Morales Will Just Say No to US Government Drug War Funds
This morning’s Los Tiempos (the Cochabamba daily) carries an article in which the MAS advisor responsible for security issues announced that the new government will stop accepting US funding for a host of Bolivian activities associated with the US War on Drugs.
Most people don’t realize that, in Bolivia, the army, the police, even prosecutors all get funding from the US government. And that isn’t about the US ¨just being helpful¨ with the bills. It is about having heavy influence in the domestic law enforcement of a nation.
Take the prosecutors, for example. According to a the former Public Advocate for Cochabamba (Defensor del Pueblo, a public office) the special prosecutors for drug-related charges receive a personal salary bonus directly from the US Embassy, often greater than their Bolivian government salaries. When I worked on a human rights case some years ago dealing with the prosecutors, we hired a former member of their team as a defense attorney. She told me, ¨If we heard it once, we heard it a hundred times, we have to justify the bonuses.¨
Is it any wonder that, according to the US Embassy itself, arrests on drug charges have leapt from 955 in1996 to 4,138 in 2004? The Embassy touts these figures as a measure of success in its Bolivian ¨War on Drugs¨ effort, not noting however that these are figures for arrests, not number of people guilty. And getting arrested on a drug charge is the name of the game in Bolivia. Thanks to an anti-drug law forced on Bolivia by the US in 1988, anyone accused is tossed in jail without any possibility of bail for a year and a half.
So as the hackles go up over the new Bolivian government just saying No to US War on Drugs funding, perhaps we might ask this question. How would the people of the US feel about government prosecutors in the US receiving monthly salary bonuses from, say China or Venezuela, or US police and military units receiving financial support from Argentina or India? My guess is that it would not go over too well at all.
Bolivia would also like to control its army and law enforcement, just as any nation would.
Most people don’t realize that, in Bolivia, the army, the police, even prosecutors all get funding from the US government. And that isn’t about the US ¨just being helpful¨ with the bills. It is about having heavy influence in the domestic law enforcement of a nation.
Take the prosecutors, for example. According to a the former Public Advocate for Cochabamba (Defensor del Pueblo, a public office) the special prosecutors for drug-related charges receive a personal salary bonus directly from the US Embassy, often greater than their Bolivian government salaries. When I worked on a human rights case some years ago dealing with the prosecutors, we hired a former member of their team as a defense attorney. She told me, ¨If we heard it once, we heard it a hundred times, we have to justify the bonuses.¨
Is it any wonder that, according to the US Embassy itself, arrests on drug charges have leapt from 955 in1996 to 4,138 in 2004? The Embassy touts these figures as a measure of success in its Bolivian ¨War on Drugs¨ effort, not noting however that these are figures for arrests, not number of people guilty. And getting arrested on a drug charge is the name of the game in Bolivia. Thanks to an anti-drug law forced on Bolivia by the US in 1988, anyone accused is tossed in jail without any possibility of bail for a year and a half.
So as the hackles go up over the new Bolivian government just saying No to US War on Drugs funding, perhaps we might ask this question. How would the people of the US feel about government prosecutors in the US receiving monthly salary bonuses from, say China or Venezuela, or US police and military units receiving financial support from Argentina or India? My guess is that it would not go over too well at all.
Bolivia would also like to control its army and law enforcement, just as any nation would.

The Democracy Center, based in Cochabamba Bolivia and San Francisco California, works globally to advance human rights through a combination of investigation and reporting, training citizens in the art of public advocacy, and organizing international citizen campaigns. If you like the Blog, consider becoming a subscriber to The Democracy Center's free e-newsletter by sending us an email at 
37 Comments:
C'mon, Jim. "Most people don't realize that, in Bolivia, the army, the police, even prosecutors all get funding from the [evil] US [empire]." And, "According to the former Public Advocate for Cochabamba (who?) the special prosecutors for drug-related charges receive a personal salary bonus directly from the US Embassy." Really?! Riiiiiiight (in Austin Powers tone). And the Jewish bankers in New York are financing Israel's Zionism in the Middle East.
Well, I guess you're not paid to be an investigative reporter so I'll let your (left leaning) idealism slide.
Nice blog! (I mean that.)
I´m a Bolivian lawyer and I have several relatives in the police too, and all what Jim writes is true. Maybe it is a little bit hypocritical to ask for proofs in such a thing.
Anyway, I won´t sign this comment, I don´t want troubles with the US Embassy, not in Bolivia…
By the way, it´s true Jim, nice blog! thank you!
This post has been removed by a blog administrator.
I'm always a bit puzzled by the hostility toward the US every time it provides assistance or that people take offense when the US decides to stop assistance to nations that are openly hostile to the interests of the US. Part of the US assistance includes supplementing the income of the military, the police, and other law enforcement agents involved in counter-narcotics efforts. The drug producers / manufacturers / smugglers / distributors also provide “bonuses” to certain members of law enforcement. One side does it to promote enforcement of the law by qualified and trained individuals, the other to discourage it.
I've met some of the military that receive assistance from the US. As a whole they are of superior integrity and approach US military standards of professionalism (footnote 1). I've met some of the military that are not fortunate enough to be receiving US assistance. As a whole, they did not rise to the same standard. A few were content to do the least amount possible without jeopardizing their position. Others, while motivated, simply did not have the training or resources to do their job well. I've met police on both sides and noted the same. I have not met any judges or prosecutors receiving US assistance, but neither do I doubt it. If the pattern holds, I would expect them to be of a higher caliber
The overall higher quality of those receiving assistance is partly because higher salaries attract the more qualified personnel and partly because the US takes an interest in their professional development providing additional assistance in training them. Bolivia, through no particular fault of its own, has neither been able to attract the best by virtue a decent salary nor to train their own to the same standard. The US made up the difference. They also insisted that the military and police indeed earn the additional pay by performing their duties. If the judges and prosecutors are indeed receiving some of that assistance, then I would expect them to be held to a higher performance standard as well.
Mr. Morales’ representative recently stated that he would not accept conditional economic aid for the fight against drug trafficking. He said the state would make up the difference if the US no longer provides assistance. Nice thought. It hasn’t been possible to date, but nice thought.
--“How would the people of the US feel about government prosecutors in the US receiving monthly salary bonuses from, say China or Venezuela, or US police and military units receiving financial support from Argentina or India? My guess is that it would not go over too well at all.”—
My guess is that the Bolivian prosecutors, police, and military will either be receiving exactly that, bonuses from Venezuela and China. The people in Bolivia understand that they do need financial assistance, although they understandably would like not to need it. What most bothers some of the Bolivians though is that the US would like to see a reduction in drug production.
Footnote 1. Before you slam the US military professionalism based on a few newspaper headlines, I recommend you take a short course on statistics and understand that a couple of headlines are not statistically significant. Let me assure you that they are by far the most professional people I’ve ever known.
Assistance is good and we welcome it, but manipulation is not acceptable. Help us but do not try to tell us what to do. The problem is that the nations that the US consider to be “openly hostile to their interests” are those which are just trying to be "openly independent" countries.
Carlos Mesa, the Bolivian ex-President, had the guts to denounce all the pressure the US Embassy puts in our country.
Evo Morales (I didn't vote for this indian) has now the guts to say we don't need the US' help. Furthermore, he says we have real friends willing to chip in as much money as the US does --without pressure.
For the first time in my life: Bravo Evo Morales!
We Bolivians, ain't need no pressure and help from the US.
Let's seek our real friends, Japan, Australia, China, the Europeans and specially the Scandinavians. Period.
Joshua,
If they were your real friends, they would have provided the ‘no pressure’ assistance already and you would have no need for US assistance. Don't expect China's or Venezuela’s money to come without strings. Don’t expect Cuba’s money at all. I understand your feelings and do hope the best for Bolivia. Forgive me if I don't think this is for the best, but I also understand that it is your choice and it will be honored. Part of your decision appears to be to reject US help. Fine, no hard feelings.
Anon,
The US provided $19,000,000,000 in foreign aid in 2004. It went to plenty of ‘openly independent’ countries with politics we don't agree with. We have a drug problem though that we are trying to handle the best we can. We are taking great strides through education and law enforcement to reduce demand and to break the distribution network inside the US. We ask for your assistance in reducing the production side. I don't believe that Mr. Morales is seriously interested in stemming cocaine production. In fact, I think he supports production. If that is true, that would constitute hostile intent. But we’ll see. He may surprise me.
Norman, can you address Jim's question directly?
How would the people of the US feel about government prosecutors in the US receiving monthly salary bonuses from, say China or Venezuela, or US police and military units receiving financial support from Argentina or India?
Not interested in any of the other content of my post, huh? Well, it’s a fair question. Of course, US citizens would not want their military and law enforcement to receive bonuses from a foreign entity. Fortunately, the US has been able to pay its police and military salaries adequate to avoid widespread corruption. I’ve been told that in the past Bolivia has had more difficulty in this respect. (See http://www.country-data.com/cgi-bin/query/r-1664.html Bolivia Narcotics Corruption.) I wasn’t here though. Perhaps you could let me know. Sarcasm aside, I hope Mr. Morales will be able to pay enough to the pepole he issuesthe weapons. I also hope that a Chapare coca farmer is sincere about having zero tolerance for narco-trafficking. No one's tried to convince me of that yet though.
I´d like to remind you that the US didn´t convince anybody about its sincerity on this issue...
We have a drug problem though that we are trying to handle the best we can.
Yet you are failing, and have been for the last 35 years. So, if I
Let 'you' assure 'me' that they are by far the most professional people 'you've' ever known.
Then we're in deep shit, might as well let the narcos take over since they seem to be more efficient and better professionals.
Either that, or you have a heavy US can't go wrong biased worldview.
When a young man ventures out on his own to start a business, he normally will turn to his father and ask for the seed capital to get things up and running (that is, if the father has the capital). Does not the father require certain objectives to be carried out if he is to further finance the company? Will he not want to see progress before providing further funding? Will he not influence--either directly or indirectly--decisions made by management? Likewise, are not corporations held accountable to shareholders, who invest in the decisions made by management? For such is the Golden Rule for all business pursuits (from start-up to Fortune 500 corporations): He who has the gold makes the rule.
Unfortunately, many Prodigal Sons want their inheritance with no strings attached. And when Bolivia's pockets are empty (and the Bolivianos tire of sleeping with the pigs [Chavez, Castro et al.]), maybe the US will respond in similar fashion as the Prodigal Son's father did upon his son's return.
Well put Soakleif.
Anonymous,
Huh?
Culito Blanco,
Please let me know your miracle cure for the drug problem (and where the random 35 year mark came from). Concerning the professionalism of the military, (I'm straying way off topic here... my apologies), I have known officers and enlisted from the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and Coast Guard. They have been honest and hard working, not watching the clock, not intentionally taking it slow, not withholding information to make the sale, not coming in drunk or stoned. I have also known professional civilians with the same qualities but a much lower percentage. If you ever run a business and are serious about the bottom line, hire veterans. Now how does insulting the military further your argument?
As far as my "US can't go wrong attitude", that's quite an intuitive leap! I've expressed my belief that the US is correct about one facet of foreign affairs with one country.
How would the people of the US feel about government prosecutors in the US receiving monthly salary bonuses from, say China or Venezuela…
You are comparing oranges with bananas!
Bolivia is getting controlled by a super power…that’s Bolivian’s problem.
Tell me …What country is more super power than the US? …if there would be any, more likely they will try to use their resources to manipulate the US.
This is normal under human behavior. A person with more resources will try to use their resources to control another person with less resources with the only objective to benefit from the control…extrapolate to civilizations or countries there you have it....no need to be amazed by this...is nature.
Jim always tries to put the US to blame, of course, cannot say Bolivians are to blame to the bad things that happen to them. So let me, a Bolivian, put some balance.
The US will not accept money from others to give bonuses to gov officials simply because it is against the law (do Bolivians have similar laws?) and even if it would NOT be illegal, the USA is an educated country, where the media will denounce, people will get to know about the issue, people will punish stupidity with their vote…eventually demand for a law to protect them.
Bolivians, we don’t have this level of education. We do have the resources to be independent, we don’t have the “know how”.
When the US comes to offer money, Bolivians should say thank you. Let’s put it in this common pot, and pay equally from here, under Bolivian administration, to all the lawyers. US can allocate the money to pay salaries (this $$$ is for police), but certainly, should not tell us how to distribute the money among police and much less expect things….if they insist on this being unffair…well, Bolivian decision makers should not accept the money.
Can the money be used more intelligently? …of course, invest in giving the “know how” to Bolivians.
How much of the Drug $$$ help goes to US citizens? Or US tax payers? ...another debate!
Bolivians should be held responsible for accepting the fact that they accept a foreign country to pay “bonuses” or any kind of hidden money giving to any Bolivian government official…actually, there should be a law about this, if there is not, then Jim an all other gringos helping Bolivia should focus a little bit more in providing the know how to Bolivians to protect themselves from outside predators instead of telling us how bad can the Bush administration be.
