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Dogs used to ship cocaine

Another bad story about Colombia. My concern is that if the USA cuts aid because of other issues like their own deficeit then the Peso will fall again. Colombia will never really realize it's potential until the stigma of drugs is removed. This stoty was printed in the Main Philadelphia paper this weekend:

Posted on Sat, Nov. 12, 2005






A losing battle on drugs in Colombia?

"The better we get at catching them," a U.S. official said, "the more creative they get."

By Shannon McCaffrey

Knight Ridder News Service


BOGOTA, Colombia - The six puppies looked fine at first. But when police gave them a closer look, they found fresh scars on their bellies that told a different story.

The tiny Labradors and rottweilers had been surgically converted into drug couriers, cut open, with several packets of heroin stitched into their abdomens.

Even Colombia's hardened police, who found the puppies at an abandoned house outside Medellin, had never seen anything like it. Traffickers were apparently going to ship the dogs to the United States saying they were pets. It is almost certain that they would have been discarded as soon as their valuable cargo was removed.

"The better we get at catching them, the more creative they get," said Mark Styron, supervisor of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Heroin Group in Bogota.

Staying ahead of the smugglers is expensive. Since 2000, the United States has sent $4.5 billion to Colombia to help battle drug trafficking. That six-year program, known as Plan Colombia, is set to expire at the end of this year.

Although the Bush administration and Congress have signaled a willingness to continue funding at current levels for at least one more year, some are questioning the money's effectiveness in stemming the tide of drugs to the United States.

Much of the cocaine and a major part of the heroin that end up for sale on the street corners of the United States originate in the rich soil of this conflict-ridden South American country.

The Colombians, defending the antidrug effort, point to the hundreds of thousands of acres of coca and poppy fields they have destroyed and the tons of drugs seized at their airports and borders. Kidnappings and murders are down.

But a report from the United Nations showed that while coca cultivation in Colombia was down, it had risen in neighboring Peru and Bolivia.

And the efforts in Colombia seem to have had little measurable effect on the U.S. drug supply. The Justice Department's National Drug Threat Assessment for 2005 found that heroin and cocaine were still readily available throughout the United States. Data from the DEA show that the purity of wholesale cocaine being smuggled in from South America has increased slightly.

At least with heroin, however, there is some evidence that a crackdown begun in 2002 is showing results. DEA tests show that purity has dipped 14.5 percent since 2000. It is generally believed that if a drug is in short supply, purity decreases and prices increase.

Colombia remains the world's largest producer of cocaine, and the nation's image remains closely linked to the drug.

Yet in the United States, concern is running high about heroin. Although the opiate is not used with the frequency of cocaine or marijuana, it is highly addictive and leads to a disproportionately high number of overdoses and deaths, according to emergency-room data.

Colombia produces only 2 percent of the world's heroin, but it is generally believed to be among the best, often so pure that users can snort it, rather than injecting it. And almost all Colombian heroin flows into the United States. Ninety percent of the heroin on the East Coast is Colombian, according to the DEA.

Plan Colombia was launched under the Clinton administration as a way to fight drugs. After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Congress said the funding could be used for counterterrorism as well.

In Colombia, the two are inseparable, officials say.

"The drugs are the terrorists' juice," said William Wood, U.S. ambassador to Colombia.

The drug pipeline to the United States often begins in the camps of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. Known by its Spanish-language acronym, FARC controls swaths of rural coca- and poppy-growing territory. Colombian police and intelligence officials say FARC supports itself and its insurgency against the government with millions of dollars from the drug trade.

One FARC defector said in an interview that he abandoned the group because of its brutality. Leaders in his front ordered his brother to kill his girlfriend after she violated the rules and killed a civilian.

The man, who declined to give his name out of fear of retaliation, said that he grew up in FARC and that drugs were a constant presence.

"To end the drug war, you have to end the guerillas," he said. "As long as there are guerillas, there are drugs. They exist together."

Everywhere in Colombia there is evidence of U.S. money and influence: Black Hawk and Huey helicopters, twin-engine Otter police planes, fixed-wing fumigation planes. At a rural training site southwest of Bogota, American Special Forces help the Colombians train for dangerous raids to destroy drug labs.

"It would be much worse without the U.S.," said Gen. Jorge Daniel Castro, chief of the Colombian National Police. "This is a long and difficult battle, and the United States has been our strongest ally."

Over the last 10 years, Colombia has lost 40 U.S.-supplied aircraft battling FARC and the right-wing United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, or AUC. The additional aid is needed to keep the fleet operating, the Colombians say.

Wood, the U.S. ambassador, said that more people died every year in the United States from Colombian drugs than in the Sept. 11 attacks. U.S. aid will eventually decline as the situation stabilizes, he said. But the drug problem will never go away entirely, and the United States - as the primary consumer of South American drugs - will likely always have a role in Colombia.

"It's like asking when is crime over," Wood said. "It's never going to be over."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Brians on Nov 15, 2005, 11:26 in Politics & the war. AddThis Social Bookmark Button


utopiacowboy says on Nov 15, 2005, 11:44:

So the perros were really mulas?

Disclaimer: any comment I make is inane and is not to be taken seriously, and is so patently ridiculous that no one should take it seriously, even as an insult.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

juancegomez says on Nov 15, 2005, 13:13:

... Looks like it.

As for Mr. Wood's little quote at the end of the text...Alcohol Prohibition ended in his own country after a little less than 20 years of it showing its counterproductive effects, and related crimes did eventually drop, so in a sense it did end, though alcohol continues to be a poison (just one that is socially acceptable, but still ends up killing and destroying many lives)...when will we stop Drug Prohibition, I wonder?

Probably much later, since unfortunately it's not a U.S.-only ban and much of the rest of the world is largely indifferent and/or tolerant of current anti-drug strategies, but the time will come. Hopefully within this generation though.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

Miguel says on Nov 15, 2005, 22:39:

Hmm "Even Colombia's hardened police, who found the puppies at an abandoned house outside Medellin, had never seen anything like it."

Well, either this story is at least a year old, or the writer embellishes a bit, since this method of smuggling has gone on quite a while, and is well documented.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

caslug says on Feb 1, 2006, 16:41:

update on the story... http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11132226/from/RS.2/

0 funny, 0 helpful.

platano says on Feb 1, 2006, 17:37:

The way I read it, the article is heaping praise on Colombia.... No one else in the world is as creative as Colombians and this article rightfully acknowledges Colombian creativity. It also acknowledges Colombian technical excellence using superlatives like "best".

That the peso is where it is, in spite of everything being done to Colombia by "gusanos, criminales, y traidores" [my choice of words] is also testament to Colombia's intelligence and discipline in the face of what might be overwhelming odds for most other countries.

Yet Colombia continues to show that it is unique among nations with an extraordinary people who have "berraquera", people "echados p'lante" and people who truly know how to live life with grace... and love fully... and laugh heartily... and through all the trials and tribulations... be happy.

plátano

0 funny, 0 helpful.

Wastelandlive says on Feb 1, 2006, 19:00:

Platano write a platitude! We all know that you're a warm, cudly banana, platano. Nobody doubts your Colombia lovin' credentials. :)
__________________

Yep folk... we pay them to grow it, and sometimes we pay them to destroy it. Either way, we pay them... big time.

And the ambassador says we must... because its a crime. We made it one, so it must be true!

The wheel goes round and around, and those who run the racket grow ever richer. They're laughing at us! And meanwhile, cops, street thugs, peasants, mulas, school kids, and puppies die.

It's a wonderful life!

Wasteland

0 funny, 0 helpful.

platano says on Feb 1, 2006, 20:04:

... La Madre Monte (corpulenta, elegante, vestida de hojas frescas y musgo verde) made me do it! :)
¡Sí, señor, es una vida maravillosa!plátano

plátano

0 funny, 0 helpful.

Mr. Hollywood says on Feb 1, 2006, 21:50:

What I wanna know Is how much heroin and cocaine is going north inside Colombian boob jobs?

Don't tell me it hasn't been done.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

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