
to go after the bank accounts of narcotics cartels along the border and
halt the flow of illegal guns fueling a wave of violence.
Secretary of State
leading a top-level Cabinet delegation, said the two nations were
studying new strategies against narcotics, focusing not only on
security but also on financial intelligence sharing and social
development.
“We are looking at everything that can work,” Clinton said.
As Clinton spoke in a salon of the Mexican
Secretariat of Foreign Relations, soldiers in a hall outside guarded a
vast display of sophisticated assault rifles and other weaponry, mostly
made in the U.S., captured from drug gangs.
“We know that the flow of illegal guns is a problem
for our Mexican friends, and we are doing all that we can within our
laws to prevent, interdict, arrest, prosecute and jail those who deal
in illegal guns,” she said.
The top-level summit occurred just 10 days after the
A few days after the killings, U.S. security personnel across the border in
Clinton and her Mexican counterpart,
in a joint statement cited “co-responsibility for cross-border criminal
activity” and said the two nations would enhance efforts against
cross-border money laundering and weapons traffic.
They also announced a pilot program of information sharing at two key border points: the
Defense Secretary
The summit focus was on the Merida Initiative, a
Espinosa said U.S. officials had promised to remove bottlenecks in the disbursement of aid under the Merida Initiative.
Still, experts said the vast coffers of drug cartels make for a lopsided battle.
“The drug cartels are earning somewhere between
Since taking office in
In a little over three years, some 16,000 people
have been killed. Violence has worsened with the shattering of an
alliance between the competing
A
Rising bloodshed has triggered calls for drug decriminalization. Former Foreign Secretary
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(c) 2010, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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