Saludos, Javier F.
Obviously, Morales is counting on the US to yank the funds and Hugo Chavez to make up the difference. I imagine some of you will think that Bolivia becoming Venezuela's colony will be an improvement, but I am not sure every Bolivian will think this once they see what it starts to look like. But cheer up: once America's funds are pulled, those of you who support the Chavez-colony ... errr, 'favorite daughter'... stuff will be free to Blame America First no matter how out of the picture the US becomes. In fact, the further detached from the US the more blameworthy, that's for sure.
How would the US feel if Bolivians set up some well-financed George-Soros-bankrolled NGOs over in Chicago to teach US-Americans about 'democracy' and 'community organizing' because obviously they could not figure it out for themselves? The Bolivian NGO should have a slick articulate blog, of course, just to notify the Bolivians back home how well the natives are doing in this charity project. But US government money? So that Bolivians could spend it on exactly what they wanted instead of well-chosen indoctrination about democracy? Sinful! No Bolivian should ever have access to cold hard cash that he can choose to spend as he pleases. Not ever. /s
I enjoyed the "father-prodigal son"/"shareholders-corporation" example. It perfectly ilustrates the north american attitude towards Latinamerica.
Just more Monroe/big stick/manifiest destiny/etc. stuff
Will you ever realize we are not your backyard/corporation/son?
Norman: "1971 (June 17) Nixon declares war on drugs."
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/drugs/cron/
The solution is legalization, dude.
Now how does insulting the military further your argument?
It doesn't, but my choices were either we're screwed b/c the narco is more professional and "better" than the U.S. military, OR you have a deluded, blindly pro U.S. worldview.
Obviously the answer is the second one. I know many veterans and have respect for anyone who works hard to succeed while maintaining a high standard of conduct. It is no secret that there is an economic draft in the United States, so why blame the poor for joining the legion?
But my point is that even a well funded and professional group of people, whether Bolivian or Usamerican, are failing because the approach is incorrect, and further even well meaning people like you refuse to admit to themselves that the DEA and CIA may be intricately involved in the drug business.
There are many paths you can follow to see that their is a root geopolitical problem dating back at least to the Roosevelt corollary to the Monroe doctrine. You say U.S. drug policy in Bolivia is correct, can I assume that this is also the case in Peru, Ecuador and Colombia? Then we must consider the 50 year civil war between leftist armed forces and rightis armed forces in Colombia, both sides of which have benefited from cocaine even though the U.S. drug war (declared very clearly by Nixon 35 years ago, I may remind you) largely ignores paramilitary narcos and their horrific human rights abuses.
And if we chase Colombia's civil war back through the decade of violence down to the U.S. sponsored oligarchic usurpation of the Panama region, we see clearer still that the so called Drug War is a continuation of Teddy Roosevelt's geopolitical interests in the region.
End rant
Oops! I forgot one minor detail. The entrepreneur/son can ALWAYS refuse father's desire to invest in his company if he doesn't like (or think fair) the deal points of the proposed financing. He can instead bootstrap the company into success through his own sweat equity.
Or he can try to find more suitable (equitable) terms from another investor. Morales will not find better terms from the likes of Chavez and Castro nor, unfortunately, will Bolivianos from the likes of Morales.
I wonder what yanking the embassy bonuses of the police and others will do for the morale of those organizations? I wonder how loyal they will feel to Morales after that cash gift gets pulled?
Would they like getting their bonuses from Hugo Chavez? Has anyone here ever waited in a Hugo Chavez dole line? Hint: They take 12-14 hours rain or searing shine. They also aren't about little efficiencies like having Hugo Chavez payday on separate days or using the mail service or direct deposit. Nope, they are long hard socialist-conditioning lines, these Hugo Chavez dole check lines, intended to condition the population to accept Castro-style rationing before it really happens. God knows what they will be like when the price of oil falls - and it will. What will it be like for Bolivian cops to have to get their bonuses from Hugo Chavez's lawless Cuban thugs?
Norman, thanks for the straight answer. I agree - the people of any country would be suspicious if their civil servants were being paid by a foreign power. They would suspect that loyalty would be towards those how paid them.
http://window-shades.boom.ru
Norman:
"Fortunately, the US has been able to pay its police and military salaries adequate to avoid widespread corruption."
Hilarious! XD
Norman, the US upheld global war on drugs is pure and simple ignorant stupidity, to the extent of evil, causing many times more suffering than the substance abuce it is supposed to fight.
Without CIA etc. need for black op money etc, the drug mafia money corrupting financial money laundering centers and US politicians dependent on them, this evil stupidity called war on drugs would have ended decades ago.
Best harm reduction means regulation through legalization instead of unregulated illegal market, because that is the only effective way to hurt organized crime, taking their market away from them, market created by US crusade against some drugs.
I think we need to define corruption and how corruption affects society.
In the US, corruption is illegal and, if discovered, is usually vetted and exposed in the local and/or national press--no matter the degree of legality. For example, Martha Stewart--our patron saint of cooking, gardening, and arts and crafts--was sent to prison not for her initial crime of insider trading 3,928 shares of ImClone Systems (avoiding losses of approximately $45,673), but, rather, for conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and (above all) lying. In other words: corruption.
The point: all societies struggle with corruption at the top. How the US deals with it in the public arena is what separates us from the Castros and Chavezes and Stalins and Husseins of the world. It will be interesting to see how Evo Morales deals with this issue.
Man, where to start?!!! Too many topics to adequately address them all. 1st, I'm not blind, deluded, or the topic of the forum, so stick to rabidly attacking my ideas instead of me. 2nd, no one, including the US, hands out free money, no strings attached. There is always give and take. 3rd, no self-respecting country begs for handouts. OK, let's get to some of the content. Drug legalization will not improve the situation. We have two legalized drugs; alcohol and tobacco. Both are major factors in premature death. Alcohol is implicated in drunken violent behavior, negligent homicide (drunk driving), and simply poisoning the system. Tobacco’s health effects need no explanation. Both show moderate or high addiction rates. Both are sources of income to organized crime through interstate smuggling to avoid high state taxes. Now let's add cocaine to the list with its 75% addiction rate and high potency/lethality. I don’t see it happening. Would it cripple organized crime by taking their market away? Well, you see, the thing is, organized crime is run by criminals, and they are just looking for a way to exploit the system; any system. They will find it whether narcotic drugs are illegal or regulated. If you price drugs low enough to really take the market away, you will have an astronomically higher rate of drug addiction with its destructive effects on society. If you price drugs high enough or highly tax them in order to significantly reduce legal excessive intake, organized crime still has a market. As far as the CIA / DEA / FBI / SWAT / USC or kinder-care being behind the drug pipeline... whatever.
One last item: If the embassy bonuses are pulled, I fully expect the Bolivian officers and enlisted to remain loyal to Bolivia; they are professionals.
Who pays for president elect Evo Morales trips?
http://www.lostiempos.com/30-12-05/30_12_05nac8.php
“Evo se reune hoy con Castro”
…
“La comitiva integrada por 60 personas, entre parlamentarios electos, dirigentes sindicales y asesores de Morales, retornará a Bolivia el sábado 31, para luego trasladarse a Orinoca, su pueblo natal, donde tiene previsto empezar junto a su familia el nuevo año.
Consultado sobre el efecto político de la primera visita de Morales Aima a Cuba, el portavoz del presidente electo Alex Contreras dijo que el MAS espera que no haya susceptibilidades sobre el viaje. Y respecto del avión especial, aseguró que Castro ha enviado varias veces naves para otras misiones.
TODO PAGADO
El vocero de asuntos protocolares del MAS, Alex Contreras, aclaró que para el viaje a Cuba, España, Francia, Bélgica, Sudáfrica, China y Brasil, ni el MAS ni Evo Morales están gastando un centavo de boliviano de las arcas del Tesoro General.
Dijo que son invitaciones oficiales al presidente electo para entablar un diálogo de agenda abierta en el inicio de una relación diplomática entre Bolivia y los países que visitará.”
We voted for change but nothing changes. All the rhetoric about “dignity”, “honesty”, “integrity” and so on, is flushed down the drain by accepting “free rides” like the trip to Cuba and other countries mentioned above. If Mr. Morales is going to discuss his “nationalization” plan, with Spain (Repsol), France (Total), Brasil (Petrobras), and so on, then he should pay his own ticket.
To Jim’s post we should add that in Bolivia, beyond the army, police and prosecutors getting foreign funding, even the president elect and his top aides get funding for their trips abroad from foreign countries. What a shame… Let's hope this changes after the inauguration...
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