Pubdate: Mon, 05 Mar 2012 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2012 Miami Herald Media Co. Contact: http://www.miamiherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 COCAINE COWBOYS? NOT AGAIN Crisis Coming As Caribbean Drug-Running Heats Up The fight against drug trafficking is heating up on South Florida's doorstep. Drugs are coming in our direction again, and Puerto Rico, U.S. territories and the island nations of the Caribbean are once more caught in the middle. "There's increasing concern that as the pressure increases in the Central American corridors, the balloon will expand back into the Caribbean zone," Sen. Marco Rubio of Miami said during a Senate hearing in December. Echoing that concern, the U.N.'s International Narcotics Control Board last week noted that pressure on drug gangsters in Mexico and Central America is diverting cocaine operations to less difficult routes through the Caribbean. The most chilling warning has come from Ambassador William Brownfield, the State Department's main drug fighter. He predicted in testimony to Congress late last year that when pressure on drug cartels in Central America gets too strong, "their old Caribbean routes and networks from the 1980s will look very attractive . . . We see this crisis coming." Actually, it's here. According to the government of Puerto Rico, drug-related violence has pushed the island's murder rate to more than five times the national average. Last year, a record 1,136 people were murdered in Puerto Rico. More than 70 percent of those murders are believed to be related directly to drug trafficking, the government says. Puerto Rico's administration has responded energetically, though its resources are strained to the limit. The Puerto Rican National Guard has been deployed for periods of time to dampen the violence. By next summer, the use of new equipment and security measures will provide for 100 percent scanning of cargo entering the Port of San Juan in another effort to cut off the drug supply. The island's government has reached out to South Florida, with Gov. Luis Fortuno and Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez coordinating an agreement to collaborate on ways to combat drugs through the Caribbean corridor. The suggestion that South Florida may soon witness a revival of the 1980s era of the Cocaine Cowboys should put U.S. officials from the local to the federal level on guard. Last summer, Wifredo Ferrer, U.S attorney for the Southern District of Florida unveiled a plan called the Florida Caribbean Basin Initiative aimed at combating and deterring drug trafficking in the region. That's a good step forward, but Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands are the front lines in this fight. This is part of our southern border. Once the drugs arrive there, they are in the United States. This is a national security issue that deserves the level of attention that has been focused on the U.S.-Mexico border to stop drug trafficking in that region. Over the decades, one of the lessons learned in the fight against drug trafficking is that even success comes with a downside. Nobody's prepared to declare victory along the U.S.-Mexico border yet, but clearly the drug lords are feeling the pressure and are re-routing their lethal cargo from the Andean region toward the Caribbean - and Florida. Gov. Fortuno's administration contends that federal law enforcement in Puerto Rico with jurisdiction over drug trafficking are under-staffed and badly in need of more resources. Congress and the Obama administration should respond before South Florida once again becomes a major battleground in the war on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom