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Counternarcotics Efforts, but the Flow of Illicit Drugs into the United 
States Remains High' which was released on October 25, 2007. 

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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Committee on Foreign 
Affairs House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT: 

Thursday, October 25, 2007: 

Drug Control: 

U.S. Assistance Has Helped Mexican Counternarcotics Efforts, but the 
Flow of Illicit Drugs Into the United States Remains High: 

Statement of Jess T. Ford, Director International Affairs and Trade: 

GAO-08-215T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-08-215T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on the 
Western Hemisphere, Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of 
Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The overall goal of the U.S. National Drug Control Strategy, which is 
prepared by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy 
(ONDCP), is to reduce illicit drug use in the United States. One of the 
strategy’s priorities is to disrupt the illicit drug marketplace. To 
this end, since fiscal year 2000, the United States has provided about 
$397 million to support Mexican counternarcotics efforts. According to 
the Department of State (State), much of the illicit drugs consumed in 
the United States flows through or is produced in Mexico. GAO examined 
(1) trends in Mexican drug production and trafficking since calendar 
year 2000 and (2) U.S. counternarcotics support for Mexico since fiscal 
year 2000. This testimony is based on a recently issued report (GAO-07-
1018) that addresses these issues. 

What GAO Found: 

According to the U.S. interagency counternarcotics community, hundreds 
of tons of illicit drugs flow from Mexico into the United States each 
year, and seizures in Mexico and along the U.S. border have been 
relatively small in recent years. The following illustrates some trends 
since 2000: 

* The estimated amount of cocaine arriving in Mexico for transshipment 
to the United States averaged about 290 metric tons per year. Reported 
seizures averaged about 36 metric tons a year. 

* The estimated amount of export quality heroin and marijuana produced 
in Mexico averaged almost 19 metric tons and 9,400 metric tons per 
year, respectively. Reported heroin seizures averaged less than 1 
metric ton and reported marijuana seizures averaged about 2,900 metric 
tons a year. 

* Although an estimate of the amount of methamphetamine manufactured in 
Mexico is not prepared, reported seizures along the U.S. border rose 
from about 500 kilograms in 2000 to highs of about 2,800 kilograms in 
2005 and about 2,700 kilograms in 2006. According to U.S. officials, 
this more than fivefold increase indicated a dramatic rise in supply. 

In addition, according to State, corruption persists within the Mexican 
government and challenges Mexico’s efforts to curb drug production and 
trafficking. Moreover, Mexican drug trafficking organizations operate 
with relative impunity along the U.S. border and in other parts of 
Mexico, and have expanded their illicit business to almost every region 
of the United States. 

U.S. assistance since fiscal year 2000 has helped Mexico strengthen its 
capacity to combat illicit drug production and trafficking. Among other 
things, extraditions of criminals to the United States increased; 
thousands of Mexican law enforcement personnel were trained; and 
controls over chemicals to produce methamphetamine were strengthened. 
Nevertheless, cooperation with Mexico can be improved. The two 
countries do not have an agreement permitting U.S. law enforcement 
officers to board Mexican-flagged vessels suspected of transporting 
illicit drugs on the high seas; an aerial monitoring program along the 
U.S. border was suspended because certain personnel status issues could 
not be agreed on; State-provided Vietnam-era helicopters have proved 
expensive and difficult to maintain and many are not available for 
operations; and a State-supported border surveillance program was cut 
short due to limited funding and changed priorities. 

In 2006, in response to a congressional mandate, ONDCP and other 
agencies involved in U.S. counternarcotics efforts developed a strategy 
to help reduce the illicit drugs entering the United States from 
Mexico. An implementation plan was prepared but is being revised to 
address certain initiatives recently undertaken by Mexico. Based on our 
review of the plan, some proposals require the cooperation of Mexico; 
but, according to ONDCP, they had not been addressed with Mexican 
authorities at the time of our review. 

What GAO Recommends: 

In the recent report, GAO recommended that ONDCP and the U.S. 
counternarcotics community coordinate with Mexico before completing the 
Southwest Border Strategy’s implementation plan to (1) help ensure 
Mexico’s cooperation with any initiatives that require it and (2) 
address the cooperation issues GAO identified. ONDCP concurred with the 
recommendation and has since assured GAO that the interagency community 
is engaged with its Mexican counterparts. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
GAO-08-215T. For more information, contact Jess T. Ford at (202) 512-
4268 or fordj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

October 25, 2007: 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to be here to discuss GAO's recent report on U.S. drug 
control assistance to Mexico since 2000.[Footnote 1] Today, I will 
discuss (1) the illicit drug threat posed by Mexican drug production 
and trafficking to the United States since 2000 and (2) U.S. agencies' 
programs to support Mexico's counternarcotics efforts since fiscal year 
2000. 

The overall goal of the U.S. National Drug Control Strategy is to 
reduce illicit drug use in the United States. One of the strategy's 
priorities is to disrupt the illicit drug marketplace. According to the 
U.S. interagency counternarcotics community,[Footnote 2] most of the 
cocaine destined for the United States comes through Mexico, and Mexico 
is a major supplier of heroin as well as the principal foreign source 
of marijuana and methamphetamine. Over the years, U.S. counternarcotics 
policy has sought to support and strengthen the institutional 
capability of the Mexican government to combat the production and 
trafficking of illicit drugs. Since fiscal year 2000, the United States 
has provided about $397 million to support Mexican counternarcotics 
efforts. In October 2007, the Director of the White House Office of 
National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) released a summary of a Southwest 
Border Strategy aimed at disrupting the flow of illegal drugs into the 
United States, and cited recent cooperation with the government of 
Mexico as leading to a substantial disruption of illegal drug flow into 
the United States. 

My statement today is based on our August 2007 report on U.S. 
counternarcotics assistance to Mexico. Over the course of that work, we 
reviewed and analyzed congressional budget presentations, and other 
reports and related information, and met with officials from the 
Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, Justice, State, and 
Treasury, as well as the U.S. Agency for International Development 
(USAID) and ONDCP. In addition, we traveled to Mexico to meet with U.S. 
embassy officials responsible for implementing U.S. programs and 
activities in Mexico and with government of Mexico officials at the 
federal, state, and local levels. To address trends in the drug threat, 
we reviewed various estimates of illicit drug production and seizures 
and disruptions prepared by the interagency counternarcotics 
community.[Footnote 3] We determined that, despite shortcomings 
outlined in prior work,[Footnote 4] the data were sufficiently reliable 
to provide an overall indication of the illicit drug trade. We 
conducted our work for the Mexico report from May 2006 through July 
2007, and for purposes of this statement, we updated certain data in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

Summary: 

The U.S. interagency counternarcotics community reports that each year 
hundreds of tons of cocaine, heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine 
flow into the United States from Mexico, while seizures in Mexico and 
along the U.S.-Mexico border have been relatively small in recent 
years. The following illustrates some trends since 2000: 

* The interagency counternarcotics community estimated that about two- 
thirds of the cocaine that departed South America toward the United 
States was destined for transshipment through Mexico in 2000; this 
estimate rose to 90 percent in 2006. Accounting for seizures along the 
way, an estimated 220 metric tons of cocaine arrived in Mexico in 2000, 
and between 296 and 458 metric tons arrived in 2006. The estimated 
amount of cocaine arriving in Mexico for transshipment to the United 
States averaged about 290 metric tons per year.[Footnote 5] Reported 
seizures in Mexico and along the U.S.-Mexico border averaged about 36 
metric tons a year--with a low of 28 metric tons in 2003, and a high of 
44 metric tons in 2005. 

* The estimated amount of export quality heroin produced in Mexico 
ranged from a low of 9 metric tons in 2000 to a high of 30 metric tons 
in 2003--averaging almost 19 metric tons a year. Reported seizures in 
Mexico and along the U.S.-Mexico border averaged less than 1 metric ton 
a year, or less than 5 percent of the export quality heroin produced in 
Mexico since 2000. 

* The estimated amount of marijuana produced in Mexico ranged from a 
low of 7,000 metric tons in 2000 to a high of 13,500 metric tons in 
2003--averaging about 9,400 metric tons a year. Reported seizures 
averaged less than 2,900 metric tons, or about 30 percent a year. 

* Reported seizures of methamphetamine produced in Mexico and along the 
U.S.-Mexican border rose from a low of 500 kilograms in 2000 to highs 
of almost 2,900 kilograms in 2005 and about 2,700 kilograms in 2006. 
Although the U.S. interagency counternarcotics community has not 
estimated the amount of methamphetamine manufactured in Mexico, it 
noted that the more than fivefold increase in seizures indicated a 
dramatic rise in supply. 

In addition, although Mexico has undertaken various initiatives to deal 
with corruption, including reorganizing its federal police and 
conducting aggressive investigations, according to State, corruption 
persists within the Mexican government and challenges Mexico's efforts 
to fight organized crime and curb drug trafficking. Moreover, according 
to the U.S. interagency counternarcotics community, Mexican drug 
trafficking organizations (DTO) operate with relative impunity in 
certain regions of Mexico, including areas along the U.S.-Mexican 
border; expanded their illicit drug business to almost every region of 
the United States; and become increasingly sophisticated and violent in 
their activities. 

Although the United States did not accomplish its goal of stemming the 
flow and production of illicit drugs destined for the United States, 
assistance to Mexico since fiscal year 2000 has produced some positive 
results. For instance, 

* The United States and Mexico are collaborating more to extradite drug 
traffickers. In 2006, Mexico extradited 63 criminals to the United 
States and, as of mid-October 2007, has extradited 68, including 
several major drug traffickers. 

* The two countries are also cooperating more to counter money 
laundering, although Justice officials report that Mexico lacks a legal 
framework to allow aggressive seizure of drug traffickers' assets. 

* With U.S. technical support, Mexican states are implementing more 
transparent and open criminal trial systems to strengthen the rule of 
law, and Mexico has strengthened controls over imports and marketing of 
chemicals used in the production of methamphetamine. 

* U.S. infrastructure support and training are strengthening the 
capacity of Mexican law enforcement entities to interdict illicit 
drugs. 

While U.S.-supported programs have strengthened some Mexican 
counternarcotics efforts, cooperation and coordination between the two 
countries can be improved. For example, 

* Although the Mexican Navy has acted on U.S.-provided information 
regarding maritime vessels suspected of carrying illicit drugs, it is 
limited in its ability to act on some suspected vessels because it 
cannot go more than 200 nautical miles from shore without special 
authorization. In many cases, the United States cannot take action 
before evidence is destroyed or the vessel is scuttled because the 
existing requirement that Mexico authorize boarding on a case-by-case 
basis is too time consuming. 

* An aerial surveillance program along the U.S.-Mexico border was 
suspended because the United States and Mexico could not reach 
agreement on certain personnel status issues. In the absence of this 
program, U.S. law enforcement officials have reported indications of 
increased drug trafficking. 

* Vietnam-era helicopters provided to the Mexican Attorney General's 
Office have proved expensive and difficult to maintain.[Footnote 6] 
Furthermore, Defense is phasing out support for this aircraft. As a 
result, the Attorney General's Office will increasingly have difficulty 
transporting law enforcement officers to interdiction sites. 

* A helicopter border surveillance program apparently did not meet the 
needs of the Mexican Attorney General's Office. State halted the 
program after the delivery of 12 out of 28 planned aircraft. 

In March 2006, ONDCP and the interagency counternarcotics community 
developed a Southwest Border Strategy,[Footnote 7] which we reviewed in 
June 2007. In July 2007, we also reviewed a classified implementation 
plan, which was being revised to respond to recent Mexican government 
initiatives. Our review highlighted a number of initiatives requiring 
Mexican government cooperation, but ONDCP told us that the strategy and 
plan had not yet been addressed with Mexican authorities at the time of 
our review. Therefore, we recommended that the Director of ONDCP, as 
the lead agency for U.S. drug policy, and the departments and agencies 
in the U.S. counternarcotics interagency community, coordinate with the 
appropriate Mexican officials before completing the strategy's 
implementation plan to (1) help ensure Mexico's cooperation with any 
efforts that require it and (2) address the cooperation issues we 
identified. ONDCP assures us that these efforts have begun. 

Background: 

According to ONDCP and other officials in the interagency 
counternarcotics community, the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico land border 
presents numerous challenges to preventing illicit drugs from reaching 
the United States. With 43 legitimate crossing points, the rest of the 
border consists of hundreds of miles of open desert, rugged mountains, 
the Rio Grande River, and other physical impediments to surveillance, 
making it easy to smuggle illegal drugs into the United 
States.[Footnote 8] 

Since the 1970s, the United States has collaborated with and provided 
assistance to Mexico for counternarcotics programs and activities. The 
goal over the years has been to disrupt the market for illegal drugs, 
making it more difficult for traffickers to produce and transport 
illicit drugs to the United States. Specifically, the United States has 
provided Mexico with assistance for a range of projects, including 
interdicting cocaine shipments from South America; stemming the 
production and trafficking of opium poppy,[Footnote 9] as well as 
marijuana; and, more recently, controlling precursor chemicals used to 
manufacture methamphetamine. 

In the past, Mexico has chosen to combat drug trafficking with reduced 
assistance from the United States, and Mexican sensitivity about its 
national sovereignty has made it difficult for the two countries to 
coordinate counternarcotics activities. However, beginning in the mid- 
1990s, cooperation began to improve, culminating in 1998 in the signing 
of a Bi-National Drug Control Strategy. Since then, the two countries 
have continued to cooperate through meetings of a U.S.-Mexico Senior 
Law Enforcement Plenary, among other contacts. 

Illicit Drug Production and Trafficking by Mexican Drug Organizations 
Have Continued Virtually Unabated: 

Mexico is the conduit for most of the cocaine reaching the United 
States, the source for much of the heroin consumed in the United 
States, and the largest foreign supplier of marijuana and 
methamphetamine to the U.S. market. According to U.S. and Mexican 
estimates, which vary from year to year, more cocaine flowed toward the 
United States through Mexico during 2006 than in 2000, and more heroin, 
marijuana, and methamphetamine were produced in Mexico during 2005 than 
in 2000. In addition, although reported seizures of these drugs within 
Mexico and along the U.S. southwest border generally increased, 
according to the U.S. interagency counternarcotics community, seizures 
have been a relatively small percentage of the estimated supply. 

As we have reported previously, acknowledged shortcomings in the 
illicit drug production and seizure data collected and reported by 
various U.S. government agencies mean that the data cannot be 
considered precise.[Footnote 10] However, they can provide an overall 
indication of the magnitude and nature of the illicit drug trade. Based 
on the available data, the following describes the trends since 2000 on 
the amount of cocaine arriving in Mexico for transshipment to the 
United States; the amounts of heroin and marijuana produced in Mexico; 
and reported seizures of these illicit drugs and methamphetamine in 
Mexico and along the U.S.-Mexico border. (See app. I for a more 
detailed table of the data.) 

Cocaine: Virtually all the cocaine consumed in the United States is 
produced along the South American Andean ridge--primarily, in Colombia. 
The U.S. interagency counternarcotics community prepares an annual 
assessment (the Interagency Assessment of Cocaine Movement [IACM]) 
that, among other things, estimates the amount of cocaine departing 
South America toward the United States. From 2000 to 2006, the IACM 
reported an increase in the estimated amount of cocaine flowing through 
Mexico to the United States--from 66 percent in 2000 to 77 percent in 
2003 and 90 percent in 2006. 

* Between 2000 and 2002, the cocaine estimated arriving in Mexico rose 
about 23 percent--from 220 to 270 metric tons. In 2003, it declined 
over 60 metric tons, or about 22 percent. For 2004-2006, the IACM did 
not provide "point" estimates for cocaine flow because of certain 
methodological concerns; rather, a range was provided for each year. 
The midpoint of the IACM range of cocaine estimated arriving in Mexico 
during 2006 (377 metric tons) was about 156 metric tons more than the 
estimate for 2000. Using the midpoint of the IACM ranges, the amount of 
cocaine estimated arriving in Mexico during 2000-2006 averaged about 
290 metric tons per year. 

* Despite the apparent increases in cocaine arriving in Mexico, the 
amount of cocaine reported seized in Mexico and along the U.S.-Mexico 
border for 2000-2006 did not increase proportionately, with 43 metric 
tons reported seized in 2000, a low of 28 metric tons seized in 2003, 
and a high of 44 metric tons in 2005. Reported seizures for 2000-2006 
averaged about 36 metric tons a year, or about 13 percent of the 
estimated amount of cocaine arriving in Mexico.[Footnote 11] 

Heroin: During 2000-2005, the estimated amount of heroin produced for 
export in Mexico averaged almost 19 metric tons a year--ranging from a 
low of 9 metric tons in 2000 to a high of 30 metric tons in 2003. 
Although the estimated amount of heroin produced declined in 2004 and 
2005, the 2005 estimate (17 metric tons) was nearly double the 
estimated amount produced in 2000. Reported heroin seizures in Mexico 
and along the U.S.-Mexico border averaged less than 1 metric ton or 
less than 5 percent a year of the estimated export quality heroin 
produced in Mexico since 2000. 

Marijuana: During 2000-2005, the estimated amount of marijuana produced 
in Mexico each year averaged about 9,400 metric tons--ranging from a 
low of 7,000 metric tons in 2000 to a high of 13,500 metric tons in 
2003. Although estimated production declined to 10,100 metric tons in 
2005, this was over 3,000 metric tons more than the estimated 
production in 2000. Reported seizures of marijuana in Mexico and along 
the U.S.-Mexico border ranged from about 2,150 metric tons in 2000 to 
nearly 3,500 in 2003--averaging less than 2,900 metric tons a year, or 
about 30 percent of the annual production estimates. 

Methamphetamine: Neither the United States nor the government of Mexico 
prepares estimates of the amount of methamphetamine produced in Mexico. 
However, U.S. officials told us that the large increases in reported 
methamphetamine seizures from 2000 through 2006 point to significantly 
greater amounts being manufactured. On the basis of the reported data, 
seizures along the U.S.-Mexico border rose more than five times--from 
an estimated 500 kilograms in 2000 to almost 2,900 metric tons in 2004 
and over 2,700 kilograms in 2006. 

Corruption Persists within the Mexican Government: 

In 2001, State reported that pervasive corruption within the government 
of Mexico was the greatest challenge facing Mexico's efforts to curb 
drug trafficking. Since then State has reported on the Mexican 
government's efforts to reduce corruption. Nevertheless, increasing 
illicit drug proceeds from the United States--estimated by the National 
Drug Intelligence Center at between $8 billion and $23 billion in 
2005[Footnote 12]--has afforded Mexican DTOs considerable resources to 
subvert government institutions, particularly at the state and local 
level. U.S. and Mexican government officials and various other 
observers, including academics, investigative journalists, and 
nongovernmental organizations that study drug trafficking trends in 
Mexico, told us that profits of such magnitude enable drug traffickers 
to bribe law enforcement and judicial officials. 

Since 2000, Mexico has undertaken several initiatives to address 
corruption. For instance, in 2001, when Mexican authorities created the 
Federal Investigative Agency (AFI) [Footnote 13] in the Mexican 
Attorney General's Office, they disbanded the Federal Judicial Police, 
which was widely considered corrupt. Mexico also conducted aggressive 
investigations into public corruption, resulting in the arrest and 
prosecution of officials, as well as the dismissal and suspension of 
others. 

Despite these actions, corruption remains a major factor complicating 
efforts to fight organized crime and combat drug trafficking. U.S. and 
some Mexican law enforcement agents told us that in certain parts of 
the country, they do not have vetted counterparts to work with. 
Moreover, AFI represents only about one-third of Mexico's estimated 
24,000 federal law enforcement officials. According to U.S. officials, 
the majority--about 17,000--belong to the Federal Preventive 
Police,[Footnote 14] whose personnel are not subject to the same 
requirements as those of AFI for professional selection, polygraph and 
drug testing, and training. 

Partly to address the problem of corruption, Mexican President Felipe 
Calderón's government has begun to consolidate various federal civilian 
law enforcement entities into one agency and triple the number of 
trained, professional federal law enforcement officers subject to drug, 
polygraph, and other testing.[Footnote 15] This initiative will combine 
AFI and the Federal Preventive Police, along with officers from other 
agencies, into one agency known as the Federal Police Corps, which 
would operate in cities and towns of more than 15,000 people.[Footnote 
16] However, this initiative will not affect the vast majority of 
Mexico's law enforcement officials, most of whom are state and local 
employees and who, according to one source, number approximately 
425,000. 

Mexican DTOs Control Drug Trafficking in Mexico and Have Extended Their 
Reach into the United States: 

According to the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA), four main 
DTOs control the illicit drug production and trafficking in Mexico and 
operate with relative impunity in certain parts of the country: 

* The Federation, which operates from the central Mexican state of 
Sinaloa, is an alliance of drug traffickers that U.S. and Mexican 
officials told us may have the most extensive geographic reach in 
Mexico. 

* The Tijuana Cartel, also known as the Arellano Felix Organization 
after its founder, operates from the border city of Tijuana in the 
Mexican state of Baja California. Its activities center in the 
northwestern part of Mexico, where, according to local investigative 
journalists and U.S. officials, it exerts considerable influence over 
local law enforcement and municipal officials. 

* The Juarez Cartel is based in Ciudad Juarez, in the border state of 
Chihuahua. According to DEA officials, the Juarez Cartel has extensive 
ties to state and local law enforcement officials. 

* The Gulf Cartel operates out of Matamoros on the Gulf of Mexico, in 
the border state of Tamaulipas. According to DEA officials, the Gulf 
Cartel has infiltrated the law enforcement community throughout 
Tamaulipas, including the border city of Nuevo Laredo, which is a 
principal transit point for commercial traffic to the United States. 
The Gulf Cartel has also employed a criminal gang referred to as the 
Zetas, which is primarily composed of rogue former Mexican military 
commandos that are known for their violent methods. 

According to the U.S. officials and the 2007 National Drug Threat 
Assessment, in recent years Mexican DTOs have taken over the 
transportation of cocaine shipments from South America previously 
managed by Colombians and have expanded their presence in drug markets 
throughout the United States, moving into cities east of the 
Mississippi River previously dominated by Colombian and Dominican drug 
traffickers. According to National Drug Intelligence Center officials, 
Mexican DTOs tend to be less structured in the United States than in 
Mexico, but have regional managers throughout the country, relying on 
Mexican gangs to distribute illicit drugs. Further, DTOs are becoming 
more sophisticated and violent. 

* With significant resources at their disposal, Mexican DTOs are 
developing more sophisticated drug trafficking methods and to evade 
U.S. maritime detection and interdiction efforts, such as using 
elaborate networks of go-fast boats and refueling vessels.[Footnote 17] 
According to Justice officials and documents, Mexican drug traffickers 
are also taking advantage of advances in cell phone and satellite 
communications technology, which have allowed them to quickly 
communicate and change routes once they suspect their plans have been 
compromised. In addition, the traffickers have also begun making more 
use of tunnels under the U.S.-Mexico border--another indication of the 
increasing sophistication of DTO operations. From 2000 to 2006, U.S. 
border officials found 45 tunnels--several built primarily for 
narcotics smuggling. According to U.S. officials, tunnels found in the 
last 6 years are longer and deeper than in prior years. 

* Drug-related violence in Mexico has continued to increase in recent 
years. President Calderón highlighted the importance of improving 
public security by punishing crime, and the administration of former 
President Vicente Fox (2000-2006) actively targeted major drug 
kingpins. While this strategy does not appear to have significantly 
reduced drug trafficking in Mexico, it disrupted the cartels' 
organizational structure, presenting opportunities to gain control of 
important transit corridors leading to the United States, such as Nuevo 
Laredo. Such struggles led to increased violence throughout Mexico, 
with drug-related deaths estimated at over 2,000 in 2006. This trend 
has continued in 2007, with drug-related deaths estimated at over 1,100 
as of June 2007. In addition, an increasing number of drug-related 
incidents targeting law enforcement officers and government officials 
have been documented in Mexico. For example, in May 2007, the newly 
appointed head of Mexico's drug intelligence unit in the Attorney 
General's office was shot and killed in a street ambush in Mexico City. 

Journalists have also been targeted as a result of investigative 
articles written about DTO activities. Due to the risks associated with 
reporting on narco-trafficking, Mexico was recently ranked as the 
second most dangerous country in the world for journalists, after Iraq. 

U.S. Assistance Helped Mexico Improve Its Counternarcotics Efforts, but 
Coordination Can Be Improved: 

Table 1 depicts U.S. assistance to support counternarcotics-related 
programs and activities in Mexico during fiscal years 2000 through 
2006. Other U.S. agencies also supported Mexican counternarcotics 
activities, but did not provide funding. 

Table 1: U.S. Agencies' Support for Mexican Counternarcotics 
Activities, Fiscal Years 2000-2006: 

State; 
$168.9. 

Justice; 
140.0. 

Defense[A]; 
57.8. 

USAID; 
29.9. 

Total; 
$396.6. 

Source: GAO analysis of Defense, Justice, State, and USAID data. 

[A] Defense does not track obligations by country; thus these figures 
reflect estimated expenditures in Mexico from fiscal years 2000 to 
2006. 

[End of table] 

State's Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs 
(INL) funds supported the purchase of a wide range of items and 
activities, including scanning machinery for security purposes at ports 
and border crossings; vehicles, computers, software, and other 
equipment used to improve Mexico's law enforcement infrastructure; 
interdiction and eradication initiatives; aircraft and related 
equipment and maintenance; training for Mexican law enforcement and 
judicial officials; and other programs designed to promote U.S. 
counternarcotics goals. DEA's funding primarily supported field offices 
throughout Mexico, from which DEA agents coordinated bilateral 
cooperation with Mexican federal, state, and local law enforcement 
officials, allowing both countries to collect drug intelligence, 
conduct investigations, prosecute drug traffickers, and seize assets. 
Defense supported programs designed to detect, track, and interdict 
aircraft and maritime vessels suspected of transporting illicit drugs-
-primarily cocaine from South America. Last, USAID's funding for Mexico 
promoted reform of Mexico's judicial system at the state level, as well 
as government transparency, which broadly supports U.S. 
counternarcotics objectives. 

According to the U.S. embassy in Mexico, one of its primary goals is to 
help the Mexican government combat transnational crimes, particularly 
drug trafficking. Over the years, U.S. assistance has supported four 
key strategies: (1) to apprehend and extradite drug traffickers, (2) to 
counter money laundering by seizing the assets of DTOs, (3) to 
strengthen the application of the rule of law, and (4) to interdict or 
disrupt the production and trafficking of illicit drugs. Since 2000, 
U.S. assistance has made some progress in each of these areas but has 
not significantly cut into drug trafficking, and Mexico and the United 
States can improve cooperation and coordination in some areas. 

Extraditions of Mexican Drug Traffickers Have Increased: 

In January 2007, the administration of President Calderón extradited 
several high-level drug kingpins, such as Osiel Cardenas, the head of 
the Gulf Cartel, whose extradition long had been sought by U.S. 
authorities. U.S. officials cited Mexico's decision to extradite 
Cardenas and other drug kingpins as a major step forward in cooperation 
between the two countries and expressed optimism about the prospects 
for future extraditions. As shown in table 2, U.S. extradition efforts 
have progressed gradually through 2005, but increased more than 50 
percent in 2006 and to date in 2007. 

Table 2: Number of Individuals Extradited from Mexico to the United 
States, 2000-2007: 

Year: Extraditions; 
2000: 12; 
2001: 17; 
2002: 25; 
2003: 31; 
2004: 34; 
2005: 41; 
2006: 63; 
2007 (through Sept): 68. 

Source: State's International Narcotics Control Strategy Report,, 2000- 
2006, and State, 2007. 

[End of table] 

Efforts to Counter Money Laundering Are Progressing: 

In 2002, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and DEA supported 
Mexican authorities who established a vetted unit within AFI for 
investigating money laundering, consisting of about 40 investigators 
and prosecutors. These AFI officials collaborated with ICE on money 
laundering and other financial crime investigations and developed 
leads. With funding provided by the Narcotics Affairs Section 
(NAS),[Footnote 18] ICE developed several training initiatives for 
Mexican law enforcement personnel targeting bulk cash smuggling via 
commercial flights to other Latin American countries. From 2002 to 
2006, in collaboration with ICE, Mexican Customs and AFI's money 
laundering unit seized close to $56 million in illicit cash, primarily 
at Mexico City's international airport. 

In 2004, the Mexican Congress passed financial reform legislation as 
part of a comprehensive strategy to prevent and combat money laundering 
and terrorist financing. In May of that year, the Financial 
Intelligence Unit under Mexico's Treasury Secretariat brought together 
various functions previously undertaken by different Treasury 
Secretariat divisions with the goal of detecting and preventing money 
laundering and terrorist financing. To support these efforts, NAS 
provided over $876,000 for equipment and to refurbish office space for 
the Financial Intelligence Unit. Since 2004, the Financial Intelligence 
Unit has established closer monitoring of money service businesses and 
financial transactions. According to Financial Intelligence Unit 
officials, this resulted in the seizure of millions of dollars. 

U.S. Treasury officials noted improvements in the level of cooperation 
with Mexican authorities under the Fox administration. For example, 
they highlighted how the Financial Intelligence Unit began issuing 
accusations against individuals named on Treasury's Office of Foreign 
Assets Control's (OFAC) Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked 
Persons list of drug kingpins and suspected money launderers.[Footnote 
19] These accusations were forwarded to the Mexican Attorney General's 
Office for possible legal action. Treasury officials also expressed 
optimism that continued collaboration with Mexican authorities under 
the Calderón administration would lead to more aggressive action on 
asset forfeitures. 

DEA also works closely with AFI to identify the assets of Mexican DTOs. 
In March and April 2007, DEA conducted asset forfeiture and financial 
investigative training to the newly formed Ad Hoc Financial 
Investigative Task Force in Mexico's Attorney General's Office. In 
March 2007, DEA efforts in an investigation of chemical control 
violations resulted in the seizure of $207 million in currency at a 
residence in Mexico City.[Footnote 20] In another investigation, DEA 
assistance led Mexican authorities to seize in excess of $30 million in 
assets from a designated kingpin and his DTO. DEA officials share 
Treasury's optimism that continued collaboration with Mexican 
authorities will lead to significant seizures of drug trafficking 
assets. 

USAID, DEA, INL, and Other U.S. Agencies Support Mexico's Rule-of-Law 
Efforts: 

As part of its rule-of-law portfolio in Mexico, USAID has promoted 
criminal justice reforms at the state level since 2003. The criminal 
procedures system that prevails in Mexico today is based on the 
Napoleonic inquisitorial written model, with judges working 
independently using evidence submitted in writing by the prosecution 
and defense to arrive at a ruling. According to U.S. officials, this 
system has been vulnerable to the corrupting influence of powerful 
interests, particularly criminal organizations. To promote greater 
transparency in judicial proceedings, USAID has supported initiatives 
to introduce adversarial trials in Mexico. Such trials entail oral 
presentation of prosecution and defense arguments before a judge in a 
public courtroom. Since this system is open to public scrutiny, USAID 
officials explained that it should be less vulnerable to corruption. To 
date, USAID has provided technical assistance to 14 Mexican states to 
implement criminal justice reforms, including oral trials. 

U.S. agencies have also pursued legal and regulatory reforms related to 
precursor chemicals used in the production of methamphetamine in 
Mexico. Specifically, the United States has encouraged the government 
of Mexico to implement import restrictions on methamphetamine precursor 
chemicals and impose stricter controls on the way these substances are 
marketed and sold once in Mexico. In 2004, the Mexican Federal 
Commission for the Protection against Sanitary Risk (COFEPRIS)[Footnote 
21] conducted a study that revealed an excess of imports of 
pseudoephedrine products into Mexico. Subsequently, Mexico implemented 
several controls on pseudoephedrine. In 2005, COFEPRIS officials 
reduced legal imports of pseudoephedrine by over 40 percent--from 216 
metric tons in 2004 to about 132. In 2006, pseudoephedrine imports were 
further reduced to 70 metric tons. According to ONDCP, thus far in 2007 
Mexico had reduced its imports of pseudoephedrine to 12 metric tons. 

U.S. Support for Mexican Interdiction Efforts Has Helped, but 
Improvements Are Needed: 

The fourth strategy under the embassy's counternarcotics goal is to 
support Mexican efforts to interdict illicit drugs. U.S. assistance has 
provided for (1) infrastructure upgrades for law enforcement entities; 
(2) professional training for law enforcement and judicial personnel; 
(3) military coordination, particularly for maritime interdiction and 
surveillance; and (4) aviation support for interdiction and 
surveillance. Overall, these U.S.-supported programs have strengthened 
Mexican counternarcotics efforts, but areas for improvement remain, 
particularly regarding cooperation and coordination with Mexican 
counternarcotics agencies and the provision of U.S. aviation support. 

Infrastructure Upgrades and Equipment: 

From 2000 through 2006, a significant share of INL's assistance to 
Mexico--about $101 million of nearly $169 million--supported the 
embassy's interdiction strategy for Mexico through the purchase of 
equipment to enhance border security measures and upgrade the 
infrastructure of various Mexican law enforcement entities. In October 
2001, when the Fox administration created AFI under the jurisdiction of 
the Attorney General's Office, NAS provided infrastructure and 
equipment for counternarcotics operations, including computer servers, 
telecommunications data processing hardware and software, systems for 
encrypting telecommunications, telephone systems, motorcycles, and a 
decontamination vehicle for dismantling methamphetamine processing 
labs. In addition, NAS funded the renovation of a building where AFI 
staff were located, as well as the construction of a state-of-the-art 
network for tracking and interdicting drug trafficking aircraft. 
According to State reports, since 2001, AFI has figured prominently in 
investigations, resulting in the arrests of numerous drug traffickers 
and corrupt officials, becoming the centerpiece of Fox administration 
efforts to transform Mexican federal law enforcement entities into 
effective institutions. 

In July 2003, the Mexican Attorney General's Office reorganized its 
drug control planning capacity under the National Center for Analysis, 
Planning and Intelligence (CENAPI).[Footnote 22] According to INL, NAS 
also equipped CENAPI with a state-of-the-art computer network for 
collecting, storing, and analyzing crime-related information. CENAPI 
analysts noted that software provided by NAS allowed them to process 
large volumes of data--including background files on more than 30,000 
criminals--and make considerable progress in investigations of unsolved 
crimes. 

In 2005, NAS provided computer equipment for COFEPRIS to monitor 
imports of methamphetamine precursor chemicals at major international 
points of entry into Mexico. This complemented efforts by the United 
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to enhance COFEPRIS's capabilities to 
track shipments and imports of precursor chemicals and controlled 
medicines through a National Drug Control System database. 

NAS also funded the procurement of nonintrusive inspection equipment 
for Mexican customs officials to scan container trucks, railroad cars, 
and other cargo containers for illicit contraband at Mexican ports and 
the border. Such border security measures also support counternarcotics 
efforts, since drug traffickers are known to exploit opportunities 
provided by legitimate U.S.-Mexico cross-border trade to smuggle 
illicit drugs. Border security funding was also used to enhance "secure 
rapid inspection lanes" at six U.S.-Mexico border crossings. 

In addition to support provided by NAS, Justice's DEA provided 
specialized equipment to the Attorney General's Office and other 
Mexican law enforcement entities to allow them to detect and properly 
handle hazardous materials at clandestine methamphetamine laboratories. 
This included safety suits required for clandestine lab cleanups, 
evidence containers, and drug-testing chemical kits. DEA also donated 
eight specially designed vehicles to handle toxic chemicals typically 
found at facilities where methamphetamine is produced. These trucks 
were recently refurbished and will be based at locations throughout 
Mexico where a large number of methamphetamine labs are suspected of 
operating. 

Law Enforcement and Judicial Personnel Training: 

U.S. agencies have sought to strengthen Mexico's interdiction 
capabilities through training for Mexican law enforcement, judicial, 
and military personnel. According to State, the overall purpose of this 
training is to help Mexican police personnel and prosecutors combat 
more effectively all transnational crimes affecting U.S. interests, 
including drug trafficking and money laundering. NAS has taken the lead 
in funding such training, and courses are typically taught by U.S. law 
enforcement agencies and various contractors in Mexico and the United 
States. From 2000 through 2006, NAS provided approximately $15 million 
for such training. DEA has also funded some training for members of its 
vetted units, and Defense has provided training for Mexican military 
officials. 

According to U.S. and Mexican officials, this training was an integral 
part of the Mexican Attorney General's efforts to develop a 
professional cadre of investigative agents within AFI, and it also 
supported more general efforts by the Fox administration to upgrade the 
capabilities and ethical awareness of Mexican law enforcement officials 
at the federal, state, and local levels. By 2006, the United States had 
supported training for over 2,000 federal, state, and local law 
enforcement officials, with a goal of training 2,000 more in 2007. 

Interdiction Cooperation and Coordination Can Be Improved: 

From 2000 to 2006, Defense has spent a total of about $58 million for 
equipment and training for the Mexican military, particularly to help 
the Mexican Navy interdict aircraft and vessels suspected of 
transporting illicit drugs. From 2000 to 2006, Defense provided 
training for about 2,500 Mexican military personnel in the use of 
certain kinds of equipment, as well as training to enable them to 
coordinate with U.S. aircraft and vessels. The training provided was 
designed to strengthen the Mexican military's ability to detect, 
monitor, and interdict suspected drug trafficking aircraft and vessels, 
as well as help professionalize Mexico's military and improve relations 
between the U.S. and Mexican militaries. 

Defense initiatives have facilitated coincidental maritime operations 
between the United States and Mexico that have resulted in greater 
cooperation between the two countries, particularly with respect to 
boarding, searching, and seizing suspected vessels transiting Mexican 
waters. In recent years, the Mexican Navy has regularly responded to 
U.S. information on suspect vessels transiting Mexican waters--46 times 
in 2006, for example. In addition, the Mexican Navy agreed on several 
occasions to temporarily place Mexican liaison officers aboard U.S. 
Coast Guard vessels, as well as placing U.S. Coast Guard officers 
aboard Mexican vessels. The Mexican Navy also permitted U.S. law 
enforcement personnel to participate in some dockside searches and post-
seizure analyses. 

However, the United States and Mexico have not agreed to a bilateral 
maritime cooperation agreement that would allow U.S. law enforcement 
personnel to board and search Mexican-flagged vessels on the high seas 
suspected of trafficking illicit drugs without asking the government of 
Mexico for authority to board on a case-by-case basis.[Footnote 23] 
According to Defense officials, a request to board and search a 
suspicious Mexican-flagged vessel--or one whose captain reports it as 
Mexican-registered--can be complex and time-consuming, involving, at a 
minimum, the Foreign Affairs Secretariat as well as the Mexican Navy. 
Waiting for approval or the arrival of the Mexican Navy typically 
creates delays, which can result in the loss of evidence as the illicit 
drugs are thrown overboard or the vessel is scuttled or escapes. In 
addition, while the Mexican Navy has proved willing to respond to U.S. 
information on suspicious vessels transiting Mexican waters, according 
to Defense officials, the Mexican Navy does not normally conduct 
patrols more than 200 nautical miles from shore.[Footnote 24] 

In addition, according to embassy and Defense officials, Defense has 
little contact with Mexico's Defense Secretariat (SEDENA),[Footnote 25] 
which oversees the Mexican Army and Air Force. According to these 
officials, the Mexican Army has conducted counternarcotics operations 
throughout Mexico, including in Acapulco, Nuevo Laredo, and Tijuana, to 
reduce the violence caused by drug trafficking, and it manually 
eradicates opium poppy and marijuana. But, according to Defense 
officials, none of these efforts took advantage of U.S. expertise or 
intelligence. In the past, some eradication efforts were also done by 
the Mexican Attorney General's Office, which worked with its U.S. 
counterparts. Now, however, the Calderón administration plans to 
consolidate all eradication efforts under SEDENA, which makes greater 
cooperation with SEDENA all the more important. 

In addition, from 2001 until late 2006, Customs and Border Protection 
(CBP) provided eight Citation jets for detection and monitoring of 
suspected drug trafficking aircraft along the U.S.-Mexican border under 
a program known as Operation Halcon in cooperation with AFI.[Footnote 
26] According to CBP officials, in recent years Operation Halcon was a 
successful interdiction effort that helped prevent drug traffickers 
from flying aircraft near the U.S.-Mexican border, which made it more 
difficult to transport illicit drugs to the United States. They also 
noted that CBP and AFI personnel worked very closely and one CBP 
official worked full time at the AFI Command Center. Moreover, CBP 
officials maintained that the embassy infrastructure, operational 
staffing, and relationships developed under Halcon provided critical 
daily interface with the Mexican authorities, facilitating quick 
responses to operational needs along the border and the sharing of 
intelligence. Overall, in 2005, between 15 and 25 percent of the 294 
suspect aircraft identified by Operation Halcon resulted in seizures of 
aircraft and other vehicles or arrests. 

In March 2006, the United States sought to formalize Operation Halcon 
to limit liability for U.S. pilots involved in the patrols in the event 
of an accident. However, the Mexican government did not respond with 
terms acceptable to CBP, and in November 2006, the government of Mexico 
suspended the program. As a result, U.S. embassy officials said that 
fewer suspect flights are being identified and interdicted. According 
to CBP officials, since the suspension, seizures of illicit drugs along 
the U.S.-Mexican border have increased, and this, according to DEA, 
CBP, and other officials, is an indication that more drugs are finding 
their way to northern Mexico. 

U.S. Aviation Support for Interdiction Can Be Better Coordinated: 

From 2000 to 2006, NAS provided about $22 million, or 13 percent of 
INL's obligations for Mexico, to support aviation programs for 
counternarcotics efforts by the Attorney General's Office and one 
program for the Mexican Air Force. Since 1990, NAS has provided 41 
Vietnam-era UH-1H helicopters, of which 28 remain in service, to the 
Mexican Attorney General's Office to transport law enforcement 
personnel interdicting drug trafficking aircraft landing in 
Mexico.[Footnote 27] Since 2000, NAS has expended $4.5 million to 
refurbish 8 of the aircraft.[Footnote 28] According to State, the 
aircraft have served as the transportation workhorse for the Attorney 
General's air services section, flying a total of approximately 14,000 
hours from 2001 to 2006. However, according to the embassy, the UH-1H 
program did not meet its target of interdicting 15 percent of all 
aircraft detected in the transport of illicit drugs and crops--in 2005, 
4 percent were interdicted. In addition, the helicopters' readiness 
rates have progressively declined from about 90 percent in January 2000 
to 33 percent in January 2007. NAS and Mexican officials attributed the 
reduced readiness rates to a lack of funding and a lack of spare parts 
for these aging aircraft, which Defense will stop supporting in 2008. 
In January 2007, NAS officials told us that State/INL does not intend 
to provide any further support for the UH-1Hs. 

Beginning in 2004, NAS provided the Attorney General's Office 12 
Schweizer 333 helicopters, of which 11 remain operational.[Footnote 29] 
The total expended for these helicopters was $14.2 million, which 
included a 2-year support package. Equipped with forward looking 
infrared sensors for nighttime operations as well as television 
cameras, the Schweizers are designed to provide the Attorney General's 
Office with a reconnaissance, surveillance, and command and control 
platform. According to State officials, the Schweizers were used in 
Nuevo Laredo and other locations, providing support for surveillance 
operations, flying a total of approximately 1,750 hours from September 
2004 to February 2007. 

Originally, NAS had planned to provide 28 Schweizers, deploying them to 
various points throughout Mexico. However, according to State 
officials, due to funding limitations and changed priorities, NAS 
capped the number at 12. In addition, Mexican Attorney General 
officials told us that they would have preferred a helicopter with both 
a surveillance capability and troop transport capacity.[Footnote 30] 

From 2000 to 2006, NAS also expended about $4.2 million to repair, 
maintain, and operate four C-26 aircraft provided by the United States 
to Mexico in 1997. The aircraft did not originally come equipped with a 
surveillance capability, and the Mexican Air Force had indicated it had 
no plans to invest in the necessary equipment. In 1998, we reported 
that the Mexican Air Force was not using the aircraft for any 
purpose.[Footnote 31] After Mexico upgraded these aircraft with forward-
looking infrared radar in 2002, NAS funded maintenance of the aircraft 
and sensors, as well as training for sensor operators and imagery 
analysts. Part of the NAS funding was also used to provide contractor 
logistical support, including spare parts. 

Southwest Border Strategy's Implementation Plan: 

In March 2006, ONDCP, in conjunction with the National Security Council 
and other agencies involved in the U.S. interagency counternarcotics 
community, developed a Southwest Border Strategy to help reduce the 
flow of illicit drugs entering the United States across the southwest 
border with Mexico. The stated objectives of the strategy, which we 
reviewed in June 2007, were to: 

* enhance and better coordinate the collection of intelligence; 

* effectively share information, when appropriate, with Mexican 
officials; 

* investigate, disrupt, and dismantle Mexican DTOs; 

* interdict drugs and other illicit cargo by denying entry by land, 
air, and sea routes; 

* deny drug traffickers their profits by interdicting bulk currency 
movements and electronic currency transfers; 

* enhance Mexico's counterdrug capabilities; and: 

* reduce the corruption that facilitates illicit activity along and 
across the border. 

In addition, a plan was developed to implement the strategy. As of 
August 2007, ONDCP officials told us that the implementation plan was 
being revised to respond to the Calderón administration's new 
initiatives. On October 2, 2007, the Director of ONDCP released a 
summary of the strategy that referred to the implementation plan. 
According to the summary, the implementation plan lays out the desired 
end state, estimated resource requirements, action plan, and metrics 
for each of the seven objectives in the strategy. 

Conclusions: 

U.S. counternarcotics assistance to Mexico since 2000 has helped Mexico 
strengthen its law enforcement institutions and capacity to combat 
illicit drug production and trafficking. However, overall, the flow of 
illicit drugs to the United States has not abated, and U.S. and Mexican 
authorities have seized only a relatively small percentage of the 
illicit drugs estimated transiting through or produced in Mexico. 
Moreover, reducing drug-related corruption remains a challenge for the 
Mexican government, and Mexican DTOs have increasingly become a threat 
in both Mexico and the United States. Mexican officials have recognized 
the increasing threat and indicated that combating the illicit drug 
threat in cooperation with the United States is a priority. 

As we noted in our recent report, the Calderón administration has 
signaled an interest in working with the United States to reduce drug 
production and trafficking.[Footnote 32] At the time, to respond to the 
Calderon administration's initiatives, ONDCP and the U.S. 
counternarcotics community was revising the Southwest Border Strategy's 
implementation plan to emphasize greater cooperation with Mexico. We 
recommended that the Director of ONDCP, as the lead agency for U.S. 
drug policy, in conjunction with the cognizant departments and agencies 
in the U.S. counternarcotics interagency community, coordinate with the 
appropriate Mexican officials before completing the Southwest Border 
Strategy's implementation plan to help ensure Mexico's cooperation with 
any efforts that require it and address the cooperation issues we 
identified. 

ONDCP concurred with the recommendation and it has since assured us 
that the interagency counternarcotics community is actively engaged 
with their Mexican counterparts. In commenting on our report, ONDCP 
emphasized that the Southwest: 

Mr. Chairman and members of the subcommittee, this concludes my 
prepared statement. I will be happy to answer any questions you may 
have. 

Contact and Staff Acknowledgements: 

For questions regarding this testimony, please contact Jess T. Ford at 
(202) 512-4268 or fordj@gao.gov. Albert H. Huntington, III, Assistant 
Director; Joe Carney; and José M. Peña made key contributions in 
preparing this statement. 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Estimated Amounts of Illicit Drugs Transiting Mexico, 
Produced in Mexico, and Seized in Mexico and Seized, Calendar Years 
2000-2006: 

Table: Estimated Amounts of Illicit Drugs Transiting Mexico, Produced 
in Mexico, and Seized in Mexico and along the: 

Illicit drugs: Cocaine (metric tons): Arriving in Mexico for 
transshipment to the United States[A]; 
Calendar year: 2000: 220; 
Calendar year: 2001: 270; 
Calendar year: 2002: 270; 
Calendar year: 2003: 210; 
Calendar year: 2004: 220 to 440[B]; 
Calendar year: 2005: 260 to 460[B]; 
Calendar year: 2006: 296 to 458[B]. 

Illicit drugs: Cocaine (metric tons): Seized in Mexico; 
Calendar year: 2000: 20; 
Calendar year: 2001: 10; 
Calendar year: 2002: 8; 
Calendar year: 2003: 12; 
Calendar year: 2004: 19; 
Calendar year: 2005: 21; 
Calendar year: 2006: 10. 

Illicit drugs: Cocaine (metric tons): U.S. border seizures[C]; 
Calendar year: 2000: 23; 
Calendar year: 2001: 20; 
Calendar year: 2002: 23; 
Calendar year: 2003: 16; 
Calendar year: 2004: 22; 
Calendar year: 2005: 23; 
Calendar year: 2006: 27. 

Illicit drugs: Heroin (metric tons): Produced[D]; 
Calendar year: 2000: 9; 
Calendar year: 2001: 21; 
Calendar year: 2002: 13; 
Calendar year: 2003: 30; 
Calendar year: 2004: 23; 
Calendar year: 2005: 17; 
Calendar year: 2006: N/A. 

Illicit drugs: Heroin (metric tons): Seized in Mexico; 
Calendar year: 2000: .27; 
Calendar year: 2001: .27; 
Calendar year: 2002: .28; 
Calendar year: 2003: .31; 
Calendar year: 2004: .30; 
Calendar year: 2005: .46; 
Calendar year: 2006: .40. 

Illicit drugs: Heroin (metric tons): U.S. border seizures[C]; 
Calendar year: 2000: .07; 
Calendar year: 2001: .35; 
Calendar year: 2002: .30; 
Calendar year: 2003: .35; 
Calendar year: 2004: .29; 
Calendar year: 2005: .32; 
Calendar year: 2006: .47. 

Illicit drugs: Marijuana: (metric tons): Produced; 
Calendar year: 2000: 7,000; 
Calendar year: 2001: 7,400; 
Calendar year: 2002: 7,900; 
Calendar year: 2003: 13,500; 
Calendar year: 2004: 10,400; 
Calendar year: 2005: 10,100; 
Calendar year: 2006: N/A. 

Illicit drugs: Marijuana: (metric tons): Seized in Mexico; 
Calendar year: 2000: 1,619; 
Calendar year: 2001: 1,839; 
Calendar year: 2002: 1,633; 
Calendar year: 2003: 2,248; 
Calendar year: 2004: 2,208; 
Calendar year: 2005: 1,786; 
Calendar year: 2006: 1,849. 

Illicit drugs: Marijuana: (metric tons): U.S. border seizures[C]; 
Calendar year: 2000: 533; 
Calendar year: 2001: 1,083; 
Calendar year: 2002: 1,072; 
Calendar year: 2003: 1,221; 
Calendar year: 2004: 1,173; 
Calendar year: 2005: 974; 
Calendar year: 2006: 1,015. 

Illicit drugs: Methamphetamine (kilograms): Seized in Mexico; 
Calendar year: 2000: 560; 
Calendar year: 2001: 400; 
Calendar year: 2002: 460; 
Calendar year: 2003: 750; 
Calendar year: 2004: 950; 
Calendar year: 2005: 980; 
Calendar year: 2006: 600. 

Illicit drugs: Methamphetamine (kilograms): U.S. border seizures[C]; 
Calendar year: 2000: 500; 
Calendar year: 2001: 1,150; 
Calendar year: 2002: 1,320; 
Calendar year: 2003: 1,750; 
Calendar year: 2004: 2,210; 
Calendar year: 2005: 2,870; 
Calendar year: 2006: 2,710. 

Sources: The Interagency Assessment of Cocaine Movement (cocaine flow 
and seizures); National Drug Intelligence Center, the International 
Narcotics Control Strategy Report, the Central Intelligence Agency's 
Crime and Narcotics Center, and the White House Office of National Drug 
Control Policy (heroin and marijuana production); the International 
Narcotics Control Strategy Report (Mexico seizures, except cocaine); 
and the El Paso Intelligence Center (U.S. border seizures, except 
cocaine). 

[A] The Interagency Assessment of Cocaine Movement (IACM) estimates the 
metric tons of cocaine departing South America and flowing toward the 
United States. It also estimates what percentage of this amount is 
flowing towards Mexico for transshipment to the United States and 
reports seizures of cocaine. To estimate the amount of cocaine 
available in Mexico for transshipment to the United States, we 
multiplied the IACM's total estimate of cocaine flowing toward the 
United States by the IACM's estimated percentage of what was flowing 
toward Mexico (which ranged from 66 percent in 2000 to 91 percent in 
2006). We then subtracted the IACM's reported cocaine seizures and 
disruptions in the eastern Pacific Ocean, western Caribbean Sea, and 
Central America for each year to estimate how much cocaine was 
available to transit Mexico. Because of the uncertain nature of the 
estimates involved, we rounded the figures we derived to the nearest 
ten. 

[B] For 2000 through 2003, the IACM reported "point" estimates of the 
cocaine flow. In 2004, the IACM began reporting low and high estimates 
of the metric tons of cocaine flowing through the transit zone due to 
certain methodological concerns over providing point estimates. 

[C] The Drug Enforcement Administration's El Paso Intelligence Center 
(and the IACM) defines drug seizures at the U.S. southwest border to 
include seizures at the U.S.-Mexico border or within 150 miles on the 
U.S. side of the border, including 88 border counties in Arizona, 
California, New Mexico, and Texas. 

[D] This estimate does not include heroin that is produced in Colombia 
and may transit Mexico on the way to the United States. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Footnotes:  

[1] GAO, Drug Control: U.S. Assistance Has Helped Mexican 
Counternarcotics Efforts, but Tons of Illicit Drugs Continue to Flow 
into the United States, GAO-07-1018 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 17, 2007). 

[2] The U.S. interagency counternarcotics community includes the 
Central Intelligence Agency's Crime and Narcotics Center; the 
Department of Defense Intelligence Agency's Counternarcotics 
Trafficking Office, Defense's Joint Staff, and the Deputy Assistant 
Secretary of Defense for Counternarcotics; various Department of 
Homeland Security entities, including Customs and Border Protection, 
the U.S. Coast Guard, Office of Intelligence and Analysis, Office of 
Counternarcotics and Enforcement, and the U.S. Interdiction 
Coordinator; the Department of Justice's Drug Enforcement 
Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Narcotic and Dangerous 
Drug Section, National Drug Intelligence Center, and the Organized 
Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force; the National Security Agency; 
the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy; the Department 
of State's Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement 
Affairs; and the Department of Treasury's Internal Revenue Service and 
Office of Foreign Assets Control. 

[3] Seizures are defined as taking physical possession of the illicit 
drug. Disruptions are defined as forcing individuals suspected of 
transporting the drugs to jettison or abandon their cargo. For purposes 
of this testimony, we refer to both events as seizures. 

[4] GAO, Drug Control: Agencies Need to Plan for Likely Declines in 
Drug Interdiction Assets, and Develop Better Performance Measures for 
Transit Zone Operations, GAO-06-200 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 15, 2005). 

[5] In response to certain methodological issues, the interagency 
counternarcotics community reported low and high ranges of cocaine 
flowing toward the United States for 2004, 2005, and 2006. To calculate 
the average for the period 2000-2006, we used the midpoints of the 
ranges. 

[6] We note that this is not a new issue. In 1998, we reported that 
similar helicopters provided to the Mexican Army were not being 
properly maintained, and they eventually were returned to the United 
States. See GAO, Drug Control: U.S.-Mexican Counternarcotics Efforts 
Face Difficult Challenges, GAO/NSIAD-98-154 (Washington, D.C.: June 30, 
1998). 

[7] The Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 
2006, enacted in December 2006, states that not later than 120 days 
after the act's enactment and every 2 years thereafter, ONDCP will 
submit to the Congress a Southwest Border Strategy that, among other 
things, identifies specific resources required to implement the 
strategy. According to ONDCP, the strategy--although not its 
implementation plan--was completed in March 2006, 9 months prior to the 
enactment of this legislation. 

[8] GAO, Border Security: Security Vulnerabilities at Unmanned and 
Unmonitored U.S. Border Locations, GAO-07-884T (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 
27, 2007). 

[9] Opium poppy is used to make heroin. 

[10] See GAO-06-200. 

[11] The 13 percent figure is based on using the midpoint of the IACM 
ranges for the years 2004-2006. 

[12] According to the National Drug Intelligence Center, drug proceeds 
in Mexico in 2005 ranged from: $2.9 billion to $6.2 billion for cocaine 
(including Central America), $324 million to $736 million for heroin, 
$3.9 billion to $14.3 billion for marijuana, and $794 million to $1.9 
billion for methamphetamine. Mexican drug traffickers also grow 
marijuana in the United States; therefore, the amount of proceeds 
returned to Mexico is likely greater than the reported estimates. 

[13] AFI is the Spanish acronym for Agencia Federal de Investigación. 

[14] The Federal Preventive Police itself was the result of a 
reorganization to reduce, prevent, and combat crime in 1999. 

[15] Felipe Calderón was elected President of Mexico in July 2006 and 
inaugurated in December 2006. 

[16] The plan would also create two other police forces: one consisting 
principally of former military police, whose role would be one of 
policing rural communities with less than 15,000 people, and a Coast 
Guard. 

[17] Go-fast boats are capable of traveling over 40 knots and are 
difficult to detect in open water. Even when detected, go-fast boats 
can often outrun conventional ships. Some go-fast boats are capable of 
carrying up to 8 metric tons of cocaine or other cargo. 

[18] NAS is in the U.S. embassy in Mexico City and supports State/INL 
counternarcotics initiatives in Mexico and funds several programs and 
activities. 

[19] The Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons list is 
maintained by OFAC. It lists individuals and organizations whose assets 
are blocked by various sanctions programs administered by OFAC, 
primarily for suspected involvement in terrorist or criminal 
activities, such as drug trafficking. Pursuant to the Foreign Narcotics 
Kingpin Designation Act, as of June 2007, 25 of the 54 individuals 
designated as drug kingpins were Mexican nationals. 

[20] DEA also noted that during 2006 and 2007, besides the record high 
drug cash seizure, Mexican law enforcement authorities seized over 30 
clandestine laboratories, over 20 tons of chemicals, and approximately 
6.4 million dosage units of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine used in the 
manufacture of methamphetamine. 

[21] COFEPRIS is the Spanish acronym for Comisión Federal para la 
Proteccion contra Riesgos Sanitarios. 

[22] This unit assumed a broad mandate to gather and analyze strategic 
intelligence on organized criminal organizations in Mexico, including 
drug trafficking and money laundering. CENAPI is the Spanish acronym 
for Centro Nacional de Planeación, Análisis e Información para el 
Combate a la Delincuencia. 

[23] The United States has bilateral maritime cooperation agreements 
with more than 20 other countries in the Caribbean Sea and Central and 
South America. 

[24] The Mexican constitution prohibits the deployment of forces more 
than 200 nautical miles from Mexican territory during peacetime unless 
the deployment is requested by the President and authorized by 
Congress. 

[25] SEDENA is the Spanish acronym for Secretaría de la Defensa 
Nacional. 

[26] When in Mexico, all activity was coordinated with the Air 
Interception Director of AFI and an AFI pilot was aboard the aircraft. 
The Citations would track the suspect aircraft, and U.S.-provided 
transport would transport law enforcement officers to the landing site. 

[27] In addition, prior to 2000, NAS provided 39 other aircraft, 
including helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft, to the Attorney 
General's Office. 

[28] The remaining UH-1H helicopters were refurbished before 2000. 

[29] One Schweizer crashed in June 2006. 

[30] The Schweizer 333 normally carries a three-person crew--a pilot, a 
copilot, and an observer to operate the forward-looking infrared sensor 
and television camera and communicate to commanders on the ground. 

[31] GAO/NSIAD-98-154. 

[32] GAO-07-1018. 

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