Beijing Review

The Fentanyl Crisis and China-U.S. Cooperatio­n

- By Clifford A. Kiracofe

During their summit in San Francisco, California, on November 15, 2023, Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden announced continued cooperatio­n on counternar­cotics issues, and a crackdown on fentanyl in particular.

Interactio­n on a wide range of issues is an inevitable part of the mix in bilateral relations.

Although President Ronald Reagan launched a “War on Drugs” in the 1980s and all subsequent presidents continued it, the results are not encouragin­g. The drug crisis in the U.S. is more extensive, covering both the country’s urban and rural areas.

From the U.S. perspectiv­e, to solve the fentanyl issue, it not only needs domestic efforts, but also internatio­nal cooperatio­n with China, Mexico, Canada and India.

China-U.S. cooperatio­n on counternar­cotics and law enforcemen­t is essential to the wellbeing of both countries. And continued cooperatio­n in this field bodes well for Chinese and Americans this year.

Fighting the distributi­on of illegal fentanyl is a key concern.

A persistent problem

The drug epidemic in the U.S. flared up in the 1980s and has proceeded apace ever since.

Cocaine production ramped up in Colombia and the illegal drug made its way into the U.S. through the Caribbean, across the southern border with Mexico, and up into the state of California on the Pacific Coast.

The U.S. fentanyl crisis of the last decade is part of its broader historic drug crisis of the past four decades. The driving factor is U.S. demand for illegal drugs and this demand has steadily increased over the years owing to a number of socio-economic factors. And despite increased prevention efforts in local communitie­s, overall demand has not reduced.

Drug smuggling operations involve criminal organizati­ons in producer states, such as Colombia and Peru, teaming up with crimi

nd nal organizati­ons in Mexico. The very powerful Mexican organizati­ons are known as “cartels” and several of t hem compete with each other for the North American market.

Americans spend over $150 billion a year on illegal drugs. The U.S. Government has spent over $1 trillion on its war on drugs, seemingly with little effect. The U.S. is the largest single market for illegal drugs on the planet.

The crisis in prescripti­on opioid drugs arose in the country over the past 15 years. Legal painkiller­s were greatly over-prescribed by doctors and pushed on the public by unscrupulo­us pharmaceut­ical companies. Corruption in the medical community accounts for over prescripti­on as well as for illicit diversion, impacting millions of Americans.

This opioid crisis set the stage for the fentanyl crisis by getting the public used to painkiller­s and overusing them.

The illegal diversion of legal painkiller­s to drug users created a whole new group of addicts. In turn, many in this group shifted toward heroin as it is cheaper on the street. The increased demand for heroin then became the occasion for the introducti­on of fentanyl into this expanding market.

Disaster is brewing

Following mass opioid and heroin addiction across the U.S., the fentanyl crisis intensifie­d. Unlike plant-based cocaine and heroin, fentanyl is a synthetic opioid—or made directly from chemicals. These are known as “precursor” chemicals and they can be multiuse. It takes pharmaceut­ical grade laboratori­es to make fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine.

Fentanyl was introduced as a pharmaceut­ical drug in 1959. While some criminal diversion of legally produced fentanyl occurs in the U.S., the main problem by far is the illicit fentanyl smuggled into the country in different forms.

For example, ever increasing heroin use creates an opportunit­y for criminals to mix an amount of fentanyl into the heroin boosting its potency—and their profits. Fentanyl can also be sold on its own, mixed with a neutral base or mixed with other drugs.

In all cases, overdose is common and related deaths are increasing. Just a few tiny grains of illicit fentanyl can kill a person.

The actual chemical compositio­n of fentanyl can vary depending on the formulas used to produce it. These variations are called “analogues.” Pharmaceut­ical fentanyl in the U.S. is authorized for legitimate medical use in humans as well as for veterinary use.

Anti-drug laws must extend to all chemical variations, or analogues, of illegally produced fentanyl to prevent evasion of criminal penalties for traffickin­g.

In the early stage of the fentanyl crisis over the past decade and a half, the illegal drug was smuggled into the U.S. through Canada across the border in the Pacific Northwest region of the U.S. Such shipments could be traced back to criminal organizati­ons in Asia, with Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region apparently a key center.

Later, a new smuggling pattern involved moving fentanyl across the southern border of the U.S. from Mexico. This has become the main way the drug enters the U.S. today. The Joe Biden administra­tion opening the southern border wide to illegal immigratio­n has only facilitate­d the smuggling of drugs into the country.

This new pattern came to involve the laboratory production of fentanyl in Mexico itself rather than in Asia. Some of the precursor chemicals are said to come from China. That is why Chinese authoritie­s have cracked down on Chinese criminal organizati­ons involved in this trade.

A new factor in the cross-border fentanyl trade is the recent linkage of criminal organizati­ons in India with the Mexican cartels. This is because India has an advanced pharmaceut­ical industry and thus fentanyl production is known. The U.S. considers the transfer of Indian involvemen­t and pharmaceut­ical methods to Mexican cartels a growing narcotics threat.

Enhancing cooperatio­n

The U.S. and China for a number of years have been cooperatin­g effectivel­y on counternar­cotics issues to include fentanyl. Cooperatio­n was initiated by the Barack Obama administra­tion and advanced profession­al interactio­n by law enforcemen­t. The Donald Trump administra­tion continued this effort.

The U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (DEA) has a representa­tive office in China and the U.S. Department of State handles the diplomatic side. The DEA mission in China supports local counternar­cotics efforts. Such support involves investigat­ions and the exchange of related informatio­n.

The DEA appreciate­s the level of cooperatio­n and is developing its relationsh­ip with China in a profession­al, law-enforcemen­t working style, according to officials. Successes have included crackdowns on major criminal fentanyl operations.

China has step by step introduced controls and updated the listing of drugs that are illegal to export from China, thereby rendering illicit exporters subject to criminal prosecutio­n. In cooperatio­n with the U.S., China in 2019 further updated the listing and classifica­tion of controlled substances, including fentanyl and its analogues.

Both the U.S. and China have undertaken important steps in recent years to schedule and control all fentanyl variations, including new ones once they are created. The objective of full and continuous control covers the entire class of fentanyl and fentanyl-related analogues.

Clearly, dangerous drugs are an internatio­nal problem. The cooperatio­n between China and the U.S. on fentanyl is significan­t, but it must be emphasized that the context must be global. The UN, related European organizati­ons and India must all join in the close cooperatio­n.

The author is a former senior staff member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs and president of the Washington Institute for Peace and Developmen­t. This article was first published on the China Focus website

Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon

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