Pubdate: Wed, 30 Nov 2005 Source: Stabroek News (Guyana) Copyright: 2005 Stabroek News Contact: http://www.stabroeknews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4034 Author: Merrill Hyman Sr. THE MOST CRITICAL COMPONENT IN THE FIGHT AGAINST DRUGS IS ACTIONABLE INTELLIGENCE Dear Editor, I have a fair idea of your source (the expert) on the story 'Copters key to drug war - expert' (SN 28.11.05) and consider it somewhat troubling that he would identify helicopters as the key asset in the fight against drug production and trafficking. Heli-copters are primarily an important asset in the interdiction and enforcement pro-cess. They allow operatives greater manoeuvrability and flexibility in enforcement activity but the most critical component in the fight against drugs is actionable intelligence. Obtaining this intelligence calls for detailed, long-term surreptitious activities which seek to target key players through the cultivation and management of sources and a meticulous attempt to record detailed supporting information and evidence. The methods and skills applied here are the result of learned experiences; elements that are obviously in limited supply to local law enforcement. If the government is truly serious then even this could be fixed with the right amount of political will. I am not as confident as your source that such a will exists because the process is compromised by forces loyal to players in this industry. I do however agree that the local trade in drug commodities is limited and greater effort is placed in the trans-shipment process. Air drops of 'supplies' is nothing new and some have had the gall to make deliveries (as much as 25 bales) from fixed wing aircraft into the Demerara river. Now, while problems exist in turning human assets, it is not insurmountable and has to be approached in a much smarter fashion. What has obviously not taken off is the ability of law enforcement to 'follow the money', both because they are inadequately equipped and no support is derived from the government agencies that have the wherewithal to access pertinent information on money laundering, etc. Unlike your source, I am not as confident that, with 2005 almost at an end and six months already gone since the strategy was announced, there isn't deliberate sloth in implementing the strategy. Just compare how quickly the Citizen Security Project was accessed and approved through the IDB for US$10M and the 'inability' to request or even source the US$3.39M needed to implement the National Drug Strategy. Out of this Citizen Security project $50M goes to the GPF and $24M to the GDF but who knows where the remaining $1.9B is slated to go, well... I am quite sure they are not prepared to use $600M for implementation of the drug strategy. And a point for correction; the DEA was not compromised in the DEA-CANU joint operation, it was elements of CANU who were believed suspect and hence the requirement to have CANU operatives take lie detector tests. Mind you, it was the same time that the former Minister of Home Affairs, Mr Gajraj, had been 'bypassed' in the process leading up to the said operation. There is no doubt that key assets (human and material) are not available but the two essential ingredients to making this fight a valid one, intelligence-based policing and a political will to do whatever it takes to legally achieve success, are themselves sorely wanting. Yours faithfully, Merrill Hyman Sr. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman