Mérida Initiative for Mexico and Central
America: Funding and Policy Issues
Clare Ribando Seelke
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
June S. Beittel
Analyst in Latin American Affairs
July 6, 2009
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R40135
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress
Mérida Initiative for Mexico and Central America: Funding and Policy Issues
Summary
Increasing violence perpetrated by drug trafficking organizations, gangs, and other criminal
groups is threatening citizen security in Mexico and Central America. Drug-related violence
claimed more than 5,600 lives in Mexico in 2008, and several Central American countries have
some of the highest homicide rates in the world. Mexican-based drug cartels dominate the illicit
drug market in most regions of the United States and are expanding their operations by forming
partnerships with U.S. gangs. As a result, some of the drug-related violence in Mexico has begun
to spillover into the United States.
On October 22, 2007, the United States and Mexico announced the Mérida Initiative, a multi-year
proposal for $1.4 billion in U.S. assistance to Mexico and Central America aimed at combating
drug trafficking and organized crime. The Bush Administration first requested funding for Mérida
in the FY2008 supplemental appropriation. The request did not include domestic programs to
complement the Initiative, but U.S. officials pledged to step up efforts to prevent arms, precursor
chemicals, and bulk cash from flowing from the United States to Mexico, and to reduce U.S. drug
demand.
In June 2008, the 110th Congress appropriated $465 million for FY2008 and FY2009 for Mexico
and Central America in the FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Act, (P.L. 110-252). Mexico
received $352 million in FY2008 supplemental assistance and $48 million in FY2009 bridge fund
supplemental assistance. Central America, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic received $65
million in FY2008 supplemental assistance. In March 2009, the 111th Congress appropriated
another $300 million for Mexico and $110 million for Central America, Haiti and the Dominican
Republic in the 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, (P.L. 111-8). On April 9, 2009, the Obama
Administration requested $66 million for Mérida funding for Mexico in a FY2009 supplemental
request. The Congress passed a supplemental appropriation in June 2009 (P.L. 111-32) greater
than the Administration’s request totaling $420 million in Mérida assistance for Mexico. With the
2009 supplemental, total funding for the Mérida program to date is approximately $1.3 billion.
For FY2010, the Obama Administration requested $450 million for Mexico and $100 million for
Central America for a total of $550 million. On June 26, 2009, the House Appropriations
Committee reported H.R. 3081 which includes security-related assistance of $235.8 million for
Mexico, $83 million for Central America under the new Central America Regional Security
Initiative and $37 million in the new Caribbean Basin Security Initiative.
The 111th Congress has demonstrated a strong interest in addressing the spiraling drug trafficking
violence in Mexico, and held more than a dozen hearings relating to the border violence in the
spring of 2009. Congress will continue to examine the Mérida Initiative and related funding as it
considers the FY2010 budget. Policy issues that have emerged in consideration of Mérida include
what levels and types of funding should be provided to Mexico and Central America; how well
U.S. agencies are coordinating with their foreign counterparts in implementing the Initiative; and
the degree to which the nations involved, including the United States, are fulfilling their domestic
obligations under Mérida. Congress has expressed a keen interest in enforcement of Mérida’s
human rights conditions. This report provides an overview of the funding provided for the Mérida
Initiative and a discussion of some policy issues that Congress may consider as it oversees
implementation of the Initiative. For related information, see CRS Report RL32724, Mexico-U.S.
Relations: Issues for Congress, and CRS Report R40582, Mexico’s Drug-Related Violence.
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Mérida Initiative for Mexico and Central America: Funding and Policy Issues
Contents
Background ................................................................................................................................ 2
Funding for the Mérida Initiative................................................................................................. 3
Mérida Authorization Legislation in the 110th Congress......................................................... 3
FY2008 Supplemental Request and Appropriations for Mérida.............................................. 4
Mexico ........................................................................................................................... 6
Central America .............................................................................................................. 7
Haiti and the Dominican Republic................................................................................... 8
FY2009 Request and Appropriations ..................................................................................... 8
Mexico ........................................................................................................................... 8
Central America .............................................................................................................. 8
Legislative Action on the FY2009 Request for Mérida..................................................... 9
FY09 Supplemental Request and Appropriations ............................................................. 9
FY2010 Budget Request and Committee Action.................................................................. 11
Additional Mérida Initiative Legislation in the 111th Congress ............................................. 12
Policy Issues ............................................................................................................................. 13
Is Mérida the Right Drug Control Approach? ...................................................................... 13
Balancing “Hard-side” and “Soft-side” Assistance............................................................... 14
Monitoring Progress............................................................................................................ 15
Pace of Implementation....................................................................................................... 16
Interagency Coordination .................................................................................................... 17
Role of the Department of Defense...................................................................................... 17
U.S. Pledges Under the Mérida Initiative............................................................................. 18
Weapons Trafficking ..................................................................................................... 19
Drug Demand ............................................................................................................... 20
Bulk Cash Smuggling ................................................................................................... 21
Mexico Policy Issues .......................................................................................................... 22
Domestic Counterdrug Efforts....................................................................................... 22
Police Reform and Anti-Corruption Efforts ................................................................... 23
Implementation of Judicial Reforms .............................................................................. 23
Protection of Human Rights .......................................................................................... 24
Central America Policy Issues ............................................................................................. 25
The Caribbean..................................................................................................................... 26
Tables
Table 1. FY2008 – FY2010 Mérida Funding for Mexico by Aid Account .................................... 5
Table 2. FY2008 – FY2010 Mérida Funding for Central America by Aid Account ....................... 5
Table 3. Estimated Mérida Requests and Appropriations by Country ......................................... 11
Appendixes
Appendix. Conditions on FY2008 Supplemental Assistance for Mérida..................................... 27
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Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 28
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Mérida Initiative for Mexico and Central America: Funding and Policy Issues
n October 2007, the United States and Mexico announced the Mérida Initiative, a three-year
program of U.S. assistance to Mexico and Central America1 to combat drug trafficking,
I gangs, and organized crime.2 Named for the location of a March 2007 meeting between
Presidents George W. Bush and Felipe Calderón of Mexico, the Mérida Initiative seeks to expand
bilateral and regional anticrime and counterdrug cooperation. In June 2008, the 110th Congress
appropriated $465 million in supplemental assistance for Mexico, Central America, Haiti, and the
Dominican Republic in the FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-252). On
December 3, 2008, the United States and Mexico signed a Letter of Agreement, allowing $197
million in Mérida funds to be disbursed.3 In the first six months of 2009, the Central American
countries all signed Letters of Agreement with the United States.4
The Bush Administration requested a second installment of Mérida funding—$450 million for
Mexico and $100 million for Central America—in its FY2009 budget request. Congress did not
include Mérida Initiative funding in a continuing resolution because the initial pot of Mérida
funding was provided through a supplemental assistance measure. For this reason, it was taken up
early in the first session of the 111th Congress in the 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act (P.L. 111-
8) signed into law in March 2009 and Mexico, Central America, Haiti, and the Dominican
Republic received a total of $410 million.
On April 9, 2009, the Obama Administration submitted a FY2009 supplemental request that
included $66 million in Mérida assistance for Mexico. Congress appropriated a total of $420
million for Mexico in the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2009 (P.L. 111-32) signed into law
June 24, 2009. For FY2010, the Obama Administration requested $450 million for Mexico and
$100 million for Central America under the Mérida Initiative. In late June, the House
Appropriations Committee reported out a bill (H.R. 3081) that funded what had been known as
the Mérida Initiative in three parts : $235.8 million for Mexico, $83 million for Central America
under the new Central America Regional Security Initiative (CARSI) and $37 million for the
Caribbean in the new Caribbean Basin Security Initiative (CBSI). While this overall funding is
less than the Administration’s FY2010 request, Congress had appropriated significantly more for
Mexico in the FY2009 supplemental spending measure. Notably the House Appropriations
Committee described part of the FY2009 supplemental funding for Mexico ($420 million) as
advance funding of the FY2010 request.
1 The Central American countries include Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and
Panama.
2 For background information on conditions in Mexico and Central America, see CRS Report RL32724, Mexico-U.S.
Relations: Issues for Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan and June S. Beittel, CRS Report RL34215, Mexico’s Drug Cartels,
by Colleen W. Cook, and CRS Report RL34112, Gangs in Central America, by Clare Ribando Seelke.
3 The $197 million is from the International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) foreign aid funding
account, and will fund equipment, training, and technology programs. In addition, more than $136 million under the
Mérida Initiative from the Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and Economic Support Funds (ESF) accounts will be
used to support antidrug and anticrime programs. See Embassy of the United States in Mexico, Press Release, “Mérida
Initiative Monies Released; Letter of Agreement signed,” December 3, 2008.
4 Letters of Agreement have been signed with Honduras on January 9, El Salvador on January 12, Guatemala on
February 5, Belize on February 9, and with Panama on March 13. See Testimony of David T. Johnson, Assistant
Secretary, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, before the
Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, House Committee on Foreign Affairs, March 18, 2009. On April 24, a
Letter of Agreement was signed with Nicaragua, and on June 17, a Letter of Agreement was signed with Costa Rica.
See http://www.state.gov/p/inl/index.htm.
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This report provides an overview and discussion of the funding provided for Mérida, and presents
several issues that Congress may consider as it oversees implementation of the Initiative and
shapes its future direction.
Background
The stated objective of the Mérida Initiative, according to the U.S. and Mexican government joint
statement of October 2007, is to maximize the effectiveness of efforts against drug, human, and
weapons trafficking. The joint statement highlights counterdrug and anticrime efforts of both
countries, including Mexico’s 24% increase in security spending in 2007 under President Felipe
Calderón and U.S. efforts to reduce weapons, human, and drug trafficking along the Mexican
border.5 The Central America portion of the Initiative aims to bolster the capacity of governments
to inspect and interdict unauthorized drugs, goods, arms, and people and to support regional anti-
gang efforts.
The Mérida Initiative is not only the largest foreign aid package for the Western Hemisphere
since Plan Colombia,6 it is, according to its proponents, a new kind of partnership between the
United States, Mexico and Central America. Analysts and U.S. officials have said that for the
Initiative to be successful, all the countries involved will have to accept their “shared
responsibility” to tackle domestic problems contributing to drug trafficking and crime in the
region, including U.S. drug demand.7 Since President Calderón took office in December 2006,
Mexico has increased security spending (to some $4 billion in 2008, and a reported $9.3 billion in
2009)8, mobilized thousands of soldiers and police to drug trafficking “hot-spots” throughout the
country, and extradited record numbers of drug traffickers to the United States.
Drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) and other organized criminal groups pose an increasing
security threat to Mexico and Central America. In 2008, the Calderón government’s crackdown
on the cartels, as well as rivalries and turf wars among Mexico’s drug cartels fueled an escalation
in violence throughout the country, including northern states along the U.S.-Mexico border. In
2008, more than 5,600 people in Mexico were killed in drug trafficking violence, a 110% increase
over 2007.9 Among those murdered were 522 Mexican military and law enforcement officials
according to recent testimony of the U.S. Department of State.10 In the first two months of 2009,
5 Although the statement did not announce additional funding for U.S. domestic efforts, it cited several examples of
such efforts to combat drugs and crime that are already in place. Those examples included the 2007 Southwest Border
Counternarcotics Strategy and the 2008 National Drug Control Strategy. See U.S. Department of State and Government
of Mexico, “Joint Statement on the Mérida Initiative,” October 22, 2007.
6 Developed by former Colombian President Andrés Pastrana (1998-2002), Plan Colombia sought to end Colombia’s
military conflict, eliminate drug trafficking, and promote economic and social development. Since FY2000, Congress
has appropriated more than $6 billion to support Plan Colombia, largely through the Andean Counterdrug Program
account.
7 Eric L. Olson, “Six Key Issues in U.S.-Mexico Security Cooperation,” Woodrow Wilson Center, July 2008;
Statement by Thomas Shannon, Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs at a briefing entitled, “The
Merida Initiative: Our Partnership Moves Forward,” States News Service, July 9, 2008.
8 Steve Fainaru and William Booth, "As Mexico Battles Cartels, The Army Becomes the Law," Washington Post, April
2, 2009. The authors report: “This year, the Mexican government will spend $9.3 billion on national security, a 99
percent increase since Calderón took office.”
9 “Mexico-U.S.: The Drugs War—Dissecting the threat perceived in Washington,” Latin American Security &
Strategic Review, January 2009.
10 Testimony of David T. Johnson, Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and
(continued...)
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the violence grew with almost 1,000 drug-related killings in Mexico or 146% more than in the
comparable period of 2008.11 Mexico and Central American security officials lack the training
and equipment needed to deal with DTOs and other criminal groups who are securing illicit arms
and significant cash resources from the United States and elsewhere. In addition, Mexico and
Central America continue to have problems with impunity, police corruption, and human rights
abuses by security forces that have hindered the performance and reputation of their law
enforcement and judicial systems.
Funding for the Mérida Initiative
The Bush Administration designed the Mérida Initiative as a three-year counterdrug and anticrime
package for Mexico and Central America that would begin in FY2008 and last through FY2010.
Prior to the FY2008 supplemental request for Mérida, neither Mexico nor the countries of Central
America had received large amounts of U.S. counternarcotics (CN) assistance.12 In FY2007,
Mexico received $36.7 million in CN assistance and the only Central American countries to
receive CN funds were Guatemala ($1.9 million) and Panama ($3.3 million).
This section of the report briefly discusses Mérida authorization legislation that was considered,
but not enacted, during the 110th Congress. It then compares the FY2008 supplemental request for
Mérida with the FY2008 supplemental funds that were enacted by Congress in June 2008. This is
followed by a brief summary of the Bush Administration’s FY2009 request for Mérida, and a
description of the 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act passed by the 111th Congress and signed into
law on March 11, 2009. It also describes FY2009 supplemental funding for Mexico appropriated
by Congress under the Initiative and the President’s FY2010 budget request unveiled in May
2009. Finally, it discusses additional legislation concerning the Mérida Initiative in the 111th
Congress.
Table 3, included at the end of this funding section, provides a country-level breakdown of
Mérida requests and appropriations.
Mérida Authorization Legislation in the 110th Congress
While several Members of Congress initially expressed concern that they were not adequately
consulted by the Administration during the development of the Mérida Initiative, a majority of
House Members subsequently voted to authorize the aid package. On June 11, 2008, the House
approved H.R. 6028 (Berman), the Mérida Initiative to Combat Illicit Narcotics and Reduce
Organized Crime Authorization Act of 2008 by a vote of 311 to 106, demonstrating bipartisan
support for the proposed assistance. The Senate did not take any action on the measure so
legislative attention turned to consideration of appropriations for the Mérida Initiative.
(...continued)
Law Enforcement Affairs, before the Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, Related Programs of House
Committee on Appropriations, March 10, 2009.
11 “Cartels add political dimension to ‘drugs war’,” Latin American Security & Strategic Review, February 2009.
12 For an evaluation of recent U.S. counternarcotics assistance to Mexico, see Government Accountability Office, “U.S.
Assistance Has Helped Mexican Counternarcotics Efforts, but Tons of Illicit Drugs Continue to Flow into the United
States,” August 17, 2007.
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As passed by the House, H.R. 6028 would have authorized $1.6 billion over three years, FY2008-
FY2010, for Mexico and Central America, $200 million more than originally proposed by
President Bush.13 Of that amount, $1.1 billion would have been authorized for Mexico, $405
million for the countries of Central America, and $73.5 million for activities of the U.S. Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) to reduce the flow of illegal weapons from the
United States to Mexico. Among the bill’s various conditions on providing the assistance, the
measure would have required that vetting procedures to ensure that members or units of military
or law enforcement agencies receiving assistance were not involved in human rights violations.
FY2008 Supplemental Request and Appropriations for Mérida
The Bush Administration requested $500 million for Mexico and $50 million for Central
American countries in its FY2008 supplemental appropriations request.14 All of the funding was
requested through the International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) account,
administered by the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
Affairs (INL). Due to the grave security situation in Mexico, Administration officials justified the
Mérida request in an emergency supplemental request rather than the FY2009 regular foreign aid
budget request.
In the FY2008 supplemental request, the size, goals, and composition of the Mexican and Central
American portions of the Mérida Initiative differed markedly. In advance of the October 2007
joint announcement of the proposed aid package, U.S. and Mexican officials had met over many
months to craft the Mexican portion of the Initiative. As a result, the FY2008 supplemental
budget request for Mexico was 10 times as large, and much further along in its development than
the initial Mérida request for Central America. The largest category of assistance to Mexico
would fund equipment and technology infrastructure improvements for military and law
enforcement agencies. Another category of assistance would fund such items as inspection
scanners, x-ray ion scanners, computer and security equipment. A third category would fund
institution-building and justice sector projects, while the final category of assistance would fund
program support.
The Central America portion of the Initiative would bolster the capacity of governments to
inspect and interdict unauthorized drugs, goods, arms, and people. It would also support
implementation of the U.S. Strategy for Combating Criminal Gangs from Central America and
Mexico, announced at a July 2007 U.S.-Central American Integration System (SICA) summit. In
contrast to the Mexico request, which focused on providing training and equipment, the majority
of proposed funding for Central America would fund programs to improve policing and support
anti-gang efforts, including prevention programs. Limited funding would also support judicial
and police reform, as well as efforts to improve countries’ capacity to share information on gang
members and other criminals, interdict illicit goods on land and at sea, and curb weapons
trafficking.
13 In H.R. 6028, the term “countries of Central America” is defined to include Haiti and the Dominican Republic, along
with Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama.
14 For a detailed description of the Bush Administration’s FY2008 supplemental assistance proposal for the Mérida
Initiative, see CRS Report RS22837, Mérida Initiative: U.S. Anticrime and Counterdrug Assistance for Mexico and
Central America, by Clare Ribando Seelke.
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Table 1. FY2008 – FY2010 Mérida Funding for Mexico by Aid Account
($ in millions)
FY2008 Suppl. FY2009 Bridge
FY2009
FY2009 Supp.
FY2010
Funds (P.L.
Funds (P.L.
Omnibus (P.L.
Funds (P.L.
Request
Account
110-252)
110-252)
111-8)
111-32)
ESF 20.0
0.0
15.0
0.0
0
INCLE 215.5
48.0
246.0
160.0
450.0
FMF 116.5
0.0
39.0
260.0
0
Total 352.0
48.0
300.0
420.0
450.0
Sources: U.S. Department of State, FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Spending Plan; P.L. 111-8, Omnibus
Appropriations Act 2009 (Division H and Joint Explanatory Statement, H.R. 1105); FY2009 Supplemental
Justification, Department of State & U.S. Agency for International Development; Conference Report to
accompany H.R. 2346, House Report 111-151, and U.S. Department of State, “Summary and Highlights,
International Affairs, Function 150, Fiscal Year 2010.”
Notes: ESF=Economic Support Fund; FMF=Foreign Military Financing; INCLE=International Narcotics Control
and Law Enforcement.
Table 2. FY2008 – FY2010 Mérida Funding for Central America by Aid Account
($ in millions)
FY2008 Supplemental
FY2009 Omnibus
Account
Funds (P.L. 110-252)
Funds (P.L. 111-8)
FY2010 Request
ESF 25.0 a 25.0
INCLE
24.8 70.0 75.0
NADR
6.2 0.0 0.0
FMF 4.0 a
0.0
Total 60.0 105.0 100.0
Source: U.S. Department of State, FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Spending Plan; 2009 Omnibus
Appropriations Act, P.L. 111-8, (Division H and Joint Explanatory Statement, H.R. 1105); and U.S. Department of
State “Summary and Highlights, International Affairs, Function 150, Fiscal Year 2010.”
a. The 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, P.L. 111-8, (Division H and Joint Explanatory Statement, H.R. 1105)
would provide $12 million in ESF for an Economic and Social Fund for Central America and $15 million for
FMF to support maritime security in the Caribbean and Central America under the Mérida Initiative. The bill
requires the Secretary of State to submit a detailed spending plan to the Committees on Appropriations
within 45 days of passage of the Act for funds appropriated for Central American countries and Mexico
under the Mérida Initiative. As of June 30, 2009, the spending plans had not yet been completed.
Notes: ESF=Economic Support Fund; FMF=Foreign Military Financing; INCLE=International Narcotics Control
and Law Enforcement; NADR=Non-proliferation, Anti-terrorism and Related Programs.
FY2008 supplemental funding for the Mérida Initiative was considered as part of a broader
FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Act, H.R. 2642 (Edwards). Originally introduced June 11,
2007 as the FY2008 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations Act, this bill
subsequently became the vehicle for the second FY2008 supplemental appropriations measure.
On June 19, 2008, the House approved an amended version of the FY2008 Supplemental
Appropriations Act, H.R. 2642, that provides $465 million in FY2008 and FY2009 supplemental
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assistance for Mexico and Central America. The Senate approved the compromise House version
of H.R. 2642 on June 26, 2008. The bill was then signed into law by President Bush on June 30,
2008 (P.L. 110-252).
In the Act, Mexico receives $352 million in FY2008 supplemental assistance and $48 million in
FY2009 bridge fund supplemental assistance, while Central America, Haiti, and the Dominican
Republic receive $65 million in FY2008 supplemental assistance. The human rights conditions in
the measure are less demanding than earlier House and Senate versions, largely because of
Mexico’s objections that some of the original conditions, particularly those in the Senate version
of the bill, would violate its national sovereignty. As enacted, the measure reduced the amount of
funding subject to human rights conditions, from 25% to 15%, removed conditions that would
have required the Mexican government to try military officials accused of abuses in civilian
courts and to enhance the power of its National Human Rights Commission, and softened the
language concerning other conditions. (See Appendix for the final language of the human rights
conditions included in P.L. 110-252). Congress also stipulated that none of the funds may be used
for budget support or as cash payments.
The State Department subsequently developed a spending plan for how it and the other U.S.
agencies involved will spend the FY2008 supplemental funding and FY2009 bridge funding
appropriated for the Mérida Initiative.15 In its plan, the State Department elected to break its
program descriptions out by funding account, rather than by the program components it had
included in the FY2008 supplemental request.
Mexico
In contrast to the Administration, which requested all Mérida funding in the INCLE account,
Congress divided the funding for Mexico in P.L. 110-252 between the ESF, INCLE, and FMF aid
accounts (see Table 1). Additionally, while the vast majority of funds provided ($352 million)
were labeled as FY2008 supplemental assistance, Congress provided another $48 million in
FY2009 bridge fund assistance. As noted above, Congress made 15% of INCLE and FMF funds
contingent upon human rights conditions. Another significant change that Congress made to the
Administration’s request was to limit the amount of FMF and INCLE available to provide
equipment to the Mexican Army/Air Force and Navy. As a result, the FY2008 State Department
spending plan includes $94 million less funding for the Mexican armed forces than the FY2008
supplemental request. Due to other funding limitations, some border security and justice sector
reform programs also had to be scaled back from the budget request. Congress provided $24
million for program and staff support for the Mérida Initiative, $13 million less than the
Administration’s request. In addition to these aid cuts, Congress included a $73.5 million earmark
for judicial reform, institution building, rule of law, and anti-corruption activities, as well as $18
million in other earmarks.16
According to the State Department’s spending plan, ESF funds will support implementation of
Mexico’s recently enacted judicial reforms, as well as efforts to provide human rights training to
Mexican police, military, and judicial officials. ESF funds will also seek to build civil society’s
15 U.S. Department of State, FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Spending Plan: Mexico, Central America, Haiti,
and the Dominican Republic, September 9, 2008.
16 Aside from the broad $73.5 million earmark, Congress earmarked $3 million to support the creation a national police
registry, $10 million for drug demand reduction programs, and $5 million for police education and training programs.
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capacity to monitor and document human rights abuses. FMF funds will be used to purchase two
aircraft, up to five helicopters, and ion scanners for the Mexican armed forces. The majority of
INCLE funds ($180 million total, of which $34 million is FY2009 bridge funding) will provide
equipment and programs to strengthen the Mexican government’s capacity to interdict drugs,
arms, and people. Another $59.5 million in INCLE funds (of which $14 million is FY2009 bridge
funding) will support Mexico’s law enforcement and judicial systems.
Central America17
As with Mexico, Congress divided the funding for Central America between several different
accounts (see Table 2). In addition to changing the account structure, Congress shifted the bulk of
funding for Central America from public security and law enforcement programs to institution
building, rule of law, and development programs. It did so by earmarking $25 million in ESF
funds for the creation of an Economic and Social Development Fund for Central America. Of the
ESF funds provided, $20 million are to be administered by the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) for youth violence prevention, community policing, and community
development programs in violence-prone areas. The other $5 million in ESF funds are to fund
educational and cultural exchange programs administered by the State Department. Congress also
earmarked $1 million to support the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala
(CICIG).18
Due to these shifts in the type of funds provided by Congress, the State Department had to scale
back some of its proposed law enforcement programs supported by INCLE funding. Compared to
the FY2008 supplemental request, the FY2008 spending plan included less funding devoted to
transnational anti-gang units, police equipment, and police training provided at the International
Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA).
Congress did provide close to full funding for counternarcotics and border security programs
requested by the Bush Administration. Those programs include efforts to include information-
sharing and data collection among the Central American countries; programs to improve port,
airport, and border security; and regional arms trafficking and maritime interdiction programs.
These programs will be supported by a combination of INCLE, FMF, and NADR funding.
According to the State Department spending plan, some 40% of the Mérida funding appropriated
for Central America will be used to support regional programs. Among the Central American
countries, those with the highest violent crime rates and greatest prevalence of gangs and
organized criminal groups – El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras – will receive the most
bilateral funding (see Table 3 for Mérida funding by country).
17 For information on the Mérida funds provided for anti-gang programs, see CRS Report RL34112, Gangs in Central
America, by Clare Ribando Seelke.
18 In December 2006, the United Nations and the Guatemalan government signed an agreement to establish the
International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) to investigate illegal security groups and clandestine
organizations, some of which have been tied, directly or indirectly, to the Guatemalan state. In August 2007, the
Guatemalan Congress ratified the UN-Guatemala agreement allowing the creation of the CICIG. The CICIG was
inaugurated on January 11, 2008.
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Haiti and the Dominican Republic
Although not included in the original Mérida request, Congress dedicated $2.5 million in INCLE
funding for Haiti and $2.5 million for the Dominican Republic, two major drug transit countries
in the Caribbean. In Haiti, Mérida funds will be used to install a secure communications network
for the Haitian National Police (HNP), to support the HNP’s drug interdiction efforts and to
provide training for Haitian judicial officials. In the Dominican Republic, Mérida funds will be
used to support police professionalization programs, to provide logistical support to interdiction
units, and to train judicial authorities in implementing the new criminal procedure code. A portion
of the Mérida funds for each country will also support the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti
(MINUSTAH), which has been providing joint counternarcotics and border security training to
Haitian and Dominican security officials.
FY2009 Request and Appropriations
In the FY2009 foreign aid request, the Bush Administration asked for another $550 million for
the Mérida Initiative – $450 million for Mexico and $100 million for Central American countries.
All of the funding was requested through the INCLE account, administered by the State
Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL). As in the
FY2008 supplemental request, no Mérida funding was requested for Haiti or the Dominican
Republic.
Mexico
In the FY2009 request, the Administration placed more emphasis on assistance to non-military
agencies. The FY2009 request included $118 million to improve infrastructure and information
systems at non-military agencies, including Mexico’s immigration agency, the Attorney General
Office’s (PGR), the intelligence service (CISEN), the postal service, and customs. With respect to
military agencies, the FY2009 request included $100 million to support aircraft for surveillance
and counternarcotics interception missions carried out by the Mexican Navy and $20 million in
inspection equipment for use at Army checkpoints. For FY2009, the Administration requested
$158.5 million in public security and law enforcement assistance. Most of the assistance, $147.6
million, would go to support the Mexican federal police. The Administration requested
significantly less funding for institution building programs in FY2009 than in the FY2008
supplemental, $30.7 million, with $23.4 million to improve the justice system; $8.5 million to
support the PGR’s Forensic Institute; and $9.4 million to support improved data collection and
analysis. The FY2009 request included $22.5 million to cover the cost of U.S. personnel,
administration, and budget services related to the proposed aid package.
Central America
For FY2009, the Administration requested $40 million for border security and counterdrug
programs. More than half of that money, $25.8 million, would go to land and maritime
interdiction assistance, as well as to a regional arms tracking program. The FY2009 request
included $13 million to implement the U.S. anti-gang strategy, with $7.5 million of that for
prevention programs, up from $5 million in the FY2008 supplemental request. It also included
$13 million for police modernization and technical assistance and $6 million to support the ILEA
in El Salvador. The Administration’s FY2009 budget request for institution-building programs
rose to $23 million. The largest increases from the FY2008 supplemental request were for courts
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management programs and training to improve prosecutorial capacity. The FY2009 budget
request also included $2 million for juvenile justice systems and rehabilitation programs and $1
million for programs to build public confidence in the justice system, two components not
included in the FY2008 supplemental request.
The FY2009 budget request also included $5 million in unspecified program support.
Legislative Action on the FY2009 Request for Mérida
The 110th Congress did not conclude its consideration of the Bush Administration’s FY2009
foreign aid budget request. Instead, Congress passed a continuing resolution (P.L. 110-329) that
provided FY2009 funding through March 6, 2009 at FY2008 levels. Since the initial pot of
Mérida Initiative funding in FY2008 was provided through a supplemental assistance measure
rather than the regular FY2008 foreign aid funding measure, the continuing resolution did not
include Mérida funding.
In March 2009, the 111th Congress passed the Omnibus Appropriations Act, (P.L. 111-8)
providing $410 million for Mexico, Central America, the Dominican Republic and Haiti under
the Mérida Initiative. In P.L. 111-8, Congress provided $300 million for Mexico within the
INCLE, ESF, and FMF accounts with not less than $75 million for judicial reform, institution
building, anti-corruption, and rule of law activities. The measure continues the same human rights
conditions originally set forth in P.L. 110-252, and also has a provision requiring that prior to the
procurement or lease of aircraft, that the Director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, in
consultation with the Secretary of State, shall submit to the Committees on Appropriations an
analysis of alternatives for the acquisition of all aircraft for the Mérida Initiative.
In the omnibus appropriations measure, Congress provided $105 million in funding for Central
America (exceeding the Bush Administration FY2009 request by $5 million) and once again
provided the Dominican Republic and Haiti with $2.5 million each from the INCLE account. The
explanatory statement to the FY2009 omnibus bill provides $12 million in ESF for an Economic
and Social Fund for Central America and $15 million for FMF to support maritime security in the
Caribbean and Central America under the Mérida Initiative. Required spending plans detailing
bilateral and regional funds appropriated for Central America and Mexico were to be reported to
the Appropriations Committees in late April 2009. As of June 30, 2009, the spending plans had
not yet been completed.
FY09 Supplemental Request and Appropriations
On April 9, 2009, the Obama Administration submitted a FY2009 supplemental request that
included an additional $66 million in INCLE assistance for Mexico under the Mérida Initiative.
According to the request, the assistance was sought to acquire three Blackhawk helicopters for
Mexico’s civilian Public Security Secretariat to provide urgently needed air transport capacity,
and to provide spare parts and support. Another $16 million in reprogrammed Mérida Initiative
funds previously appropriated in P.L. 110-252 was to be used to fund the helicopters (including
spare parts and support costs) bringing the total funding for the helicopters to $82 million.
On June 24, 2009, President Obama signed the FY2009 appropriations measure passed by
Congress (H.R. 2346/P.L. 111-32) that includes $160 million in INCLE assistance and $260
million in FMF for Mexico, $354 million more than the Administration’s request. (The legislation
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also appropriates funds to other U.S. federal agencies providing security on the Southwest border,
including $178 million for programs of the Department of Homeland Security and the
Department of Justice). Mérida program funding was accelerated to support the difficult task
undertaken by the Mexican government. The additional INCLE funding is intended for such
items as forensics and nonintrusive inspection equipment, computers, training and fixed and
rotary wing aircraft. The provision of such additional equipment in an expedited fashion will
greatly assist the Mexican government by enhancing the ability of the federal police operations to
conduct law enforcement, counternarcotics, and counterterrorism operations, particularly where
DTOs are challenging Mexican authorities for control of major cities, including those on the
border with the United States. The $260 million of FMF funding is for expedited aviation
assistance to the Mexican Navy (SEMAR) to enhance air transport ability and aerial surveillance.
Anticipated purposes of the funding are for CASA airplanes and for medium lift maritime
helicopters. With the total of $420 million for Mexico in the supplemental, the amount of funding
to date for Mexico under the Mérida Initiative is $1.12 billion.
The FY2009 Supplemental Appropriations Act provides the $420 million of new assistance to
Mexico without the human rights conditions set forth in the FY2009 omnibus appropriations
measure (P.L. 111-8, section 7045(e) of Division H) that withheld 15% of assistance until the
Secretary of State reports that Mexico is taking action in four human rights areas. According to
the conference report (H.Rept. 111-151), the supplemental requires a report from the Secretary of
State within 45 days of enactment of the measure detailing actions by the government of Mexico
since June 30, 2008, to investigate and prosecute violations of internationally recognized human
rights by members of the Mexican Federal police and military forces, and supports a “thorough,
independent, and credible investigation” of the murder of Bradley Will, an American journalist
killed while covering a protest in Oaxaca in 2006 (for more, see section below on “Protection of
Human Rights,” and CRS Report RL32724, Mexico-U.S. Relations: Issues for Congress).
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Table 3. Estimated Mérida Requests and Appropriations by Country
($ in millions)
FY2008
FY2009
FY2009
Supp. App.
Omnibus
Supp.
FY2010
FY2008
Act
App. Act
FY2009
App. Act
Request
Supp.
(P.L. 110-
FY2009
(P.L.
Supp.
(P.L. 111-
Country
Request
252)
Request
111-8)
Request
32)
Mexico 500.0 400.0 450.0 300.0
66.0 420.0 450.0
Belize
1.9
1.5 5.8
- - - -
Costa
Rica
4.3
4.3 9.5
- - - -
El
Salvador
7.1
6.1 17.3
- - - -
Guatemala
11.1
10.6
17.7
- - - -
Honduras
10.8
7.3 12.4
- - - -
Nicaragua
3.7
2.4 6.7
- - - -
Panama
3.9
2.0 8.9
- - - -
Central
7.2
24.9
21.7
- - - -
America
(Regional)
Central
50.0
60.0
100.0
105.0
- - 100.0
America
(total)
Haiti
0.0
2.5 0.0
2.5
- - -
Dominican
0.0
2.5 0.0
2.5
- - -
Republic
Total 550.0
465.0
550.0
410.0
66.0 420.0
550.0
Source: U.S. Department of State briefing papers provided to Congressional offices; FY2008 Supplemental
Appropriations Spending Plan; 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, P.L. 111-8, (Division H and Joint Explanatory
Statement, H.R. 1105); FY2009 Supplemental Justification, Department of State & U.S. Agency for International
Development; Conference Report to accompany H.R. 2346, H.Rept. 111-151. and U.S. Department of State,
“Summary and Highlights, International Affairs, Function 150, Fiscal Year 2010.”
Notes: The 2009 Omnibus appropriations measure did not specify country amounts for Central America. Not
less than 45 days after the enactment of the measure, the Secretary of State must submit a spending plan that
details how the funds will be expended in individual countries and regionally. As of June 30, 2009, the spending
plans had not yet been completed. In addition, the FY2010 request does not yet contain details concerning
country amounts in Central America.
FY2010 Budget Request and Committee Action
For FY2010, the Obama Administration requested $450 million in INCLE assistance for Mexico
and $100 million in INCLE and ESF for Central America (see Table 1 and Table 2). For Mexico,
the Administration requests support for Mexico’s reorganized federal police (SSP)—by equipping
them with helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft and surveillance systems—and provides the Mexican
Navy with helicopters. The requested INCLE funds would provide non-intrusive inspection
equipment for SSP, the Mexican military and Customs and implement a case-tracking system
with technical support and software. Law enforcement training in ethics, criminal investigative
techniques and crime scene search and preservation of evidence methods would be provided.
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Also, the request includes programs to support rule of law reforms and anti-corruption initiatives
inside watchdog units of the SSP and Mexico’s Attorney General’s office.
The Mérida Initiative funding in the FY2010 request for Central America includes $75 million in
INCLE assistance to enhance the regional capability to protect citizen security, combat illegal
trafficking and build stronger justice sector institutions. According to the request, funding would
support the U.S. anti-gangs strategy, provide equipment and technical assistance for community
policing and juvenile justice systems and implement anti-corruption measures. In the 2010
request, the Obama Administration did not seek Mérida Initiative funding for Haiti and the
Dominican Republic but proposed a new security regime for the Caribbean, the Caribbean Basin
Security Initiative (CBSI).
In the FY2010 foreign operations appropriations bill reported to the House, H.R. 3081, the House
Appropriations Committee would provide Mérida-related funding in three parts: Mexico, the new
Central America Regional Security Initiative (CARSI) and the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative
that President Obama had announced in the spring at the Summit of the Americas. The
Committee allocates $235.8 million for Mexico in the ESF, INCLE and FMF accounts; $83
million for Central America in CARSI including $75 regional INCLE funds and $8 million of
FMF funding; and $37 million for the Caribbean in the CBSI.
The legislation reported on June 26, 2009 describes the $420 million in the 2009 supplemental as
“forward funding” of the Administration’s FY2010 request. In the report to the bill (H.Rept. 111-
187), the Committee notes that it “fully funds” the Administration’s Mérida Initiative request but
it is no longer using the name Mérida Initiative. As in the past, Congress has divided up Mérida
funding into different accounts while the Administration request limited funding to the INCLE
account.
Additional Mérida Initiative Legislation in the 111th Congress
In addition to legislative action on appropriations, on May 14, 2009, the House Committee on
Foreign Affairs marked up H.R. 2410 (Berman), the Foreign Relations Authorization Act for
FY2010 and FY2011, which includes several provisions to enhance the Mérida Initiative. The bill
would require the President to designate a high-level coordinator within the Department of State
to implement the Mérida Initiative, and would add Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries
to the program. The bill also requires the establishment and implementation of a program to
assess the effectiveness of assistance provided under the Mérida Initiative. Within six months and
annually thereafter, it would require a report on the programs and activities carried out under the
Mérida Initiative. In addition, the bill would require the President to establish an inter-agency task
force on the prevention of illicit small arms trafficking in the Western Hemisphere; increase
penalties for illicit trafficking in small arms and light weapons; and express congressional support
for the ratification by the United States of the Inter-American Convention Against the Illicit
Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, and Other Related
Materials (CIFTA).
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Policy Issues
A broad consensus appears to be shared by the Administration, Congress and the policy
community on the need for the United States to support neighboring governments in Mexico and
Central America that are struggling to address drug-related violence. The 111th Congress has
expressed interested in cooperating with the Mexican government in its battles with the DTOs,
deploying more than 45,000 military troops and thousands of federal police. The heightened
violence in Mexico, much of it in northern Mexico near the U.S.-Mexico border, has been the
focus of 14 congressional hearings to date. The support provided through the Mérida Initiative, its
efficacy and the pace of its implementation, are being closely monitored by Congress.
When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton traveled to Mexico on March 25 – 26, 2009, she
commented on the importance of bilateral cooperation under the Initiative and she expressed
concern about the slow pace of implementation.19 During her trip, she acknowledged that an
“insatiable demand for illegal drugs” in the United States “fuels the drug trade.”20 With regard to
the United States as a source of the weapons that arm the drug cartels, Clinton also acknowledged
that “our inability to prevent weapons from being smuggled across the border to arm these
criminals causes the deaths of police, soldiers and civilians.”21 Congress appears poised to further
examine how well the U.S. government is demonstrating its “shared responsibility” to tackle
domestic problems contributing to drug trafficking and crime in the region, including U.S. drug
demand. This section of the report raises some questions and policy issues for Congress to
consider at it oversees implementation of the Mérida Initiative.
Is Mérida the Right Drug Control Approach?22
Unless programs like the Mérida Initiative are woven into a more holistic U.S. drug policy
focusing on reducing demand as well as supply, many analysts predict that they are unlikely to
have a significant impact on drug flows in the region. Analysts from a range of organizations,
including the Brookings Institution, the Inter-American Dialogue, the Heritage Foundation, and
the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), have called for a new comprehensive U.S.
counternarcotics policy that attacks the drug problem in source, transit, and, perhaps most
importantly, consumer countries. As a comparison, many recent studies, including an October
2008 report by the Government Accountability Office, have concluded that while Plan Colombia
has improved security conditions in Colombia, it has not significantly reduced the amount of
19 U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, “Remarks with Mexican Foreign Secretary Patricia Espinosa After Their
Meeting,” Mexico City, Mexico, March 25, 2009, available at:
http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2009a/03/120905.htm. Secretary of State Clinton stated: “With respect to the
helicopters, I am well aware that our long process of approval was cumbersome and challenging for the Mexican
Government. We’re going to see what we can do to cut that time…We think they are a necessary and important tool in
the fight against the drug cartels and criminals. It’s also suggested to us we ought to look at this more generally, that it
takes too long from a decision to delivery, and we’ll see what we can do to shorten that.”
20 Mary Beth Sheridan, “On Mexico Trip, Clinton Criticizes U.S. Drug Policy,” Washington Post, March 26, 2009; and
Mark Lander, “Clinton Says Demand for Illegal Drugs in the U.S. ‘Fuels the Drug Trade’ in Mexico,” New York Times,
March 26, 2009.
21 Ibid.
22 For more information on U.S. international drug control policy, see CRS Report RL34543, International Drug
Control Policy, by Liana Sun Wyler.
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drugs flowing into the United States.23 Other recent assessments of U.S. drug policy’s historic and
current tendency to focus on eradication, interdiction, and extraditions of drug traffickers have
been even more pessimistic.24
Assessments of the likely impact of the Mérida Initiative are varied. Mérida supporters describe
the initiative as a security cooperation partnership against drug traffickers and organized criminal
groups, rather than a foreign assistance program. They emphasize the importance of fully funding
Mérida in order to build up the capacity of both military and civilian institutions in partner
nations so that bilateral and regional counterdrug efforts can be more successful.25 The Heritage
Foundation supports the Mérida Initiative and recommends that Congress provide funding above
the $1.4 billion originally proposed by the Bush Administration if the Initiative has positive
results. At the same time, it maintains that “the U.S. needs to do more to secure the border [and]
reduce the flow of illegal arms and illicit cash” to Mexico.26 WOLA, the Council on Foreign
Relations, and others maintain that fighting the drug trade will require more than providing
equipment and training for Mexican and Central American military and police forces. They assert
that Mérida needs to include more funding to address the weak civilian judicial and police
institutions, as well as the underlying societal problems, such as poverty, underdevelopment, and
corruption, that have allowed the drug trade to flourish in Mexico and Central America. They also
emphasize the importance of addressing U.S. and European drug demand.27
Balancing “Hard-side” and “Soft-side” Assistance
During the 110th Congress, there was ongoing debate between some in Congress and the Bush
Administration over what levels and types of assistance should be provided to countries in Latin
America. The most vigorous debates centered on what type of assistance should be provided to
large aid recipients like Colombia and, more recently, Mexico.28 The Bush Administration tended
to favor so-called “hard-side” security-related assistance, whereas a majority in Congress sought
to balance security assistance with “soft-side” rule of law, human rights, and development
assistance programs.29 These debates continue in the 111th Congress.
23 Government Accountability Office, “Plan Colombia: Drug Reduction Goals Were Not Fully Met, But Security Has
Improved; U.S. Agencies Need More Detailed Plans for Reducing Assistance,” October 2008, GAO-09-7.
24 Michael Shifter, “Latin America’s Drug Problem,” Current History, February 2007; International Crisis Group,
“Latin American Drugs II: Improving Policy and Reducing Harm,” March 14, 2008; Brookings Institution, “Re-
Thinking U.S.-Latin American Relations: A Hemispheric Partnership for a Turbulent World,” November 24, 2008.
25 American Enterprise Institute, “Five Perspectives on the Mérida Initiative: What it is and why it Must Succeed,”
March 4, 2008.
26 Heritage Foundation, “Executive Summary: Mexico, Drug Cartels, and the Merida Initiative: A Fight We Cannot
Afford to Lose,” by Ray Walser, July 23, 2008.
27 Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), “The Mérida Initiative and Citizen Security in Mexico and Central
America,” March 19, 2008; Council on Foreign Relations, “Task Force Report: U.S.-Latin America Relations: A New
Direction for a New Reality,” May 2008.
28 For example, the FY2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-161) cut security-related aid to Colombia
significantly from the Administration’s request, and increased funding for alternative development, human rights, and
institution-building programs.
29 In Mexico and Central America, “hard-side” assistance generally refers to counterdrug and anti-terror assistance
provided to police and military forces, while “soft-side” assistance refers to rule of law, human rights, and economic
and social development programs. In Andean drug-producing countries like Colombia, the “hard-side/soft-side”
dichotomy is not just about security vs. development assistance, but also an allusion to crop eradication (“hard-side) vs.
alternative development (“soft-side”) programs.
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With respect to Mérida, debates emerged within the human rights community and Congress about
the balance of security vs. institution-building funding in the Bush Administration’s FY2008
supplemental request for Mexico.30 Several Members of Congress opposed the request’s apparent
emphasis on providing expensive equipment to the Mexican military with its poor human rights
record. In response, Administration officials contended that the Calderón government specifically
requested security assistance from the United States because Mexican law enforcement and
military forces were being outgunned by the drug cartels. They assured Members of Congress
that military and police units receiving U.S. equipment and training would be properly vetted.31
As noted above, Congress employed a variety of measures to ensure that various “soft-side”
programs received support from the Mérida Initiative. These included limiting the FMF and
INCLE funds available to provide equipment to the Mexican military, and earmarking $73.5
million in FY2008 supplemental assistance for institution building, rule of law, and anti-
corruption activities in Mexico. Congress reduced border security and counterdrug assistance for
Central America in order to free up $25 million in ESF funds for the creation of an Economic and
Social Development Fund for the subregion.
Monitoring Progress
In the last year, several think tanks held forums addressing the issue of how to monitor progress
in implementing the Mérida Initiative. Many analysts maintain that it is crucial for both the U.S.
and Mexican executive branches to manage legislative and popular expectations for the Initiative.
They argue that it is important that the goals for the Initiative be realistic, and that progress made
towards meeting those goals be regularly communicated to legislators and to the general public in
both countries. For example, in this vein, an achievable goal would not be to end drug trafficking
through Mexico, but to reduce trafficking and related violence to a public security issue, from the
level of a national security threat. Some contend that it is likely to take much longer than three
fiscal years for the Mérida Initiative to help partner governments make real headway in achieving
that goal.32 One press report asserts that it is proving difficult for the United States and Mexico to
overcome decades of mistrust in order to work together to implement Mérida.33
U.S. and Mexican security experts have also urged Congress to look at a range of indicators when
evaluating the Mérida Initiative, rather than merely measuring its effects on drug seizures and
flows. Perhaps in response to that advice, Congress asked the State Department to include a list of
performance measures for each portion of the Mérida Initiative in its FY2008 supplemental
spending plan. For example, one indicator that is to be used to measure improvements in the
Mexican justice system would be the percentage change in the Mexican federal criminal case
backlog.
30 WOLA, “The Mérida Initiative and Citizen Security in Mexico and Central America,” March 19, 2008; Center for
International Policy Americas Policy Program, “Primer on Plan Mexico” by Laura Carlsen, updated July 10, 2008.
31 Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “Hearing on Mexico and Central America Counternarcotics Aid,” November
15, 2007.
32 See, for example, comments made at the Woodrow Wilson Center Event, “U.S.-Mexico Security Cooperation: The
Mérida Initiative and Beyond,” February 8, 2008. Available at
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cfm?topic_id=5949&fuseaction=topics.event_summary&event_id=370648.
33 Josh Meyer, “Mistrust Bedevils War on Mexican Drug Cartels,” Los Angeles Times, December 31, 2008.
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Pace of Implementation
The growth and dramatic character of the violence in Mexico and the potential threat of spillover
along the Southwest border has focused concern about the pace of the implementation of Mérida
aid on that country most vividly. It has been reported in the press, there has been increasing
criticism from Mexican officials as well as from Members of the U.S. Congress about the
slowness of delivery of promised assistance to Mexico under the Mérida Initiative.
According to the Department of State,34 which is leading Mérida Initiative implementation, the
first pot of $400 million for the foreign aid program provided in P.L. 110-252 includes funding
for the following:
• helicopters (up to five Bell 412 helicopters) and surveillance aircraft (up to two
CASA maritime patrol aircraft) to support interdiction and rapid response of
Mexican law enforcement agencies;
• non-intrusive inspection equipment, ion scanners, and canine units for Mexican
customs, the new Mexican federal police and the military to interdict trafficked
drugs, arms, cash, and persons;
• technologies and secure communications to improve data collection and storage;
• and technical advice and training to strengthen the institutions of justice in order
to improve vetting for the Mexican police force, to provide case management
software to track investigations through the legal process, to support offices of
citizen complaint and professional responsibility, and to promote the
establishment of witness protection programs.
On December 3, 2008, the United States and Mexico signed a Letter of Agreement, allowing
$197 million of the first pot of Mérida funds to be disbursed.35 Later in December, the
governments of Mexico and the United States met to coordinate implementation of the Mérida
Initiative through a cabinet-level High Level group reflecting the urgency felt on both sides of the
border to address the growing violence in Mexico. According to the State Department, a working-
level meeting was held February 3, 2009, in Mexico City “with the aim of accelerating the
implementation of the 48 projects through nine working groups for Mexico under the Initiative.”
This meeting was followed by another on March 2, 2009.36
Only the initial phases of implementation have begun. Although some programs will become
operational starting in the spring through the end of 2009, others that fund military equipment
have a longer procurement process. This is especially true for assistance in the Foreign Military
Financing (FMF) account that provides for equipment such as Bell helicopters and CASA
surveillance aircraft that may take from one to two years for delivery to Mexico. U.S. officials
34 U.S. Embassy, Mexico, “U.S.-Mexico At a Glance: The Mérida Initiative,” September 2008; U.S. Department of
State, “FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Spending Plan, Mexico, Central America, Haiti, and the Dominican
Republic,” September 4, 2008.
35 The $197 million is from the International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) foreign aid funding
account, and will fund equipment, training, and technology programs. See Embassy of the United States in Mexico,
Press Release, “Mérida Initiative Monies Released; Letter of Agreement signed,” December 3, 2008.
36 Testimony of David T. Johnson, Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and
Law Enforcement Affairs, before the Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, Related Programs of House
Committee on Appropriations, March 10, 2009.
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reportedly have attributed delays to cumbersome U.S. government contracting regulations,
negotiations with Mexico about what equipment is actually needed, and the difficulty of
delivering an aid package involves so many agencies and has some four dozen programs.37
Interagency Coordination
In the last few years, several studies have noted the proliferation of U.S. agencies engaged in
foreign assistance activities, as well as the challenges of getting those agencies to work together
in a coordinated fashion.38 Each federal agency tends to have its own mission, priorities, and
operating style. Instead of working together to implement a particular policy or initiative,
agencies often engage in “turf battles” as they compete for leadership roles and budgetary
resources.
Interagency coordination may prove particularly difficult during implementation of the Mérida
Initiative since its diverse program components are being carried out by a wide range of U.S.
agencies under the leadership of the State Department. Like many other foreign aid programs in
Latin America, most Mérida programs are being administered by the State Department and
USAID. However, since border security is a key component of Mérida, the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) is to also have a major role to play in its implementation. Within DHS,
officials from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection
(CBP), and the U.S. Coast Guard are to provide training and logistical support to their
counterparts in Mexico and Central America.39 Additionally, the Department of Justice is to have
agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Federal Bureau of
Investigations (FBI) working with their counterparts in partner countries. According to a press
report from late 2008, some Members of Congress have complained about the lack of
coordination, fights over jurisdiction, and general confusion among the various federal agencies
implementing the Initiative.40
Similar “turf battles” may also play out in the congressional committees that have an interest in
overseeing Mérida. Since it is a foreign assistance program, primary oversight responsibilities for
Mérida is to rest with the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs Committees.
However, other committees, such as the Senate and House Homeland Security Committees, may
seek to weigh in on how Mérida funding is being spent, how its progress is being evaluated, and
how Mérida-funded programs are dovetailing with U.S. homeland security programs.
Role of the Department of Defense
Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the Department of Defense (DOD) has become
increasingly involved in funding counterterrorism and other foreign assistance programs around
37 William Booth and Steve Fainaru, “U.S. Aid Delays in Drug War Criticized,” Washington Post, April 5, 2009.
38 See, for example, Ann Van Dusen and Carol Lancaster, Organizing U.S. Foreign Aid: Confronting the Challenges of
the 21st Century, Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 2005.
39 Testimony of Paul Rosenzweig, Acting Assistance Secretary of the Office of International Affairs, Department of
Homeland Security, before the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Border, Maritime, and Global
Counterterrorism, June 6, 2008.
40 Josh Meyer, “Mexico Under Siege; Mistrust Bedevils War on Cartels” Los Angeles Times, December 31, 2008.
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the world.41 In Latin America, DOD, acting through its Southern Command (Southcom), has
expanded its definition of security threats to include nontraditional threats such as international
crime, public health crises, radical populism, and even poverty and inequality. Human rights
groups have tracked DOD’s expanding role in providing foreign aid in Latin America, alleging
DOD’s “mission creep” into programs and activities they feel are best funded and administered
by the State Department or USAID.42 Many analysts have expressed similar concerns about
Mexico43 and some of the Central American countries’ increasing reliance on military forces to
perform anticrime and counternarcotics activities traditionally handled by civilian law
enforcement personnel.
When the Mérida Initiative was first announced, analysts from across the political spectrum
praised the fact that it did not appear to involve an active role for U.S. military forces in Mexico
or Central America.44 Some were pleased that civilian officials from the Central American
Integration System (SICA) and the State Department designed the Central American portion of
the proposal, rather than military personnel from the Central American Armed Forces Conference
(CFAC) and Southcom.45 Although DOD may not have taken a leadership role in designing
Mérida, it will be administering assistance provided to Mexico through the FMF aid account, as
well as a maritime assistance package in Central America. DOD also has programs in the works
to complement the Mérida Initiative, such as a proposed Regional Aircraft Modernization
Program (RAMP) for Central America that reportedly may cost as much as $300 million.46
U.S. Pledges Under the Mérida Initiative
In the U.S. and Mexico joint statement announcing the Mérida Initiative, the United States
government pledged to “intensify its efforts to address all aspects of drug trafficking (including
demand-related portions) and continue to combat trafficking of weapons and bulk currency to
Mexico.”47 Many security experts argue that this pledge may be even more important to the
success of regional counterdrug and anticrime efforts than any amount of U.S. foreign aid
provided to Mexico or Central America.48 However, Mérida was proposed and funded as a
foreign assistance package without any companion legislation on the domestic side. As such, it
may prove difficult for Congress to monitor the degree to which the U.S. government is fulfilling
its domestic pledges under the Mérida Initiative.
41 For more information, see CRS Report RL34639, The Department of Defense Role in Foreign Assistance:
Background, Major Issues, and Options for Congress, coordinated by Nina M. Serafino.
42 WOLA, Center for International Policy, and Latin America Working Group Education Fund, “Ready, Aim, Foreign
Policy: How the Pentagon Takes Over More and More Areas of Foreign Policy,” April 20, 2008.
43 Mexico falls under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Northern Command (Northcom). There has been increasing
cooperation between the U.S. and Mexican militaries to a degree that was unlikely just a short time ago. See “Clinton
smoothes the way for Obama,” Latin American Regional Report, April 2009.
44 Heritage Foundation, July 2008; WOLA, March 2008.
45 U.S. Department of State, Office of Language Services Translating Division, “Not All That is Gold Glitters and Not
All That Glitters is Gold,” by Joel Fyke and Maureen Meyer, originally published in Foreign Affairs en Español, vol. 8,
no. 1.
46 See “House Foreign Affairs Committee, Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere Holds a Hearing on Central
America and the Mérida Initiative,” CQ Transcriptions, May 8, 2008.
47 U.S. Department of State and Government of Mexico, “Joint Statement on the Mérida Initiative,” October 22, 2007.
48 Brookings Institution, November 2008.
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Weapons Trafficking
U.S. officials estimate that 90% of the firearms recovered from crime scenes in Mexico originated
in the United States.49 Mexican drug cartels and enforcer gangs are reportedly buying
semiautomatic versions of AK-47 and AR-15 style assault rifles, and other military-style firearms
in the United States. The cartels often obtain their weapons through “straw purchases,” whereby
people who are legally qualified buy the weapons from licensed gun dealers or at gun shows in
border states and sell them to smugglers who take them across the border. In November 2008, the
Mexican government made the largest seizure of drug-cartel weapons in Mexican history when it
discovered a cache of 540 rifles, 15 grenades, 500,000 rounds of ammunition, and 14 sticks of
TNT at a house in the border town of Reynosa, Mexico.50
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) began a Southwest border
initiative dubbed Project Gunrunner in FY2004 that aims to deny firearms to criminal
organizations in Mexico, and to combat firearms-related violence affecting communities on both
sides of the border. 51 The number of ATF personnel dedicated to Project Gunrunner has
increased in recent years. In FY2006 and FY2007, around 100 special agents and 25 industry
operations investigators were dedicated to Project Gunrunner, while by March 2009, the numbers
had increased to 148 special agents and 59 industry operations investigators.52 From FY2004
through mid-February 2009, ATF referred almost 800 cases for prosecution involving more than
1,600 defendants, including almost 400 cases for firearms trafficking involving more than 1,000
defendants and almost 13,000 guns.53
In addition to these efforts in the United States, under the Mérida Initiative, ATF received $4.5
million for the deployment of eTrace firearms tracking technology to U.S. Consulates in Mexico
to combat arms trafficking.54 In FY2008, Mexico submitted more than 7,500 recovered guns for
tracing, showing that most originated in Texas, Arizona, and California.55
The Department of Homeland Security, especially ICE and CBP, are also involved in taking
action to stop the southbound flow of weapons to Mexico. Both ICE and CBP have the authority
to enforce export provisions of the Arms Exports Control Act. In collaboration with Mexican law
enforcement authorities, ICE launched a new bilateral program against weapons smuggling in
June 2008 known as Operation Armas Cruzadas. Among other activities, the program involves
49 U.S. Embassy, Mexico City, Mexico, “U.S.-Mexico, “U.S.-Mexico at a Glance: Combating Illicit Firearms,”
February 2009.
50 “Mexico: Army Seizes Huge Weapons Cache,” Los Angeles Times, November 8, 2008.
51 For background on ATF funding and Project Gunrunner, see CRS Report RL34514, The Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF): Budget and Operations, by William J. Krouse.
52 U.S. Embassy, Mexico, “Border and Law Enforcement, Project Gunrunner,” ATF Factsheet, available at
http://www.usembassy-mexico.gov/eng/texts/et080116eTrace.html; and Department of Justice, Statement of William
Hoover, Assistant Director for Field Operations, ATF, and Anthony P. Placido, Assistant Administrator for Intelligence
Division, DEA, before Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs, March 17, 2009.
53 ATF, “Statement of William Newell, Special Agent in Charge, Phoenix Field Division, ATF” before House
Committee of Appropriations, Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies,” March 24, 2009.
54 U.S. Department of Justice, “Statement of Joseph M. Arabit, Special Agent in Charge, El Paso Division, Drug
Enforcement Administration, and William McMahon, Deputy Assistant Director, Field Operations, ATF,” before the
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, March 30, 2009.
55 U.S. Department of Justice, “Department of Justice Announces Resources for Fight against Mexican Drug Cartels,”
Fact Sheet, March 24, 2009.
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intelligence sharing and joint law enforcement efforts with vetted Mexican units. As DHS
reported in March 2009, the operation has resulted in more than 100 criminal arrests, 42
convictions, and the seizure of more than 400 weapons.56
According to DHS, the Mexican government began a pilot program in February 2009 to screen
incoming traffic to look for guns, bulk cash, and other contraband, and hopes to expand the
program across the entire border by the fall of 2009.57 In addition, under the Mérida Initiative, the
United States will be providing non-intrusive inspection equipment that will assist Mexican
officials to prevent arms and cash smuggling from the United States.58
Some analysts have suggested that the U.S. government could further expand its efforts against
gun trafficking to Mexico. They have advocated for, among other things, improving regulations to
combat “straw purchases,” better regulating how weapons that are particularly attractive to
criminal groups (such as “vest-buster” handguns and anti-armor rifles) are marketed, and enacting
an effective assault weapons ban.59 Others have called for the U.S. Senate to act on a pending
treaty, the Inter-American Convention Against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in
Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, and Other Related Materials.”60 According to the Department
of State, the convention will help shut down the illicit transnational arms market that fuels the
violence associated with drug trafficking, terrorism, and international organized crime. The
treaty, which was signed by the United States in 1997 entered into force in July 1998, was
submitted to the Senate for its advice and consent in June 1998.61
Drug Demand
In 2007, more than 35 million people in the United States reported using illicit drugs or abusing
prescription drugs. U.S. drug demand fuels a multi-billion dollar illicit industry that has enhanced
the power of DTOs and other allied gangs and organized criminal groups. Some 90% of the
cocaine consumed in the United States is now trafficked from South America through the
Mexico-Central America corridor. Mexico is also a major supplier of marijuana,
methamphetamines, and heroin. Mexican DTOs have become the leading drug distributors of
cocaine, heroin, and other illicit drugs in the United States, with supply networks established in at
least 230 U.S. cities.62
Studies have shown that addressing drug demand through a combination of treatment programs
for heavy users and prevention programs is more successful and cost-effective than through
56 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, “Statement of Mark Koumans, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Office of
International Affairs,” before House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Homeland Security, March 10,
2009.
57 Ibid.
58 U.S. Department of State, “Statement of David T. Johnson, Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of International
Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs,” before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on the
Western Hemisphere, March 18, 2009.
59 Tom Diaz, Violence Policy Center, “Disrupting Arms Trafficking to Mexico,” October 17, 2008.
60 Peter DeShazo and Johnna Mendelson Forman, “A treaty that can help stem drug violence in Mexico,” Washington
Times, February 24, 2009.
61 U.S. Department of State, The Inter-American Convention Against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in
Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, and Other Related Materials,” Fact Sheet, March 25, 2009.
62 NDIC, National Drug Threat Assessment 2009, November 2008.
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supply reduction programs.63 Nevertheless, the U.S. drug control budget has continued to
emphasize supply-side programs, including drug crop eradication in source countries,
interdiction, and domestic law enforcement efforts, rather than demand reduction efforts. Since
FY2002, funding for supply-side programs reportedly has increased by almost 57%, whereas
support for demand reduction efforts has increased by less than 3%.64 Supply reduction efforts
now account for nearly two-thirds of the federal drug control budget.
It remains to be seen whether U.S. pledges to intensify domestic demand reduction efforts in
order to complement the Mérida Initiative will be reflected in new budgetary priorities. Ongoing
debates about the proper balance of funding for supply reduction vs. demand reduction programs
are likely to continue in the 111th Congress.65
Bulk Cash Smuggling
Interrupting the flow of money from drug sales in the United States to Mexico, estimated to range
from $15 billion to $25 billion annually,66 may be one of the most effective ways to disrupt the
activities of the Mexican DTOs. A portion of this money is used to buy weapons in the United
States to arm the DTOs and their drug enforcers. Other drug proceeds are used to corrupt law
enforcement and public officials enabling the DTOs to continue to operate with impunity. Some
analysts believe that the U.S. Treasury is doing a good job of making it difficult to launder money
within financial institutions. Therefore, the preferred mode to transfer drug proceeds by the
Mexican DTOs is through shipments of bulk cash.67
In order to address the problem of bulk cash smuggling, the DEA has carried out bulk cash
seizures with the FBI, ICE, and CBP. In 2005, ICE and CBP launched a program known as
“Operation Firewall,” which increased operations against bulk cash smuggling in the U.S.-
Mexico border region. Many operations have been carried out in coordination with Mexican
customs and the Mexican money laundering vetted unit. In 2008, ICE created a Trade
Transparency Unit (TTU) in Mexico. Mexican TTU representatives are receiving training and
technical support from ICE officials in how to identify cross-border trade anomalies that could be
indicative of bulk cash smuggling.
63 P. Rydell and S. Everingham, “Controlling Cocaine Supply Versus Demand Programs,” RAND: Santa Monica, C.A.,
1994; David Boyum and Peter Reuter, An Analytic Assessment of U.S. Drug Policy, Washington, D.C.: American
Enterprise Institute, 2005.
64 “FY02-FY09 Budget Emphasizes Least Effective Ingredients of Drug Policy,” Carnevale Associates, February 2008.
65 For more information on U.S. domestic drug policy, see CRS Report RL32352, War on Drugs: Reauthorization and
Oversight of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, by Mark Eddy.
66 Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Mexico Institute, The United States and Mexico: Towards a
Strategic Partnership, January 2009.
67 Testimony of Andrew Selee, Director of the Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center before the House
Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform,
March 12, 2009.
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Mexico Policy Issues68
As Congress oversees implementation of the Mérida Initiative, it is likely to maintain an interest
in what the Mexican government is doing to combat the drug cartels and reform its law
enforcement and judicial systems. Congress may want to ensure that U.S. and Mexican
counternarcotics programs are complementing, rather than duplicating each other’s efforts.
Congress may also want to monitor the Mexican government’s anti-corruption efforts, as well as
its ability to hold police and military forces accountable for human rights abuses.
Domestic Counterdrug Efforts
President Calderón has made combating drug cartels a top priority of his administration. He has
increased Mexico’s security budget from roughly $2 billion in 2006, to some $4 billion in 2008,
and a reported $9.3 billion for 2009.69 He has mobilized thousands of soldiers and federal police
to arrest drug traffickers, establish check points, burn marijuana and opium plants, and interdict
drug shipments. According to the U.S. State Department, Mexican authorities seized more than
twice the amount of cocaine in 2007 than they did in 2006.70 A recent U.S. government report
credits Mexico’s recently established import restrictions on products containing
methamphetamine precursors with reducing Mexican methamphetamine shipments to the United
States.71 President Calderón has also used extradition as a major tool to combat drug traffickers,
extraditing 83 alleged criminals to the United States in 2007 and a record 95 individuals in
2008.72
While a majority of Mexicans still support President Calderón, some predict that popular
frustration with his government may grow if his unprecedented campaign against the drug cartels
fails to produce measurable results.73 Drug seizures and extraditions have increased, but drug-
related violence has reached record levels. According to the Mexican Media organization,
Milenio, more than 10,100 people have been killed in the drug trafficking violence since
Calderon came into office in 2006, including 917 police officers, soldiers, prosecutors and
political leaders.74 Some have expressed concerns about the militarization of Mexican law
enforcement. Calderón Administration officials, however, maintain that the military has to be
used for counterdrug efforts due to the corruption of state and local police by the cartels, and
because the police cannot compete with the type of heavy weaponry that the drug cartels are
using.75 Others assert that Calderón has not devoted enough resources to addressing issues that
68 For more information, see CRS Report RL32724, Mexico-U.S. Relations: Issues for Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan
and June S. Beittel.
69 Steve Fainaru and William Booth, "As Mexico Battles Cartels, The Army Becomes the Law," Washington Post,
April 2, 2009.
70 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, International Narcotics
Control Strategy Report 2008, March 2008.
71 NDIC, National Drug Threat Assessment 2009, November 2008.
72 U.S. Embassy, Mexico City, Mexico, “U.S.-Mexico At a Glance: Extraditions,” February 2009.
73 Laurence Iliff, “Calderón’s 2nd Year Ends With Fresh Turmoil,” Dallas Morning News, December 1, 2008.
74 Steve Fainaru and William Booth, "As Mexico Battles Cartels, The Army Becomes the Law," Washington Post,
April 2, 2009.
75 U.S. Government Printing Office, “The Mérida Initiative: Guns, Drugs, and Friends,” Minority Staff Report to
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, December 21, 2007. A press report in April 2009 notes
that the Mexican police seized an antiaircraft machine gun among an arsenal allegedly belonging to the Beltran Leyva
(continued...)
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are closely linked to the drug trade, such as money laundering. Still others remain concerned that
ongoing corruption, impunity, and human rights abuses by military and police forces are not
being adequately addressed.76
Police Reform and Anti-Corruption Efforts
Instances of corruption of law enforcement and government officials have been a significant
problem that has made the campaign against drug cartels more difficult. In August 2008, six
members of the federal Attorney General’s office known as SIEDO reportedly had been arrested
on suspicion of leaking information to drug traffickers. In late October 2008, an elite unit within
SIEDO was implicated in a scandal involving payoffs for sensitive information about antidrug
activities, with at least 35 officials and agents fired or arrested.77 In November 2008, the former
head of SIEDO, Noe Ramirez Mandujano, was arrested and accused of accepting bribes from a
drug cartel.
President Calderón has taken steps to reform the country’s federal, state, and municipal police
forces and to crack down on corruption within the police and other government institutions.
Calderón has reorganized the two federal police agencies under a single commander, established a
new police training institute, and created a national database through which police can share
information and intelligence. His government has begun to test the competency of state and local
police forces and to reward units whose officers meet certain standards with higher budgets. Only
roughly 50% of officers tested in 2008 are said to have met the minimum standards. President
Calderón has also purged hundreds of corrupt police officers. In late December 2008, he asserted
that some 11,500 law enforcement and other government employees had been fined for
corruption in the past two years, with fines totaling close to $300 million.78
The State Department’s 2007 human rights report, issued in March 2008, recognized the Mexican
government’s efforts to reform and professionalize the police force, although it highlighted that
corruption and impunity, particularly at the state and local levels, remain endemic problems.
Analysts have suggested that the Calderón government consider implementing other reforms,
including, but not limited to, strengthening police professionalization programs, establishing a
career track within federal and state police forces, and developing internal and external review
mechanisms for police performance.79
Implementation of Judicial Reforms
The Mexican judicial system has been widely criticized for being opaque, inefficient, and corrupt.
It is plagued by long case backlogs, a high pre-trial detention rate (some 40% of Mexican inmates
(...continued)
drug cartel. See “Mexico: Drug Group Found with Antiaircraft Gun,” in World Digest, Washington Post, April 15,
2009.
76 Human Rights Watch, Uniform Impunity, Mexico’s Misuse of Military Justice to Prosecute Abuses in
Counternarcotics and Public Security Operations, April 2009, available at:
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/04/29/mexico-hold-military-account-rights-abuses.
77 Tracy Wilkinson, “Mexico Under Siege: Elite Police Tainted by Drug Gang,” Los Angeles Times, October 28, 2008.
78 Sara Miller Llana, “Setbacks in Mexico’s War on Corruption,” Christian Science Monitor, December 29, 2008.
79 Woodrow Wilson Center, Mexico Institute, The United States and Mexico: Toward a Strategic Partnership, January
2009.
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are simply awaiting trials), and an inability to secure convictions. In June 2008, President
Calderón signed a judicial reform decree after securing the approval of Congress and Mexico’s
states for an amendment to Mexico’s Constitution. Under the reform, Mexico has eight years to
replace its trial procedures, moving from a closed door process based on written arguments to a
public trial system with oral arguments and the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. In
addition to oral trials, the judicial system is to adopt additional means of alternative dispute
resolution (ADR), which should help make it more flexible and efficient.
Implementing these judicial reforms is likely to bring additional challenges. Some of those
challenges may include the need to update law school curricula, retrain current legal
professionals, build new courtrooms, improve forensic technology, and encourage the use of
ADR. Many observers hope that the federal government can learn how to identify and overcome
those challenges by looking at the experiences that states such as Chihuahua and Oaxaca have
had in adopting an accusatorial justice system and in using ADR.80 USAID has been supporting
state-level judicial reform programs in Mexico since the mid-1990s, and will now be supporting
implementation of the federal judicial reform.
Protection of Human Rights
Both the Mexican police and military have poor human rights records. According to the State
Department’s most recent human rights report, there were credible reports of police involvement
in extrajudicial killings, kidnappings for ransom, and torture. On July 1, 2008, the media released
videos reportedly showing police from an elite squad in the city of León, Mexico, practicing
torture techniques which provoked strong expressions of concern by Mexican and international
human rights organizations. An American instructor was seen in the videos. A spokesman for the
U.S. Embassy in Mexico City maintained that the “U.S. government was not involved in the
training in any way.”81
There is increasing concern that the Mexican military, which has had less human rights training
and is less accountable to civilian authorities than the police, will commit more human rights
abuses as it is increasingly tasked with law enforcement and duties for which it is ill-trained and
ill-suited.82 Between December 2006 and May 2008, Mexico’s Human Rights Commission (the
CNDH) received 634 reports of human rights abuses by Mexican military forces. In July 2008,
the CNDH issued a report recommending that, among other measures, the military should
conduct investigations into each of the cases, punish those who are found guilty of abuses, pay
damages to victims, and develop plans to prevent future abuses. By the end of 2008, however,
CHDH reported that human rights complaints against the Mexican army had surged with more
than 1,200 complaints of human rights abuses by members of the Mexican military registered in
that year alone.83 There are also concerns that the desertion rate among military members is
increasing, with some of those deserters joining the cartels. Some have urged the Calderón
80 David Shirk and Lourna M. Márquez-Carrasquillo, “Border Brief: State Level Judicial Reform Initiatives in
Mexico,” February 21, 2008.
81 Alfredo Corchado, “U.S. Denies Involvement in Training Videos Showing Mexican Officers Using Torture,” Dallas
Morning News, July 3, 2008.
82 Roderic al Camp, “Role of Military to Military Cooperation and the Implications and Potential Risks to Civil-
Military Relations,” Testimony before the Congressional Policy Forum, May 8, 2008.
83 Comisión Nacional de Derechos Humanos, (Mexico), “Informe de Actividades del 1 de enero al 31 de diciembre de
2008,” Mexico, 2009, p. 36.
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government to develop a time-table for Mexico’s military to disengage from law enforcement
efforts. In the meantime, many experts maintain that there needs to be greater oversight of the
military by civilian institutions, particularly the Congress.84
Human rights organizations generally lauded the inclusion of human rights conditions (described
in the Appendix) in Mérida Initiative appropriations legislation. Some groups, however, have
expressed concerns that Mexican authorities are not taking adequate measures to comply with the
conditions. Some assert that the growing role of the Mexican military in public security tasks is
resulting in increased human rights violations by the military.85
Central America Policy Issues
A number of policy issues may emerge as Congress considers the Central American portion of the
Mérida Initiative including concerns about:
• Funding: When the Mérida Initiative was announced, Central American leaders
and some Members of Congress expressed concerns about the funding disparity
between the Mexican and Central American portions of the Initiative.86
Depending upon how much funding Central America receives in the FY2010
budget for Mérida, there may be lingering questions about the adequacy of the
funds provided, as well as how much of those funds should be spent on regional
programs versus bilateral programs in the seven Central American countries.
• Type of Funds Provided: In the FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Act,
Congress reduced the funds appropriated for law enforcement programs in
Central America in order to increase funding for institution-building, rule of law,
and development programs. Members are likely to continue to debate how
funding should be balanced between the various program components,
particularly how much funding should support law enforcement programs and
drug interdiction efforts versus institution-building and rule of law activities.
• Interagency Coordination: Debates are likely to continue concerning what U.S.
agency is best equipped to oversee Mérida programs, including the issue of
whether there is a role for the U.S. Southern Command in anticrime efforts, and
how U.S. programs should be coordinated with those funded by other donors.
• Domestic Efforts by Partner Governments: Congress and the Obama
Administration are likely to monitor the political will among the Central
American governments to combat corruption and impunity, address crime and
violence in a holistic way, and to complement U.S. funding with support from
their national budgets, the private sector, and other international donors.
84 Woodrow Wilson Center, Mexico Institute, The United States and Mexico: Toward a Strategic Partnership, January
2009.
85 See testimony by Joy Olson, Washington Office on Latin America, and Lisa Haugaard, Latin America Working
Group, before the House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs, hearing on the Mérida Initiative, March 10, 2009.
86 Manuel Roig-Franzia, “Central Americans See Peril in Bush’s Anti-Drug Priorities,” Washington Post, November
29. 2007.
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• Anti-gang Policies: There is ongoing disagreement over the level and
combination of preventive and suppressive policies that should be used in Central
America to address the gang problem. Proponents of law enforcement solutions
maintain that Central American law enforcement officials lack the capacity and
resources to target gang leaders effectively, share data, and conduct thorough
investigations that lead to successful prosecutions. Human rights groups tend to
emphasize the importance of prevention and rehabilitation programs.
• U.S. Deportation Procedures: Congress may also maintain an interest in how
U.S. deportation procedures for individuals with criminal records might be
improved and whether U.S. assistance should be provided to help receiving
governments reintegrate deportees.
The Caribbean
The Bush Administration originally conceived the Mérida Initiative as a foreign assistance
package for Mexico and Central America, the countries through which the bulk of cocaine
heading to the United States now flows. However, some Members of Congress felt that the
Initiative should also include funding for the Caribbean drug transit countries of Haiti and the
Dominican Republic. If they are not funded, they argued, a successful Mérida Initiative will force
drug traffickers to return to the Caribbean transit zone. As a result, the 110th Congress included
Haiti and the Dominican Republic in Mérida authorizations and appropriations legislation. The
111th Congress provided additional Mérida funding for Haiti and the Dominican Republic in the
2009 Omnibus appropriations measure signed into law on March 11, 2009.
Some favor including Haiti and the Dominican Republic in the Mérida Initiative since both
countries are key transhipment points for cocaine bound from South America to the United States
and Europe. They point out that both countries have experienced a surge in air smuggling of
cocaine from Venezuela since 2007.87 Haiti, the poorest and most unstable country in the Western
Hemisphere, is particularly attractive to narcotics traffickers since its coasts and border with the
Dominican Republic are largely uncontrolled. Others oppose providing additional Mérida funds
for Haiti and the Dominican Republic since there are only limited funds available for the
Initiative. Haiti and the Dominican Republic already receive U.S. counternarcotics assistance
through other foreign aid accounts. Moreover, they argue, both countries are also receiving
counternarcotics training and support from the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti.
Finally, some Members of Congress have called for a broader expansion of Mérida Initiative-
related security assistance to the Caribbean nations. They support additional foreign operations
appropriations in FY2010 so that all the nations of the Caribbean receive Mérida assistance. In
the authorization legislation in the 111th Congress, all Caribbean community (CARICOM) nations
are included. The Obama Administration did not include Haiti and the Dominican Republic in its
FY2010 request for Mérida. It did announce a new Caribbean Basin Security Initiative at the
Summit of the Americas held in April 2009. This Caribbean expansion is reflected in H.R. 3081,
the FY2010 foreign operations appropriation measure reported out of the House Appropriations
Committee in late June 2009.
87 U.S. Department of State, International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, March 2008.
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Appendix. Conditions on FY2008 Supplemental
Assistance for Mérida
Mexico
The FY2008 Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-252), which includes the first tranche of
funding provided for the Mérida Initiative, has softer human rights conditions than earlier House
and Senate versions, in large part because of Mexico’s objections that some of the conditions
would violate its national sovereignty. The Secretary of State, after consultation with Mexican
authorities, is required to submit a report on procedures in place to implement Section 620J of the
Foreign Assistance Act (FAA) of 1961. That section of the FAA “prohibits assistance to any unit
of the security forces of a foreign country if the Secretary of State has credible evidence that such
unit has committed gross violations of human rights.” An exception to this prohibition is provided
in Section 620J if the Secretary of State determines and reports to Congress that the government
of such country is taking effective measures to bring the responsible members of the security
forces unit to justice.
In P.L. 110-252, human rights conditions require that 15% of INCLE and FMF assistance be
withheld until the Secretary of State reports in writing that Mexico is taking action in four human
rights areas:
• improving transparency and accountability of federal police forces;
• establishing a mechanism for regular consultations among relevant Mexican
government authorities, Mexican human rights organizations, and other relevant
Mexican civil society organizations, to make consultations concerning
implementation of the Mérida Initiative in accordance with Mexican and
international law;
• ensuring that civilian prosecutors and judicial authorities are investigating and
prosecuting, in accordance with Mexican and international law, members of the
federal police and military forces who have been credibly alleged to have
committed violations of human rights, and the federal police and military forces
are fully cooperating with the investigations; and
• enforcing the prohibition, in accordance with Mexican and international law, on
the use of testimony obtained through torture or other ill-treatment.
Central America, Haiti and the Dominican Republic
P.L. 110-252 includes similar conditions on assistance provided to Central America, Haiti and the
Dominican Republic. As with Mexico, The Secretary of State is required to submit a report on
procedures in place to implement Section 620J of the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA) of 1961 in
order for Mérida funding to be released.
Other human rights conditions require that 15% of INCLE and FMF assistance be withheld until
the Secretary of State reports in writing that the governments of the countries in Central America,
Haiti, and the Dominican Republic are taking action in three areas:
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• establishing police complaints commissions with authority and independence to
receive complaints and carry out effective investigations;
• implementing reforms to improve the capacity and ensure the independence of
the judiciary; and
• investigating and prosecuting members of the federal police and military forces
who have been credibly alleged to have committed violations of human rights.
Author Contact Information
Clare Ribando Seelke
June S. Beittel
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
Analyst in Latin American Affairs
cseelke@crs.loc.gov, 7-5229
jbeittel@crs.loc.gov, 7-7613
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