Pubdate: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Eric Lichtblau And Esther Schrader FLOW OF COCAINE UNDERESTIMATED Colombian High-Yield Plants Imperil Drug War, U.S. Says WASHINGTON -- U.S. authorities believe they have significantly underestimated the flow of cocaine out of Colombia and other drug-producing nations, a realization that casts doubt on years of assumptions behind the war on drugs and that likely will change U.S. tactics. Drug-intelligence officials are particularly alarmed over their discovery of a new high-yield variety of coca being grown and processed in Colombia, the No. 1 supplier of cocaine to the United States. That, together with a growing acknowledgment that their methods for measuring narcotics production may be seriously flawed, means that government estimates of global drug trafficking are likely to ``skyrocket'' early next year, said officials in the drug-intelligence community. Estimates of cocaine production in Colombia alone could triple, two government sources said. ``It's going to be big,'' said one senior law-enforcement official who asked not to be identified. The revised estimates, combined with a soon-to-be-released plan for countering lax coordination among the various drug-intelligence agencies, are likely to alter U.S. tactics in the $17.8 billion drug war for years to come, sources said. Estimates essential Key policy-makers said that the estimates of worldwide drug production, while imprecise, are critical in allocating drug-interdiction resources, plotting strategy and influencing diplomatic relations with drug-producing nations. ``The policy-maker ought to have correct estimates of how (drugs are flowing), patterns, where, when, so that you're not buying a bunch of Coast Guard cutters to go to the eastern Caribbean if most of your smuggling is on maritime craft in the eastern Pacific,'' Gen. Barry McCaffrey, head of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said in an interview. Yet the new numbers jeopardize McCaffrey's ambitious goals for cutting narcotics supplies to the United States 25 percent by 2002 and 50 percent by 2007. Some critics of U.S. policy are already demanding an end to the nation's war on drugs. News of higher cocaine and heroin production, as well as an explosion in border confiscations of the designer drug Ecstasy, could bolster their arguments that current anti-drug strategies are failing. Authorities have been working quietly for several years to devise a better way to track the global flow of drugs, combining their long-used satellite photos of crop fields with new, more precise analyses of how poppy, coca and other crops are processed into drugs for street sale. But embarrassing shortcomings in the system became apparent last month after U.S. and Colombian authorities broke up a major Latin American cocaine ring. The volume of cocaine that they now believe the Juvenal network was bringing into the United States -- up to 30 metric tons a month -- rivaled previous estimates of all cartel imports combined, officials said. Flow from Juvenal ``There was just amazement that one organization would have the ability to distribute that much cocaine a month,'' a law-enforcement official said. ``The whole Juvenal thing really just illustrates why we have to get our act together in terms of reconciling these numbers.'' Indeed, even before final estimates are made next year, government officials say they already have begun trying to assess what they mean. Some government officials believe that Latin American traffickers are sending more cocaine to Europe than ever. Others think that growers are stockpiling large supplies of the drug. Still others suggest that U.S. residents are consuming more cocaine than previously feared. UCLA expert's view But outside observers such as Mark A.R. Kleiman, director of the Drug Policy Analysis Program at the University of California-Los Angeles, say that the estimates are little more than guesswork used by the Clinton administration to hit up Congress for more money. And they point to extensive surveys, emergency room admissions and other data showing a decline in drug use in the United States. ``More cocaine in the U.S.? Hard to believe,'' Kleiman said. ``Where are all the corpses?'' In Colombia, which produces 70 percent of the world's cocaine, a combination of factors has scuttled the numbers that U.S. government officials have used to shape anti-drug policy. Cocaine producers there have developed an insidious variety of coca, but U.S. intelligence agents have limited access to a key drug-growing region, which is controlled by the anti-government guerrillas. This has contributed to U.S. authorities' flawed understanding of the region's growth and processing methods. For years, intelligence officials said, most of the coca grown in Colombia was of a variety, ipadu, whose leaves yield relatively small amounts of cocaine. A higher-yield variety, E. coca coca, is grown in Peru and Bolivia and sent to Colombia for processing and export. So when satellite photos of Colombia taken late last year showed acre upon acre of new fields of coca, U.S. intelligence officials assumed that the Colombians were growing the same low-yield coca plants they long have cultivated, and they estimated that 165 metric tons of potential cocaine were produced in Colombia. But recent forays inside Colombia's cocaine-producing regions by intelligence officials revealed that the crops are a third, never-before-seen variety of coca that yields higher amounts of cocaine and takes only a year -- rather than three -- to cultivate. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea