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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
Policy and Program Overview for 1995
The international drug trade had little to cheer about in 1995, as
several key countries intensified their efforts against it. Though some
governments acted more vigorously than others, by early 1996 there were
more prominent drug figures behind bars than in any comparable period in
the past few years. Drug crop eradication, a measure once fiercely
resisted by many of the major drug cultivation countries, gained better
acceptance as a means of limiting cocaine and opium production.
National drug enforcement units, often supported by USG resources,
continued to disrupt trafficking organizations, choke off key
trafficking routes, destroy drug refining laboratories, and seize
important quantities of cocaine and heroin. More countries enacted
tougher money laundering laws and tightened restrictions on the commerce
in precursor chemicals. And perhaps most importantly, governments of
several countries pivotal to the drug trade found themselves obliged to
confront the corruption that has given the drug trade access to the
highest levels of government. These encouraging developments confirmed
the overall soundness of current antidrug policies.
Drug Trade Still Strong. Yet 1995 offered no grounds for complacency.
The international drug trade remains a powerful, sophisticated, and
adaptable force. Despite our collective effort, in 1995, trafficking
organizations managed to produce and move tons of cocaine and heroin to
nearly every country in the world. They nurtured new markets in Eastern
Europe, the countries of the former Soviet Union, Africa and the Middle
East. They flaunted their undeniable capacity to corrupt governments.
And they showed that often, far from crippling an organization, the
arrest of a drug baron may only create a temporary job opening.
The drug trade always seeks new opportunities. To offset potential
losses in the Western Hemisphere, the cocaine syndicates have set their
sights on new markets throughout the world. In Europe, where a
combination of new affluence and social discontent provides the ideal
conditions for drug consumption, cocaine was seized in nearly every
country between Denmark and Turkey, traditional markets for Southwest
Asian heroin. Eastern Europe was a prime target. For example, shipyard
workers in Gdansk found over 200 kg of cocaine aboard a Greek freighter
in dry-dock; Czech authorities in August arrested a Venezuelan courier
smuggling cocaine; Turkish police stopped a Bulgarian courier carrying
cocaine intended for sale in Istanbul's bars; Romanian police
confiscated liquid cocaine shipped from Colombia. Brazil became a hub
for Nigerians moving cocaine to Africa and Europe. And Nigerian
traffickers can be found in nearly every prison population in the world.
But cocaine only supplemented the already robust heroin trade. Heroin
trafficking rings in Southeast and Southwest Asia respectively poured
drugs into the Western Hemisphere, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
In 1995, Southwest Asian heroin became especially plentiful in Europe,
with traffickers splitting and expanding the traditional Balkan
smuggling route northward into Romania, Hungary, and the Czech and
Slovak Republics, and southward through former Yugoslavia, Croatia,
Slovenia, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Greece and Albania.
Illegal drugs unfortunately remain a growth industry.
The Rise Of Synthetics. A disturbing development in 1995 has been the
astonishing spread of synthetic drugs, especially methamphetamine, on
the illicit world drug market. Synthetics, which have been growing in
popularity over the last few years, may become the drug control
nightmare of the next century. As the INCSR country chapters report,
the demand for methamphetamine has been increasing not only in the
industrialized nations, but in most of the countries of the developing
world. From the United States to Europe, from the countries of the
former Soviet Union to Africa the appetite for methamphetamine and MDMA
("Ecstasy") has been on the rise. Synthetics allow trafficking
organizations to control the whole process, from manufacture to sale on
the street. They free traffickers from reliance upon potentially
vulnerable drug crops like coca or opium poppy and can be manufactured
relatively cheaply from easily obtainable chemicals. With a pool of
under- or unemployed Eastern European chemists to draw from, the drug
mafias are making synthetics a third "drug pillar" to rival the
mainstays of drug trade, cocaine, and heroin. There were already signs
in 1995 that Mexican trafficking organizations that dominate the cocaine
pipeline are aiming to control the US methamphetamine trade.
Accomplishments. In 1995, it was the cocaine trade that suffered most
as Colombian forces arrested many of the key leaders of the Cali drug
mafia, until now the most powerful of the cocaine trafficking
syndicates. While the subsequent escape of Jose Santacruz Londono--who
drove away in January from a Bogota prison--took some of the luster off
the triumph, it was nonetheless a major achievement. Coming two years
after the fragmentation of the Medellin drug cartel in 1993, the
Colombian government's attack on the Cali drug cartel has sown disarray
in the Colombian cocaine trade, at least for the time being.
The cocaine trade suffered other losses elsewhere in Latin America.
Colombian and Peruvian military forces, supported by the USG, severely
constricted the "airbridge" carrying semi-finished cocaine products from
Peru to Colombia for refining and distribution. The bottlenecks briefly
caused the price of coca in Peru to plummet, since traffickers were
unable to move perishable commodities to market.
There were notable achievements in other parts of the world. Pakistani
authorities reported seizing nearly 17 metric tons of heroin. If pure,
this quantity alone would be enough to satisfy demand for the year in
most of Western Europe. Pakistan also extradited to the United States
three leading heroin traffickers, Iqbal Baig and two of his deputies,
key figures long sought by USG authorities. In Southeast Asia, Thailand
began extradition proceedings against the ten major drug traffickers
associated with the region's most notorious drug warlord, Khun Sa
(Chiang Chi-Fu). The ten were arrested in late 1994 in Operation Tiger
Trap, as Thai military and security forces shut off major roads and
trafficking routes close to insurgent-held areas of Burma. An eleventh
associate was arrested in 1995 and also is facing extradition to the US
to stand trial on federal drug trafficking charges.
Drug Cultivation. Drug crop data were less encouraging: both coca and
opium poppy enjoyed a bumper year in 1995. Hectarage and potential
yield estimates set a new record for each crop. Good weather was
primarily to blame, though government inaction was also a boon to the
growers. In the Western Hemisphere, coca cultivation spread in all
three major coca-growing countries, for an annual total of 214,800
hectares, beating the 1992 record of 211,700 hectares. The largest
expansion--six percent--occurred in Peru, where the government has yet
to forced eradication of mature coca, fearing it would stir social
unrest. Peru did, however, carry out an aggressive eradication of coca
seedbeds, which could have produced over 16,000 hectares of mature coca.
In February 1996, the Government of Peru issued a decree initiating a
limited coca eradication program.) In Colombia and Bolivia, the second
and third ranking coca producers, eradication campaigns removed
important hectarage from cultivation, though new planting during the
year offset any net gains. The Bolivian eradication effort in 1995 was
particularly significant. By removing nearly 5,500 hectares of mature,
fully productive coca, potential leaf production fell by five percent,
despite the slight net increase in overall cultivation (from 48,100
hectares in 1994 to 48,600 hectares in 1995). Unless the government
eradicates the new coca soon, potential leaf yield will rise again in
two years when the new plants come "on-line."
Opium. Aided by improved weather conditions, opium poppy cultivation
enjoyed a banner year in 1995. Southeast Asian cultivation rose five
percent in Burma and six percent in Laos, while dropping markedly in
China (down 35 percent) and Thailand (down 17 percent). Overall,
Southeast Asian poppy cultivation grew by slightly over four percent.
In Southwest Asia, total hectarage climbed by approximately nine
percent, most of it in Afghanistan. Afghan poppy cultivation leapt up
by one third to 38,740 hectares, making it the world's second greatest
opium source country. Pakistan's cultivation declined by four percent
(to 6,950 hectares). Western Hemisphere opium figures were lower in
1995 for two reasons. First, until 1995, we had no actual survey data
on Colombian opium, which had been reported at 20,000 hectares. The
revised estimate, based on imagery, is 6,540 hectares, assuming three
crops per year. Second, Mexico's opium poppy crop fell from 5,795
hectares in 1994 to 5,050 hectares in 1995.
Opium gum yield estimates for 1995 set a new record. Potential opium
gum production soared by 16 percent to a new high of over 4,000 metric
tons, with Burma alone responsible for nearly 70 percent of the total.
With a potential capacity for producing 2,400 metric tons of opium
(i.e., 240 metric tons of heroin), Burma by itself could supply most of
the world's heroin needs. Ideal weather conditions in Laos more than
doubled the country's potential opium gum production, jumping from 85
metric tons in 1994 to 180 metric tons in 1995. In Southwest Asia,
overall potential production rose by 18 percent, despite a three percent
drop in Pakistan's estimate. Afghanistan's 32 percent increase (1,250
metric tons in 1995 versus 950 metric tons in 1994) accounts for most of
the rise. Western Hemisphere potential yields were 65 metric tons of
opium gum for Colombia and 53 metric tons for Mexico, leaving Colombia
for the second successive year as the Hemisphere's major potential opium
producer, despite an aggressive poppy eradication campaign.
The Elements of Controlling Supply: Simple Concept, Difficult
Application. The goal of significantly reducing the supply of illegal
drugs is attainable, but not without a sustained commitment. The basic
principles of supply reduction are straightforward. A five-stage
grower-to-user chain links the drug producer in a foreign land with the
consumer in the United States. These stages are: cultivation,
processing, transit, wholesale distribution, and finally retail sales on
the street. The USG's international drug control programs target the
first three links of this chain, cultivation, processing, and transit.
Severing the chain at the source is the most cost-effective means of
cutting the flow; the drugs never enter the system at all. It is
analogous to removing a tumor before it metastasizes. For example,
current research suggests that roughly every 200 hectares of coca
eradicated potentially deprives the system of about a metric ton of
finished cocaine. Given current aerial spraying capability, it would
not take long to make a major dent in the cocaine supply. Aerially
applied, environmentally approved herbicides could eradicate a large
portion of the coca crop in a period of months. Moreover, it would take
two years to replace this lost production, given the growth cycle of
coca.
The Importance of Eradication. USG drug control policy over the past
three years consequently has stressed the importance of eradication,
without underplaying the need for interdiction. Except for Colombia and
Panama, however, most coca-producing countries are reluctant to apply
such products to drug crops, even when they are using significantly
stronger, more toxic herbicides for weed control in legitimate food
crops. Bolivia uses manual eradication which helps but is slow, less
permanent, and exposes eradication personnel to greater danger from
growers.
Eradication has gained greater acceptance in the past few years.
Eradication campaigns in Bolivia and Colombia have shown that it is
possible to restrict significant expansion of the coca crop. Both
governments now acknowledge crop control as a critical element in
eliminating illegal coca, though only Colombia will permit the use of
aerially applied chemicals. Peru, the largest cultivator, is still
wavering. Its government will destroy seedbeds, but is reluctant to
face the political and economic consequences of spraying without long-
term compensation from abroad. In 1995, Peru, which did not eradicate,
was the only country to show a significant increase in coca cultivation.
If all the governments in the region would aerially eradicate illegal
crops at the same time as they make serious inroads into the trafficking
organizations, we could expect to see a real drop in supply over the
next few years.
The Determining Factor: Political Will. The cornerstone of any
successful antidrug strategy is political will. A country can have
state-of-the-art antidrug hardware and enforcement units and still not
cripple the drug trade--unless its government is willing to weather the
short-term political backlash that effective antidrug measures
inevitably trigger. Except in those rare cases where governments lack
physical control of national territory, the ground that antidrug forces
gain one year is often lost the following year when governments lack the
political courage to stand by their decisions. The effects of flagging
political will are visible to all, especially the major drug
organizations. And they make the most of it. The drug trade learned
long ago that where political will is weak it can establish a modus
vivendi with a government. Trafficking organizations as a matter of
course will absorb losses in a given area if their overall operations in
other areas are profitable. That is the cost of doing business. Most
governments, in turn, tend to concentrate their antidrug operations in
sectors least likely to trigger a political backlash from drug
interests.
In a typical pattern, a major drug cultivation country concentrates on
interdiction, when what is necessary is eradication; a major drug
refining country eradicates crops while major trafficking organizations
operate profitably by manipulating corrupt enforcement and weak judicial
systems; or a major banking country actively pursues trafficking
organizations, while guarding bank secrecy and avoiding effective money
laundering reforms. Once a modus vivendi takes hold, the drug problem
becomes endemic. The short-term political peace that the politicians
enjoy only allows drug interests to dig in for the long term. One of
the basic tenets of USG antidrug policy has been to expose and where
possible prevent such capitulation by encouraging political will in the
principal drug producing and transit countries. For once a drug problem
becomes endemic, corruption inevitably thrives; and where there is
large-scale corruption, democratic government is in jeopardy.
A Gauge of Will. Measuring political will is not easy, but one useful
gauge is crop eradication, particularly in the coca-growing countries.
Coca cultivation is finite and concentrated in three countries in the
Western Hemisphere. Our technical skills allow us to locate and measure
the extent of coca cultivation, while our modern spray aircraft and
environmentally safe herbicides provide a tested means of eliminating
cultivation. Since we share survey results with--and will provide
eradication assistance to--the governments concerned, we can judge
political will by the amount of crop reduction a government is willing
to carry out. Granted, this is only one measure of political will, but
it is a critical one, since large-scale, methodical eradication could in
one growing season remove half the crop that yields the cocaine feeding
the world's drug habit.
In the decade since the USG first refined its crop estimating
techniques, the size of the world's illicit drug crops has fluctuated
within certain parameters. Though supply varies depending on weather
patterns and sporadic efforts by various governments to cut back
cultivation, we know that even in bad years there is more than enough
coca and opium poppy available to assure a market surplus. Since we
also know that reducing drug crops is both feasible and effective, a
serious antidrug effort will only succeed as we force down total drug
cultivation below the point where the drug trade feels the pinch. And
we must do this more every year. Otherwise, we will be caught in an
endless annual ritual of thrust-and-parry that allows weak governments
to demonstrate activity without accomplishment. That is a prescription
for a status quo that only favors the drug trade and the corruption that
follows in its wake.
Corruption. At the core of the struggle against the drug trade is a
battle against corruption. Drugs are primarily a means to make vast
sums of money. Gram for gram there is no more lucrative commodity than
drugs. Substances that are relatively cheap to produce generate
criminal revenues on a scale that has no historical precedent. At an
average of one hundred dollars a gram on the streets of the US, a
metric ton of cocaine is worth $100 million if pure, double that amount
if the cocaine is cut. The USG typically seizes more than 100 metric
tons annually, or a quantity of drugs exceeding $10 billion to the drug
trade, as much as the gross domestic product of many countries. To put
these numbers in perspective, the USG in fiscal year 1995 spent a little
over $810 million on all its international drug control activities. In
quantities of cocaine, that translates into approximately eight metric
tons of cocaine. Large jets flying into Mexico have carried in as much
or more in one shipment.
With such resources at their command, large trafficking organizations
have an almost unlimited capacity to corrupt. The more entrenched the
drug organization, the better its chances to corrupt. For example, in
this hemisphere the two countries that have struggled the longest
against the drug trade--Mexico and Colombia--are also those that have
had to face the drug corruption that has crept into the uppermost
reaches of government. The nightmare scenario, of course, is that one
day traffickers could simply control governments through elected
officials who actually owe their office to drug syndicates. While this
has not happened in recent times, there have been some disturbing near
misses. We can expect the drug trade to keep pressing at every
opportunity, since its survival depends upon the right combination of
government impotence, neglect, and complicity that corruption feasts
upon.
Certification: a Spotlight on Cooperation. One way to help keep
governments honest is through periodic public scrutiny. Drug
corruption, like any other form of subversion, can only flourish in the
shadows. Thanks to a provision in the Foreign Assistance Act, the
United States Government has the equivalent of an international
spotlight to focus on the major drug-related countries: the drug
certification process. Every year the President must certify whether
each major drug producing or transit country has cooperated fully or has
taken adequate steps on its own to meet the goals and objectives of the
1988 UN Convention, including rooting out public corruption. The
certification process gives the President an international platform for
a candid, public evaluation of the performance of the major drug-
affected countries.
Though denial of certification carries important foreign assistance
sanctions, as well as a mandatory negative US vote against lending by
six multilateral development banks, the potential material losses are
often less important than the public opprobrium of failing the standard.
The last thing any government wants impugned before its international
peers is its honor or integrity, especially when it must publicly
confront objective, if often damaging evidence that it has not
cooperated fully in countering the drug trade. Most governments now
realize that every year the President of United States is legally bound
to make such a public assessment. And most know that the nature of that
assessment depends largely on their efforts during the year.
A Useful Process. The drug certification process has been very
effective in recent years. By working with the principal countries
concerned to establish realistic benchmarks through periodic demarches,
we have been able to provide honest assessments of cooperation. Where
appropriate, we have recognized achievement, criticized poor
cooperation, or granted national interest certifications. The
remarkable improvement in cooperation levels over the past three years
underscores the importance of holding countries publicly responsible for
their actions before their international peers. Such public diplomacy
makes it impossible for the drug trade to hide behind the polite
formalities of traditional bilateral diplomacy. As uncomfortable or
embarrassing as some countries may find this process in the short term,
we believe that over time such openness will severely curtail the
influence of the drug trade by eliminating the corruption that nourishes
it.
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