Pubdate: Tue, 30 May 2000 Source: American Press (LA) Copyright: 2000 Shearman Corp Contact: P.O. Box 2893, Lake Charles, LA 70602 Fax: (337) 494-4070 Website: http://www.americanpress.com/ COUNTRIES FILL U.S.'S NEED FOR ILLICIT DRUGS In a sign that illicit drug trade is becoming more and more an established industry, new countries are cutting into the marketplace and American drug gangs are being ousted out of the wholesale trade in their own country. Mexican and U.S. drug traffickers face increasing competition from their counterparts in Caribbean and Central American nations, U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey reports in a review of trends in the narcotics trade. Mexico -- which has again been certified by the Clinton administration as a full and helpful partner in the war against drugs -- is still the leading route for cocaine shipments into the United States. But traffickers in Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Panama are rapidly gaining ground, McCaffrey says. Meanwhile, American drug gangs have been pushed out of the wholesale domestic trade by Dominicans, Colombians and Mexicans. Americans simply can't compete because they're easier to watch by U.S. authorities. Meanwhile, wholesalers from other countries have set up shop in the U.S., moving in without police histories and hiding their proceeds in foreign banks. While the U.S. concentrates on trying to stem the flow of cocaine from Colombia through Mexico into this country, other countries have made big inroads into the trade. ''There's a lot more (cocaine) showing up in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, the Jamaica axis,'' McCaffrey reported. Panama may become a special case, and in time it could become the major player in world cocaine trade. With U.S. troops out of Panama for the first time in nearly a century, drug trafficking is increasing rapidly in that country. And the increase is expected to continue to escalate because of geography. Colombia, the region's leading drug producer, is a next-door neighbor to Panama. Colombia also illustrates the complexity of the drug trade. Consider these facts: Leftist rebels in Colombia protect cocaine shipments, and even coordinate planting the crop and move shipments. Meanwhile, right-wing paramilitary groups who are fighting the rebels operate cocaine processing labs. And when the Colombian government tried to bribe its way to a peace accord with the rebels by giving them a Switzerland-size chunk of Colombia, the rebels quickly planted the 35,000 acres of cocaine on their new property. It has become obvious that the U.S. demand for illicit drugs -- especially cocaine -- has created a monstrous, complex supply mechanism that can rapidly change its shape and form in response to every effort we make to bring it under control. What may be needed is a U.S. plan broader, more sophisticated and costly than anyone has heretofore imagined. And all because too many Americans can't simply say "No." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson