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Viewing cable 08BRUSSELS962, DIRECTOR WALTERS DISCUSSES DRUG FLOWS AND

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08BRUSSELS962 2008-06-25 12:58 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL USEU Brussels
VZCZCXRO2789
PP RUEHAG RUEHROV
DE RUEHBS #0962/01 1771258
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 251258Z JUN 08
FM USEU BRUSSELS
TO RHEHOND/DIR ONDCP WASHDC PRIORITY
INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHBO/AMEMBASSY BOGOTA PRIORITY
RUEHCV/AMEMBASSY CARACAS PRIORITY
RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL PRIORITY
RUEHLP/AMEMBASSY LA PAZ PRIORITY
RUEHME/AMEMBASSY MEXICO PRIORITY
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW PRIORITY
RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEABND/DEA WASHDC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 10 BRUSSELS 000962 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DIR ONDCP FOR DIRECTOR, OSR, ODR 
STATE FOR INL/FO, INL/PC, EUR/ERA, L/LEI; 
JUSTICE FOR CRIMINAL DIVISION, OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL 
AFFAIRS; 
DEA HQS FOR OG, OGE 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/25/2016 
TAGS: OVIP KCRM PREL SNAR PTER EUM BE CO MX
SUBJECT: DIRECTOR WALTERS DISCUSSES DRUG FLOWS AND 
CHALLENGES WITH EU COUNTERPARTS 
 
REF: A. USEU BRUSSELS 0494 (NOTAL) 
     B. DIR ONDCP TELEGRAM DTG 242042Z MAR 08 
 
Classified By: INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT 
AFFAIRS (INL) COUNSELOR JAMES P. MCANULTY FOR REASONS 
1.4 (B) AND (D) 
 
------- 
SUMMARY 
------- 
 
1. (C) During his recent visit to Brussels, the Director of 
the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy 
(ONDCP), John Walters, discussed a wide range of drug issues 
with European Union (EU) counterparts and media.  He briefed 
EU officials and journalists on U.S. domestic counter-drug 
efforts including significant reductions in drug use within 
the United States.  The Director emphasized the need to focus 
more effectively on drug flows from Latin America and 
Afghanistan.  He challenged EU officials to press Venezuela's 
President to work more forcefully against the flow of cocaine 
to Europe.  A major unsolved mystery involves the destination 
of opium products and drug proceeds from Afghanistan, as 
heroin consumption has not yet registered notable increases 
in Europe.  Some interlocutors speculated that such drugs 
remained in neighboring countries of Afghanistan but could 
not offer more precise answers.  END SUMMARY. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
PROGRESS IN REDUCING U.S. DRUG CONSUMPTION 
------------------------------------------- 
 
2. (C) ONDCP Director, accompanied by the U.S. Special Envoy 
to the European Union, Acting ONDCP Deputy Director for 
Supply Reduction Patrick Ward, ONDCP Associate Director of 
Public Affairs Thomas Riley, ONDCP Press Officer Jennifer 
de-Vallance and Mission International Narcotics and Law 
Enforcement Affairs (INL) Counselor, met with EU 
Counter-Terrorism Coordinator (CTC) Gilles de Kerchove and 
Council Secretariat Deputy Director General (DDG) for Justice 
and Home Affairs (JHA) Rafael Fernandez-Pita y Gonzalez. 
Director Walters reported positive news on domestic 
consumption of cocaine.  Authorities in various cities have 
reported shortages in the supply of cocaine, increases in 
prices, and decreases in purity.  Officials at the Southwest 
border have reported fewer seizures in recent months.  Since 
March, work force drug testing involving millions of 
employees has shown a drop of 20 percent in cocaine use. 
Improved interdiction along maritime routes and courageous 
efforts by the Calderon Administration in Mexico and the 
Uribe Administration in Colombia have appeared to reduce the 
flow of cocaine into the United States.  Drug traffickers 
almost certainly are reconstituting their efforts and could 
be re-directing their trade towards other destinations, 
including Europe.  De Kerchove noted that his son, who was 
studying in Monterey, Mexico, had reported frequent instances 
of drug-related violence.  Walters indicated that 
counter-drug efforts had elicited violent attacks by 
traffickers against each other and against Mexican law 
enforcement personnel. 
 
-------------------------- 
VENEZUELA'S UNHELPFUL ROLE 
-------------------------- 
 
3. (C) Director Walters, who had just visited the Maritime 
Analysis and Operations Center (MAOC) and the European 
Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) in 
Lisbon, inquired whether EU officials had observed an 
increase in cocaine flow to Europe.  He understood that Spain 
and Portugal had become major entry points for cocaine 
flowing from South America through West Africa into Europe. 
The drug flow has also produced a destabilizing effect in 
countries in West Africa.  CTC de Kerchove noted that an EU 
Security Sector Reform Mission (SSRM) would soon begin in 
Guinea-Bissau.  Walters welcomed this news, noting that the 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  002 OF 010 
 
 
international community needed to help nations build 
effective criminal justice systems that could not only arrest 
but also effectively prosecute drug traffickers.  Drug 
corruption has affected many of these transit countries.  CTC 
de Kerchove noted that the Portuguese have shown keen 
interest in Africa, particularly during their recent Council 
Presidency from July to December 2007.  Their top priorities 
included increasing EU assistance to third countries, 
particularly in the Sahel, and fighting drug trafficking in 
West Africa.  Walters expressed concern over the flow of 
cocaine from western Colombia through Venezuela to Africa and 
Europe, with smugglers using a variety of air and maritime 
routes.  Colombia's leaders have made tremendous progress in 
demobilizing or apprehending paramilitary leaders and their 
forces (including the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia 
-- AUC) and in countering the activities of the Revolutionary 
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).  He noted media reports 
indicating that the Venezuelan military had transported 
wounded FARC members to medical facilities in Venezuela. 
Colombian military forces recently seized electronic media 
from killed FARC leader Reyes, which further confirmed 
Venezuelan assistance to the FARC.  DDG Fernandez-Pita 
remarked that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez had attempted 
to discredit the seized information. 
 
4. (C) CTC de Kerchove noted that EU officials, including 
High Representative Javier Solana (de Kerchove's boss), had 
met recently with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and would 
not be deceived by President Chavez's claims.  Walters noted 
that FARC members, while initially portraying themselves as 
"freedom fighters," had become increasingly involved in drug 
trafficking and kidnappings.  The FARC, however, has fallen 
on hard times, with an average ten or more members deserting 
each day and food and other supplies dwindling dramatically. 
A bodyguard even killed a senior FARC leader because this 
leader refused to allow members to surrender.  Walters 
expressed concern over the destabilizing impact of the drug 
trade on West African governments and institutions.  The U.S. 
Government would like to keep up pressure on the source 
countries.  He commended the work of the recently established 
MAOC, which has worked closely with U.S. officials from Joint 
Interagency Task Force - South (JIATF - South) based in Key 
West, Florida.  Walters explained the critical importance of 
using intelligence to direct drug interdiction operations. 
Areas of operation have proven too large to patrol randomly 
with scarce assets.  Therefore, use of intelligence, 
particularly from human sources such as port watchers, has 
become a key factor in daily interdiction successes.  Use of 
JIATF-South information about the transit zone between Latin 
America, Africa, and Europe can help MAOC officials in 
planning deployments of maritime assets.  Exploitation of 
information from drug seizures in the European arrival zones 
would be of interest to U.S. officials as well.   For 
example, the U.S. has learned during the past seven to eight 
years the tremendous utility of pressuring arrested ship 
crews to provide information in return for more lenient 
sentences.   Such intelligence also allows U.S. authorities 
to use their interdiction assets more effectively. 
 
------------------- 
DRUG-TERRORISM LINKS 
------------------- 
 
5. (C) Walters indicated that drug trafficking and terrorist 
financing remained closely linked in Afghanistan. 
Unfortunately, as an alliance we have been slow to see this 
important relationship.  CTC de Kerchove indicated that the 
EU wanted to be tough on drugs.  Security appears to be the 
key factor in determining where drug production occurs in 
Afghanistan.  Walters noted the ongoing debate as to whether 
addressing drug cultivation represented a threat or a 
complement to promoting security.  In turn, CTC de Kerchove 
noted some divergence on how to proceed.  Nonetheless, EU 
policy makers have wondered why Afghan farmers have not 
turned to alternative development.  They are concerned that 
forced eradication could push farmers toward joining the 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  003 OF 010 
 
 
insurgency and al Qaeda.  Providing security appears to be 
the key.  A second factor involves corruption.  DDG 
Fernandez-Pita mentioned that the EU has expended 452 million 
euros for fighting drug trafficking, with such funding 
distributed among 57 different projects. 
 
------------------------------ 
WHERE HAS ALL THE HEROIN GONE? 
------------------------------ 
 
6. (C) Walters conveyed a slightly different perspective of 
the drug situation in Afghanistan.  He reported that drug 
trafficking had infiltrated all sectors of Afghan society, 
providing up to one-third of the country's gross domestic 
product (GDP).  Policy makers initially focused on 
influencing the planting decisions of farmers, but in many 
cases the farmers did not make these decisions.  Instead, the 
wealthy land owners and warlords told them what to plant. 
Dealing with corruption is even more complicated, given that 
drug cultivation at one point was declared to be legal many 
years earlier.  Virtually every family has members who 
formerly cultivated drug crops.  Now, the northern provinces 
are virtually free of opium fields, with drug cultivation 
concentrated in the less secure provinces in the south. 
Nonetheless, traffickers continue to "tax" drug smuggling 
routes and activities throughout the country.  Subsistence 
farmers cannot be taxed as they have no excess resources. 
The only "money-making" business in Afghanistan is drug 
trafficking and this could influence upcoming electoral 
campaigns.  Drug production has doubled in recent years, but 
U.S. analysts cannot account for the destination of this 
increased output or the related drug proceeds.  Health data 
is often a lagging indicator, however, in showing the impact 
of supply on drug consumption.  Some production may be going 
to Russia, India, or Iran, but the actual destinations remain 
a mystery.  Walters wondered whether the drug proceeds 
remained in areas under Taliban control as part of taxation 
and protection payments.  For hundreds of years, Helmand 
Province had served as the bread basket for Afghanistan. 
Now, farmers have turned from cultivation of wheat to growing 
opium.  Alternative livelihoods alone will not provide the 
answers.  Instead, security plays a role in allowing farmers 
to choose what they plant.  In the south, unfortunately, 
opium cultivation has become the enemy's "program for 
alternative development." 
 
------------------------------------- 
QUESTIONS PERSIST ON DRUG MONEY FLOWS 
------------------------------------- 
 
7. (C) CTC de Kerchove inquired whether the U.S. knew much 
about drug money flows in Afghanistan.  Walters responded 
that U.S. and Afghan officials had gathered information 
regarding individual cases, but many questions remained 
unanswered regarding overall trends.  Even in regions closer 
to the States, U.S. analysts have suffered from gaps in 
information on drug money flows.  For example, the U.S. 
cannot account for some 800 million dollars in drug money 
flowing into Mexico from the U.S. each month.  Traffickers 
seem particularly effective at protecting their money.  CTC 
de Kerchove acknowledged that the EU lacked effective 
legislation to freeze the assets of drug traffickers, even 
though it had enacted sophisticated legislation recommended 
by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in other areas. 
Walters suggested using the same approach used by the Office 
of Foreign Assets Controls (OFAC) to designate major 
trafficking organizations and then using regulatory authority 
to go after their assets.  He suggested making the entire 
financing and banking system one's ally.  For example, OFAC 
effectively targeted the Rodriguez brothers in Colombia so 
that their families could not use any part of the U.S. 
banking system to purchase needed services.  Ultimately, the 
brothers gave in to pressure after gaining agreement to lift 
the sanctions against other family members less directly 
involved in the trade. 
 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  004 OF 010 
 
 
--------------------------------------------- - 
POTENTIAL ROLES OF ERADICATION AND EXTRADITION 
--------------------------------------------- - 
 
8. (C) CTC de Kerchove inquired about the role of aerial 
fumigation in Afghanistan.   Director Walters said the U.S. 
has not pressed this issue, given strong resistance from 
President Karzai and lack of unity on this option within the 
international community.  That said, he noted the importance 
of integrating counter-narcotics activities into the rest of 
police missions in Afghanistan to try to dissuade powerful 
individuals from continuing their involvement in the drug 
trade.  CTC de Kerchove said he had checked with European 
Judicial Coordination Office (EUROJUST) colleagues about the 
possibility of pursuing extradition requests against major 
traffickers.  The main obstacle, he understood, involved lack 
of evidence linking major Afghan traffickers to drug 
shipments arriving in Europe.  He promised to follow up on 
this issue again at EUROJUST.  Director Walters reported that 
eradication forces would be withdrawn shortly from Helmand 
Province because of the numerous casualties they had 
suffered. Again, security has played an important role.  CTC 
de Kerchove inquired whether NATO would provide security for 
such missions.  INL Counselor noted his understanding that 
the NATO Operations Plan permitted indirect support of 
counter-drug missions but not direct engagement. 
 
9. (C) Director Walters said aerial eradication could serve 
as a useful tool in targeting the fields of wealthy farmers 
in Helmand without unduly risking the lives of personnel 
involved in manual eradication on the ground.  CTC de 
Kerchove inquired about the safety of the herbicides used in 
such programs.  Walters said the issue had been studied 
exhaustively over the years.  Glyphosate, the chemical 
typically used in aerial eradication, is widely used by 
farmers and consumers in the U.S. and Europe and has the 
advantage of adhering to plants to which it was applied. 
Moreover, traffickers use chemicals, including pesticides, in 
even higher concentrations in their cultivation process. 
They simply make false allegations about glyphosate to thwart 
aerial eradication programs.  In Colombia, President Uribe 
authorized widespread use of aerial spraying, particularly in 
areas controlled by the FARC.  While not the full answer to 
drug cultivation, such a strategy proved useful against drug 
crops in remote, contested areas.  Director Walters noted 
that a key factor in Afghanistan would be to introduce an 
element of risk for traffickers "in a smart way."  Otherwise, 
corruption would destroy every institution there. 
 
---------------------- 
DRUG FLOWS INTO EUROPE 
---------------------- 
 
10. (C) DDG Fernandez-Pita then provided an overview of drug 
flows into Europe.   He expressed concern over the flow of 
heroin through the Balkans and from Turkey via three routes 
(northern, central, and southern) into Europe.  Both Albania 
and Bosnia and Herzegovina constitute the major sources of 
marijuana for the European market.  The flow of cocaine has 
increased dramatically to Europe both via the Balkans and 
from Colombia and Venezuela via maritime routes and through 
Africa.  CTC de Kerchove added that Spaniards suffered from 
the highest consumption of cocaine. 
 
11. (C) ONDCP Director Walters, accompanied by ONDCP Acting 
Deputy Director for Supply Reduction, ONDCP Associate 
Director of Public Affairs, ONDCP Press Secretary, Mission 
INL Counselor, and Mission Drug Enforcement Administration 
(DEA) Assistant Regional Director (ARD), also met with Andrej 
Groselj of the Slovenian Presidency, Head of Unit Carel 
Edwards of the Commission's Drug Coordination Office, Head of 
Unit Johannes Vos of the Council Secretariat's Justice and 
Home Affairs (JHA) Directorate, Principal Administrator 
Wouter van de Rijt of the Council Secretariat's JHA External 
Relations Office, Administrator Suzanne Stauffer of the 
Commission's Taxation and Customs Unit, Intern Nicholas 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  005.2 OF 010 
 
 
Edwards of the Commission, and other EU officials.  As he did 
during his meeting with CTC de Kerchove, Director Walters 
described significant progress in reducing drug consumption 
in the United States and major interdiction successes in the 
transit zones.  He asked whether EU officials had observed 
any changes in drug flows to Europe and consumption rates. 
The U.S. aim is to make the drug problem a smaller one 
worldwide and not simply move it to other regions, such as 
Europe.  He reviewed the drug situation in Afghanistan, 
noting the need for a balanced strategy to build stability 
there.  Authorities must introduce an element of risk in a 
measurable and responsible way to dissuade drug traffickers 
and cultivators from engaging in such activities.  Drug 
trafficking has reached unprecedented proportions of the 
nation's GDP and remains the one major source of money that, 
in turn, could be used to corrupt the political system.  The 
flow of cocaine through West Africa to Europe also presents a 
serious concern, with drug money undermining institutions in 
underdeveloped transit-zone countries. 
 
12. (C) The Slovenian Representative confirmed EU interest in 
all these issues.  Closing borders completely would be 
impossible to do.  Therefore, the U.S. and EU must work 
closely to counter the sources of drugs in third nations. 
Slovenia, as a country along the route from the Baltic 
nations, remains particularly interested.  Representatives of 
the European Police Office (EUROPOL), European Judicial 
Coordination Office (EUROJUST), and the European External 
Borders Management Agency (FRONTEX) discussed border issues 
at a conference in Slovenia in March.  EU Member States are 
interested in what happens along drug routes as well as the 
nexus between drug production and terrorism.  Such links are 
obvious in places like Colombia and Afghanistan but less so 
in other locations.  Director Walters agreed that the 
international community needed to look at the entire range of 
vulnerabilities for drug activities.  Although the U.S. has 
not yet reached its objective of interdicting 40 percent of 
the drug flow, interdiction efforts have become more 
effective in seizing large shipments of drugs and proceeds 
along transit routes and using intelligence to direct 
interdiction operations.  The Slovenian representative agreed 
on the need for sharing information to attack criminal 
activities.   He praised the role of the Southeast European 
Coordination Initiative (SECI) Center in enhancing 
information sharing in the Balkans.   He expressed hope that 
countries could apply the same model for sharing information 
in North Africa to counter terrorism, organized crime, and 
drug trafficking activities. 
 
13. (C) While Head of Unit Edwards expressed agreement with 
the Director's point regarding the desire to avoid 
disproportionate impact of eradication on poor farmers in 
Afghanistan, he added that the EU also viewed eradication as 
"problematical."  He noted that, for the 2006 to 2010 time 
frame, the EU has allocated 610 million euros in projects in 
Afghanistan, mostly involving alternative development to 
encourage farmers to cultivate licit crops.  Some of this 
funding also goes into a fund for paying police salaries, 
although he acknowledged some difficulties in channeling the 
money to intended recipients.  Corruption seems more 
pervasive in Afghan society than many had originally 
anticipated.  He recalled the admonition of United Nations 
Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Director Antonio Costa that 
the international community had helped build a 600-bed prison 
and it now was up to Afghan authorities to fill it. 
Otherwise, governments risked "pouring money into the sand." 
On West Africa, Edwards acknowledged the need to bolster 
basic police services and infrastructure.  Otherwise, the 
international community could expect little in the way of 
counter-drug cooperation, including handling of controlled 
deliveries.  The EU would continue to build MAOC's 
capacities, including linkages to EUROPOL.  Russia, which 
suffers from serious heroin abuse, nevertheless is 
cooperating with EUROPOL, and this cooperation has started to 
produce results.  The EU advocates a balanced approach 
involving both treatment and law enforcement.  Officials are 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  006 OF 010 
 
 
studying how illicit drug markets function to determine the 
relative impact of supply and demand, including the role of 
"supply-led" markets that encourage consumption via broad 
availability of inexpensive illicit drugs.  A wide range of 
drug policies and cultures exists among the 27 Member States, 
but most provide public health care, usually free, for drug 
users.  The EU has attempted to reduce the harm caused by 
drugs, for example, by decriminalizing substance abuse to 
encourage more users to seek treatment, 
 
14. (U) Director Walters remarked that the more one delved 
into drug markets, the more one discovered that they really 
functioned quite differently than earlier imagined.  The U.S. 
had also worked to expand drug treatment tremendously, 
expending billions of dollars to attempt to close the gap 
between private and public health care systems and between 
supply and demand for drug treatment services.  Nonetheless, 
the fundamental challenge does not involve building treatment 
programs, but recognizing drug abuse as a disease.  Drug use 
produces fundamental changes in the functioning of the brain, 
with drug users, who like alcoholics, often engage in denial 
and react angrily to efforts by families and friends to 
encourage treatment.  Walters advocated collective 
responsibility to overcome such problems.  The U.S. has now 
established over 2,000 drug courts with the power to direct 
court-supervised treatment.  Debunking the "cartoon" 
stereotype of the U.S. focusing exclusively on incarceration 
as a response to drug use, the U.S. Government has, in fact, 
applied considerable resources on demand reduction and drug 
treatment, and, as a result of earlier intervention, overall 
drug use has dropped significantly in the U.S.  Making drug 
screening a regular part of visits by patients to doctors and 
emergency rooms has helped considerably in identifying those 
at risk of becoming abusers.  Additionally, extensive 
outreach programs, including confidential drug testing in 
4,000 school districts, without the threat of punitive 
measures, has permitted treatment at early stages.  The 
influence of peers plays a critical role in fomenting drug 
use among adolescents and pre-adolescents.  Drug testing has 
helped to counter this disease in which young people have 
encouraged each other to become "sick."  He warned that the 
greatest hurdle to successful drug programs came from public 
cynicism that drug prevention and treatment would not work. 
 
