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Saturday, 6 June 2009

Plying the Pacific, Subs Surface as Key Tool of Drug Cartels

This 60-foot semi-submersible at the Coast Guard base in KeyWest, Fla., was
captured by a U.S. drug interdiction task force. It carried 6.4 tons of
cocaine. (By William Booth -- The Washington Post)
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By William Booth and Juan Forero
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, June 6, 2009

MEXICO CITY -- When anti-narcotics agents first heard that drug cartels were
building an armada of submarines to transport cocaine, they thought it was a
joke.

THIS STORY
a.. Plying the Pacific, Subs Surface as Key Tool of Drug Cartels
b.. Anti-Drug Plan Set For Mexican Border
Now U.S. law enforcement officials say that more than a third of the cocaine
smuggled into the United States from Colombia travels in submersibles.

An experimental oddity just two years ago, these strange semi-submarines are
the cutting edge of drug trafficking today. They ferry hundreds of tons of
cocaine for powerful Mexican cartels that are taking over the Pacific Ocean
route for most northbound shipments, according to the Colombian navy.

The sub-builders are even trying to develop a remote-controlled model,
officials say.

"That means no crew. That means just cocaine, or whatever, inside the boat,"
said Michael Braun, a former chief of operations at the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration.

The subs are powered by ordinary diesel engines and built of simple
fiberglass in clandestine shipyards in the Colombian jungle. U.S. officials
expect 70 or more to be launched this year with a potential cargo capacity
of 380 tons of cocaine, worth billions of dollars in the United States.

"This is definitely the next generation of smuggling conveyance," said
Joseph Ruddy, an assistant U.S. attorney in Tampa who prosecutes
narco-mariners.

The submersibles are equipped with technologies that make them difficult to
intercept, even though U.S. forces use state-of-the-art submarine warfare
strategies against them. Authorities say most slip through their net.

"You try finding a floating log in the middle of the Pacific," one DEA agent
said. U.S. officials and their Colombian counterparts have detected evidence
of more than 115 submersible voyages since 2006. They have apprehended the
crews of more than 22 submersibles at sea since 2007. Six crews have been
arrested this year. The Colombian navy has intercepted or discovered 33 subs
since 1993.

U.S. officials fear that the rogue vessels could be used by terrorists
intent on reaching the United States with deadly cargos.

Daytime Drift

The vessels do not fully submerge but skim the sea surface. They move
quickly at night, then drift like sleeping whales during the day. Under
cover of darkness, they slither out of Colombia's shallow rivers and 10 days
later rendezvous offshore along the Central American coast, usually near
Guatemala, where cocaine is offloaded and the subs are sunk.

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