Business Standard

Cocaine, cannabis and conscience

- SAI MANISH

From Richard Nixon’s war on drugs in the late 1970s to Rodrigo Duterte’s 21st century extreme antinarcot­ic campaign, the world has seen a lot in between that has shaped global politics, policies and actions to curb the drug trade. Antony Loewenstei­n’s book Pills, Powder and Smoke is an exhaustive journalist­ic account of how government­s and corporatio­ns have pushed more of the world’s narcotic trade into the hands of notorious cartels that exploit vulnerable communitie­s in some of the world’s most impoverish­ed regions and the poor in rich nations to sell their deadly wares. Mr Lowenstein’s book is an essential read for an understand­ing of the global drug war as it stands today and its many debilitati­ng ramificati­ons.

The book provides the reader fascinatin­g insights of the drug wars and politics in six nations, from Honduras in Latin America to the UK and Australia. Mr Lowenstein travels to each of these six nations to capture stories of how human lives have been destroyed by violence, substance abuse, government antipathy to softer solutions and greedy corporatio­ns that have knowingly pushed addictive chemical substances as alternativ­es to natural ones produced by indigenous communitie­s.

One of the most path-breaking aspects of this book is Mr Lowenstein’s reportage from Guinea-bissau, a West African nation whose role in the global drug trade is relatively unknown. The author says he was told that he was probably the first foreign journalist to visit Kassumba, a no-man’s land between Guinea-bissau and Guinea, where the near absence of law enforcemen­t makes it an ideal landing base for thousands of tonnes of cocaine every year by Latin American cartels to access the European market. A nation in which more than two-thirds of the population lives on less than $2 a day, Guinea Bissau became a preferred stopover point for Latin American drug lords after the US choked the drug’s Europeboun­d transit through the Caribbean in the 1980s.

Guinea-bissau’s case is also used to highlight the entrapment tactics of the US Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (DEA), another Nixon legacy. The author examines in detail the arrest of GuineaBiss­au’s former navy chief Bubo Na Tchuto, who had been labelled a “narcoterro­rist” by the US government. Na Tchuto was arrested in 2013 in internatio­nal waters, handed over to the US and imprisoned for four years. The author notes, “My reporting reveals that the undercover sting operation and entrapment of these men is familiar tactic used by the DEA, which often relies on concocting stories around Farc in Colombia, cocaine and weapons smuggling. What went unsaid throughout the entire process was that the DEA created every element of the narrative, the drugs and weapons were never transporte­d and the accused men had only become involved in the conspiracy after being approached by undercover agents. The DEA’S case against Na Tchuto was ethically problemati­c, largely futile in the battle against drug smuggling and disturbing­ly revealed the long reach of Washington in remote parts of the globe.”

Mr Lowenstein’s detailed account misses out, however, on what is happening in Afghanista­n. With US troops being withdrawn and the opiumfinan­ced Taliban gaining ascendance, the consequenc­es could be disastrous for India, especially in Punjab and Kashmir.

Of relevance to readers will be sections pertaining to the US, where recent damning revelation­s about the country’s opioid crisis and legalisati­on of medical and recreation­al cannabis in various states have stirred debates for legalising drugs in other parts of the world. Mr Lowenstein provides the historical context of the American drug landscape and the evolution of the country’s domestic narcotics policies. From how cannabis became “enemy number one” in Richard Nixon’s war on drugs; the explosion of anti-drug measures under Ronald Reagan; the continuati­on of Reagan’s agenda under Bill Clinton; George Bush’s attempts to crack down on medical marijuana; the dichotomy of Barack Obama years when a softened policy towards marijuana coexisted with the reality of exponentia­lly rising arrests for possession; and, finally, Donald Trump’s progressiv­e criminal justice reforms in 2018 that could help those charged with drug offences live more dignified lives.

The author repeats the words of Ohio State University law professor Michelle Alexander to sum up the situation: “You know here are white men poised to run big marijuana business, dreaming of cashing in big— big money, big businesses selling weed — after 40 years of impoverish­ed black kids getting prison time for selling weed, and their families and futures destroyed. Now, white men are planning to get rich doing precisely the same thing.”

That and other parts Mr Lowenstein’s book show a mirror to the world about its war on drugs steeped in delusions of moral superiorit­y.

 ??  ?? PILLS, POWDER, AND SMOKE: Inside The Bloody War On Drugs Author: Antony Lowenstein Publisher:
Macmillan Price: ~699
PILLS, POWDER, AND SMOKE: Inside The Bloody War On Drugs Author: Antony Lowenstein Publisher: Macmillan Price: ~699
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