Pubdate: Feb, 2000
Source: Strategic Analysis (India)
Copyright: 2000 Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
Contact:  Block No. 1, Old JNU Campus, New Delhi 110067, India
Fax: 91-11-618-9023
Website: http://www.idsa-india.org/an-content.htm
Author: P. R. Rajeswari, Researcher, IDSA

US COUNTER-NARCOTICS POLICY

For the last two decades or so, drug trafficking has emerged as one of the 
fastest growing industries in the Americas, Southeast Asia and parts of 
Southwest Asia. This problem has caused serious threats to public health, 
institutional development, and political stability of the respective 
regions. If not controlled and put to a halt, the issue is going to have 
serious implications at the national and international levels.

The end of the Cold War and opening up of the markets has enabled this 
industry to garner a great share of profiteering. With the ability of 
nations to control what comes across their borders and what takes place 
within them having diminished because of declining trade barriers, economic 
deregulation, and revolutionary advances in information and communications 
technology, the process of drug trading has become much easier.

Illicit opium cultivation in Southeast and Southwest Asia, particularly in 
Burma and Afghanistan provides the raw materials for much of the world's 
heroin. Trafficking patterns have continued to expand through South and 
East Asia and into the Middle East, the Newly Independent States, Eastern 
Europe, and Africa, as local drug trafficking organisations prosper and 
develop world-wide networks. Africa, has been a nurturing ground to one of 
the widely connected terrorist networks in the world, the Liberation Tigers 
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) too. The immense profits that are generated from 
selling drugs not only provides strong incentives for the enlargement of 
the market but also gives tremendous power to the principal organisations 
to corrupt and intimidate public officials and institutions1 particularly 
in areas of weak governance. Countries with poor governance and weak law 
enforcement infrastructure fall prey to this big menace and hence, the 
industry flourishes there.

US Agencies and its Anti-drug Initiatives

The Department of State is the lead agency for international narcotics 
control and anti-crime policy formulation and implementation. The State 
Department is responsible for coordinating the international narcotics 
control and anti-crime policies of all the US government agencies operating 
abroad. As per the recommendations and advice of the secretary of state, 
the president sends his annual certifications to the Congress, the major 
illicit drug producing countries and drug transit countries.

The Clinton Administration, as part of its efforts on anti-drug lines, sent 
its annual report to the Congress on November 10, 1999. President Clinton, 
in accordance with provisions of section 490 (h) of the Foreign Assistance 
Act of 1961, as amended, identified some of the major countries involved in 
either drug producing or drug transit activities. The following are 
included in this category: Afghanistan, the Bahamas, Bolivia, Brazil, 
Burma, Cambodia, China, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, 
Haiti, Hong Kong, India, Jamaica, Laos, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, 
Paraguay, Peru, Taiwan, Thailand, Venezuela, and Vietnam.2 In this report, 
the administration had removed Aruba and Belize from the majors list and 
added Belize as part of this year's Central America region of concern; 
added the entire Eastern and Southern Caribbean, including the Leeward and 
Windward islands, Aruba, and the Netherlands Antilles, as a region of 
concern, and also added North Korea as a country of concern.3

A country's inclusion in this list does not reflect the government's 
counter-drug efforts or the extent of cooperation with the US, but just a 
record of how serious the issue of drug trafficking in these regions or 
countries is and how even the anti-drug initiatives have not been 
effective. For example, Hong Kong and Taiwan have been two countries who 
have excellent counter-drug records and cooperate closely with the United 
States.

It would be interesting to take a little detailed look into each of the 
areas. Central America has been one of the most significant trans-shipment 
points for most of the illicit drugs reaching the United States. Central 
America, located between South America and Mexico, with its thousands of 
miles of coastline, several container-handling ports, the Pan-American 
Highway, and limited law enforcement capability has made the entire region 
a logical conduit and trans-shipment area for illicit drugs.4

The Leeward and Windward Islands, together with Aruba and the Netherlands 
Antilles, constitute a broad geographical area through which drugs bound 
for the United States may pass en route from Latin America.5 Aruba was 
designated as a transit country in 1997 but has been removed from this 
year's report, as there has been no proven evidence to show it as a drug 
transit point.

Iran, in the past, has been a traditional opium producing country, but over 
the years the Government of Iran has put a halt to the illicit opium poppy 
cultivation. Whatever little production is still continuing has not made 
the United States, but Europe, the ultimate destination. This prerequisite 
for any country to be declared a major in the report prevents Iran from 
being cited.

The United States remains concerned about the large volume of Southwest 
Asian heroin moving through Turkey and neighbouring countries to Western 
Europe along the Balkan route. The heroin transiting countries like Turkey, 
Bulgaria, Greece, Serbia-Montenegro, Bosnia, Croatia, the former Yugoslav 
Republic of Macedonia, or other European countries on the Balkan route 
significantly affect the United States and may be added in the majors list 
as and when necessary.

Other major cannabis producing countries like Kazakstan, Kyrgystan, 
Morocco, the Philippines and South Africa are significantly important, yet 
they have not been listed out as majors since the illicit cannabis is 
consumed either locally or transported to countries other than the United 
States and President Clinton has determined that such illicit production in 
these countries does not significantly affect the United States.

The Department of Defence (DOD) has been designated as the lead agency for 
detection and monitoring of aerial and maritime transit of illegal drugs 
into the Untied States. DOD provides training and technical assistance even 
to foreign governments in conjunction with the Department of State. Other 
agencies include the US Coast Guard, which is a principal maritime 
enforcement agency, the Agency for International Development (AID), the 
Department of Justice, the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and 
the US Information Agency (USIA).

US policy initiatives have been as follows:

- - Encourage countries in the region to adopt and implement strong narcotics 
control legislation, arrest major drug traffickers, improve the efficiency 
and effectiveness of judicial institutions to bring drug offenders to 
justice, and develop bilateral and multilateral mutual legal assistance 
cooperation;

- - Strengthen host nation counter-narcotics law enforcement capabilities to 
deal with drug trafficking and production, money laundering, and other crimes;

- - Develop governmental and non-governmental organisation (NGO) 
institutional capabilities to address the issue of drug abuse and production.6

The President's Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) of the US 
presents an annual report to the president and the latest one of the year 
1998 puts five broad goals in its strategy.

- - Educate and enable America's youth to reject illegal drugs as well as 
alcohol and tobacco;

- - Increase the safety of America's citizens by substantially reducing 
drug-related crime and violence;

- - Reduce health and social costs to the public of illegal drug use;

- - Shield America's air, land, and sea frontiers from the drug threat; and

- - Break foreign and domestic sources of supply.7

The vast majority of the budget for counter-narcotics programs is applied 
to the first three goals. Out of the overall budget for counter-drug 
activities, a large amount $26,731 million in 1996 and $35,838 million in 
1997--is allocated to research and development, which is primarily tied 
down to the Counter-drug Technology Assessment Center (CTAC).8 The 
remaining budget amount is spent on operations, or activities that directly 
affect the daily lives of millions of US citizens. The overall budget 
request for counter-narcotics operations for fiscal year 1998 (FY 1998) was 
$15, 977 million. The total budget amount is split among criminal justice 
system, drug treatment, drug prevention, international programs, 
interdiction, research, and intelligence.

The programs undertaken by the US administration have proved to be quite 
successful. The number of people 12 years and older who regularly use drugs 
in the United States has dropped from 14 per cent in 1976 to just 6 per 
cent in 1996. Also the number of cocaine users dropped 70 per cent a 
decade, from 5.7 million in 1995 to 1.7 million in 1996.9 Drug-related 
crimes too have declined considerably.

Since the process of illicit drug production, transport, and reloading take 
place in different countries, international cooperation among the producing 
countries, transit countries, and the final destined ones should be a very 
significant component of the international anti-drug policy. It is very 
important for the US government to work with international organisations 
and other countries, for the network can be broken only through 
multilateral actions and through cooperation of the transit countries. 
Without a proper consensus among all countries, it is difficult to achieve 
any success in this venture, as the network among illicit drug traffickers 
is very complex.

Working with the government of Mexico since 1995, targeting the Amado 
Carillo Fuentes organisation has led to more than 100 indictments in the 
US, the seizure of 11.5 metric tons of cocaine, 6.9 metric tons of 
marijuana, and more than $18.5 million in assets.10 The US has also 
dismantled Colombian, Nigerian, and Jamaican organisations that had 
resulted in multi-ton shipments of a variety of drugs into the United 
States, such as heroin, methamphetamines, and marijuana. Operation 
Millennium, a joint US-Colombian operation had netted 31 drug traffickers 
in October 1999, including several identified by the Drug Enforcement 
Administration (DEA) and Colombian police as kingpins who moved more 
cocaine to the US than Pablo Escobar of Medellin or the Rodriguez Orejuela 
brothers in Cali.11

International Drug Control Initiatives

The international drug control initiatives began not at the end of the 
century, but well at the beginning in 1909. The movement particularly took 
shape from the situation in Eastern Asia, especially from the opium problem 
in China, and the geopolitical interests there of the western powers. Sale 
of Indian opium to China was profitable trade and became an integral part 
of payment for the British government in India. Besides importing from 
India, the crop was grown in plentiful quantities in China itself. This 
opium trade caused trouble in China because the use of opium was often 
cited as the cause for the nation's weakness in the face of western aggression.

Around the same time, Britain also came out with certain groups declaring 
that the trade was a wrong practice and should be stopped. However, it was 
only in 1906 that a government came into power in Britain who shared the 
same view. Simultaneously the Chinese government too set in motion a 
campaign against opium smoking and opium production in China. These two 
movements further converged with another one when the US decided to invite 
relevant nations to meet in Shanghai to discuss ways and means through 
which the opium trade in China could be controlled. This could be said to 
be the starting point of the anti-drug programs at an international level. 
The International Opium Commission initially met at Shanghai in February 
1909, which could not conclude in a treaty, but the later meeting that look 
place at the Hague in December 1912 drafted the Hague Opium Convention, the 
first treaty to control opium and cocaine through world-wide agreement.12

The League of Nations that took responsibility for the Hague Convention in 
1920 did not successfully follow up due to the lack of leadership of the 
USA. Further, the whole issue of drug production and consumption got 
entangled into the Cold War politics, with Russia and the US always taking 
opposing sides.

Anyhow, this was not the time when the US got involved in the issue of drug 
trafficking. The American interest in international drug control began in 
1898 with their acquisition of Philippines. The transportation of opium 
from Philippines to the US started in the early 1800s and any kind of 
prohibitionary measure came only by this century when this became a major 
issue in the domestic legislation of the United States.

However, the major international drug control treaties are the 1961 Single 
Convention on Narcotic Drugs (further strengthened by the 1972 Protocol 
amending that Convention), the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances, 
and the United Nations Conventions against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic 
Drugs and Psychotropic Substances which was adopted in 1988.

The UN member states (158 parties) came out with the 1961 Single Convention 
on Narcotic Drugs to merge all the existing multilateral treaties on the 
control of drugs, extension of the existing control system so as to include 
even the cultivation of opium and other raw materials.13 Opium smoking and 
eating, coca leaf chewing, cannabisresin smoking and the non-medical use of 
cannabis have been prohibited through control convention.

The 1972 Protocol to the Convention further called for increased efforts to 
prevent illicit production of, traffic in, and use of narcotics.14

The next significant treaty that came into effect was that of the 1971 
Convention on Psychotropic Substances where 146 states became parties to 
the treaty. This convention in particular looked at the harmful effects of 
psychotropic substances such as amphetamine-type drugs, sedative-hypnotic 
agents and hallucinogens like LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) and 
mescaline, and stimulants.

The third major treaty on this line is the one where 137 countries signed 
the United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and 
Psychotropic Substances in 1988. This convention specifically included the 
issue of money laundering and illicit traffic in precursor and essential 
chemicals within the ambit of drug trafficking activities and called on 
parties to introduce these as criminal offences in their national 
legislation. Its objective was to create and consolidate international 
cooperation between law enforcement bodies such as customs, police, and 
judicial authorities and to provide them with legal guidelines: (a) to 
interdict illicit trafficking effectively; (b) to arrest and try drug 
traffickers; and (c) to deprive them of their ill-gotten gains.15 It also 
takes significant steps against the illicit production and manufacture of 
narcotic and psychotropic drugs by calling for strict monitoring of the 
chemicals often used in illicit production. This convention also took care 
of the provisions for tracing, freezing, and confiscating proceeds and 
property derived from drug trafficking as well as financial and commercial 
records. In this regard, it called specifically for seven areas of action:

1. Eradicate illicitly cultivated narcotic crops.

2. Monitor chemicals and equipment used in the processing of drugs.

3. Identify, seize, and forfeit illicitly generated proceeds.

4. Improve international legal cooperation by such means as extradition, 
mutual legal assistance, and exchange of information relating to 
trafficking activities.

5. Improve "controlled delivery" procedures (a term referring to law 
enforcement cooperation through which the movement of an illicit drug 
consignment can be monitored so that arrests are made at the time of 
ultimate delivery).

6. Require commercial carriers to take reasonable precautions to avoid use 
of their facilities and means of transport for illicit trafficking.

7. Prevent illicit traffic by sea, through the mails, or by abuse of 
special rights prevailing in free trade zones and free ports.16

The seven objectives given above, more or less, take care of all aspects of 
the drug trade.

The last major event has been the creation of the United Nations 
International Drug Control Programme (UNDCP) by General Assembly resolution 
45/179 of December 21, 1990, which integrated all the existing structures 
and functions of the three former UN drug control units, namely the 
Division of Narcotic Drugs, the United Nations Fund for Drug Abuse Control 
and the International Narcotics Control Board Secretariat.17 (UNDCP)18, 
based in Vienna has been made responsible for coordinating and providing 
effective leadership to all the other UN drug control programmes.

Other UN agencies that have been associated with the drug control programme 
are World Health Organisation (WHO), International Labour Office (ILO), 
United Nations Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Division (CPCJD) and 
so on. The functioning of various organisations and the laws implemented at 
the national levels have eradicated opium and cocaine to a much lower level 
(see Fig. 1).

The process of eradication takes place either forcefully or by compensatory 
means. Eradication of illicitly cultivated drugs can be done through 
mechanical destruction (slashing or uprooting); by burning; by applying 
chemical herbicides or by biological (genetic) elimination. Where the 
eradication is not forcefully done, it can be through compensatory schemes 
developed on the basis of payments per hectare eradicated.19

Another method of stopping the illicit cultivation of drugs is through 
substitution. The process of substitution is through introduction of new 
crops in place of these drugs. In many areas, when the process of 
eradication takes places, the coca and opium poppy growers have shown 
resistance and made protests against it as this halts a steady and 
relatively stable source of income. Compensatory measures do not attract 
the coca growers much because the relief that they get through these does 
not sustain them a long time, whereas the market for illicit coca and opium 
poppy seeds is great and there is no government infrastructure that they 
need to worry about. This is where state machinery needs to take the issue 
seriously and implement some measures against it. The wealth that is 
generated through this means is not accountable to the government's 
financial accounts and this in turn could create inflation in the market. 
The running of a parallel economy run by the drug traffickers at the local 
level may be helpful in the short term but it is going to create long term 
hazards to the national economy. The losses outweigh the gains in the long 
run. Money that is gained through the drug industry makes its way even to 
the capitalisation of banks, investment in real estate business and other 
legal business too. It has been argued that local investments by these drug 
industrialists have been mostly in short-term speculative ventures designed 
more to launder money rather than to promote sustained economic growth. 
Development of the society or economy has never been their motto.

Apart from the economic costs of the drug industry, it has political and 
societal costs too. Politically it affects a nation by halting or 
completely derailing the process of nation-building in most of the 
developing countries, where this industry has been flourishing and 
providing the necessary means for it. Countries that are in a "soft state" 
and have weak governments/ or no stable government at all are most 
vulnerable because the very presence of the drug traffickers undermines the 
authority of these governments. Far more dangerous is the situation when 
corruption by the drug trafficking groups reaches the highest levels of the 
government and it is hardly differentiable between licit and illicit drug 
dealings. Many countries in Latin America have been branded as 
"narco-democracies".20

Another way of cutting down the drug trafficking is through reduction of 
the supply of illicit drugs in the market. A key component this supply 
aspect is to prevent diversion of drugs from the licit to illicit market.

As Paul B. Stares correctly puts it, the effectiveness of the drug control 
policy would depend largely on the international community's ability to 
address a few other linked up issues of development like overpopulation, 
poverty, disease, illiteracy, environment degradation, and ethnic conflict. 
There is a crucial relationship between these broad issues and drug 
trafficking. Unless the government decides to tackle these problems, the 
great menace of drug trafficking would continue. The process of eradication 
has become more difficult to implement due to the inaccessibility of 
cultivated areas and through the involvement of insurgent and terrorist 
groups in the protection of these plantations and also the process of 
trafficking.

Why the drug traffickers' success despite tightening laws?

A news item appearing in the Washington Post reads: A new generation of 
Colombian drug traffickers, light years ahead of the traditional Medellin 
and Cali cartels in using the Internet and other modern technology, has 
sharply increased cocaine production and smuggling in the past two years 
despite growing budgets for law enforcement, according to senior US and 
Colombian intelligence officials. What has led to the growth in this 
industry can provide solutions to cripple it as well.

The whole new generation of drug traffickers and their high-tech gear, the 
officials say, are reversing the gains of earlier years that had destroyed 
the old, better known cartels. The new set of traffickers has learnt from 
past mistakes of the older groups, and carry on in a very intelligent 
manner. According to General Rosso Jose Serrano, Director of the Colombian 
National Police who oversaw the dismantling of several major drug cartels, 
the new groups maintain an extremely low profile, they mix their licit and 
illicit business, they don't carry out terrorist acts, and they operate in 
small, autonomous cells.22 They are much harder to fight simply for the 
reason that they are harder to find.

Unlike in the past, there is no proper integrated structure under the top 
leadership of an organisation, making the task more difficult for an 
official to conduct investigations and get the details of the functioning 
of the organisation. People are specifically called for jobs, taken on a 
contract basis, and are got rid of at the end of the job, so that if an 
official wants to bribe any of the lower rank workers and get any 
information on the working of the organisation, it is not possible. The 
groups have become far less visible and smarter by having these contract 
workers who come and go on a temporary basis.

A very interesting new aspect about drug traffickers is their access to the 
most modern high technology and their proficiency with it. This phenomenon 
has increasingly become a feature with the terrorist organisations too. The 
newly emerging phenomenon of narco-terrorism is not to be overlooked at any 
cost. This new phenomenon combines the two very well—get all the finance 
through drug trafficking, establish links in various countries with 
established groups of that country/region, and carry out attacks on the 
targeted groups without being there physically. The information and high 
technology that is available with these groups make their task easier and 
information is passed on within minutes and seconds. The narco-terrorists 
also use sophisticated cellular phone cloning technology, stealing numbers 
that were already assigned to legitimate users, using them for a short 
period of time, then moving on to new numbers, so that they are never 
permanently on a particular number.

The US and Colombian officials found the traffickers making use of the 
latest technology to protect and advance their business. One of the most 
important Colombian groups, Alejandro Bernal's operation kept in touch by 
using internet chat rooms protected by fire walls that made them impossible 
to penetrate. The officials reported that besides this, each part of the 
operation fed its information on the day's sales and drug movements to a 
computer on a ship off the coast of Mexico, so that if one computer were 
taken down, it would be impossible to trace the rest of the network. The 
traffickers also had access to highly sophisticated encryption technology, 
which even the law enforcement authorities find difficult to decode. One US 
official pointed out that it took some of their best computers 24 hours to 
crack a 30-second transmission by the traffickers, making the exercise 
pointless. These new techniques have helped the traffickers move tons of 
cocaine before being detected. DEA officials and Colombian authorities have 
estimated that Bernal's group, working with Mexican organisations led by 
Valencia, shipped 20 tons to 30 metric tons of cocaine every month to the 
United States.23

