Life of a Scandal

By Peter Kornbluh

This article appeared in the September 20, 1999 edition of The Nation.

September 2, 1999

In mid-October 1996, two months after the publication of Gary Webb's series "Dark Alliance" in the San Jose Mercury News, an extraordinary town meeting took place in Compton, California, one of the South Central neighborhoods of LA ravaged by the crack epidemic. A daylong series of panels, convened by Representative Juanita Millender-McDonald, examined many of the critical issues related to drug use and abuse--the human casualties of crack-related crime, gang operations, sentencing inequities, police corruption and, of course, the brewing CIA-contra-cocaine scandal.

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One witness could not be physically present. The voice of "Freeway" Ricky Ross, serving life without parole for his activities as LA's most renowned crack dealer in the eighties, was piped in over the loudspeakers. Ross, who received some of his coke from a Nicaraguan trafficker whom Webb identified as a CIA-backed contra, clearly had the sympathy of the 800 people who filled the audience. When he told Representative Millender-McDonald that Ronald Reagan and George Bush "deserve to be in jail with me," the crowd cheered its approval.

The surreal nature of Ross's participation in this forum--the man whom the Los Angeles Times once called "the one outlaw capitalist most responsible for flooding Los Angeles streets with mass-marketed cocaine" being hailed as a victim rather than the foremost victimizer--illustrates at least a temporary distortion in the debate over drug policy that Michael Massing attributes to the CIA-trafficking scandal. In this case, the focus and outrage of the audience was directed away from the criminal damage wrought by a member of the community and toward the amorphous specter of CIA and US government misconduct. Across the country, immediately following the publication of the "Dark Alliance" series, thousands of activists, community leaders and citizens vented their rage at the CIA's "responsibility" for drugs flowing into the inner cities.

But the agenda of those who helped to expose this scandal was to highlight the government's criminal abuse of power and gross distortion of social and political priorities during the cold war--not to find a solution to the scourge of drugs in our society. By suggesting that they constitute a "main school" of thought on drug reform, or even a "tendency" on the left, Massing is creating a straw-man argument--itself a diversion in the drug debate.

With one exception, the main writings and reports on the reprehensible merging of covert operations and drug trafficking during the CIA's Third World wars have never offered prescriptions for drug policy. The Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism, Narcotics and International Operations, led by Senator John Kerry, documented government knowledge of and tolerance for drug smuggling under the guise of national security; Gary Webb's book (drawn from his series) is a journalistic account of the CIA-backed contras, cocaine smuggling and corruption and competition among law-enforcement agencies in California; the Alexander Cockburn/Jeffrey St. Clair book, Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press, was about just what its title suggests.

Only Alfred McCoy, in his seminal work The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade, concluded with policy analysis and recommendations to confront the crisis. Contrary to Massing's argument that, for the CIA-crack "tendency," "the solution consists in cracking down on producers, processors and smugglers," McCoy writes: "Simply put, narcotics are major global commodities resistant to any attempt at localized suppression. As long as the demand for drugs in the cities of the First World continues to grow, Third World producers will find a way to supply their markets." He agrees with Massing that legalization would expand drug use and abuse, particularly among teenagers. His "middle ground" solution, worth considering in the context of this discussion, is "regulation"--a combination of emphasizing (1) treatment and education to reduce demand, (2) short-term interdiction to reduce but not eliminate shipments bound for the United States, (3) multilateral efforts through the UN aimed at reducing global supply and (4) barring CIA protection of drug smugglers in the name of covert operations.

About Peter Kornbluh

Peter Kornbluh directs the Cuba Documentation Project and the Chile Documentation Project at the National Security Archive (www.nsarchive.org), a public interest research center located at George Washington University (Washington, DC). He is co-author of The Iran-Contra Scandal: The Declassified History (New Press) and author of a new book, The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability (New Press).

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