U.S. role in arming Mexico’s drug war exaggerated-study

GENEVA, (Reuters) – Mexico’s hardline fight against  drug gangs has driven violence to levels higher in than many war  zones but the role the United States plays in arming these  brutal cartels appears exaggerated, independent arms researchers  said on Thursday.

The Geneva Declaration, a Swiss-driven diplomatic  initiative, said in a global report on armed violence that the  success of President Felipe Calderon’s decision five years ago  to use the army to fight the cartels was debatable.

Deaths from drug-related violence in Mexico have surged  since Calderon took office in December 2006, damaging support  for his National Action Party (NAP) and caused strains in  relations with the United States.

“Some Mexican cities and regions suffer from  extraordinarily high levels of violence, higher than found in  many war zones,” said the report, citing Ciudad Juarez,  epicentre of drug violence in the northern state of Chihuahua.

“The Mexican government has openly declared war upon drug  traffickers, with ambiguous results. While the drug cartels have  been weakened and divided, the resulting struggles and  readjustments of power have given way to even more episodes of  overt violence.”

The report said drug-related violence has become  increasingly organised and paramilitary in character, including  gruesome decapitations, mutilations, mass executions and extreme  torture.

More than 44,000 people have died in this surge of violence  in Latin America’s second biggest economy since Calderon  declared war on the drug gangs.

Santiago Creel, a leading presidential candidate of  Mexico’s ruling party, told Reuters on Wednesday that he would  break with government policy and withdraw the army from the drug  war if he wins the nation’s election in July 2012.

U.S. TENSIONS

The escalation in violence has put strains on Mexico’s  relations with the United States, with Calderon calling on  Washington to clamp down on the large number of weapons used by  Mexico drug gangs that originate from north of the border.

Mexico has said 90 percent of the weapons used by drug gangs  are bought in the United States and wants the U.S. Congress to  reinstate a ban on the sale of assault weapons that expired in  2004.

But Keith Krause, an arms expert and one of the authors of  the Geneva Declaration report, said it was not clear how many of  the weapons used by Mexican drug gangs came from the United  States.

He said only 30 percent of an estimated 100,000 weapons  confiscated in Mexico each year are sent by authorities to the  United States for identification on suspicion of having crossed  the long, porous border.

Of these, 80 percent turn out to be U.S.-made but that does  not mean that 80 percent of the overall total of arms seized in  Mexico are of U.S. origin, as is often claimed, he said.

“It’s not the case that most of the weapons that are seized  by Mexican police from drug gangs come from the United States…  it’s very misleading,” Krause told a news briefing.

He said seizures and photographs suggest significant  quantities of military-style weapons such as grenades and even  rocket launchers, were not coming across the U.S. border but  coming from surplus stocks in places such as Guatemala or even  from other official sources in Mexico itself.

The Geneva Declaration report said at least 526,000 people  were killed in armed violence worldwide each year between 2004  and 2009 which was in line with figures in its 2008 report.

More than one in four deaths occurred in 14 countries,  seven of them in Central and Latin America. El Salvador topped  the global list for 2004-2009, followed by Iraq and Jamaica.