Texarkana Gazette

The U.S. and Mexican government­s are sparring over immigratio­n and trade, but the two countries are joining forces on the high seas like never before to go after drug smugglers.

- By Julie Watson

SAN DIEGO—The U.S. and Mexican government­s are sparring over immigratio­n and trade, but the two countries are joining forces on the high seas like never before to go after drug smugglers.

The United States, Mexico and Colombia will target drug smugglers off South America’s Pacific coast in an operation that is scheduled to begin Sunday and last for the foreseeabl­e future, Coast Guard officials told The Associated Press.

U.S. Coast Guard Adm. Paul F. Zukunft teased the idea during a recent defense conference in San Diego, saying the United States “can’t do it alone.”

“It’s no secret we are besieged with the flow of drugs from Latin America to the United States,” he said.

U.S. and Mexican forces have routinely worked together at sea, but the latest effort “marks a significan­t step in terms of informatio­n sharing, collaborat­ion and cooperatio­n between the United States, Mexico and other partner nations,” according to the Coast Guard.

The Americans and Mexicans will exchange intelligen­ce more freely than in the past, which could mean sharing informatio­n on well-traveled routes for drug smugglers or preferred paths for specific smuggling organizati­ons, Coast Guard spokeswoma­n Alana Miller said.

They will also board the other country’s vessels to view operations and gain expertise, Miller said. In 2015, three members of the Mexican navy boarded a Coast Guard vessel during a port call in Huatulco, Mexico, but this operation calls for more frequent exchanges, and they will be at sea.

The operation will last “for the foreseeabl­e future as long as it’s working for everyone,” Miller said. “It’s sort of open-ended.”

Trafficker­s over the years have increasing­ly turned to the sea to move their illegal goods, traversing an area off South America that is so big, the continenta­l United States could be dropped inside. Smugglers routinely move cocaine out of countries like Colombia to Central America and Mexico via fishing boats, skiffs, commercial cargo ships—even homemade submarines.

The operation comes after five years of record seizures by the Coast Guard. But U.S. officials say because of limited resources, the U.S. military’s smallest service still catches only about 25 percent of illegal shipments in the Pacific.

Even so, the Coast Guard annually seizes three times the amount of cocaine confiscate­d at the U.S.-Mexico border. Yet ocean smuggling has not grabbed lawmakers’ attention like the flow of drugs across the nearly 2,000-mile-long land border, where the Trump administra­tion wants to spend billions to build a continuous wall.

As much as 20 percent of the cocaine moving through South America ends up in the United States, and most of it lands first in Mexico from seafaring smugglers. The hope is boats will be stopped before their shipments are loaded onto Mexican trucks that fan out on various routes bound for the U.S. border, authoritie­s said. Large boats can cart 20 tons of cocaine or more.

Mexico has historical­ly been among the Latin American countries that are most reluctant to join operations with the U.S., which can be traced back to the Mexican-American War that was fought 170 years ago. The United States cannot open military bases in Mexico, and U.S. officials, for instance, cannot venture into Mexican waters without prior permission, even if they are chasing drug vessels.

The Coast Guard now stops its pursuit and alerts Mexican authoritie­s if suspicious boats cross into their territoria­l waters.

It’s unclear whether this new cooperatio­n will affect those restrictio­ns.

Treaties with nations such as Colombia have allowed U.S. authoritie­s more latitude, such as permitting Coast Guard officers to board Colombian-flagged ships. U.S. officials have touted Colombia’s joint anti-drug efforts as a model for the region.

The U.S. and Mexican military relationsh­ip has strengthen­ed since the two nations signed the 2008 Merida Initiative to work together in the drug war. There have been more cross-border trainings, especially with the Mexican Navy, which is considered less corrupt than the Mexican Army and has raised its profile with the captures and killings of drug bosses.

The combined operation was planned in a series of meetings over the past year. The maritime services signed letters of intent to work together to fight organized crime while respecting each country’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l waters.

 ?? AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills ??      An unidentifi­ed U.S. Coast Guardsman communicat­es with the pilot of a helicopter during takeoff and landing exercises March 2, 2017, on the cutter Stratton in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The Coast Guard is teaming up with Mexican and Colombian...
AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills An unidentifi­ed U.S. Coast Guardsman communicat­es with the pilot of a helicopter during takeoff and landing exercises March 2, 2017, on the cutter Stratton in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The Coast Guard is teaming up with Mexican and Colombian...

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