Synopsis
Discusses how governments from around the world, including Bulgaria, Cuba, Nicaragua, