HOW TO LOSE THE COKE WAR

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
5
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 9, 2012
Sequence Number: 
32
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 1, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9.pdf527.19 KB
Body: 
STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 ^" THE ATLANTIC 0" PAGE May 1987 How To LOSE THE COKE WAR The U. S. -Bolivian campaign against the "Coca Nostra" has been a failure, says one of the men who led it ceived in four treaties on narcotics outdoor cafes along the Avenida Balli- signed by Bolivia and the United States vian, acting out their vision of them- on August 11, 1983. In addition to selves as outlaws in their BMWs and launching UMOPAR, the agreements cre- Mercedes. Outside town, in the Cha- ated a Bolivian government entity pare, impatient dealers have occasional- known as DIRECO, the Coca Reduction ly taken to weighing hundred-dollar Directorate, and committed the govern- bills-so many pounds of dollars buys so merit to a five-year program to reduce many pounds of drug-as they sit be- coca production to only that level need- hind their lemonade-stand-stylc folding ed by the domestic population of coca- tables. leaf chewers. In 1985 Bolivia estimated Fr om the moment that Merwin ar- STATF?RtiER AIR FORCE Ma'or C that level to be 20,000 metric tons of dry rived in Cochabamba, there were por- Edgar Merwin has seen America's coca leaf annually, a figure thought by tents of trouble. Merwin had told his uwar o gs as few others have-from most experts to be exaggerated. The fig- State Department liaison that he would the front lines of one of its losing battles. ure was recently revised to 10,000 tons. accept the job only if his family was For two years Merwin combated Boliv- In any case, perhaps 240,000 tons of guaranteed a secure, defensible home. ia's "Coca Nostra," the barons of the co- coca are grown-over twenty times as It had to be on a quiet street; there had caine trade. The story of his struggle much as domestic consumption could to be a stone wall around the property at helps to explain why the United States is warrant. This huge crop has the poten- least twenty feet from the house itself; far from winning this much heralded tial to produce 240 tons of cocaine hy- and there had to be a route of escape, conflict. drochloride. Bolivia supplies about 40 should the perimeter of the house ever Ed Merwin went to Bolivia, at age for- percent of the worldwide market in the be breached. ry-five, uniquely qualified to take on the drug. In the agreements Bolivia was ini- The State Department liaison had underground empire of the drug traf- tially obligated to eliminate 4,000 hect- given his solemn promise: "We don't fickers. He had recently retired from a ares of coca production-some experts take chances where the safety of our twenty-one-year career in the military, estimate that as many as 200,000 hect- people is concerned," Merwin recalls during which he had served as the direc- ares are under cultivation there-by De- the man's saying. But what Ed Merwin for of the Latin American branch of the comber 31, 1985. saw on his first day in Cochabamba was a Air Force's Special Operations school, Under the treaties about $7.5 million house with no protective wall at all. And chief of the indications and warning was allocated by the United States for it was located on a dead-end street, a branch of the U.S. Southern Command the agricultural and law-enforcement cul-de-sac. Shaken, he found another in Panama, and a senior U.S. representa- support of the various programs. This house himself. tivc to the Organization of American was followed in later fiscal years with ad- His unease deepened when he set to States Mission in Central America. IE_ ditional funding in foreign-aid pack- work training the Leopards unit. The had also served in combat in Southeast, ages-with, however, the stipulation 1983 agreements obligated the United Asia and had been detached from the Air that portions of the assistance would be States to outfit the strike force with vir- Force for two tours with the CIA. He suspended unless the Bolivian govern- tually all of its nonlethal equipment- was highly regarded in Washington cir- ment took steps to eliminate cocaine vehicles, communications devices, and Iles as an expert in special operations. trafficking, including meeting the target uniforms. (U.S. law prohibits the trans- Shortly after he entered the civilian of the 4,000-hectare reduction. fer of weapons job market as an "international-security or ammunition to foreign In this hopeful context of ambitious Police organizations.) The government consultant," the aState nal Da ep cseMatnt's policy goals and generous funding to of Bolivia agreed to provide the rest- reach them, Ed Merwin took his family weapons, food, housing, medical sup- came to Merwin with an unusual offer. to Cochabamba, Bolivia, on March 1, port, and salaries for the troops. They wanted him to join the depart- 1984. Sprawled across a valley 8,500 feet But Merwin quickly discovered that meet's Narcotics Assistance Unit (NAU) above sea level, southeast of La Paz, the the wording of treaties is often a far cry team in Bolivia, on a civilian contract, city was until recently referred to as the from the language of reality. "The and become the chief adviser to the Bo- breadbasket of Bolivia. That was before troops would go months without receiv- livian Narcotics Police. His task would coca became king and Cochabamba be- ing money for rations," he told me re- be to create and train a first-of-its-kind came the gateway to the vast coca fields cently. "They had food, of course, but it paramilitary unit to move against major of the neighboring Chapare region. To- was because of credit. We'd con some g dr Oally bile uic traff eking aced the Moin Bolivia. day the city's population of 650,000, merchant into selling enough food for a though still primarily Quechua Indian, is whole battalion on credit." According to Patrol Unit (UMOPAR), but popularly teeming with flotantes-drifters, or tran- Merwin, this lack of support from La known as the Leopards, the force would sient peasants searching for work in the Paz was unswerving. "I kept objecting, be elite-trained as well as or better coca plantations and processing labs. As because the men weren't getting paid than any other armed unit in Latin the coca economy has relentlessly over- three, four, five, six months at a time, America, and composed of tough, highly grown all else and food production has but it didn't do an good. And motivated, and corruption-resistant offs- steadily declined, the valley has become y medical sup lithere was pees and troops. The Leopards would no budget for medical supples-things a food importer. any kind of military organization needs. serve as the model for similar anti-nar- Cochabamba is a cowboy town; deal- It was not provided for at all." cotics units elsewhere. This anti-drug strategy had been con ors and cocaine camp followers loiter in - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 ' Although the Leopards unit was in- tended in the treaties to have priority- the necessary precondition for any effec- tive coca-crop-reduction program being the establishment of governmental au- thority in the Chapare region-the pro- gram was lost in the clutter of other U.S. programs and agencies involved in com- bating the Bolivian narcotics problem. The DEA, U.S. Customs, the U.S. In- formation Agency, the Bureau of Inter- national Narcotics Matters (and its NAU arm), the FBI, the CIA, and the Agency for International Development all an- ticipate in Bolivia's war on drugs. (Inside the United States more than thirty gov- ernment entities are involved in our war on drugs as of this writing.) Politically the anti-drug campaign was byzantine; organizationally it was a nightmare. While the NAU was funding a coca-crop-reduction program, AID was running a separate crop-substitution pro- gram, aimed at inducing camptsinos to grow other crops instead of coca. Mer- win's NAU was in charge of the Leop- ards unit, but the DEA (which is prohib- ited from any direct law-enforcement activity overseas) was responsible for de- veloping the intelligence needed by the Leopards to pick targets and make raids. In addition, the entire U.S. effort in Bo- livian narcotics control was under the su- pervision of U.S. Ambassador Edwin Corr, now the ambassador to El Salva- dor. Unfortunately, the Ambassador's principal mission was not to cripple the drug trade but rather to maintain stable relations with unstable Bolivian govern- ments that refused to do so. THE PROBLEMS THAT Merwin at first attributed to bureaucracy, indiffer- ence, and the anarchy of Bolivian poli- tics took on a new significance when he discovered that his Leopards command- er, German Linares, had "accepted gra- tuities," as Merwin put it, from traffick- ers. I had met Linares, before Merwin arrived to take over training and deploy- ment of the newly assembled Leopards force. In November of 1983 I accompa- nied Linares and his troops on a rare raid against a major cocaine lab, run by Jorge Cuellar and Jorge Flores, in Beni prov- ince. Cuellar, before going into business with Flores, had worked as a pilot for the legendary drug czar Roberto Suirez Gomez-reputedly the model for the Sosa character in the recent movie Scar- face. Flores also was considered by the DEA to be a fairly weighty crook. The raid was planned after intelligence indi- cated that 3,000 pounds of pure cocaine would soon be flown out from the Cuel- lar-Flores ranch. But the operation was delayed a critical twenty-four hours- lack of fuel for the aircraft, Linares told me-and by the time we arrived at the remote jungle ranch, all that remained was a few pounds of the drug, $13,000 in crisp Bolivian pesos, a small aircraft fueled and ready to go, and Cuellar and Flores. What I didn't know at the time, Mer- win insists, is that Linares accepted a gold Rolex watch from Cuellar and "probably some other items or promises of items." The two dealers were re- leased from jail after only a few days, when a La Paz judge cited "irregulari- ties" in Linares's paperwork. Soon after the raid Linares's administrative assis- tant, Captain Pablo Vargas, took to driv- ing his newly acquired Mercedes through the streets of La Paz, causing no surprise that he could afford such a vehi- cle on his salary of $75 a month. Linares remained commander until June of 1984, when he led a group of rogue Leopards officers who participated in a rightist-backed attempt to kidnap Her- nan Siles Suazo, then the President. Ex- iled to Spain, Linares was recently brought back and reappointed to his old Leopards command. M ERWIN EVENTUALLY recalled Lin- ares fondly, considering his cor- ruption "not very serious" when set against that of later commanders. In an interview, never broadcast, for the CBS newsmagazine West 57th, which I co-pro- duced after Merwin's return to the Unit- ed States, the reporter Jane Wallace asked him about corruption. Wallace: "[You had] eight different commanders?" Merwin: "Eight. It was mostly be- cause they either got too blatant about accepting bribes or, in the one case of the only really good tactical field com- mander we had, he refused to take a bribe and he got fired by his boss, who had offered him the bribe." Wallace: "So the drug dealers were buying off [former director of the Nar- cotics Police] Colonel Guido Lopez while you were there, as far as you know?" Merwin: "I was under that impres- sion. " Wallace: "How solid is the informa- tion?" Merwin: "Very solid." Wallace: "Can you reveal the source of it?" Merwin: "No, not really. . . . The U.S. is a very technological society and we have a lot of capabilities. That's something that the Bolivians never quite understood. Every time they talked on the telephone, we knew about it, you know." Wallace: "Is [the current director of the Narcotics Police] on the take?" Merwin: "I don't even know who he is right now. . . . If this one isn't, his pre- decessors all were." Wallace: "All of them?" Merwin: "To my knowledge, all of them." Wallace: "In what ways?" Merwin: "New cars. Send your kids to the States to go to school. One of the former Leopard commanders who was dishonest-he was bad when we got him and he got worse-I understand that he now has a really nice ranch. Has a new BMW. Wears very nice clothes. All of the national directors [of the Nar- cotics Police], very natty dressers. Some of them had amazingly good taste." Wallace: "And the rest of the enforce- ment structure in Bolivia ... how cor- rupted was that structure?" Merwin: "I have to tell you I think that a hundred percent of the Bolivian enforcement structure was corrupted." Wallace: "Bought by the cocaine traf- fickers?" Merwin: "Yeah." HIS MISSION THUS compromised, Merwin found his operations either sabotaged or restricted to low-level traf- fickers. I observed one raid in mid-De- cember of 1985, carried out against the tiny village of Cruzpata, about twenty- five miles south of Cochabamba. Mer- win and forty-seven Leopards stole into the village just before dawn, rousting frightened villagers from their beds at gunpoint and searching the pitted stone huts for drugs. The net result, aside from the seizure of a couple of pounds of drug, was the arrest of two coca-leaf mashers (the drug-making process looks much like primitive wine pressing), a boy of about sixteen and a woman with three children who was caught with a half pound of coca paste. What follows is a transcript of my videotaped interview with one of the suspects as she was be- ing led away: Question: "Ma'am, why do you have this [points to bag of cocaine]?" Woman: "They told me to sell it. My husband is trying to [find work in] pota- toes. He's going to try hard...." Question (to Ed Merwin): "These people do not seem to be making any money from this. They seem to be more victims than perpetrators." VQ nued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 Mcrwim: "Clearly. That's correct." England, and other Suarezes have Question: "Then why are they being served as senators and business leaders. arrested?" Reportedly, Roberto Suarez's fondness Merwin: "People have to understand for gambling necessitated at one point a that it is illegal, and be unwilling to do financial "quick fix," as it were, which it, be unwilling to go to jail to earn even the surging cocaine trade provided. He what they cam." quickly rose to the top. Question: "What happens to these One of the most fascinating elements children if their mother goes to jail?" of the Suarez story is how little his status Mcrwin: "They'll go with her." as an outlaw has limited his very power- Question: "They'll go to jail with ful influence in the country. In the late their mother?" 1970s Suarez became associated with (Mcrwin sighs.) the Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, who It was a difficult moment for Ed Mer- was hiding out in Bolivia. Barbie used win, one that caught the futility of his his Gestapo experience and his fascist mission in Bolivia. "It was very frustrat- connections to recruit for the Coca Nos- ing," he later told me, adding that he tra a small private army known as Los had interceded with the prosecutor to Novios del Muerte-"the Fiances of let the woman go. "Picking up these Death." It was actually more a security campesinos and putting them in jail for force than an army, and probably never however long is not going to really do numbered more than twenty-five men. any good. You want the big guys ... But among its top officers was a right- VV HO ARE THE chieftains of the Coca Nostra who have fostered this po- litical corruption? As Bolivian (and some American) officials tell it, the Coca Nos- tra is an invisible cabal of conspirators, each more elusive than the archterrorist Abu Nidal, each better protected than Yasser Arafat, and each possessed of more weapons and resources than Colo- nel Qaddafi. Actually, I found the men of the Coca Nostra to be more accessible than the average big-city mayor in America. I spoke on the telephone to members of the Roberto Suarez family, and they were forthcoming about many of their activities, especially their charitable work in behalf of the poor. I visited (and even filmed inside) a well-guarded cock- fighting club on a main street in the town of Santa Cruz, where I saw men re- puted to be among the biggest traffick- ers in the country betting tens of thou- sands of U.S. dollars in cash on a single fight. I'm speaking of people whose traf- ficking enterprises handle from 2,000 to 10,000 pounds of pure cocaine a month, and generate gross monthly sales of $20 million to $70 million-people like the Razuk family and the Malky brothers, descendants of Palestinian merchants who emigrated earlier in this century. There are also the Chavez Rocas broth- ers, a former air force lieutenant called "Teniente" Morales, Loncho Paz, and two of the biggest drug traffickers in the world, Hugo Anez (more on him later) and the more famous Roberto Suarez. Like several other drug barons, Ro- berto Suarez comes from a prosperous cattle-ranching family. His great-grand- father was Bolivia's first ambassador to wing Italian terrorist, Pier Luigi Pagliai, who was wanted for the 1980 bombing of a Bologna train station in which eighty-five people were killed. And it seems to have concentrated on attacking and intimidating left-wing labor leaders rather than defending the cocaine enter- prises of its employers against rivals or the police. Suarez is known to have been in- volved with General Luis Garcia Meza in the coup d'etat of 1980 (Garcia Meza was alleged to have been paid a million dollars in cash by the Coca Nostra), which for the first time anywhere in the world handed state power over to ac- tive traffickers. Garcia Meza's Interior Minister, Luis Arce Gomez (who was popularly known as the Minister of Co- caine), was eventually indicted by U.S. grand juries. In 1981 Garcia Meza's gov- ernment fell, after Washington suspend- ed aid to Bolivia, and a year later he and Arce Gomez fled to Argentina. Shortly thereafter the new civilian government of Hernan Silez Suazo extradited Klaus Barbie to France and Pagliai to Italy. But Suarez remains, his public presence strong. For example, he has taken out full-page newspaper advertisements to argue against more-stringent narcotics laws. And he has several times publicly offered to pay off Bolivia's $3.8 billion national debt. Other members of the Coca Nostra are similarly visible. They own TV sta- tions, cattle ranches, and other busi- nesses, they operate small fleets of air- craft out of major airports, their addresses are in the phone book, and their whereabouts at any time are prob- ably not too difficult to ascertain. If someone wanted to get them, it would But U.S.-Bolivian anti-narcotics ef- forts have consistently avoided these bosses of the underground drug empire end have focused instead on the mass of impoverished peasants that makes up the empire's work force. According to a 1986 State Department report, the work force is growing steadily. "The country 's entire economic structure-labor, mar- keting, supply and demand-is being distorted by growing reliance on coca," the report notes. "Diversion of re- sources, transportation and skilled labor have severely disrupted normal legiti- mate trade patterns." The report adds, "The poor continue to migrate to key coca producing regions seeking ready work and cash. This trend could in- crease dramatically as Bolivian tin mines close down in the face of the dramatic fall in world tin prices and as landless and unemployed miners seek employ- ment alternatives." The economy is paralyzed. Inflation at one point in 1985 reached levels that would produce an annual rate of 20,000 percent. Development has ground to a halt. The very idea of capital investment is laughable. For the first time anywhere in the world, the illegal traffic in drugs is no longer just an underground economy. In Bolivia it is the economy. Meanwhile, rather than attacking the handful of men, and their organizations, who have such a stranglehold on the so- cial and economic life of the nation, the State Department's strategy has been, in its words, to place its "highest priority on crop control." Merwin considers this approach ludicrous. He describes flying from the town of Santa Cruz to Cochabamba in the com- pany of a representative from Earth Sat- ellite Corporation, which had been con- tracted by the Bureau of International Narcotics Matters to conduct surveys and determine the precise number of hectares of coca under cultivation. "We're flying up there at ten thousand feet," Mcrwin recalls, "and as far as the eye can see in any direction is coca plan- tation. I tell this guy, 'Take a look out there! What's the difference if we eradi- cate four hundred or forty thousand hectares? There'll still be enough to bury the world in cocaine!"' Nothing short of immense crop reduc- tions has even a theoretical possibility of making an appreciable dent in cocaine manufacturing. But there is the small matter of trying to implement such a program. In the 1983 treaties the Boliv- ians promised to destroy 4,000 hectares be easy to do. C*nued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 of coca by December 31, 1985. In that year traffickers planted thousands of new hectares. But, as the Department of State concedes, La Paz managed to eradicate only thirty hectares. Washing- ton praised this as a "demonstration of the government's political will to combat narcotics production." Today, with less than two years to go before all illegal coca cultivation is sup- posed to be eradicated in Bolivia, Wash- ington reports that the bilateral efforts have succeeded in pulling up a total of 200 hectares' worth of coca bushes out of the 200,000 hectares estimated to be now in cultivation. This 200 hectares could have produced about 250 kilos of co- caine. Thus it seems that what was bought with the $7.5 million of U.S. tax- payers' money initially authorized under the treaties could have been bought wholesale in Miami for $6 million. W NILE MERWIN WAS being tied down Gulliver-like by the Lilliputian detail of Bolivian coca eradication, he and his family were in growing danger. There were bomb threats to his home. The electricity was shut off for days at a time-his was the only home in the neighborhood to suffer such outages. The family dog was first knifed and then poisoned. Finally, Merwin discovered through highly classified intelligence gathered in another country that the Coca Nostra had ordered his assassina- tion. Although he still won't discuss de- tails, he does say that the order came from the "highest levels" of the drug mob. Ed Merwin felt betrayed by his allies, abandoned by his superiors, and held back from truly grappling with his en- emies, who now seemed intent upon murdering him and possibly his family, as well. U.S. drug agents had always been considered inviolate-until the re- cent torture and killing of Enrique Ca- marena Salazar, in Mexico, that is. Mer- win repeatedly asked for-begged for- more support, or at least more pressure on the Bolivians. It never came. So Merwin decided to act. The DEA had managed to place an informant in- side a large-scale cocaine laboratory near the jungle town of Trinidad, in Beni province. This lab was located at the ranch of no less a personage than Hugo Ancz. Merwin moved quickly, scroung- ing up a C-47 transport that even with load restrictions would allow him to ferry twenty-eight troopers, himself, and the air crew to the Anez ranch. The oper- ation was organized as previous ones had been, with one exception: La Paz was not informed of the raid until after Mer- win was airborne, and the plane was twenty minutes en route to the target before Merwin told the air crew where they were going. The Leopards seized thirty-four sus- pects, two small planes, and an un- impressive assortment of weapons (it did not include any of the surface-to-air missiles that La Paz officials keep insist- ing are in Coca Nostra hands). On the property they also found a working co- caine lab stocked with 210 kilos of ready-to-ship cocaine. And in the haci- enda, having lunch with a Bolivian sena- tor, was Hugo Anez himself. Anez was brought to the lab, where he denied knowledge of how drugs had come to be present there. Merwin came in a bit later to find Anez smoking ciga- rettes and joking with his Leopards guards. Everyone became quiet, except Anez, who smiled. "Tell you what, my friend," he said. "['II give you a check, and you fill in the number of zeros you want, okay?" Without a word Merwin (who tells the story in a matter-of-fact way) grabbed Anez by his open shirt collar, pushed him back, and sat him on a chair in front of a table on which was piled the 210 ki- los of cocaine. Then Merwin pulled out his Polaroid and snapped a picture, much as one might of an animal cap- tured on safari. Anez's smile disintegrat- ed; Merwin turned and walked out. Two days later Hugo Anez was released from jail in Trinidad on orders from La Paz. The U.S. Embassy did not protest his release. M ERWIN NEVER AGAIN moved against a major drug trafficker. He spent the remaining months of his tour breaking in new commanders, organiz- ing more raids against mostly low-level operators, and trying not to get killed. His last act in the war on drugs was to write a report summarizing his mission. In it, though taking pride in his skill and in the knowledge that he had done all he could, he challenged the willful opti- mism of Washington's assessment of progress in Bolivia. One would never guess that Merwin and his employers were talking about the same country. The October, 1986, update of the State Department's International Narcotics Control Strategy report, in reference to coca-crop eradication, says that "Bo- livia continues to postpone widescale coca eradication," but "plans [are] being finalized." Some ten months earlier, Ed Merwin wrote in his report, "Voluntary crop reduction and legal control of coca "- will never work. There is too much cor- ruption and inefficiency, and the prob- lem m is too staggeringly large to ever have such measures yield results." The State Department report says that La Paz had decided to "emphasize interdiction and cocaine lab destruc- tion." Merwin's report says, "There are simply no sanctions being applied against any but the lowest level of traffickers. " The State Department report says that the goal of the Bureau of Interna- tional Narcotics Matters (INM) "of maintaining effective, simultaneous eradication programs in all narcotic source countries affecting the U.S. drug market is becoming a reality." Compare Ed Merwin's final report: "Our current level of effort is largely a waste of time and money." Since Merwin's departure from Boliv- ia it appears to have been business as usual in Washington's war on drugs there. To be sure, last year the State De- partment withheld $8.5 million of the total $72.5 million in aid earmarked for Bolivia. Shortly thereafter the United States launched with great fanfare Oper- ation Blast Furnace, a four-month effort in which 160 U.S. soldiers and civilians ferried the Bolivian Leopards on 256 vis- its to suspected cocaine labs. What was the end result of this "significant new initiative," as the State Department termed it? At its close the operation had led to the seizure and destruction of twenty-two coca-paste or cocaine-hydro- chloride labs. Unfortunately, all of these were empty labs-in other words, all that was found was a few barrels of precursor chemicals, maybe a few kilos of leftover drug, and a few brightly colored plastic buckets. Significantly, not one trafficker was arrested. Still, Washington insisted that Oper- ation Blast Furnace had "disrupted co- caine trafficking in Bolivia." That was in October. But by December, according to The New York Times, narcotics experts and U.S. embassy officials in La Paz were conceding that "cocaine activities had picked up." The newspaper also re- ported that the Bolivian Planning Minis- ter, Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, had claimed that Bolivia would "get out of the cocaine business in three years, if we can get the financing." That financing, he estimated, would be in the neighbor- hood of $450 million, of which Bolivia, "with great sacrifice," could possibly bear 20 percent. Continued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9 ? In February, Pr,:sident Reagan certi- V fied to Congress that Bolivia has made progress in controlling narcotics traffick- ing, which means that the country will once again receive its full foreign-assis- tance allocation. However, the INM's 1987 Strategy Report says, "Optimism about the future must be tempered by the reality of what has actually occurred in Bolivia since 1980. `Voluntary' eradi- cation campaigns ... have not worked. Far from reducing total hectareage, Bo- livia's coca cultivation expanded during 1986 by at least 10 percent." And cor- ruption is, if anything, getting worse. In late February, Interior Minister Fer- nando Barthelemy was sacked, follow- ing reports that he was receiving payoffs from coca traffickers. "The only thing that will work," Mer- win insists, "is force. I see it as a war. It's a threat to our national security at the same level as a military threat from an- other nation or a group of nations." His prescription is a blunt one: "Internation- alize a strike force. Arrest the major traf- fickers. Put them in jails where they would stay. I would destroy their means of production, the millions of dollars' worth of chemicals that they have around their laboratories and factories. I would burn their houses down, is what I would do." How long would it take to cripple (albeit not eliminate) the cocaine trade in Bolivia if Washington and La Paz were really committed to it? I asked. "With up-to-date intelligence they could do it in a couple of weeks," Mer- win said. "Maybe less." -David Kline Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220032-9