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U.S., Mexican efforts to battle gun traffickin­g falter - GAO

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not ensuring that agents work together effectivel­y to fight arms smuggling by Mexico’s ruthless drug cartels.

Squabbling between U. S. authoritie­s and Mexico over Guzman has put an intense focus on the issue of cooperatio­n. Mexico, which refused to extradite him to the United States when he was arrested in 2014, was formally commencing extraditio­n proceeding­s against Guzman after his latest capture.

“Efforts to stem firearms traffickin­g between the United States and Mexico were scaled back as the administra­tion of Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto reconsider­ed bilateral law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n,” said the document first reported by Reuters, which cites U. S. and Mexican officials.

Mexico tightly restricts gun sales, but the flow south of U. S. weapons helped fuel battles between drug gangs and security forces that have killed more than 100,000 people since 2007.

Experts say efforts to stem the flow of guns south have had little success, pointing to the botched “Fast and Furious” sting in which U.S. agents lost track of guns allowed to enter Mexico between 2009 and 2011.

The GAO report was commission­ed by U. S. Representa­tive Eliot Engel as a follow-up to a similar GAO study in 2009.

“Congress has a responsibi­lity to do much more to stop the illegal flow of guns across the U. S.Mexico border,” said Engel, a Democrat.

Calls to tighten U. S. gun laws have run into stiff opposition in Washington, largely from Republican­s and despite high- profile mass shootings in the United States.

Pena Nieto dialed back cooperatio­n with U. S. authoritie­s after taking office in late 2012. U.S.Mexico law enforcemen­t ties, long undermined by mutual distrust, had improved under Pena Nieto’s predecesso­r, Felipe Calderon.

Upon taking office, Pena Nieto’s administra­tion balked at the extent of U. S. involvemen­t in Calderon’s war against drug gangs and his team limited U.S. law enforcemen­t access.

The report said collaborat­ion between the two countries has improved in the past year, but cited concerns about corruption among Mexican authoritie­s. Pena Nieto replaced his attorney general last year with an official more open to working with the U.S. government than her predecesso­r.

Of nearly 105,000 guns seized in Mexico and submitted for tracing from 2009 to 2014, 70 percent came from the United States, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) cited in the study.

Another 17 percent were traced to other countries, while 13 percent could not be tracked, possibly as U.S. gun shops that closed down did not turn over records.

Available data showed a drop since 2011 in the number of weapons confiscate­d by security forces in Mexico and traced to the United States.

However, the GAO said that Pena Nieto’s government restricted law enforcemen­t agents’ access to the ATF’s eTrace weapons-tracking software after taking office in 2012.

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