Pubdate: Mon, 27 Dec 2010 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: 2010sThe Australian Contact: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/35 Referenced: New York Times "Cables Portray Expanded Reach of Drug Agency" http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n1057/a07.html SECRET ROLE OF US DRUG-FIGHTERS THE US Drug Enforcement Administration has grown into a global intelligence and diplomatic body. And its reach extends far beyond narcotics, leaked cables reveal The DEA's operations have become so expansive that the agency has had to fend off struggling foreign leaders who want to use it against their enemies. One cable from August last year reported that Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli sent an urgent message to the US ambassador asking the DEA to go after his political rivals. "I need help with tapping phones," the President said, according to The New York Times yesterday. A May 2008 cable from the West African nation of Guinea reported that the country's biggest narcotics dealer was Ousman Conte, son of then president Lansana Conte. And a cable from the US embassy in Mexico said military leaders had appealed for closer links with the DEA because they did not trust Mexican police. In Sierra Leone, the attorney-general solicited $US2.5 million in bribes from defendants in a cocaine-trafficking prosecution, according to a 2009 cable. But the then president, Ernest Koroma, scuttled the deal. Cables from Burma tell of DEA informants reporting on how the military government enriches itself with drug money and on the activities of the junta's opponents, the New York Times said. But the tables were turned in Venezuela, which infiltrated the DEA, sabotaging equipment and using a computer hacker to intercept US embassy emails. US diplomats in Paraguay wrote in February that the government had asked the DEA to help spy on the Paraguayan People's Army (EPP) insurgent group. When diplomats refused to make the agency's wiretapping system available, Interior Minister Rafael Filizzola threatened to shut it down, saying: "Counter-narcotics are important, but won't topple our government. The EPP could." Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli yesterday denied information in a leaked cable suggesting he asked the US to help install phone taps on his political opponents, but acknowledged requesting help against criminals. A cable from August 22 last year quotes then US ambassador Barbara Stephenson as saying the newly elected conservative president asked for help with wiretaps soon after he took office on July 1. "He made no distinction between legitimate security targets and political enemies," the cable states, adding that Ms Stephenson had said: "We will not be party to any effort to expand wiretaps to domestic political targets." A cable reports Mexico's army leader "lamenting" the military's role in the anti-drug offensive, but expecting it to last up to 10 more years. It says Mexican Defence Secretary General Guillermo Galvan mistrusts Mexican law-enforcement agencies and prefers to work separately, because corrupt officials leaked information. The October 26, 2009, cable describes a meeting between Mexico's top soldier and former US national intelligence director Dennis Blair, and quotes the general as saying Mexico's army "would be willing to accept any training the US can offer". Colourful cables from Guinea have sections titled "Excuses, Excuses, Excuses" and "Theatrical Production", describing diplomats attending what was billed as a bonfire of seized marijuana and cocaine worth $US6.5 million. But informants told the embassy the authorities replaced the cocaine with manioc flour, proving, the diplomats wrote, that "narco-corruption has contaminated" the government of Guinea "at the highest levels". The cable reported that even the ambassador's driver sniffed out a hoax. "I know the smell of burning marijuana," the driver said. "And I didn't smell anything." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake