Transcript Drug wars
THE WAR ON DRUGS IN LATIN
AMERICA: A CASE STUDY OF
COLOMBIA & BRAZIL
•President Nixon declares a war on “Public Enemy
No. 1,” drugs at a press conference on June 17, 1971.
•In 1973, Nixon establishes the Drug Enforcement
Agency, or DEA.
•Throughout the 1970’s, U.S. demand for
illicit drugs from Latin America
increased, especially for Colombian
cocaine & Mexican marijuana.
•The lucrative profits & the demands of
smuggling illegal drugs into the U.S. led
to the rise of notorious drug trafficking
cartels all throughout Latin America.
•President Reagan believed America's drug
problems stemmed from an overly tolerant
approach toward drug users, drug dealers,
and drug producing countries.
•Colombia, the source of almost all the
world's refined cocaine, became the main
focus of US policy, followed by Peru and
Bolivia, where most of the raw material,
coca leaf, is grown.
•Unlike Turkey and Mexico in the 1970s,
Peru and Bolivia in the 1980s lacked strong
governments in control of the growing
areas, where coca was a traditional crop,
used for centuries as a mild stimulant.
•At the same time, the Reagan
administration launched the largest drug
interdiction campaign in the nation's
history, intended to seal the borders
against the drug traffic, particularly at key
entry points.
•By the early 80’s, the Colombian drug
trade had become increasingly violent.
•The Medellin Cartel formed, led by Pablo
Escobar. It was the most powerful in
Colombia & arguably the world.
•Escobar negotiated a trafficking route
through Panama for the cartel’s cocaine
with Panamanian General Manuel Noriega
in 1982.
•On March 9, 1982, 3,906 pounds of cocaine
seized at Miami airport.
•On March 10, 1984, the DEA & Colombian
police discover Tranquilandia, a drug lab
complex deep in the Columbian jungle.
•After large crackdowns in Florida, the U.S.
Mexico border becomes the primary entry
way for Colombian cocaine.
•By the mid 1980’s, the crack epidemic hit
the U.S. which only further strengthened
demand for Colombian cocaine.
•In early 1990, the U.S. invades Panama,
leading to the surrender to the DEA by
Manuel Noriega. He is convicted in U.S.
court & sentenced to 40 years in prison.
•In September 1990, The Ochoa Bros.
turn themselves in to Colombian police.
•On December 2, 1993, Pablo Escobar is
killed by Colombian police with the aid
of the DEA & the CIA.
•In the summer of 1995, the Cali Cartel’s
five leaders are captured.
•In the struggle to control
Colombia’s drug trade, Colombia
becomes the world’s deadliest
country.
•Guerrilla factions like the FARC
begin taxing small drug trafficking
groups to fund their rebellion.
•Originally a $7.5 billion plan for social
and economic development by then
President Andres Pastrana in 1999.
•U.S. President Clinton gives $1.3 billion in
aid as part of the plan, mostly to fund
military & counter narcotics initiatives.
•The plan also aimed at targeting the
southern parts of Colombia where the
FARC and other guerrilla groups
controlled the largest coca fields.
•Aerial fumigation is a key for the
eradication of the coca plants.
•Fumigation destroys the only
economic option for peasant farmers
& leaves thousands displaced from the
sprayings.
•Record numbers of eradication in
Colombia.
•World's leading coca cultivator with 167,000
hectares in coca cultivation in 2007, a 6% increase
over 2006, producing a potential of 535 mt of pure
cocaine. World’s largest producer of coca
derivatives.
•Supplies cocaine to nearly all of the US market
and the great majority of other international drug
markets.
•In 2005, aerial eradication dispensed herbicide to
treat over 130,000 hectares but aggressive
replanting on the part of coca growers means
Colombia remains a key producer.
•A significant portion of narcotics proceeds are
either laundered or invested in Colombia through
the black market peso exchange.
•Important heroin supplier for the U.S.; most
Colombian heroin is destined for the US market.
•Second-largest consumer of cocaine in the
world.
•Important market for Colombian, Bolivian,
and Peruvian cocaine
•Coca cultivation in the Amazon region,
used for domestic consumption
•Important transshipment country for
Bolivian, Colombian, and Peruvian cocaine
headed for Europe.
•Used by traffickers as a way station for
narcotics air transshipments between Peru
and Colombia.
•Illicit narcotics proceeds are often
laundered through the financial system.
•Significant illicit financial activity in the
Tri-Border Area. (Argentina, Paraguay,
Brazil)
•Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff
announced on February 18, 2011, the
establishment of 49 Regional
Centers of Reference on crack and
other drugs in public universities.
•The fight against drugs will be
conducted on three fronts:
prevention, assistance to users and
their families and combating drug
traffic.
•According to the president, the
fight against drugs requires a fight
against organized crime, so it is
necessary to strengthen the Federal
Police and border control.