsequent­ly dropped that case amid an outcry in Mexico and questions about the strength of the evidence.

Meanwhile, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has altered Mexico’s security strategy, scrambling bilateral cooperatio­n.

He’s created a military-dominated national guard to replace the corruption-riddled federal police, and cut funds to state and local police. The U.S. government had poured millions of dollars into improving civilian law enforcemen­t and the justice system.

“The two agendas don’t match up,” said Shannon O’Neil, a Latin America analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations. “The U.S. agenda is more about community policing, profession­alization, areas of the security process

from police to courts to prison. That really isn’t what the [Obrador] administra­tion focuses on.”

The organized-crime threat in Mexico has changed considerab­ly since the Merida Initiative was launched.

Mexican forces, aided by U.S. intelligen­ce, have captured or killed dozens of drug kingpins. But instead of collapsing, the cartels have splintered into scores of groups that have diversifie­d

into oil theft, extortion, migrant-smuggling and sales of methamphet­amine to Mexican addicts.

Increasing­ly they have sought to control territory. Gen. Glen VanHerck, head of U.S. Northern Command, said in March that transnatio­nal crime groups operate in “ungoverned areas — 30 percent

to 35 percent of Mexico.”

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