Colombia and the United States: Narcotics Traffic and a Failed Foreign PolicyMcFarland, 1997 - Počet stran: 189 The cocaine trade between the United States and Colombia has perhaps caused more harm for two friendly countries than any other peacetime event in history. As the trade developed in the 1970s, most of the efforts went to interdicting the flow of the drug to the United States; little attention was given to decreasing the evergrowing American appetite for cocaine. This failed policy allowed the cocaine trafficking to flourish in the 1980s, resulting in untold deaths in both countries and countless dollars being spent in a futile effort to win the "drug war." The author supervised the antinarcotics operations of the American Embassy in Bogot as the deputy chief of mission and charg daffaires during the late 1970s. This work provides for the first time an insiders account of the formative years of the American drug policy and the failure of the U.S. and Colombian governments to form an alliance against the cocaine traffickers during this critical period. The earlier history of the U.S. and Colombian relations is covered, providing background to the failed drug policy. Recommendations for fundamental changes in the U.S. drug policy conclud |
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Strana 90
... López Michelsen had little liking for that coalition . The Front included conservatives who had engaged in highly defamatory and reckless personal attacks on the López family in the 1940s . López Michelsen probably also regarded the ...
... López Michelsen had little liking for that coalition . The Front included conservatives who had engaged in highly defamatory and reckless personal attacks on the López family in the 1940s . López Michelsen probably also regarded the ...
Strana 91
... López Michelsen speaks English fluently and readily , and he was thus able to lengthen somewhat Secretary Kissinger's normally brief span of attention to things Latin American . The Colombian president maintained his contact with ...
... López Michelsen speaks English fluently and readily , and he was thus able to lengthen somewhat Secretary Kissinger's normally brief span of attention to things Latin American . The Colombian president maintained his contact with ...
Strana 133
... López Michelsen obviously lacked Lleras Camargo's warmth and com- mon touch , but a more fundamental — and harmful - difference was that López Michelsen believed that it was up to the United States to cultivate him , not vice versa ...
... López Michelsen obviously lacked Lleras Camargo's warmth and com- mon touch , but a more fundamental — and harmful - difference was that López Michelsen believed that it was up to the United States to cultivate him , not vice versa ...
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administration Amer American officials army Barco Barranquilla battalion Beaulac became become Betancur bian Bidlack bilateral relations Bogotá Bogotazo Bolívar Cali campaign canal Cartagena Carter Catholic Chapter church cocaine Colom Colombian armed forces Colombian government Colombian military Colombian officials Colombian president Colombian-American Communist conference Conservative Party Department diplomatic drug lords drug trafficking Dulles economic election embassy in Bogotá envoy Escobar foreign Gabriel García Márquez García Márquez Gaviria Gual guerrillas human rights Ibid ican isthmus John Quincy Adams Korea later Latin America Latin American nations Laureano Gómez leaders Lleras Camargo Medellín Medellín cartel ment minister mission Monroe narcotics trafficking National Front Ospina Pérez Pablo Escobar Panama Panamanian political President López Michelsen president of Colombia presidential problem Reagan recognized reports Republic Rojas Pinilla Roosevelt Samper Santander Secretary social South American Spanish threat tion Todd treaty troops Turbay United States government University Press violence Washington York