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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-01-31
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<text id=94TT1536>
<title>
Nov. 07, 1994: Diplomacy:In the Way of Good Policy
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
DIPLOMACY, Page 50
Getting in the Way of Good Policy
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A U.S. drug enforcer in Burma sues his colleagues for scuttling
his best efforts to curb trafficking
</p>
<p>By J.F.O. McAllister/Washington--With reporting by Sandra Burton/Hong Kong and Elaine Shannon
and Douglas Waller/Washington
</p>
<p> His reports were mangled, he claims. His home phone was bugged.
A valued source was betrayed. During the 14 months he spent
in Rangoon, Drug Enforcement Administration agent Richard Horn
contends, he was lied to, electronically surveilled and finally
kicked out of the country--not by the Burmese heroin traffickers
he was trying to nab but by State Department and CIA officials
who thought his antidrug campaign should be played down in favor
of other diplomatic interests. Horn, a 23-year DEA veteran now
posted to New Orleans, has taken the highly unusual step of
suing the acting head of the U.S. embassy who had him recalled,
as well as the CIA station chief. The State Department's Inspector
General and the Justice Department are investigating Horn's
charges. It is not the first time the priorities of U.S. agencies
abroad have come into open conflict, but it is rare, to say
the least, that the result is a suit by a federal agent against
his colleagues for harassment over policy disputes.
</p>
<p> To U.S. drug busters, Burma is Asia's mother lode, the source
of 60% of the heroin coming into America. Last year, officials
say, Burma seized less than 1% of the estimated 2,575 metric
tons of opium its drug lords produced.
</p>
<p> That is what drove Horn to push for better cooperation with
Burma's military junta, the State Law and Order Restoration
Council. He and his DEA bosses concluded there was no other
way to hurt Burma's drug kingpins like Khun Sa, who has some
20,000 men organizing production and distribution routes. But
that goal collided with the main thrust of U.S. policy. After
the junta nullified an election and killed thousands of protesters,
the U.S. cut off aid and trade privileges and then refused to
send a new ambassador. Ever since, the State Department has
tried to minimize its contacts with the junta.
</p>
<p> The State Department had forced out Horn's two immediate DEA
predecessors in Rangoon, but he still considered it his "dream
job" when he arrived in June 1992. Not for long. Horn is bound
to silence by DEA rules, but his lawyer has provided TIME with
a long letter he wrote to Democratic Congressman Charles Rangel
detailing Horn's allegations. It recounts that Horn and Franklin
Huddle, the embassy's charge d'affaires, clashed over a report
to Washington that Horn thought unfairly denigrated the junta's
antidrug efforts. Horn says Huddle refused to obtain expert
help from the U.S. to draft manuals for Burmese police and prosecutors
implementing new drug laws, but did approve training at the
CIA for Burmese intelligence officers. He claims that the CIA
divulged the name of a DEA informant to the junta and sabotaged
a DEA survey of opium yields by revealing to the government
that the CIA--distrusted by the Burmese--had secretly given
the DEA the funds to conduct it. The ultimate insult was discovering
Huddle's cable to Washington relaying exact quotes from a phone
conversation Horn had made from his home. Horn knew of another
instance where the CIA had bugged a DEA agent, and concluded
the same had been done to him.
</p>
<p> Sources familiar with the Inspector General's investigation
say the former CIA station chief absolutely denies wiretapping
Horn. For his part, Huddle says "there's absolutely no truth
whatsoever in Horn's allegations." Personality clashes played
their part: a State Department colleague calls Huddle "a little
martinet," while a DEA buddy admits that Horn is "sometimes
pigheaded." But the core of the fight in Burma was a vexing
question of policy: How intimate should Washington be with a
vicious regime to win its help on curbing drugs?
</p>
<p> The diplomats argue that putting too much emphasis on drugs
is parochial and that the DEA often gets manipulated by corrupt
governments. The junta, they say, set up splashy drug busts
for the Americans that traffickers were happy to treat as a
cost of doing business. "The DEA," says an intelligence source,"was
being played for a patsy by a bunch of Burmese military folks
who were getting a cut of the action."
</p>
<p> Nevertheless, the Clinton Administration has decided after a
long review to offer Burma some incentives for better behavior,
hoping that one payoff will be serious help in combatting heroin.
A U.S. delegation will meet this week in Rangoon with junta
leaders, who have just visited opposition leader Aung San Suu
Kyi. The junta has kept her under house arrest since July 1989.
Diplomats will continue to emphasize human rights, but "our
efforts at pure isolation have not been tremendously successful,"
acknowledges Robert Gelbard, Assistant Secretary of State in
charge of narcotics matters. One result of the new policy should
be more unanimity among the different agencies that work in
the Rangoon embassy where, as Richard Horn's saga shows, Burma's
military bosses have had plenty of opportunity to play the Americans
against each other.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>