Drug Crazy by Gray Mike

Drug Crazy by Gray Mike

Author:Gray, Mike [Gray, Mike]
Language: eng
Format: mobi, epub
ISBN: 9781136788765
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Published: 2013-08-08T02:15:29+00:00


Chapter Seven

Montezuma's Revenge

Depite Bob Dole's accusations, George Bush had not been totally ineffectual as commanding general in the Reagan drug war. In the mid-1980s, Bush successfully clamped down on the free-for-all in Florida, where cocaine was pouring in by ship, plane, mule, and diplomatic pouch. Miami was then the port of entry for most of the Colombian product, and as business arrangements shifted from day to day, the murder rate in Dade County skyrocketed. To stem the tide of white powder and violence, Vice President Bush created an interagency strike team called the South Florida Task Force and set out to attack the smugglers by land, sea, and air. Customs and Border Patrol agents were pulled off the Canadian and Mexican frontiers and reassigned to the Sunshine State, and ten Coast Guard cutters fitted for night operation went into action in the Caribbean as AWACS jets circled above the fray directing airborne interceptors in Blaekhawk helicopters.1 All this heat had the desired effect, and once again, the law of unintended consequence crowned success with disaster.

For years there had been a casual relationship between Mexican marijuana smugglers and the Colombian cartels, and with the Florida corridor suddenly awash in lawmen, the cocaine traffic shifted almost overnight to the land route through Mexico. At first the Mexicans were operating strictly as cargo handlers, picking the drug up from the Colombians on one side of the line and handing it back to them on the other for a thousand dollars a kilo. But in the early 1990s, when the cartels were in a death struggle with the Colombian government, cash flow became a problem and they started paying the Mexicans off in cocaine. Since the muchachos already had a vast marijuana distribution network in the United States, this new product line—pound for pound ten or twenty times more valuable than marijuana—was like rocket fuel in the gas tank of a lowrider, A laid-back culture imbued with a tradition of mordida and skilled at corruption was suddenly supercharged.

Throughout its tormented history, Mexico has been plagued by exemplary economic inequality. Most of the nation's wealth is in the hands of about thirty families, while a fifth of the people live on less than a dollar a day. The ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party has routinely stolen the elections since its inception sixty years ago, creating a fertile climate for under-the-table payoffs. Almost even-body seems to be on the take, from the garbage man to the presidential cabinet, where a suitable gift of cash might get you appointed, say, commandante of the federal judicial police for Baja California Norte. For decades, cabinet officers and presidents routinely left office with unexplained fortunes.2 In the old days, mordida—the "bite"—was accepted as an efficient lubricator, a means of getting things done while sharing the wealth in an otherwise unequal society. But with the arrival of the narco-billions everything shifted gears.

In 1988, after a key official in the previous administration was implicated in the torture-killing of a U.S. drug agent, President Carlos Salinas took office with a promise not to tolerate any more high-level corruption.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.