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Questions 4~6 Despite their reputation for incompetence, corruption and abuse, Mexico’s police and military are pretty good anti-drug cops. That is, when they want to be. In recent weeks there has been some impressive interdiction work south of the border, including last week’s seizure of 23. 5 tons of cocaine—with a street value of more than $ 400 million—at the Pacific coast port of Manzanillo. It was, in fact, the largest coke bust in Mexico’s history. But there is a strong incentive for the massive show of efficiency: the U.S. Congress is currently debating whether to approve President Bush’s two-year, $1.4 billion anti-drug aid proposal for Mexico. Veteran observers remark that every time Mexico wants to ensure U. S. State Department certification in the drug war, scores of Mexican drug traffickers get rounded up. Every time Mexico wants U.S. helicopters, mountains of methamphetamines suddenly get intercepted on their way across the border. The problem is, once Mexico wins the prize, a lot of its law enforcement usually repays the favor by joining up again with the country’s drug cartels. That was the case a decade ago when, after Washington agreed to begin sharing important anti-drug intelligence with Mexico City, no less than Mexico’s drug czar, Army Gen. Jesus Guterriez Rebollo, was discovered to be in the pocket of Mexico’s major drug lord. "We’ve seen this movie before," says drug expert Bruce Bagley, professor of international relations at the University of Miami. "It’s gotten to be almost a ritual. " It’s time for a fresh approach: The U. S. has to make sure the aid is accompanied by a genuine modernization of Mexico’s local, state and federal law enforcement, whose officers all too often become members rather than opponents of Mexico’s $ 25 billion-a-year drug trafficking industry. Bagley believes the U. S. must be strict and demanding in that sense this time, echoing a chorus of anti-drug analysts in both Mexico and the U. S. And if we make this aid an open spigot without transparent and measurable criteria for the professionalization of Mexico’s police forces, then it risks being money wasted. Experts like Bagley agree that reform at least seems more likely under new Mexican President Felipe Calderon, who during his first year has made a major military push against the nation’s increasingly bloodthirsty drug cartels. (One of Calderon’ s cabinet-level anti-drug advisers, Sigrid Arzt, is one of Bagley’s doctoral students.) Mexico’s Public Security Minister, Genaro Garcia Luna, has begun a serious purge of the federal police as well as a training program for federal and state cops under U. S. , Canadian and European tutors. None of that will mean much, of course, if Mexico doesn’t start paying its cops salaries decent enough to make them less vulnerable to drug cartel recruitment—and many feel a good chunk of the new aid package should be used for just that purpose. But either way, Garcia declared that last week’s Manzanillo seizure "reaffirms the reach of-Calderon’s strategy.., to break the operational networks of organized crime groups" in Mexico. Still, the stakes are higher this time because the U. S. is giving more money and more valuable equipment to Mexico than usual. Although the aid package doesn’t reach the annual $1 billion-plus that Washington shells out to Bogota under Plan Colombia, it contains a cache of high-tech law enforcement toys the U. S. has been wary to share in the past, due to the risk of having them fall into Mexican traffickers’ hands. (The leaders of Mexico’s most vicious drug gang, a group of exarmy special forces soldiers known as the Zetas, are experts at high-tech communications. ) Among them: sophisticated telephone eavesdropping; systems to track cell phones; lie detector machines and, perhaps most important, criminal data bases. U.S. and Mexican officials also say heavyweight interdiction tools like Blackhawk helicopters are being discussed. As a result, many analysts believe the higher value of the aid package and its offerings could serve as more effective leverage to persuade Mexican law enforcement to finally get its act together—especially if it makes different police and military branches compete for the booty. But the aides real value is probably political, at least in the eyes of the Bush Administration. The conservative Calderon is a rare U.S. ally in a Latin America that is increasingly steering leftward. Because he won last year’s presidential election by a less than 1% margin, the White House sees the aid as a solid means of shoring up his stature at home and abroad. It also allows Bush to look as if he’s fulfilling his own 2000 campaign pledge to make Mexico a foreign policy priority—after the country was anything but the past seven years. The U.S. is in no position to cut off funding, given the unprecedented cross-border drug flow and drug-related bloodletting Mexico is suffering today. It’s the kind of south-of-the-border instability Washington can never stomach for too long. But perhaps this time there will some incentive for Mexico’s cops to deploy their skills long after U. S. aid arrives.1.What does Prof. Bruce Bagley mean by saying "We’ve seen this movie before... It’s gotten to be almost a ritual. " (Para.2)

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知觉有哪些基本特性

各单位发生的各项经济业务事项应当在依法设置的会计账簿上统一登记、核算,不得违反《会计法》和国家统一的会计制度的规定私设会计账簿登记、核算。 ( )

A. 对
B. 错

2002年8月,在A市建筑材料商品交易会上,甲公司委托乙代为销售"B"牌三合板,并约定甲公司按代销贷款总额的8%付给乙代销费。之后,乙以自己的名义分别于丙、丁、戊三家室装潢公司签订了供应三合板的合同。合同签订后,乙将合同订立的情况通知了甲,并要求甲在两个月之内提供3 000张三合板。丙;丁、戊各1 000张,每张50元,货款总值15万元。甲在接到通知后,于同年10月,以自己的名义分别向丙、丁、戊发货1 000张三合板。丙在收到货物后,立即支付了货款5万元,丁开始以未收到货为由拒付货款,后经甲的追索,支付了2万元的货款,戊则以与甲不存在合同关系为由拒绝付款。甲为此诉诸法院,经法院查明,丁、戊已如数收到三合板。 本案中甲与乙之间_________。

A. 是购销合同关系
B. 是不当得利关系
C. 不存在合同关系
D. 是借贷关系

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