-Caveat Lector-

http://www.angelfire.com/id/ciadrugs/analysis.html
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CIA protection
of drug pipelines
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Narco-colonialism
in the 20th Century

Hegel was right when he said that we learn from history that man can never
learn anything from history. -- George Bernard Shaw 1856-1950



Years ago, the "beat poet" Allen Ginsberg had access to unfiltered Associated
Press news feeds. Ginsberg had a habit of collecting the most interesting
printouts from the teletype machines, when access to wire feeds was rare. Of
the teletypes that Ginsberg collected, the ones that drew a straight line of
CIA involvement in running opium for Vang Pao and the Hmong in Laos during
the Vietnam war are the most memorable; they are the most memorable, not for
their scant information, but for helping researchers like Alfred McCoy
investigate the matter more deeply.

Ginsberg, quite the tireless radical, had a habit of telling people the truth
as he knew it, especially those in the establishment press. One particular
newspaper man, New York Times columnist C.L. Sulzberger, didn't believe
Ginsberg's portrayal of the CIA. Sulzberger, who later became editor-in-chief
at the paper, became indignant when poet Allen Ginsberg accused the CIA of
involvement in smuggling opium during the Vietnam War. But years later, on
April 11, 1978, Sulzberger wrote:


"Dear Allen,

I fear I owe you an apology. I have been reading a succession of pieces about
CIA involvement in the dope trade in Southeast Asia and I remember when you
first suggested I look into this I thought you were full of beans. Indeed you
were right and I acknowledge the fact plus sending my best personal wishes."

[Signed, C.L. Sulzberger]


Sulzberger wasn't unreasonable in doubting such an extraordinary claim,
perhaps the onus was on Ginsberg to provide some evidence. The most difficult
aspect of performing this kind of analysis is the admittedly thorny issue of
extrapolating from what is known.

This isn't necessarily an effort to make the CIA out as the absolute source
of all the evil in the world. But, in what has been termed a 'unipolar
world,' the CIA should certainly takes its fair share of the credit. In
counterpoint, it could be argued that regardless of who is vying for
influence in a region, if control over territory necessitates forging
military alliances with those who control the coca plantations or the poppy
fields, then the strategic end justifies the means.

Covert war is still war and covert warriors make logical military choices;
the USA has a habit of expanding its influence with whatever means are most
convenient. And so it appears a most enduring strategy has become pulling
economies along by their most easily-leveraged commodity. Wars are
functionally the result of economic questions being answered with violence.
Covert action and warfare march to the same tune.

Perhaps the objective is to not so much blame the CIA as blame U.S.
politicians. The CIA is an instrument of the American two party system,
whereby the Democrats play innocent and the Republicans play ignorant. Let's
be direct: The American two-party system sets policy. The CIA is in the
business of executing those policies. If U.S. policy entails expanding the
realm of U.S. influence, and it has to be done covertly, then the CIA readily
opts to forge alliances with regional criminal enterprises. That's the way of
covert action and warfare.

But for the CIA to gain any level of influence, a quid-pro-quo arrangement is
required. In exchange for that criminal enterprise working for the CIA in
some capacity, the CIA has to somehow protect or promote a criminal
enterprises' interests.

Since the market for illicit narcotics is international, and the interests of
the CIA is international, then the relationship is inevitable.

Place the blame where you will.

PIPELINES:

Enter the protected narcotics pipeline. U.S. government protection can mean
any number of things. But the documentary history shows that invoking the
rubric of 'national security,' lifting customs barriers, granting immunity
and nullifying criminal prosecutions in U.S. courts, have all been tactics
employed by the U.S. intelligence community. These tactics functionally
protect a drug pipeline; the protection may not be indefinite or grant
unlimited impunity, but so long as a CIA alliance with a particular
trafficker holds, the trafficker's pipelines become protected.

Skirting and flouting the rule of law is normal protocol - understandably so,
from the perspective of a covert warrior - except for many years, the CIA was
generally proscribed from various operations within the borders of the U.S.A.
(well, that law was skirted and flouted, too). Underscoring this assertion is
a public admission by the CIA it had reached a secret agreement with the
Department of Justice so its agents, contract agents and assets could deal
drugs without fear of prosecution.

These days, evidence presents itself in abundance. In October 1996, Jack Blum
(former special counsel to the 1987 "Kerry" Senate Foreign Relations
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Narcotics and International Operations) gave both
a prepared statement and verbal testimony before the October 1996 Senate
Select Intelligence Committee on alleged CIA drug trafficking to fund
Nicaraguan Contras in the 1980s, Chaired by Senator Arlen Specter. In his
testimony, Mr. Blum said:

"For criminal organizations, participating in covert operations offers much
more than money. They may get a voice in selecting the new government. They
may get a government that owes them for help in coming to power, They may be
able to use their connections with the United States government to enhance
their political power at home and to wave off the efforts of the American law
enforcement community. "


Blum has said something quite significant here. The CIA functionally gains
influence and control in governments corrupted by criminal narco-trafficking.
Politically, the CIA exerts influence by leveraging narco-militarists and
corrupted politicians. It's fascinating that Blum's description wouldn't be
out of place in describing the Opium Wars of the 19th century. From what Blum
describes, it seems that narco-colonialism is alive and well and residing
centrally at CIA headquarters at Langley, Virginia.

Well, that's one hell of accusation, isn't it?

Mind you, when when we term this "narco-colonialism," it's not the same
narco-colonialism of the 19th century British Empire and East India Tea
Company forcing opium down the throats of Chinese. This is really
NEO-narco-colonialism, whereby local criminal proxies do the bidding of the
patron government seeking expanded influence. But because of the quid-pro-quo
of protecting the criminal proxies' illicit pipelines, the result is still a
functional narco-colonialism, involving a narcotics commodity in the actual
practical execution of policy, with the very different twist of covert action.

Neo-Colonialism. Chile and Angola:

But to really understand the importance of the CIA expanding its realm of
influence through covert actions, we need to look at two particular cases
that didn't involve narcotics pipelines or narco-militarists, Chile and
Angola, and a particular coup that did, Bolivia. The cases of Chile and
Angola are illustrative because they frame the CIA's motivations as purely
Machiavellian, with the use of local military proxies, while Bolivia
illustrates the narco-colonial technique directly.

In the early 1970's, the CIA backed the military take-over of Chile
(orchestrated by Pres. Richard Nixon and his Secretary of State, Henry
Kissinger). After the socialist Salvador Allende won a popular election and
began making overtures towards a socialization of the Chilean division of
ITT, ITT asked for intervention from the U.S. Before the final brutal
military take-over by General Pinochet, Nixon and Kissinger had brought
various forces to bear, including currency manipulation designed to "make
their economy scream" with hyper-inflation. In the ensuing years, the Chilean
fascist military murdered tens of thousands of "dissidents" who were simply
asking for a return to Chilean democracy. Kissinger's comment at the time was
brazen: "I don't see why we should stand by and watch a country become
socialist." Never mind the popular will of the Chilean people, nor the
differences between Fabian Socialism (as practiced in Sweden, France, and
Austria) and Marxist Socialism, any kind of socialism was bad if ITT was
going to loose a piece of itself to a foreign government's buy-out.

In the case of Angola, the recounting of the CIA's involvement there is
revealing. Former CIA-agent John Stockwell served as a CIA operative during
the bloody Angolan civil war in the 1970's. After he resigned the agency, as
a matter of conscience, he revealed that the CIA backed the insurgency of
UNITA, lead by Marxist Jonas Savimbe (as revealed in ex-CIA agent John
Stockwell's book, "In Search of Enemies"). The CIA backed UNITA, obviously
not because of Savimbe's communist ideology, but because Angola's government
(also Marxist, allied with Cuba) harbored a large base of ANC rebels. The
CIA's general strategy was to destabilize Angola for the benefit of the
racist colonialist regime in South Africa. The UNITA insurgents were
convenient proxies in achieving the CIA's goals in that region; the cold war
dialectic of "communism vs. capitalism" did not present itself conveniently
in Angola, so the CIA simply exploited what convenient resource it could use.

Narco-Colonialism. Bolivia:

But there's one last CIA intervention that did involve drug lords and
narco-militarists, and that was in Bolivia (this particular page in history
was documented in the book "The Great White Lie," by ex-DEA agent Michael
Levine).

The CIA already had a history of intervening in Bolivia against socialists
and Catholic church workers with reformist leanings during the 1960's and
1970's. In 1980, the DEA uncovered CIA and Argentinian collusion with a coup
d'tat by the cocaine barons. In what came to be known as the Bolivian
"Cocaine Coup", the CIA and Argentinian government backed the cocaine barons
in their 1980 overthrow of the Bolivian government. (Note that the rationale
for CIA support of this coup d' tat was similar to the CIA's intervention in
Chile eight years earlier)

In 1980, we had a Socialist Bolivian government which, having strong
anti-drug policies, was a natural enemy of the cocaine barons. The Bolivian
cocaine underworld would be a certain foe to any government that enforced any
anti-narcotics law, making the Bolivian drug lords the ideal proxies to
support in a Bolivian coup d'tat.

As the drug barons wanted to further expand their cartel, and the CIA and
Argentinian government wanted to suppress socialism in South America, an
alliance was formed against the legitimate Bolivan government. At that point,
the fall of the Bolivan government to narco-fascism was inevitable: Allied
with the Argentinian military the Bolivian cocaine barons were able to muster
logistical support and organize a coup d'tat that brought Bolivia under their
control.

The result: A narco-fascist government.

With the Bolivian government in the hands of the cocaine barons, the drug
lords organized a plantation-and-refinement cartel that came to be known as
La Corporacion (described by Micheal Levine as the General Motors of Cocaine).

Moreover, in the same time frame, the Argentines were organizing the
Nicaraguan Contras - not long before the CIA took over supervising the Contra
operations.

Functionally, the dots were all lined up, and it was a simple matter of
bringing all the various interests together into establishing a pipeline from
"Point A" to "Point Z". "Point Z" might not have worked so well, were it not
for the fact that the CIA-backed Contras offered such a wonderous mechanism
to access the end market in the inner cities of the United States: A
protected narcotics pipeline.

Whether or not you feel this was more than mere coincidence, the subsequent
rise to power of the Bolivian-based La Corporacion cocaine cartel was
contemporaneous with the incipient CIA-backed Contra war in Nicaragua.

With backing from the Argentinean military and the CIA, and the Bolivian
government belonging to the drug lords, the volume of cocaine coming out of
Bolivia sky-rocketed. Pipe-lined through the newly-formed Contra connection,
the cocaine cascaded across South and Central America into the neighborhoods
of the USA.

Everything fell together all-too well. Understanding the persistent and
pervasive pattern of CIA collusion with drug traffickers, I personally find
it hard to ascribe these historical events to the realm of mere coincidence.

Narco-Colonialism. A giant sucking sound:

The problem is, there's a fall-out from covert protection of narcotics
pipelines. A narcotics pipeline, once protected, no matter how brief nor
justifiable, can create a mechanism that serves as a nexus for increased
narcotics traffic. Why is this?

Laos:

Let's look at the CIA's experience in Laos, during the Vietnam war. The CIA
backed the opium warlord Vang Pao, because opium helped the Laotian tribes
people alliance with the CIA. Not to over-emphasize the particulars of which
opium lord the CIA favored, the point was to support the Hmong opium
production in Laos, funding the warfare, thereby enhancing control over
Laotian territory.

The tactical upshot from gaining control in Laos meant the CIA had to support
Vang Pao; to make the efforst of the CIA worthwhile, he needed to out-class
all the other opium warlords in Laos. All that was required of the CIA was to
run the opium via Air America aircraft to the next transshipment point, which
functionally protected the pipeline & let the warlord run the tribal people.
In this particular case, the Hmong tribes were in a difficult spot because of
the demands of the war on their agrarian economy, and in a sense, the CIA was
helping them out of a tight spot. But the CIA was also after its own
interests, and Vang Pao lead the proxy CIA Hmong army.

So, although it created an opium monster, controlling Laos justified the
inevitable escalation in heroin supply. As a a result of this 'radical
pragmatism,' the volume of heroin coming out Laos tripled, and U.S. troops
found themselves awash in heroin. And it is important to emphasize that the
CIA ran the opium to the next transshipment node, facilitating the production
of heroin.

Latin America:

In Latin America, many indigenous farmers are Amerindian and speak little or
no spanish. (They don't care about Adam Smith vs. Karl Marx, they only care
about the last time the government kicked them off their land, or who's
holding a gun to their head, or how much cash they get for their crop if they
aren't growing food for their families.)

This is the pattern we see from the simple economic reality that wars have
some economic basis (control of commodity production, as is the case with
illicit narcotics), and it is beneficial in the course of warfare to gain
influence and control in Latin America through coca production. The very same
formula employed in Laos is being employed generally in the Latin American
coca production and transshipment system.

The Contras:

Although we see similar pattern with the U.S.-backed Nicaraguan contras and
the Honduran military, the involvement of the CIA in this alliance was just
as intimate, but for different reasons. Military U.S. aid to the Contras was
prohibited by the Boland Amendment (early 1980's), so the intelligence
community flouted Congressional rule, and went ahead in aiding and
coordinating the Contras. But they had to do it off-the-books, with hidden
money sources. In the course of brazenly breaking the law, the NSC staff
(Oliver North, etc.) abandoned all principles and elected to go with the
narco-militarist covert war mechanism. The Contras, originally organized by
the Argentinean fascist military, was largely overseen and supported by the
CIA and the Honduran narco-military.

Once the Contras and Honduran military became the protected conduit for
cocaine trafficking with established critical relationships with the
Colombian cartels and narco-militarists like Manuel Noriega, the Contra and
Honduran military drug pipeline offered guaranteed delivery to market,
something that no other smuggling operation could assure. The absurdity of
the denials and claims of new-found purity from ex-Contras has been amusing:
It wasn't as though they were going to readily abandon the political and
strategic advantages gained through the alliances with the cartels, not when
there was so much to be gained from the alliance, in terms of both power and
money (The CIA didn't depose the head of the Honduran military until much
later in the game).

At first, this probably worked well for the cartels and the Contras, but
demand for illegal narcotics only rises so fast and so far in the face of
increased supply. The result is falling prices, which in turn fosters an
increase in use. During the heyday of the Contra-cocaine pipeline (the early
1980's), there was a period when cocaine was being sold below cost, such that
cocaine prices met the classic economics lesson. Except that with a highly
addictive substance like cheap, smokable cocaine, consumer demand is tends to
be more rigid than consumption for typical commodity goods.

Columbia:

Years ago (in 1990), I recall watching a reporter on CBS's 60 Minutes news
program asked the CIA station chief in Bogota why the CIA had overlooked the
existence of the Cali Cartel. The station chief denied the Cali cartel even
existed, and then tried to redirect the reporter's questions to the Medellin
Cartel. If it weren't so serious, it would have comical: CIA underworld
alliances show themselves in some form of protection, even in the form of
obvious and pathetic denials.

Currently, in Colombia (as in Peru, Bolivia and Guatemala), we see similar
patterns arise. Colombia is undergoing a internal "dirty" civil war. More
than half of Colombia's principalities are controlled by indigenous rebel
forces (FARC, ELN) who partially fund themselves through taxation of coca,
opium and marijuana production. Paramilitary forces allied with the
government, renown for slaughtering entire villages, are themselves allied
with illicit drug traffickers who find opportunities in acquiring land
through theft and murder (most of the non-combatant casualties are from
paramilitary deathsquads, and most paramilitary violence is committed in
areas where the regular army has a strong presence). The U.S. officially
sends money to fight narcotics production under the aegis of the War on
Drugs; however, that money is used extensively by the Colombian military to
fight the rebels, not the actual elements of Colombia's illicit drug economy.

Elsewhere:

After the contra war, the CIA continued to ally itself with narco-militarists
in Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Guatemala, Haiti, Mexico and Panama. Many of
these alliances have shifted, but the practice apparently continues, even in
Myanmar (Burma) in a continuation of CIA machinations in the Golden Triangle
(with an added twist of an international oil venture involving Unocal).

The quiet side of gun-boat diplomacy (or how to win and influence peoples)

Nearly a century ago, King Leopold of Belgium ran a murderous regime in the
Belgian Congo. The horror of the time was that his armies killed off half of
a population of 20 million (a large African republic which was up until
recently named Zaire). The other governments of Europe saw the horror of his
bloody rule as such a destabilizing threat to colonialism, that they
literally took possession of the Congo from Leopold under a pan-European
administration.

Joseph Conrad wrote about the Congo in the novella "Heart of Darkness." In
Heart of Darkness, Conrad's protagonist commented about the excuses that
cloak the true nature of colonialism, namely "Christianizing the savages."
The willingness of governments to disguise the real basis of their foreign
policies and actions abroad hasn't changed: modern euphemisms, such as
"making the world safe for democracy," serve the same purpose: to short
circuit public skepticism of the real world of Machiavellian state-craft (now
broadcast daily through the ultimate of propaganda machines).

The U.S. has always, and at any cost, maintained US hegemony in the
Caribbean, Central and South America. For instance, early in this century,
Panama was set up by U.S.-backed bandits, stealing the isthmus from Colombia
with the backing of the U.S. military. The objective was to build the canal
as property of the U.S.A. Then, as now, we used proxies to do our dirty work;
hence, neo-colonialism.

"I helped make Honduras "right" for American fruit companies in 1903. I
helped make Mexico, especially Tampico, safe for oil interests in 1914. I
helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to
collect revenue in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American
republics for the benefits of Wall Street.... I helped purify Nicaragua for
the international banking house of Brown Brothers. I brought light to the
Dominican Republic for American sugar interests in 1916. I helped purify
Nicaragua for the international banking house of Brown Brothers in 1909-1912.
I brought light to the Dominican Republic for American sugar interests in
1916. In China I helped to see to it that Standard Oil went its way
unmolested. "

"..Looking back on it, I feel that I could have given Al Capone a few hints.
The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated
on three continents."

- Marine Corps General Smedley D. Butler, New York Times August 21, 1931, in
"Morrow Book of Quotations in American History"

Indeed, and the OSS (the CIA's predecessor) took some lessons from Lucky
Luciano, Santos Trafficante and Meyer Lansky.

Covert war, cash crops and protected pipelines:

The unquiet way to go about this business is through open warfare. But the
quiet way to gain influence and control in Latin America is through
manipulation of the illicit cash crop of Latin America: Coca. Enter the
alliance with the criminal enterprise and the requisite quid-pro-quo. The
U.S. has a unique ability to influence a foreign government's militaries and
politicians (especially the corrupt ones), as well as allying with criminal
proxies (which serve the same end), so it's short order to protect a
narcotics pipeline.

As any criminal knows, it's important to have corrupt government officials
available in order to help protect the racket. However, in the case of the
CIA, it's less a function of ordinary greed and more a function of
drug-money-for-guns and acquisition of control in coca economies.

But protecting a particular narco-pipeline leads results in increased volume
and increased cash flows towards that pipeline. The CIA and its proxies (like
General Manuel Noriega) offer what only government facilitators can offer: a
government-protected pipeline to the end-market. A CIA-protected pipeline
provides privileged access to the market.

In the 1980's this meant cocaine producers routed their product through the
privileged CIA-protected La Corporacion-Cali-Noriega-Contra coke pipeline,
with a commensurate increase in volume and drop in prices (mentioned above).
This was a monetary pipeline as well, with the producer economies receiving
infusions of hard American currency. In that sense one commodity, cocaine,
flowed north while another kind of commodity flowed south: hard currency. The
power of hard currency cannot be underestimated, and one of the most powerful
weapons at the U.S.'s disposal is a Federal Reserve Note.

Consider what happens when the CIA allies itself with drug smugglers to gain
control of Latin economies: Rather than let independent politicians have more
money, power or control, the CIA's underworld proxies infiltrate the
legitimate political system.

With that statement in mind, consider these quotes from ex-DEA agents like
Michael Levine and Cellerino Castillo:

"For decades, the CIA, the Pentagon, and secret organizations like Oliver
North's Enterprise have been supporting and protecting the world's biggest
drug dealers.... The Contras and some of their Central American allies ...
have been documented by DEA as supplying ... at least 50 percent of our
national cocaine consumption. They were the main conduit to the United States
for Colombian cocaine during the 1980's. The rest of the drug supply ... came
from other CIA-supported groups, such as DFS (the Mexican CIA) ... [and]
other groups and/or individuals like Manual Noriega." (Ex-DEA agent Michael
Levine: The Big White Lie: The CIA and the Cocaine/Crack Epidemic)

"Castillo stated that together with 3 other ex-DEA agents, they were willing
to testify in Congress regarding their direct knowledge of CIA involvement in
international drug trafficking. Castillo estimates that approximately 75% of
narcotics entered the U.S. with the acquiescence or direct participation of
U.S. and foreign CIA agents." (August 13, 1996 San Diego Union-Tribune,
regarding Rep. Robert Toricelli's proposed subcommittee on the intelligence
community and human rights violations in Guatemala and Central America).

"We also became aware of deep connections between the law- enforcement
community and the intelligence community. I, personally, repeatedly heard
from prosecutors and people in the law-enforcement world that CIA agents were
required to sit in on the debriefing of various people who were being ques
tioned about the drug trade. They were required to be present when witnesses
were being prepped for certain drug trials. At various times the intelligence
community inserted itself in that legal process. I believe that that was an
impropriety; that that should not have occurred."

"...We ran into another procedure which was extremely troubling. There was a
system for stopping Customs inspections of inbound and outbound aircraft from
Miami and from other airports in Florida. People would call the Customs
office and say, "Stand down. Flights are going out. Flights are coming in."

(Jack Blum, speaking before the October 1996 Senate Select Intelligence
Committee on alleged CIA drug trafficking to fund Nicaraguan Contras in the
1980s, Chaired by Senator Arlen Specter).

Very simply: Oliver North and the CIA were running the biggest facilitator
racket in the hemisphere, ensuring that the CIA held the economic strings on
two hemispheres' cocaine economies.

As the size of the Peru/Bolivia-to-Miami/L.A. pipelines increased, their
entire coca economies were drawn into that pipeline. There was a giant
sucking sound of this big operation's intake valve pulling everything in its
direction, economically and otherwise.

The CIA gained tremendous power from this: the CIA proxies (The chosen narco
traffickers - Cali cartel, Noriega, etc.) who benefitted from the protection
owed their fealty to the U.S. government. They returned the favor by
channeling their product through the Contra operation, as well as
infiltrating their respective economies, so that the CIA increased its
influence and control via these underworld proxies.

But in the process of establishing itself and its proxy allies as top dog,
the CIA protected these trafficking pipelines. In so doing, the protected
pipelines produced increased volume and lower prices.

The consequences of protected drug pipelines are well known: The CIA's use of
opium warlords in fight the war in Laos resulted in wildly escalated
addictions in the U.S. Moreover, by allowing the Latin cartels to transform
into sophisticated international business organizations (La Corporacion in
Peru), nearly every republic in the region has become intractibly immeshed in
a narcotics economy.

By manipulating drug transshipment nodes, narco-militarists and
narco-profits, the CIA has gained incredible amounts of influence, and even
control, in the region. Good narco-facilitators gain more power and wealth.
Narco-facilitators who act in defiance of U.S. interests, like Gen.
Hueso-Rosa of Honduras, ex-President Salinas of Mexico or Gen. Manuel
Noriega, ultimately find themselves suddenly exposed, deposed and either
exiled or rotting in prison.

Hegemony:

Historically, any attempt at local independence in Latin America is contrary
to the hegemony of the U.S.A. (Recall the Monroe Doctrine that established
that the U.S.A. was the sole player in the Carribean basin and that European
powers were to stay out). Contemplate the end game: Were a Latin American
confederacy or superstate to emerge from the divided (and conquered) crazy
quilt of republics, it would constitute a 'threat' - a challenge - to U.S.
'interests' - hegemony.

The Latin republics would no longer be subservient to U.S. interests
(neo-colonial exploitation by proxy). Latin America could assert its own
objectives over U.S. objections. Chile, Bolivia, Panama, Guatemala, El
Salvador and Nicaragua all have endured a sad history of their misfortunate
inhabitants suffering at the blood-thirsty hands of U.S.-backed despots.

Enter the War on Drugs:

The most disturbing aspect about this whole rotten mess, is that the U.S.
National Security operatives planning and implementing these operations could
not have possibly been unaware of the long-term consequences of their
actions. To suggest that the CIA's black-ops specialists would be naive as to
the outcome of their actions is to engage in a gross act of denial
(especially after their well-documented heroin-related machinations in Laos
and the resultant soaring drug addiction problem amongst G.I.'s). It doesn't
take a genius to tell you that if specific drug pipelines are protected from
interdiction, the resulting increase in drug volume will see a commensurate
increase in drug addiction in the U.S.

History repeats

The narco-colonial trade-off for enhanced control in the Americas is
increased coca volumes. But is it a 'trade-off' or is it a 'benefit?' The
European colonial opium trade relied upon a simple formula to expand it's
business: the targeted market focused upon concentrations of poverty,
facilitated by the ease with which the impoverished could make a living
through opium distribution. A supply of unsuspecting, undereducated or
desperate people easily duped into addiction always helped.

With the protected pipelines from the Bolivian cocaine coup and the Contra
war, came increased cocaine volumes and lower prices. The ultra-cheap cocaine
inevitably landed in the inner cities, as it necessarily would, the crack
cocaine plague affecting inner-city minorities first. And, although the
typical crack user is white, inconvenient facts haven't stopped the media
from scapegoating blacks as the locus of the drug scourge. (Remember, during
Prohibition, the inner-city Italian mobsters paid in blood, Canadian and
Irish rum-runners and producers got rich. So did folks like the Kennedys. )

Scapegoats always help

If you look beyond the day-to-day nonsense of the two-party system, it should
be obvious that political control of the entire hemisphere extends into
ultra-covert internal pogroms against minority groups as well (COINTELPRO was
only partially revealed, and there's evidence that similar programs continue
to this day).

It has been pointed out that, when black communities were saturated with
drugs, old objectives at racial oppression were renewed. Neighborhoods were
destabilized, men were killed off, incarcerated and marginalized, whites were
alienated from blacks via the War-on-Drugs propaganda machine. Throughout the
world, governments and their defenders find that propaganda helps to mollify
their populations into cooperating with dubious policies.

After all, what's the difference between a black radical in an U.S. urban
ghetto and a Guatemalan AmerIndian guerrilla in a mountain village? They are
equally troublesome to the expansion of the power of multinational
corporations or the rule of oligarchies, and their possible followers are
equally expendible.

A war of attrition clearly has its place: Eradicating mountain villages to
eliminate 'leftist sympathizers' or bombing South Vietnamese villages so to
deprive the Viet Cong of a population or bombing U.S. cities with drugs are
equally useful strategies on a continuum of tactical considerations.

Historically, minority groups that have been disinclined to fall in line with
these objectives find themselves somehow 'contained,' hence the centuries-old
war on Amerindian and African-American civil rights, the overt and covert
assaults on the left wing (COINTELPRO), the use of CIA assets to contain the
left wing, and the deployment of agent provocateurs against activists (Black
Panthers, Ms. Qadala Shabazz, Earth First!, amongst others).

The personal observation of the author is this: There is no depth this
government won't go to infiltrate, scapegoat dissident groups, and manipulate
the polity.

The New World's order is much more subtle than black helicopters and blue
helmets

The War on Drugs turns our economy into an enforcement economy. Under the
rubric of the War on Drugs, there is big money to be dispersed, fealty to be
acquired and developed, control to be wielded, power to be useed and civil
rights to be rescinded. Money, power, control, hegemony; whatever: It's an
old story with a new sinister and disturbing spin.

Lest this discussion devolve into dire and grim resignation, we can address,
with sarcastic humor, the out-of-hand dismissals of this sordid array of
facts as the wild-eyed conjectures of 'conspiracy theorists.'

Yes, there are many conspiracy theories flying about, many of which I
wouldn't recommend anyone give much credance. However, this aspect of CIA
operations - the fact that it allies itself with underworld figures - is
simply grounded in fact. It's not even a function of conspiracy, it is a
function of policy. One should regard this as policy theory.

Alas, there are the off-the-cuff dismissals from government apologists (even
in the face of the Inspector General's report). When confronted with these I
reply (with rhetorical sarcasm) that I'm actually a coincidence theorist.
Certainly it's all a BIG coincidence that the CIA allies with underworld
figures, that drug traffic is international, that the CIA's interests are
international, that the CIA seeks to infiltrate foreign governments, and that
there was an explosion of cocaine trafficking while the CIA was protecting
drug traffickers in the early 1980's. Yup. Yessirree. All a big coincidence.
And if all those things are coincidences, then the CIA has never done
anything illegal and criminals will work for free.

For those of you in the right-wing who think that the blame should befall New
World Order crypto-communists (the 'New World Order' isn't so new: If you
look at a U.S. $1 Federal Reserve Note, 'Novus Ordo Seclorum' means "a New
Order for All" ), you might want to look into the reality that ex-President
George Bush was formerly a CIA director and that the CIA protected Contra
drug smuggling under the office of then-Vice President George Bush, his NSC
staff and CIA-director William Casey. While Sen. Jesse Helms may be against a
New World Order, ex-President George Bush (former CIA director, former Drug
Czar) wasn't. Just to understand the scope of political control that the
two-party system has acquired, consider the fact that then-CIA Director
William Casey also sat on the board of Capitol Cities, Inc. In reponse to
critical reporting in news broadcast on the ABC television network, Casey and
Capitol Citites bought ABC! Functionally: The CIA bought ABC.

And, for those of you in the left wing who think that right-wing
crypto-fascists are to strictly to blame, perhaps you should re-evaluate the
ostensible left-wing of the U.S. While the superficial ideological cover for
the Democrats is liberalism which appeals to many (including the
rank-and-file press), the Democratic Party, as Jerry Brown observed from his
first-hand experience, is a huge cover story for the "wholesale buying and
selling of raw power." The CIA's misadventure in Laos fell under the auspices
of two different U.S. presidencies, one Democratic the other Republican. The
reputation of President Bill Clinton has been marred by allegations (stemming
from his tenure as Governor of Arkansas) of corruption and involvement in the
Arkansas drug trade related to CIA activities in Mena, Arkansas.

Frankly, the Republican party is only a little more brazen and less
hypocritical than the Democrats in their pursuit of power.

The CIA and the 2-party system of the Democrats and Republicans hold a close
alliance - a veritable cartel. The 2-party system has had winner-take-all
control over U.S. politics for the past century, ever since splinter parties
were suppressed via anti-fusion laws. While the CIA is directly culpable for
covert narco-colonialism, it has done it to expand the influence and maintain
the political and economic hegemony of the U.S., both internally and abroad.

When you look at the real underpinnings of what the CIA does and why, and the
way U.S. politicians turned CIA narco-colonialism abroad into an internal
psy-war under the guise of a War on Drugs, the blame for covert
narco-colonialism belongs at the feet of the American 2-party system.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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