Los Angeles Times

U.S. ability to intercept drugs is declining

Forces are stretched too thin to stop all shipments from Latin America, general says.

- Brian Bennett reporting from washington brian.bennett@latimes.com

Despite intensifie­d counter-narcotics efforts over the last five years, the military’s ability to stop drug smuggling into the U.S. from Latin America has declined as planes and ships have been diverted to combat operations around the globe, according to a senior military officer.

As a result, the Navy and Coast Guard are stopping one in three suspected seaborne drug shipments headed to U.S. shores, Gen. Douglas Fraser, commander of the U.S. Southern Command, told reporters Wednesday.

The Navy has four frigates on patrol in the Caribbean and along the Pacific coast of Central America — one more than usual — as the U.S. works with regional allies in an anti-drug operation aimed at pushing smugglers farther offshore.

But other military craft used to track or interdict drug shipments have been diverted to operations in Iraq and Afghanista­n, the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on-led air campaign last year in Libya, the coast of Somalia to hunt pirates and the Persian Gulf to beef up the Navy’s presence as tension builds with Iran.

“It’s really the capacity to intercept that we are really lacking,” Fraser said.

The military has spent $6.1 billion since 2005 to help detect drug payloads heading to the U.S., as well as on surveillan­ce and other intelligen­ce operations, according to a report last year by the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee.

Some experts say that the U.S. should focus more on reducing demand for narcotics and curbing cartel violence rather than on assigning more military assets to chasing drug smugglers.

“This doesn’t mean that the U.S. should scramble for more drug-interdicti­on boats and planes,” said Vanda Felbab-brown, an expert on drug policy at the Brookings Institutio­n think tank in Washington.

U.S. demand for cocaine has fallen in the last two years, studies show, but smuggling of methamphet­amines and their precursor chemicals has grown as trafficker­s shift to meet changing U.S. demand.

The Obama administra­tion has sought to increase cooperatio­n with authoritie­s in Mexico and Central American countries to dismantle drug cartels operating from Panama to the U.S. border.

Officials cite improved communicat­ions, better training and a series of highprofil­e arrests.

But critics say policymake­rs have little to show for their efforts. The epidemic of drug-related killings continues to rage in Mexico, and cartels show few signs of losing control of lucrative smuggling routes.

Some economists and academics have argued that capturing illegal drug shipments drives up the price on American streets and serves to further enrich the cartels.

“Any drug interdicti­on strategy is a Band-aid, a temporary fix,” said Bruce Bagley, who studies U.S. counter-narcotics efforts at the University of Miami at Coral Gables, Fla. “It may reduce the supply for a short time, but what does get in is worth more.”

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