List Price

$32.95

Textbook Details

  • EDITION:
    1st Edition
  • ISBN:
    1556524838
  • ISBN-13:
    9781556524837
  • PUB. DATE:
    April 2003
  • PUBLISHER:
    Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Advertisement

The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade / Edition 1 by Alfred W. McCoy

$32.95 List Price
  • Overview
  • EditorialReviews
  • CustomerReviews
  • marketplace

Customer Reviews

The Poltics of the CIAby niafong

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

I have just read the greatest book on American foreign policy. I say that usually with great reservations as their are many great foreign policy shows I have read, but this one makes the other ones pale in comparison as it shows the dirty backstabbing of the CIA, the Corsicans, Chi Chau syndicates and Taiwanese proxy armies. It is amazing the agendas that come around the epochal history of opium...

Overview -

The Politics of Heroin

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: April 2003
  • Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
  • Sales Rank: 242,965

Synopsis

The first book to prove CIA and U.S. government complicity in global drug trafficking, The Politics of Heroin includes meticulous documentation of dishonesty and dirty dealings at the highest levels from the Cold War until today. Maintaining a global perspective, this groundbreaking study details the mechanics of drug trafficking in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and South and Central America. New chapters detail U.S. involvement in the narcotics trade in Afghanistan and Pakistan before and after the fall of the Taliban, and how U.S. drug policy in Central America and Colombia has increased the global supply of illicit drugs.

Author Biography: Alfred W. McCoy is a professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He holds a doctorate in southeast Asian history from Yale University and is the recipient of the 2001 Goodman Prize from the Association for Asian Studies. He lives in Madison, Wisconsin.

Publishers Weekly

Nearly 20 years ago, McCoy wrote The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia , which stirred up considerable controversy, alleging that the CIA was intimately involved in the Vietnamese opium trade. In the current volume, a substantially updated and longer work, he argues that the situation basically hasn't changed over the past two decades; however the numbers have gotten bigger. McCoy writes, ``Although the drug pandemic of the 1980s had complex causes, the growth in global heroin supply could be traced in large part to two key aspects of U.S. policy: the failure of the DEA's interdiction efforts and the CIA's covert operations.'' He readily admits that the CIA's role in the heroin trade was an ``inadvertent'' byproduct of ``its cold war tactics,'' but he limns convincingly the path by which the agency and its forebears helped Corsican and Sicilian mobsters reestablish the heroin trade after WW II and, most recently, ``transformed southern Asia from a self-contained opium zone into a major supplier of heroin.'' Scrupulously documented, almost numbingly so at times, this is a valuable corrective to the misinformation being peddled by anti-drug zealots on both sides of the aisle. First serial to the Progressive. (July)

More Reviews and Recommendations