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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Navy Adding Muscle To Drug War
Title:US: Navy Adding Muscle To Drug War
Published On:2000-03-28
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-04 23:29:43
NAVY ADDING MUSCLE TO DRUG WAR

Crime: High-Tech Gear And Firepower Are Increasingly Being Put To Sea To
Help The Coast Guard Stop The Flow Of Narcotics From Latin America.

SAN DIEGO--Under gray skies and light rain, the guided missile cruiser
Valley Forge, built to do hull-to-hull combat with the Soviet navy, set sail
Monday for six months in hostile waters.

The Valley Forge will not be on the prowl for the Soviets or the armed
forces of Third World nations considered by the United States as potential
adversaries.

Rather, its quarry will be one of the most elusive on the high seas: the
"go-fast" boats of drug smuggling cartels in the eastern Pacific and the
Caribbean.

"I have a message for the go-fast boats: We're watching and we're going to
get you," said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Michael Van Durick, executive officer of the
567-foot Valley Forge.

The sleek rogue boats, powered by up to four 250-horsepower engines, can
skim the waves at up to 70 mph and, by slipping through the "zone defense"
of the U.S. anti-drug effort, are thought to be responsible for a ton or
more of drugs entering the United States each day.

Until recently the go-fasts were helped both by superior speed and a U.S.
Coast Guard policy that all but prohibited the use of preemptive firepower.

But now, the Coast Guard has changed policy and, along with the Navy, is
putting more manpower, horsepower and firepower into stopping the
clandestine flow of drugs from manufacturers to consumers.

With a budget boost provided last year by Congress, the Coast Guard has
added souped-up helicopters called Enforcers and inflatable chase boats with
more speed than older models. Coast Guard sharpshooters now have authority
to fire warning shots and, if needed, to use state-of-the-art nonlethal
weapons to punch holes in the go-fasts and disable their engines.

Coast Guard personnel have also learned "fast-roping" techniques from the
Marine Corps in how to board a hostile ship by rappelling from a hovering
helicopter.

"In the past, it could be very frustrating when the go-fasts would just
outrun us or refuse to stop," said a Coast Guard petty officer, part of a
seven-man team deploying with the Valley Forge. "Now we've got a
considerably more aggressive posture. This is real law enforcement."

The Coast Guard has established elite, well-armed squads in Miami,
Portsmouth, Va., and San Diego trained in the difficult and dangerous job of
chasing, disabling and boarding go-fast boats and other drug-laden craft. On
some missions, the squads use the Coast Guard's own cutters; other times,
they are assigned to Navy ships such as the Valley Forge.

Announced late last year, the Coast Guard's policy change marks the first
time since the 1920s--when the Coast Guard was battling rum runners--that
the service has used firepower to disable smuggling vessels at sea.

The new policy has meant added coverage from Baja California to Ecuador. In
the past, the Caribbean was the main area of concern, with the eastern
Pacific being left virtually uncovered by U.S. seaborne forces for weeks.

The two regions are now given nearly equal priority, and a continuous
presence is being provided in the eastern Pacific, where many shipments of
drugs are dropped off in Mexico or Central America to be trucked into the
United States.

Although it is open to debate whether the nation's drug problems can ever be
eradicated by focusing on supply rather than trying to reduce demand, there
seems no question that the new Navy-Coast Guard effort is productive. In all
of fiscal 1999, the Coast Guard seized 19 1/2 tons of cocaine and other
drugs from smugglers in the eastern Pacific. In the first six months of
fiscal 2000, the figure is 24 tons and rising.

The White House Office on Drug Policy estimates that more than 400 missions
are attempted each year by go-fast boats operating out of ports in Latin
America, particularly Colombia.

The Coast Guard says it probably catches fewer than 15% of the go-fast
boats, but it aims to increase that figure significantly.

Under U.S. law and several treaties, the Coast Guard has sole authority to
board and search vessels thought to be engaged in drug running in
international waters. The Navy provides a platform to find and pursue the
go-fasts with the Coast Guard doing the actual boarding.

For some patrols, the Coast Guard uses its own cutters, like the San
Diego-based Hamilton and the Oregon-based Steadfast that, together, stopped
a go-fast boat 40 miles off Acapulco shortly before Christmas and seized 2
1/2 tons of cocaine.

For longer missions, Navy ships like the Valley Forge have something that
smaller Coast Guard cutters do not: the best electronic gear that the
Silicon Valley can produce to detect, classify and track hundreds of moving
targets simultaneously at a distance that is classified top-secret.

Although it is exceedingly rare that go-fast boats are armed, the Valley
Forge has deck-mounted guns that could easily destroy any boat that
attempted to fire on U.S. forces.

"The Navy's role is to intimidate the drug lords," said crew member Vaughn
Hampton. "A show of force can be very persuasive."

Of all the ships that the Navy deploys for drug interdiction, guided missile
cruisers are the largest and most technologically advanced. At any given
time, the Navy has five to seven ships dedicated to drug interdiction from
bases on both coasts and the Caribbean.

Like most San Diego-based ships, the Valley Forge's normal area of
responsibility is the Persian Gulf; it served in Operation Desert Storm.

For this deployment, the Valley Forge, with 385 officers and enlisted men,
will patrol 24 hours a day for small blips on the horizon that could prove
to be boats loaded with cocaine, marijuana and other illicit substances.

The ship will patrol a sector of the eastern Pacific from Baja California to
South America and cross into the Caribbean via the Panama Canal for further
drug duty.

Experience has shown that July 4 is a favorite day for smugglers--possibly
because many U.S. ships are in port for the holiday. This year, the Valley
Forge will be at sea and on duty.

If there is any sense that duty as a waterborne drug cop is a comedown after
facing down the Soviets for years and then helping battle Saddam Hussein, it
was not apparent Monday among crew members and their loved ones as the ship
left San Diego Bay.

"I hate to see him go," said a teary Erika Vatsaas, 19, whose boyfriend,
Joseph Urban, is a communications electrician aboard the Valley Forge. "But
at least he's going for a good reason: to stop drugs. I just hope those drug
lords don't shoot at him."
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