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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT, MARCH 1996

United States Department of State

Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Next Steps

We must continue to exploit the vulnerabilities of the drug trade. Contrary to the image that the large drug syndicates cultivate, they are far from invincible. They cannot exist independently of the governments in whose territories they operate. Nor can they function outside the financial channels of legitimate commerce. We must therefore concentrate on disrupting the drug production and distribution cycle, while striking at trafficking organizations at their most vulnerable point, in their financial operations. Illegal drugs and their criminal revenues form a self-reinforcing vicious circle. Drugs generate astronomical profits that permit the expansion of the drug trade; this expansion, in turn, allows the system to generate more cash.

Breaking the cycle is difficult, but not impossible. Unfortunately for them, criminal enterprises are at the mercy of the world's legitimate banking systems. Their profits, if they are to be useful, must at one time or another pass through international banking channels subject to government oversight. Moreover, the very magnitude of cash that makes drug trafficking so profitable also makes the profits difficult to conceal from attentive banking systems. We will encourage other governments to strengthen their oversight mechanisms, tighten regulations, and more stringently enforce money laundering laws. We will also work with them to develop means of quickly identifying, freezing, and ultimately seizing illegal drug proceeds before they can be invested. We will make full use of the sanctions imposed by under the International Economic Emergency Powers Act to prevent the drug trade from exploiting legitimate companies for criminal purposes. Drug traffickers who find they cannot easily spend their profits may eventually 1ook for another line of work.

The United States will continue to provide leadership and assistance to its partners in the global antidrug effort. We cannot afford to give up any of the precious gains made in the last decade. Yet ultimately the success of this effort will hinge not on the United States, but on the actions and commitment of the major drug-affected countries themselves. We will help, but they must lay the political and economic groundwork for development programs to provide legitimate alternatives to farmers now raising illegal crops. They must undertake prevention and demand reduction programs to avoid the risk of losing the next generation to drug addiction. Most importantly, they must demonstrate the necessary political will to defend their national sovereignty from drug corruption by reforming and strengthening their political, legislative, judicial, law enforcement, and banking institutions. The drug trade flourishes only when it can divide populations and corrupt institutions from within. It cannot survive a concerted, sustained effort by a coalition of countries individually committed to its destruction. We shall work to make that coalition a reality.

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