Pubdate: Wed, 03 Oct 2007
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2007 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Richard Marosi, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon

COCAINE SUPPLY DOWN SHARPLY, U.S. OFFICIALS SAY

Drug Policy Critics Say It's Too Soon to Tell Whether the Data Signal 
Success in the Drug War.

SAN DIEGO -- Mexico's crackdown on drug cartels and U.S. authorities' 
seizures at sea have helped to sharply reduce the availability of 
cocaine in 37 American cities, according to a report released Tuesday 
by federal anti-narcotics officials.

The shortage has driven up prices to their highest levels in nearly 
two decades, with the cost of cocaine increasing 24%, from $95.89 to 
$118.70 per gram over the six-month period ending in June, according 
to the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Los Angeles, San Francisco, Phoenix, Washington and New York are 
among the cities reportedly experiencing shortages.

Critics of U.S. drug policy remain skeptical, saying it's too early 
to determine whether the statistics signal an important milestone in 
the war on drugs.

The report, they say, comes as the Bush administration prepares to 
ask Congress for an aid package of nearly $1 billion to help Mexico 
fight traffickers.

But John Walters, director of the White House drug policy office, 
said at a news conference in San Diego that the multibillion-dollar 
anti-drug effort appears to be causing major disruptions in 
trafficking routes from Colombia to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon's extradition of top drug cartel 
figures and his decision to send thousands of soldiers and federal 
agents to major drug transit areas over the last year has also helped 
cut supplies, Walters said.

In August, Mexican authorities arrested several key members of the 
Sinaloa drug cartel in the border state of Sonora.

In Tijuana, thousands of troops and federal agents have failed to 
quell drug violence, but their presence appears to be putting 
pressure on drug traffickers.

"Kudos go to President Calderon and his cops and military," said 
Michael A. Braun, the Drug Enforcement Administration's chief of 
operations. "They are very aggressively engaged and working closely 
with us and other U.S. law enforcement along the southwest border and 
Mexico in attacking the major cartels."

The U.S. government's war on cocaine traffickers is a multipronged 
effort aimed at eradicating coca cultivation in source countries like 
Colombia and intercepting the drugs along major trafficking routes in 
the eastern Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea.

Although production has increased in recent years, drug seizures have 
gone up steadily, highlighted by the March seizure of 21 tons of 
cocaine on a freighter off the coast of Panama, which was the largest 
ever maritime seizure of cocaine, according to the DEA.

In Mexico, the war between the Sinaloa and Gulf drug cartels could be 
disrupting the flow of cocaine on a key highway corridor to the 
border, authorities say.

Most of the cocaine entering the United States is smuggled in cars 
through ports of entry.

Another emerging factor is growing demand in Europe, where 
traffickers are believed to be sending increasingly large shipments of cocaine.

DEA officials say cash seizures in Mexico and Colombia have been 
turning up larger amounts of Euros in the last year.

Adam Isacson, a Colombia analyst for the Center for International 
Policy, a Washington think tank, said the statistics illustrate the 
largest sustained price increase in years.

But he said crackdowns and cartel wars in the past have produced 
similar price spikes, only to be followed by increased drug supplies 
as new groups take over.

"My fear is even if Mexico is quite successful at taking down the 
Sinaloa, Gulf and Tijuana cartels, something is going to replace 
them. That's been the history of the drug war," Isacson said.

The statistics, compiled by the DEA, are supported by other 
independent data showing an effect on cocaine supplies, officials say.

The nation's leading workplace drug testing company, Quest 
Diagnostics, reported a nearly 16% drop in positive tests between the 
first six months of last year and this year, the lowest levels in a 
decade, said Walters.

Some lawmakers quickly questioned the timing of the report, coming 
just before the administration's request for funding for Mexico.

"Law enforcement always claims a victory before they ask for money," 
said Rep. Sam Farr (D-Carmel), a critic of the administration's drug 
policy, who thinks more focus should be put on drug treatment.

"All the money that went to fighting drugs in Colombia, an equal 
amount should be spent fighting usage in America," Farr said. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake