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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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90
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0219107.000
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<text>
<title>
(Feb. 19, 1990) Cartagena Summit:A Chat About Drugs
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Feb. 19, 1990 Starting Over
</history>
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<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 62
A Seaside Chat About Drugs
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The Andean summit's main agenda will be salving wounded egos
</p>
<p>By Jill Smolowe
</p>
<p> Even for a country so security-minded that it assigned 1,300
soldiers to protect the contestants in a beauty pageant last
year, Colombia's precautions for this week's antidrug summit
are extraordinarily tight. Though a spokesman for the drug
cartels against which Colombia has been waging an all-out war
promised that they would not make trouble, the government is
taking no risks. Hundreds of Colombian and U.S. undercover
agents disguised as beach vendors, taxi drivers, bellboys and
happy-go-lucky tourists are prowling the Caribbean resort city
of Cartagena, where George Bush and the leaders of the three
South American nations that are the source of virtually all the
world's cocaine will hold their five-hour meeting. An
additional 5,000 troops have set up pedestrian checkpoints and
roadblocks. Nearby, frogmen are scouring waters for submerged
bombs, and a force of jet fighters and helicopter gunships will
patrol the sky.
</p>
<p> But while the pomp and preparations make it appear that a
momentous new phase of the war on the drug lords could be at
hand, the reality is probably otherwise. For all the bold talk
of hammering out a coordinated antidrug assault by the U.S.,
Bolivia, Colombia and Peru, not much is likely to happen until
the post-Panama cooling of Washington's relationship with many
Latin nations is reversed.
</p>
<p> Bush originally conceived the summit during the 1988
presidential campaign as a forum for reading the riot act to
Latin leaders about their failure to curb the tidal wave of
cocaine that continues to flood the U.S. But that was before
Colombia embarked on its brave and costly offensive against the
narcotraficantes and the U.S. launched its military strike
against Panamanian strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega, stoking
long-standing regional resentments of gringo imperialist
intervention.
</p>
<p> So angered by the Panama invasion was Peru's lame-duck
President Alan Garcia Perez that he recalled his Ambassador to
Washington and vowed not to attend the summit "as long as North
American troops are illegally in Panama." After an appeal from
Colombia's President Virgilio Barco Vargas, Garcia had a change
of heart, and he now plans to be on hand in Cartagena. But
tensions were further inflamed when in the heady days after
Noriega's fall, the Pentagon clumsily leaked word of its plan
to station an aircraft-carrier task force in international
waters off Colombia's Caribbean coast to track suspected
drug-smuggling aircraft. Though U.S. officials insist that
Barco had privately approved the plan, the ill-timed disclosure
aroused the Colombian press to dire warnings of a "yanqui
blockade." The Bush Administration promptly backed down and
assured Barco that no U.S. warships would be deployed until
Bogota agrees.
</p>
<p> Thus, rather than pressuring the Latin Presidents to step
up their attacks on the cocaine lords, Bush will spend much of
the meeting listening to their complaints. "We're going down
there in part just to let ourselves get beat up," confesses a
White House official.
</p>
<p> Bush will reaffirm U.S. commitments to a consensual approach
to fighting the drug lords. He will applaud Colombia's
six-month-old crackdown against the drug barons. He will offer
reassurances that except for the soldiers stationed at the U.S.
Southern Command in Panama, there will be no American troops
left in the region after the U.S. completes the withdrawal of
its invasion force from Panama, perhaps by the end of this
month. Bush hopes that once those assurances are given, Barco
will agree to the deployment of the antismuggling naval task
force and the installation of a U.S.-built radar system that
would be turned over to Colombia's antidrug forces.
</p>
<p> For their part, the Latin leaders will reiterate
long-standing claims that American consumers, not Latin
suppliers, fuel the drug wars. To buttress that accusation, the
Andean Presidents may even bring up the arrest on drug charges
of Washington Mayor Marion Barry. The Latins will decry what
they perceive as an attempt by Bush to shift the flagging need
to battle international communism to an expanded offensive
against a new "evil empire," this one based in Medellin. If,
as one Colombian commentator warns, Bush attempts to "project
the image of the defiant macho," he can expect little
cooperation from his Latin friends.
</p>
<p> All three countries will be seeking greater financial
assistance from the U.S. Colombia will request trade preference
for its $200 million annual export of cut flowers and a revival
of the international coffee pact that lapsed last July, costing
the country some $400 million. Also on the Latin leaders' wish
list:
</p>
<p>-- Concessions on foreign debts and the granting of new
credits from the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund.
</p>
<p>-- A share of the proceeds from confiscations of
drug-related property and money, including bank accounts in the
U.S.
</p>
<p>-- Massive new infusions of direct U.S. aid--about $1
billion each per year--both to subsidize the war on drugs and
to cushion the blow to their economies that will result if the
lucrative trade in cocaine is halted.
</p>
<p> Much of the wish list will not be realized. Last month Bush
unveiled a proposed foreign aid budget for fiscal year 1991.
He allocated a total of $423 million for military,
law-enforcement and economic aid to the Andean nations. While
the request would double the 1990 bequest, the package
represents just 4% of the $10.6 billion Bush has proposed for
all antidrug programs. The White House emphasizes, however,
that European countries will join the U.S. in providing Andean
aid.
</p>
<p> The summit is set against the backdrop of a continuing
hemispheric drug scourge that shows little sign of abating.
Colombia's effort to rein in the drug lords has scored some
successes. Barco told TIME, "The leadership of the drug cartels
has received a major blow. A number of members of the cartels
have been extradited to the U.S. to face trial. Their leaders
are hiding and on the run." In the past twelve months, troops
have confiscated more than 1 million gal. of precursor
chemicals used in cocaine refinement and 32 tons of cocaine and
coca paste, compared with 14 tons in the same period a year
earlier. Sixteen suspected cartel traffickers have been
captured and shipped to the U.S., and one of the most notorious
kingpins, Jose Gonzalo Rodriguez Gacha, has been killed.
</p>
<p> Still, Colombia remains the cocaine capital of the world,
and any claim to the contrary, says a U.S. diplomat in Bogota,
"is bull." To escape the pressure in Colombia, the cartels have
relocated some drug refineries to Peru and Bolivia, where 90%
of all coca leaves are grown. As antidrug efforts have clogged
traditional smuggling routes through the Caribbean to the East
Coast, Venezuela has become an increasingly popular
transshipment point for eastbound cargo. Now cocaine travels
primarily from Colombia's Pacific ports, often via Costa Rica,
to Mexico and on to California.
</p>
<p> Enlarging their reach, traffickers are also moving drugs
through Chile to the cartels' new growth markets in Asia, and
through Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina to Europe. In
anticipation of the 1992 consolidation of the European
Community, the cartels have opened operations in Spain and
Amsterdam. In the U.S., despite record seizures, cocaine is as
freely available as ever, and as cheap. One possible reason is
that the cartels may have stockpiled huge amounts of the drug
inside the U.S. before the crackdown in Colombia began.
</p>
<p> Many U.S. experts acknowledge that any effective war on
drugs cannot be waged primarily on the suppliers. But the U.S.
is far from devising an effective plan for reducing the
insatiable demands of some 14.5 million users who spend an
estimated $100 billion annually on illegal drugs. The disarray
was evident again last week when the nation's drug-policy
director, William Bennett, a former Secretary of Education,
declared that attempts to "inoculate" young Americans against
drugs through education would not work. More effective, Bennett
said, would be rigorous prosecution of even casual users. Where
the billions of dollars will come from to hire enough police
and build enough prison cells to make such a policy more than
a charade Bennett did not say.
</p>
<p> The sad truth is that no approach the U.S. has tried, from
greater involvement by the armed forces in drug interdiction
to Nancy Reagan's Just Say No campaign, has done much to curb
drug abuse inside its borders. Government studies of drug abuse
show that the problem is deepening in the impoverished nonwhite
underclass, whose swelling ranks attract little interest or
sympathy from politicians and whose addicts, as a result, face
long waits for slots in underfunded treatment programs. Not
until the despair and alienation of that group is reversed
through improved schooling, better job opportunities and a
rebirth of self-respect can the U.S. and its Latin allies hope
to put the drug lords out of business.
</p>
<p>-- Reported by Dan Goodgame/Washington and John Moody/
San Jose
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>