15. (C) As he had done earlier with CTC de Kerchove, Director 
Walters provided an overview of the drug situation in 
Afghanistan.  The international community must establish not 
only a program of benefits and risks but also one that 
produces greater security throughout the country.  In theory, 
Afghanistan should benefit considerably from high levels of 
foreign assistance, but, in the south, "the guys with the 
guns control the night" and therefore determine what farmers 
grow.  Administrator Stauffer noted the importance of 
controlling precursor and processing chemicals as part of 
efforts to decrease the supply of drugs.  EU officials have 
cooperated closely with the U.S. and other international 
partners in controlling the flow of acetic anhydride into 
Afghanistan under "Project Cohesion."  Whenever possible, 
officials are attempting to fill in intelligence gaps on the 
flows of this chemical.  Elsewhere, EU officials have 
cooperated on initiatives designed to control the diversion 
of precursor chemicals associated with the production of 
methamphetamine, including under Projects "Prism" and 
"Crystal Flow."  She pointed to the record seizure of 207 
million dollars in proceeds in Mexico City stemming from a 
trafficker involved in importing and diverting precursor 
chemicals for methamphetamine. 
 
16. (C) Walters agreed on the importance of chemicals 
control.  In this area, the U.S. and other countries have 
achieved much greater results than previously expected. 
Methamphetamine production had become a huge problem in the 
States because of the ability of individuals to download the 
recipe from the Internet and produce this drug in their homes 
from widely available ingredients.  Authorities cracked down 
on over-the-counter sales of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  007 OF 010 
 
 
and helped to curb such production, which then moved to 
Mexico.  The Mexican Government has taken aggressive actions, 
reducing significantly the licit imports of pseudoephedrine 
and ephedrine and has instituted an outright ban of such 
imports for 2008. 
 
17. (C) Walters noted that he had just visited the European 
Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) in 
Lisbon.   EMMDCA officials said they had not yet detected any 
indicators of major increases in cocaine abuse in Europe, but 
remarked that indicators, particularly those based on health 
reporting, could lag by one to two years.  Changes will not 
be detected overnight.  He inquired as to efforts that EU 
nations have taken to develop more speedy indicators, perhaps 
including an experimental project to measure traces of drugs 
in community water supplies.  Walters said that the amounts 
of drugs consumed by addicts "dwarfed" those of casual users. 
 In many instances, addicts have built up such high 
tolerances that they regularly consume "staggering" amounts 
that would otherwise kill first-time users.   He once more 
sought opinions on where all the excess production of opiates 
and heroin from Afghanistan had gone -- along with the 
associated drug proceeds.  Head of Unit Edwards acknowledged 
that colleagues had not developed satisfactory explanations. 
He expressed doubt over the theory offered by UNODC Executive 
Director Costa -- stockpiling in the region.  One difficulty 
is that the economics associated with these drugs do not 
follow those patterns of most commodities.  Instead, EU 
analysts have seen an increase in prices, rather than the 
decreases expected to result from increased supplies.  To 
date, the percentage of heroin from Afghanistan in the 
European market has dropped from 14 percent to seven percent. 
 Edwards called for clearer analyses, including perhaps from 
independent experts. 
 
------------------------------- 
PROGRESS IN COLOMBIA AND MEXICO 
------------------------------- 
 
18. (C) In response to a question from Head of Unit Vos about 
Colombia, Walters observed that Colombia represented a 
"remarkable" success.  The Colombian Government has 
established a presence in 1,100 municipalities and the 
economy has grown strongly in recent years, with 
entrepreneurs choosing to re-invest in the country.  To date, 
Colombia has extradited over 600 drug traffickers to the 
U.S., thereby reducing the ability of traffickers to corrupt 
the local court system.  The justice system has changed from 
an inquisitorial one to a more efficient accusatory system 
open to public scrutiny.  Authorities have reduced violence 
against unions and have "damaged" the drug trade 
considerably.  Instead of targeting the FARC from the "top 
down," as originally envisioned, the Colombian Government has 
worked systematically to target the organization's resources. 
 Currently, FARC desertions average 10 to 20 members each 
day.  Drug trafficking corrupts everyone, including guerrilla 
leaders, and the FARC is no exception, changing more into a 
drug trafficking organization than a guerrilla movement. 
President Uribe has stood up institutions around the country 
and enjoys job approval ratings of 70 to 80 percent.  He 
approved use of glyphosate for aerial eradication in 
contested areas on a scale not seen previously.  As a result, 
authorities eradicated 200,000 hectares of coca (some areas 
multiple times) from an estimated 130,000 to 140,000 hectares 
under cultivation in the past year. 
 
19. (C) Similarly, Walters commended the Mexican Government 
for beginning to extradite major drug traffickers to the 
States, including various kingpins in early 2007.  He 
suggested that EU officials consider seeking the extradition 
of Afghan drug traffickers as a way to help Afghanistan deal 
with its challenges.  He also noted Administration efforts to 
gain Congressional approval of 1.4 billion U.S. dollars in 
funding over three years for counter-drug and security 
projects in Mexico and Central America.  Projects would focus 
on institution-building and enhancing airlift capacity for 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  008 OF 010 
 
 
moving police forces around Mexico. 
 
 
-------------------------------------------- 
VENEZUELA NEEDS TO DO MORE IN FIGHTING DRUGS 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
20. (C) Vos inquired about the Director's views on Iranian 
counter-drug efforts.  Walters remarked that the U.S. had 
little visibility on any changes, saying that Iran and 
Venezuela, despite efforts to forge closer ties, had failed 
to enhance counter-drug cooperation because of political 
differences.  He noted that the U.S. even enjoyed better 
counter-drug cooperation with Cuba than with Venezuela, 
because Cuba has recognized the threat posed by drugs to its 
society.  In contrast, Venezuelan President Chavez has proven 
"willful" in his support of the FARC and has permitted use of 
his country's border regions to facilitate the flow of drugs. 
 A Venezuelan official boasted recently of bombing 157 
clandestine airstrips.  This would be positive news, if the 
actions actually produced results.  However, the Venezuelans 
seized no cocaine during such missions.  The drug fight 
involves people and not inanimate objects.  Airport personnel 
allegedly permit use of their facilities for drug shipments. 
Cooperation with the DEA broke off after joint investigations 
exposed official corruption in Venezuela.  Nonetheless, the 
U.S. remains open to working with President Chavez on 
counter-drug activities.  Because some EU Member States 
likely enjoyed better relations with Venezuela, he urged EU 
colleagues to try to convince President Chavez to move 
against drug trafficking.  Current inaction is not good for 
Venezuela, not good for Africa, and not good for Europe. 
 
------------------------ 
EU ASSISTANCE TO BOLIVIA 
------------------------ 
 
21. (C) Walters expressed appreciation for EU assistance in 
helping Bolivia to calculate the extent of legitimate need 
for coca leaf.  He heard about Bolivian Government efforts to 
"adjust" the terms of reference more broadly to promote their 
political aims.  Citing INL Counselor's recent discussions 
with Commission colleagues about U.S. concerns over 
implementation of the coca study in Bolivia, he encouraged EU 
officials to continue to "push back" unhelpful Bolivian 
efforts.  The international community can tolerate coca leaf 
production for legitimate uses, but excess capacity must be 
destroyed. 
 
---------------- 
"HARM" REDUCTION 
---------------- 
 
22. (C) Director Walters noted that U.S. and EU views 
coincided considerably on drug supply issues, but more often 
differed on demand side issues.  Everyone wants to reduce the 
"harm" caused by drug use.  U.S. officials have tried to 
advance scientific understanding of drug abuse as a 
"disease."  Advocates of needle exchanges seek to reduce 
transmission of blood-borne illnesses, but such efforts often 
become an alternative to drug treatment and build on public 
cynicism that exchanging needles is the best that we can do 
for some drug users.  The U.S. does not want to give up on 
drug users.  Getting users to quit intravenous drug use is 
the best prevention.  Addicts often engage in other 
inherently unhealthy activities, such as prostitution, to 
support their habits.  Authorities must encourage screening 
and build such measures into their health care system. 
Initially, some opposed screening, but without screening, 
authorities cannot obtain accurate data on the extent of the 
drug problem, especially when part of the drug addict's 
problem involves denial. 
 
23. (C) Head of Unit Edwards pointed to EU efforts at the 
March session of the Commission on Narcotics Drugs to gain 
approval of the resolution on screening.   He admitted that 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  009 OF 010 
 
 
some skepticism remains regarding this idea.  Doctors already 
conduct screening, but methodological indicators are missing. 
  Walters said screening helps to peel away some of the lack 
of information regarding drug use.  Screening identifies 
persons who need counseling and treatment, even if outward 
appearances seem otherwise.  Yet, persistent drug use causes 
chemical imbalances in the brain over time.  The prevalent 
view in the U.S. is that users often "hit bottom" before 
seeking treatment.  Screening permits referrals to drug 
treatment at earlier stages.  Ultimately, users seek 
treatment because they are compelled -- whether by the 
insistence of relatives or by direction of the courts. 
 
