Skip navigation

U.S. drug czar: Cocaine flow interrupted

Official: Disruptions increase price 44 percent; critics disagree with findings

Video: Life  
Wounded vets get back into the swing
  July 10: Making a Difference: Iraq war veteran Tim Bombke lost his lower right leg in the line of duty, but that didn’t prevent him from taking up golf at the American Lakes Veteran’s course, where wounded vets are linking up and readjusting to life at home. NBC’s Chris Jansing reports.

Text alerts on msnbc.com

Breaking news alerts (about 1 per day)
Click here to sign up or text NEWS to MSNBC (67622).

Find more alerts at alerts.msnbc.com

  Photo features  
  More
Image: British forces in Afghanistan's Helmand province.
The New York Times via Redux Pic
  The Week in Pictures
Vibrant fields of sunflowers, a high-rescue drama and Michael Jackson memories are among this week’s attention-grabbing images.
AP
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
updated 3:54 p.m. ET Nov. 8, 2007

BOGOTA, Colombia - American-backed counter-narcotic programs in Colombia and Mexico are disrupting the flow of cocaine into the United States, driving up prices 44 percent on U.S. streets this year, the White House drug czar said Thursday.

John Walters told reporters that the average price per pure gram of cocaine rose 44 percent to $136.93 between January and September. He said the jump, detected in 37 cities, was accompanied by a 15 percent decline in the average purity of cocaine, another key indicator of supply.

“We’ve never had disruptions of this magnitude before,” Walters said in Bogota, where he’s on a two-day visit with Drug Enforcement Agency chief Karen Tandy to show support for Colombia’s anti-narcotics strategy.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Drug policy analysts disputed Walters’ upbeat appraisal as possibly unfounded. A Justice Department drug intelligence report released Wednesday indicates prices since July may already be returning to earlier levels in some markets.

“The increase (Walters) is claiming is decent-sized, but it’s not unprecedented and history shows that those price spikes reverse quite quickly,” said John Walsh, a drug policy expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, which has criticized the anti-drugs strategy.

Production of coca continues to rise
Despite a record eradication campaign that’s been at the heart of $5 billion in American foreign aid to Colombia since 2000, production of coca — the base ingredient of cocaine — continues to rise, the latest White House survey found.

Colombia supplies 90 percent of America’s cocaine.

But Walters said he believes the price increases can be sustained.

“Nine months isn’t temporary in my view,” he said. “At some point to say this just a blip gets a little harder to argue.”

Key lawmakers have slammed Walters in the past for touting the drug war’s achievements.

Last year Sen. Charles Grassley, a Republican from Iowa who then chaired the Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control, called for President Bush to fire Walters for “cooking the books” and celebrating in November 2005 a 19 percent, six-month price hike that was later reversed.

Shortage could be short lived
This year’s apparent shortage could prove to be just as short-lived, the 2008 National Drug Threat Assessment found.

Even while acknowledging previously announced shortages during the first half of the year, the report prepared by the Justice Department’s drug intelligence center found “cocaine availability may already be returning to previous levels in some areas.”

The report did not say which markets were being replenished or how quickly, only that the shortage observed between January and June “was not the result of decrease in cocaine production.”

More likely, it was the result of a crackdown on prominent Mexican traffickers, violent feuding among that country’s cartels and surging demand for cocaine in Europe.

“Because cocaine production in South America appears to be stable or increasing, cocaine availability could return to normal levels during late 2007 and early 2008,” the report states.

The Justice Department report echoes the findings of another study presented to Congress on Oct. 25 by the Government Accountability Office.

“Nobody believes there’s not enough drugs in the system to satisfy global demand,” Jess Ford, author of the GAO study partly based on the most recent government data, told The Associated Press.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Online College Courses
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide