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Cocaine Cowboys
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15104 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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4 / 1989 |
4,253 Words |
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Michael Hedges Michael Hedges is a national reporter for the Washington
Times who covers organized crime. |
During a recent inspection of Cat Cay, a Bahamian island where the United States has an antidrug outpost, Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Paul Yost told a reporter, "This is so much like Vietnam, only worse. The enemy has a thousand safe havens; the rats have a thousand holes. And even when we find them, there's so little we can do, we can't even shoot them down. It's frustrating."
A little later, the admiral--a decorated combat veteran who had inspected a dazzling array of U.S. weaponry aimed at drug traffickers--gave a pragmatic, if pessimistic, view of anti-drug efforts. "The best we can hope for is to raise their odds of getting caught from one in twenty to maybe one in five. Then, maybe in two generations, attitudes will change, and drugs will be taboo."
How did the United States became embroiled in the costly, morally debilitating war on drugs with a collection of ruthless, cunning Colombian bandits, a conflict certain to afflict our society for generations? That question can be, and has been, addressed on cultural, political, and psychological grounds by legions of writers and behaviorists.
Yet, until the publication of Kings of Cocaine, by Miami Herald reporters Guy Gugliotta and Jeff Leen, no one had fully described the development of the cartels that revolutionized drug smuggling into the United States and control as much as 80 percent of the cocaine penetrating our borders. And no one had vividly portrayed the handful of bush-league banditos from the Colombian city of Medellin who would come to rule multibillion-dollar fiefdoms.
... (1997 of 25828 Characters)
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