 
--------------                 . 
MEDIA OUTREACH 
-------------- 
 
24. (U) During his visit, Director Walters conducted 
interviews at the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) 
studios and participated in a media roundtable at the Mission 
with journalists.  He provided a detailed overview of U.S. 
domestic efforts against drugs, including successes in 
reducing demand for drugs.  Cocaine use and availability have 
dropped significantly.  Workplace testing shows a decline of 
20 percent in cocaine use alone.  He also provided 
comprehensive information on drug developments around the 
globe.  He raised U.S. concerns with Venezuela's troublesome 
role in international drug trafficking.  He expressed 
disappointment over the decision by the U.S. Congress to 
avoid a vote on the Free Trade Agreement with Colombia, which 
has shown great strides in fighting drugs and in 
strengthening human rights.  In Afghanistan, growth in drug 
cultivation in the south has produced a net increase in 
overall cultivation, and violence has hampered efforts to 
enhance law enforcement capabilities and economic 
development.  No other nation has faced the same extent of 
drug problems, poverty, and terrorism.  Director Walters 
expressed appreciation for international commitment of 
resources, training, and financial development to address 
these challenges in Afghanistan, but much more needs to be 
done.  Director Walters than responded to numerous questions 
from the journalists. 
 
----------------------------------------- 
DEA BRIEFING ON DRUG TRENDS AND ATTITUDES 
----------------------------------------- 
 
25. (C) Mission DEA Assistant Regional Director (ARD) and 
Embassy Country Attache (provided briefings on the drug flows 
to Europe and European attitudes towards the drug threat. 
Mission ARD noted that his office has responsibility for much 
of Europe and Africa encompassing six regions and 63 
personnel.  Embassy Attache said his office of three persons 
covers activities in Belgium and Luxembourg.  Substances of 
primary interest involve heroin, cocaine, and precursors. 
Director Walters, who had just visited Lisbon, noted 
Portuguese concern over drug shipments from Africa, even 
though seizures had actually declined during the past year. 
He inquired about attitudes by other EU nations.  Mission ARD 
said Spain and Portugal have shown the most concern, but 
other Europeans seem to be gaining more awareness of the drug 
threat.  INL Counselor said the Portuguese expressed serious 
concern over the flow of drugs from Latin America through 
Africa to Europe during their recent Council Presidency. 
Similarly, the Slovenians have expressed concern over 
criminal activities, including drug flows, from the Balkans. 
Mission ARD noted that the vast majority of heroin from 
Southwest Asia appears destined for Europe.  Precursor 
chemicals used in Afghanistan appear to originate mainly in 
China and India.  Fifty percent of the heroin seized in 
Canada appears to be of Afghan origin, with ninety percent 
going through Europe to Canada.  DEA suggested possible use 
of extraditions.  Director Walters remarked that he believed 
the British would not attempt extraditions.  DEA concurred, 
noting that they would encounter difficulty using 
 
BRUSSELS 00000962  010 OF 010 
 
 
intelligence from wiretaps as evidence in British courts. 
Under the "African Frontier" pilot project, DEA scoured 
records to identify several high-value drug informants in 
Africa and will be working jointly with European counterparts. 
 
26. (C) Embassy Attache estimated that 30 tons of heroin 
entered the Benelux (Belgium, The Netherlands, and 
Luxembourg) last year, with Belgian authorities seizing at 
least four tons.  Anecdotally, heroin consumption appears to 
be worsening in Belgium, but criminal laws provide lenient 
sentences for drug trafficking -- only two to four years in 
prison, compared with 20 years in the States.   ARD remarked 
that EU Member States tend to treat drug use more as a health 
problem than a law enforcement issue.  Authorities are 
attempting to investigate drug money flows.  Considerable 
"hawala" activity occurs in Antwerp, with police looking at 
52 targets there alone.  Antwerp's status as a major port and 
center for the diamond trade make it an attractive location. 
 He heard that traffickers were exchanging heroin for 
ecstasy. 
 
------- 
COMMENT 
------- 
 
27. (C) Director Walters' visit produced a valuable exchange 
of views on counter-drug issues of interest to both the U.S. 
and the EU.  The Director engaged in productive discussions 
with both EU counterparts and the media to increase awareness 
of the serious drug threats confronting Europe, including the 
flow of cocaine from Latin America and of heroin from 
Afghanistan.  He sought to dispel the widespread stereotype 
of U.S. drug programs focusing exclusively on the 
incarceration of drug users.  A major mystery that both sides 
have yet to answer effectively involves the destination of 
opium products and drug proceeds from Afghanistan.   END 
COMMENT. 
 
28. (U) ONDCP has cleared this telegram. 
 
MURRAY 
.