Along with the increasing sophistication in their mode of working, there is 
a tremendous increase in the cultivation of coca--the raw material for 
cocaine--in Colombian territory controlled by Marxist-led guerillas or 
right-wing paramilitary groups. A senior US Justice Department official 
said the estimate that Colombia produced 165 metric tons of cocaine in 1998 
will at least double and may triple in 1999.24 Colombia has been scoring 
high in this industry. Colombian drug traffickers now have a control on 
most cocaine production from the raw material to the finished product, 
which provides more control of the drug-making process and enhances their 
profits when the finished cocaine is sold to Mexican delivery specialists. 
There seems to be something very contradictory in the two simultaneous 
processes that are taking place. On the one hand, the US government has 
started helping out the Colombian President Andres Pastrana and on the 
other hand, the drug traffickers have become successful in going undetected 
by the authorities of either of the countries. This proves the complex and 
tight network that these groups have established among themselves from 
country to country at all stages from production to refinement to 
transportation. In 1999, the United States provided Colombia with $289 
million in aid, mostly to the police and military to fight drug trafficking.25

Thus, the ultimate answer to this big menace is for all the countries to 
cooperate as it involves not just one country but several countries in the 
multi processes of production, trafficking, and ultimate consumption. 
International cooperation to fight this issue is very essential in order to 
find a solution.

Notes

1. The idea of the illicit drugs trade flourishing particularly in regions 
of weak governance has been dealt with by Paul B. Stares, Global Habit: The 
Drug Problem in a Borderless World (Washington, D.C.: Brookings 
Institution, 1996).

2. USIS, "Text: Clinton Reports to Congress on Drug-Producing Countries", 
Wireless File, November 12, 1999.

3. Ibid.

4. Ibid.

5. Ibid.

6. US Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law 
Enforcement Affairs, INL Country Programs—Asia/Africa/Middle East, Fact 
Sheet released by the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement 
Affairs, March 30, 1999.

7. US Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law 
Enforcement Affairs, Contending With Illegal Drugs at Home and Abroad, Fact 
Sheet released by the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement 
Affairs, June 4, 1998.

8. Ibid.

9. Ibid.

10. Ibid.

11. "New Drug Smugglers Hold Tech Advantage", The Washington Post, November 
15, 1999.

12. David F. Musto, "International drug control: historical aspects and 
future challenges", United Nations International Drug Control Programme, 
World Drug Report, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 165.

13. Ibid., p, 168.

14. Ibid.

15. Ibid., p. 169.

16. Anthony P. Maingot, "The Drug Trade in the Caribbean: Policy Options", 
Drug Trafficking in the Americas, edited by Bruce M. Bagley, and William O. 
Walker III (USA: North-South Center Press, University of Miami, 1996), p. 476.

17. Musto, n. 12, p. 169.

18. United Nations International Drug Control Programme, World Drug Report, 
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 171. The UNDCP established in 
1991 has some specific objectives: (1) to coordinate and provide effective 
leadership for all UN drug control initiatives; (2) to anticipate the 
development of phenomenon which could create or aggravate illicit drug 
production, trafficking, and abuse, and to mobilise and support remedial 
measures in a timely fashion; (3) to be a world-wide centre of expertise 
and respository of information by collecting, analysing and disseminating 
data, information and experience in all fields of drug control; (4) to 
assist CND and INCB in implementing their treaty-based functions and in 
promoting new instruments as needed; (5) to provide technical assistance 
through expertise and training to help governments in setting up adequate 
drug control structures and to elaborate comprehensive national and 
regional drug control strategies and programmes; (6) to provide technical 
operation in the different fields of drug control with a view to 
elaborating methodologies and approaches to be shared; and (7) to assist 
governments in the developments of subregional initiatives and plans of 
action with the basic concept of joint operations between concerned countries.

19. Ibid., p. 221.

20. Stanley A. Weiss, "The Global Narcotics Trade: Economic Patterns and 
Implications", International Herald Tribune, July 1-2, 1995.

21. USIA, Wireless File, December 10, 1999.

22. The Washington Post, November 15, 1999.

23. Ibid.

24. Ibid.

25. Ibid.
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