Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US: New Challenge in Drug War: Semi-Subs at $2 Million Apiece
Title:US: New Challenge in Drug War: Semi-Subs at $2 Million Apiece
Published On:2008-08-25
Source:Christian Science Monitor (US)
Fetched On:2008-08-29 01:45:15
NEW CHALLENGE IN DRUG WAR: SEMI-SUBS AT $2 MILLION APIECE

The craft poke out only a foot above water and can carry 12 tons of drugs.

WASHINGTON - Drug cartels have turned to a new and effective vehicle
to smuggle their goods, using small, homemade "semi-submersibles" that
are hard to detect and yet effective at carrying millions of dollars
worth of cocaine and other illicit drugs that end up in the United
States.

Military officials who oversee Latin and South America have grown
alarmed by the increased use of these boats, which poke out above the
water only a foot or so but carry more than 12 tons of cargo. The
military's ability to interdict the craft is hampered in part because
its attention has been focused on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and
on border security.

"We're in a holding pattern," says Rear Adm. Joseph Nimmich, who heads
a military joint task force in the Florida Keys overseeing the drug
fight. "We are maintaining our own but not making huge progress."

The semi-subs, known as "self-propelled semi-submersibles," also
represent a serious national security threat: Today it's drugs, but
tomorrow's cargo could be heavy weaponry, senior defense officials
warn.

Interdictions Set to Double From 2006

Military officials, working in conjunction with the US Coast Guard and
law-enforcement agencies, say they apprehended about 25 of the
hard-to-find semi-subs a couple of years ago but this year are on
track to find as many as 60. Another military official says that
number could be as high as 100 by the end of the year.

Meanwhile, the semi-subs have an estimated success rate - actual
delivery of cargo - of about 80 percent, Admiral Nimmich says, adding
that he is confident the US can tackle the problem given more focus
and resources.

Most of the boats have been intercepted in the eastern Pacific between
South and Central America. In the last two years, the vessels have
emerged as an increasingly viable way to transport large quantities of
drugs that ultimately make their way into the US.

Built of a combination of fiberglass and wood and now steel, the 40-
to 80-foot long semi-subs can travel as far as 2,000 miles, carrying a
payload that represents, according to Nimmich, "10 hits of cocaine for
every senior high school student in the US."

Costing an average of $2 million per ship, the semi-subs are typically
built under cover of the jungle canopy in South and Central America
and can take a year to construct.

Drug cartels are using them increasingly, military officials say,
because the US Southern Command and other government agencies have
successfully foiled other methods, including so-called Go Fast boats,
high-performance craft that have been used to smuggle drugs for years.

Lack of Consensus in How to Respond

But the US is challenged in responding to a constantly adapting
enemy.

That's due in part to the focus on the wars overseas; in part to a
lack of consensus about how to approach the problem, drug and defense
experts say.

For example: even before 9/11, then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
had discouraged actively battling drug cartels. Today's antidrug
effort continues to be divided over questions about whether to
emphasize reducing the supply or the demand for drugs.

American drug policy has been too focused on addressing drug demand
and not enough on attacking supply routes, says Peter Hakim, president
of Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based policy group. "US drug
policy is something of a disaster in terms of any concrete results or
progress."

The wars have weakened the effort even more.

"Given Iraq, Afghanistan, and the war on terror, they completely
walked away from Latin American policy," says Barry McCaffrey, a
retired Army four-star general who also served as the so-called drug
czar in the White House under Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush.

Although US Southern Command, headed by Adm. James Stavridis, has not
received as much attention support as its sister commands,
particularly US Central Command, which oversees the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, it has quietly focused on the drug fight, interdicting
about 200 metric tons of cocaine last year.

To make more headway, General McCaffrey says, the American government
as a whole needs a broader strategic policy in Latin America that
would help address the growth in effectiveness of drug cartels.

If semi-subs represent one way in which narcotics traffickers have
adapted, the growing use of tunnels on the US-Mexico border represent
another.

"These narcotics traffickers, much like terrorists in other parts of
the world, are learning adversaries," said Gen. Victor "Gene" Renuart,
head of US Northern Command, on C-SPAN's "Newsmakers" program on
Sunday. "As you close one loop, they will open another."

General Renuart, who among other things focuses on border-security
issues, said: "If we believe we have solved the problem, we are almost
guaranteeing it will come back. You can't take your eye off the ball
in this kind of situation."
Member Comments
No member comments available...