Drugs

Must Read

WOLA-BFDPP: At a Crossroads: Drug Trafficking, Violence And The Mexican State

Authors: Maureen Meyer and Dave Bewley-Taylor

This document provides an overview of current and past drug policies implemented by Mexican government. It also analyzes the trends in the increased reliance on the Mexican armed forces in counter-drug activities and the role that the U.S. government has played in shaping Mexico's counter-drug efforts.

Maureen Meyer, with contributions from Coletta Youngers and Dave Bewley-Taylor

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Online Debate

U.S.-Mexico Security Cooperation

Armand Peschard-Sverdrup, senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and Jorge Chabat, professor at Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE) in Mexico City, debate what an ideal security cooperation agreement would look like between the United States and Mexico.

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Must Read

RFE: Afghanistan: Multipronged Drug-Eradication Effort Set For Helmand

Author: Ahto Lobjakas

Transcript of an interview by Radio Free Europe with Mark Norton, first secretary for counternarcotics at the British Embassy in Afghanistan, focussing on the coming poppy-eradication campaign in southern Helmand Province—targeting roughly one-tenth of the opium-poppy crops that provide about half of the heroin that reaches Europe. NATO forces will support the effort, which includes about 600 Afghan and auxiliary police, along with a force assembled by Helmand Governor Assadullah Wafa.

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Must Read

IWPR: Afghan Opium: A Failed Jihad?

Authors: Jean MacKenzie, Wahidullah Amani, and Sayed Yaqub Ibrahimi

This report the Institute for War and Peace Reporting argues that corruption, lack of security, and poor coordination will combine to torpedo the counter-narcotics effort in Afghanistan.

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Analysis Brief

Colombia's 'Drugs and Thugs'

Under President Alvaro Uribe's "democratic security" initiative, data suggests security in Colombia has improved significantly. But the country remains the world's biggest producer of cocaine, the rebel group FARC controls many rural areas, and paramilitaries show signs of regrouping.

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