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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT, MARCH 1996

United States Department of State

Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Coca and Cocaine

Cocaine continues to pose the most serious drug threat to the United States. Crack, the smokeable variety of cocaine, is one of the most addictive drugs on the market. Besides quickly ensnaring its victims, crack is a euphoric stimulant which often provokes violent behavior in users. From the drug trade's vantage point, it is an ideal drug: it is cheap, potent, addictive, widely available, and most important of all, immensely profitable. Crack sales fuel much of the drug violence in America's largest cities, as gangs compete for lucrative sales territory while addicts steal to feed their habit. In spite of stringent USG antidrug efforts, hundreds of tons of cocaine enter the U.S. every year by land, air, and sea. Even the 100 metric tons or so of cocaine that the USG typically seizes in a year have little discernible effect of price or availability. The combination of strong demand and extraordinary profits continue to make the United States the cocaine trade's foremost market.

Europe, however, is not far behind. Contemplating a day when cocaine use may decline in the U.S., the cocaine trade for the past few years has been targetting affluent European countries. In 1995, Italy seized over two and half metric tons of cocaine; by October, Spain had seized six metric tons; Portugal 1.9 metric tons--a sign that large volumes of cocaine are now available in Western Europe. Post-Communist Eastern Europe offers another attractive market. The Cali drug mafia has been using Poland as a local hub since the early 1990's, and apparently has been looking for a toehold in Hungary. Cocaine now moves freely also to Africa. Nigerian trafficking rings use air links from Brazil to African capitals to move large amounts of cocaine both for consumption in Africa and transshipment to Europe. Ghana and South Africa are increasingly important junctions for cocaine transiting Africa. Cocaine, in short, remains a growth industry in most of the world.

Source and Transit Highlights. The principal cocaine producing and transit countries, with some essential assistance from the USG, carried on active campaigns against the cocaine syndicates in 1995. Though the weakening of the Cali drug mafia was the most salient single accomplishment, all the major coca growing countries kept up the pressure on the drug trade. Bolivia not only turned in its best coca eradication effort in six years, but seized over seven metrc tons of cocaine products. The key enforcement success in 1995 was a joint Bolivian-USG investigation that ultimately resulted in the mid-September seizure in Lima of a Bolivian transport plane carrying over four metric tons of cocaine HCl.

In Colombia, government forces carried out major coca eradication efforts, spraying over 24,000 hectares. Without the massive spraying campaign, Colombian coca could have far outstripped Bolivian cultivation. Colombian forces seized over 21 metric tons of cocaine HCl, less than in 1994, but still a sizeable quantity. In addition to its active role in constricting the air-bridge shipments, the Government of Peru also stepped up its interdiction efforts with the country. Cocaine seizure rates rose dramatically from less than 100 kilograms in 1994 to 7.7 metric tons in 1995, showing not only greater achievement but underscoring increased refining activities of cocaine hydrochloride (HCl) in Peru. Though the Peruvian government has yet to undertake eradication of mature coca, in 1995 it did systematically destroy 253,673 square meters of coca seedbeds capable of providing 16,912 hectares of mature cultivation. In February 1996, the Government of Peru issued a decree initiating a limited coca eradication program. The discovery that Colombian traffickers were delivering multi-ton shipments of cocaine in jumbo jets underscored Mexico's role in the flow of cocaine north. Although drug seizures lagged for much of the year, several surge operations in late 1995 brought the total cocaine seized up to 22.2 metric tons, approximately the quantity seized in 1994. Mexico's air interdiction program, Operation "Halcon" (falcon), known in the US as the Northern Border Response Force (NBRF), helped seize 18.5 metric tons cocaine in 1995. In addition to the arrest of other important traffickers in 1995, in January 1996 Mexican authorities captured Juan Garcia Abrego, one of the country's most notorious traffickers who has also been suspected of involvement in the assassination of Mexican Presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio.

In Panama, by the end of November, enforcment authorities had seized nearly six metric tons of cocaine, less than 1994, but nonetheless an important quantity. Panama's National Air Service, supported by USG aircraft, eradicated over 100 hectares of coca along Panama's border with Colombia. As in past years, these operations further underscored not only the feasibility but also the efficacy and environmental acceptability of aerially applied herbicides against coca.

Belize emerged in 1995 as an important transit country for South American drug traffickers moving cocaine into Mexico via the Yucatan for transshipment to the US. Despite limited resources, Belizean enforcement authorities seized over three quarters of ton of cocaine. the USG believes this represents only a fraction of the amount actually transiting the country.

In 1995, there was substantial drug trafficking through the Eastern Caribbean gateways to US ports of entry in both the main island and Vieques island of Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. The USG has designated Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands as a high intensity drug-trafficking area, and has provided special funding to combat the problem. DEA reports that during the last three years an estimated seven tons of cocaine per month were successfully smuggled into Puerto Rico from the Lesser Antilles. The Lesser Antilles, which includes territories of the United Kingdom (UK), the Netherlands, and France, is also increasingly a transit route to Western Europe; approximately 30 percent of the drugs brought into the UK come from or through the Caribbean.

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