Cuba:
Lost Opportunities for Cooperation on Drugs
By
Wayne S. Smith
A select
delegation organized by the Center for International Policy visited
Cuba on January 5-9, 1998, to look into the possibilities of more
systematic cooperation between Cuba and the United States in drug
interdiction. There have been isolated instances of cooperation, most
notably in the case of the Limerick, a vessel seized in Cuban
waters in 1996 with six tons of cocaine aboard. The delegation found,
however, that there is no planned cooperation, let alone any effort
on the part of the United States to enhance Cuba's interdiction capabilities.
On the contrary, the United States seems reluctant to work more closely
with the Cubans. Worse, it prevents full Cuban participation in a
number of Caribbean initiatives to coordinate anti-drug efforts.
Yet,
given its geographic location, Cuba could be the key to sharply reducing
the flow of drugs through the Caribbean to the United States. Not
to enlist Cuba in an all-out joint effort--and not to encourage its
full participation in regional efforts--undermines the interests of
the United States itelf. If the war on drugs is indeed a top national
priority, this is a poor way to conduct it.
One reason
the administration may be reluctant to seek Cuba's fuller cooperation
is fear of offending certain members of the Congress who in Section
2 of the Helms-Burton Act suggest that "The Cuban Government
engages in the illegal international narcotics trade . . . "
But the
assertion itself is now without foundation and the administration
should know it. According to the Coast Guard's Seventh District in
Miami, over the past few years it has had no evidence--except anecdotal--of
any official Cuban involvement in drug smuggling. Quite the contrary,
the Cubans are cooperating with us in drug interdiction. The point
is that both our efforts could be more successful if that cooperation
were more systematic.
Program
in Cuba
While
in Cuba, the delegation met with:
- Ricardo
Alarcón, president of the national assembly
- Roberto
Díaz Sotolongo, minister of justice
- Abelardo
Ramírez Marquéz, vice minister of public health
- Gen.
Lázaro Ramón, commander of the Cuban Border Guards
- Gen.
Jesús Becerra, deputy commander of the national police
- Col.
Oliverio Montalvo, chief of the national anti-drug directorate
The delegation
also visited the operations room of the Border Guards, went aboard
patrol boats, inspected the national forensic laboratory, and went
through the William Soler Children's Hospital. During these meetings,
the delegation was fully briefed on Cuban efforts to interdict drugs
and on the magnitude of the problem.
The delegation
also met with Michael Kozak, chief of the U.S. interests section,
who outlined the U.S. policy of inviting cooperation only on a limited
caseby-case basis.
Senator
Hatfield's response to that was that if we had fought World War II
on a case-by-case basis, with no strategy or coordination, we would
have lost.
What
Full Cooperation Would Do
As indicated
above, the official U.S. position is that the present level of cooperation
is all that is needed. This is based on the assertion that Cuba is
not on any major smuggling route and that few drugs pass through Cuban
waters or air space anyway. When the Coast Guard or DEA occasionally
spot some suspicious vessel or aircraft headed into Cuban territorial
air space or seas, they can at that point call on the Cubans to intercept.
In some cases, according to the U.S. interests section, the Cubans
have not been able to do so, but in a few others, the interception
has been quite successful. The most notable was the case of the Limerick,
a vessel boarded by the Coast Guard in international waters in 1996.
The vessel was taking on water and drifting. The Coast Guard removed
the crew and began to search the vessel, but before the search could
be completed, the vessel had drifted into Cuban waters. The Coast
Guard alerted the Cuban Border Guards and withdrew. The Border Guards
then boarded and searched the vessel. Using information provided by
the United States and other sources the Cubans eventually found six
tons of cocaine. They cooperated fully with the United States by turning
the cargo over to the Coast Guard for use as evidence in the trial
against the vessel's captain. They even sent four Cuban officials
to Miami to testify at the trial.
The case
of the Limerick demonstrates what might be achieved through
closer cooperation with Cuba. Analyzed more closely, it also argues
against the principal rationale for the status quo. If one vessel
yielded up six tons of cocaine, how much more must be passing along
this route?
One partial
and disturbing answer to that question is seen in the fact that in
1997 alone, well over six tons of narcotics washed ashore on Cuban
beaches. This, because the pattern is for small planes to drop bags
of narcotics into the sea off Cuba's northern keys. The floating bags
are then picked up by speedboats for the run up to Florida. But some
are missed and eventually float ashore. If we estimate that these
six tons represent only about 10 percent of what is dropped, then
some sixty tons per year are being moved by this one method alone.
Estimates place the amount of drugs being smuggled around Cuba's eastern
and western capes and through its territorial seas and air space at
many times that.
Further,
Cuba's geographic position alone makes it a key to halting the flow
of drugs through the Caribbean to the United States. It not only lies
between the Caribbean and the United States and controls all Caribbean
approaches to the United States, it also controls the entrance to
the Gulf of Mexico. With sufficient equipment and resources, it could
be a valuable ally in the war against drugs.
Cuban
Willingness to Cooperate
All Cuban
officials with whom the delegation met, from Ricardo Alarcon, the
president of the national assembly, to General Lazaro Roman, commander
of Cuba's Border Guards, emphasized Cuba's full willingness to cooperate
with the U.S. Coast Guard and DEA on a much expanded case-by-case
basis. They noted that Cuba is doing the best it can under difficult
circumstances and with limited resources to interdict drugs, even
though 90 percent are destined for the United States, not Cuba. Thus,
in interdicting them, Cuba is in effect assisting the United States,
a neighbor which often seems determined to isolate it and even to
consider it an enemy. However, Cuba considers the war against drugs
to be one for all humanity and thus has no reservations about providing
such assistance so long as Cuban territorial rights and sovereignty
are fully respected. On the contrary, it is prepared to assist even
more fully.
Cuban
officials noted that their country's sea frontier stretches for some
1,650 miles around the island, that Cuba has more than 42,000 square
miles of territorial seas containing some 4,195 island and small keys,
often well offshore. Their resources to watch and patrol all this
are quite limited. Because of the economic crisis, they have had to
mothball many of their patrol craft, fuel is scarce and they have
only some 117 operational radars. Cuba recognizes and desires access
to some of the superior U.S. technology that can be brought to bear.
At present it must rely on other foreign countries for their less-than-cutting-edge
technology and because of severe limitations on hard currency, it
cannot even obtain much of that. They cited several examples including
having to go to Canada to get dogs trained for drug searching.
The Cubans
emphasized that no alert has been received from the U.S. Coast Guard
to which they have not responded. When the Coast Guard advises them
of a suspicious vessel, they try to intercept. However, they are usually
contacted rather late in the game and thus often do not have cutters
positioned to intercept. Their chances of successful interception
would be much improved by earlier warning and by greater coordination
of patrol areas. They never know which quadrants the Coast Guard is
covering, so there is some duplication of effort. It would make sense
to coordinate areas and operations to the extent that security concerns
might realistically permit.
A more
systematic exchange of information would also be useful. The United
States has the capability to blanket the entire Caribbean with electronic
surveillance. Cuba has no access to any of that. Its surface radars
only reveal what is on the horizon, not what is beyond. It needs more
information as to the overall situation and on vessels that may be
headed its way well before they are on the horizon. But not only does
the United States not share such information with them, it prevents
their full access to intelligence sharing on a regional basis. Essentially,
this involves three organizations:
l.) The
Caribbean Customs and Law Enforcement Commission, which is based in
St. Lucia and whose secretariat is run by a British customs officer.
The United States has prevented Cuba from becoming a full member,
thus impeding access to the organization's intelligence sharing much
to the irritation of the other members.
2.) The
World Customs Organization, whose Caribbean chapter is based in San
Juan, Puerto Rico. Cuba is a member, but because the headquarters
are in San Juan, it has no access to the organization's intelligence
facilities.
3.) The
most important regional effort is through the Caribbean Drug Initiative.
This was generated by the European Union and Great Britain remains
the principal sparkplug. Cuba is an integral part of the CDI. However,
intelligence sharing is to be coordinated through the Inter-American
Commission Against Drug Abuse, which is an agency of the Organization
of American States. Cuba is not a member of the OAS and so cannot
take part.
In sum,
Cuba is operating at a distinct disadvantage: with inadequate resources
and with access to only the most rudimentary intelligence. "It
is," said one Cuban officer, "as though we were working
with only one arm and leg and most of the time blindfolded."
Recommendations
The arguments
for a very limited case-by-case approach to cooperation now pursued
by the United States, i.e., the status quo, do not hold up to even
the most rudimentary scrutiny. On the contrary, if it is to give the
war on drugs the priority it deserves, the United States should devise
ways to cooperate more closely with Cuba and encourage Cuba's full
participation in regional interdiction efforts. The CIP delegation
would recommend the following steps:
l.) The
United States should drop all efforts to impede Cuba's access to intelligence-sharing
in the three regional organizations. Indeed, it should move in the
other direction, taking the lead in clearing the way for the island's
full membership and participation.
2.) The
Coast Guard should be authorized to begin a systematic exchange of
information with the Cuban Border Guards on the subject of drug interdiction
and to coordinate patrol areas and responsibilities on a continuing
basis.
3.) There
should be frequent and periodic meetings between representatives of
the Border Guards and the Coast Guard to discuss joint drug-interdiction
operations, problems and ways to overcome them. Meetings already occur,
but only to discuss problems related to rafters; exchanges on drug
interdiction are prohibited. This prohibition should be immediately
removed.
4.) The
United States should consider the provision of technical and material
assistance to Cuba with a view to enhancing its interdiction capabilities.
Joint training exercises might be a useful confidence-building first
step.
5.) Cuba's
cooperation with us in drug interdiction efforts should be publicly
acknowledged.
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A publication
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© Copyright 1998 by the Center for Inter national Policy. All rights
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ISSN 0738-6508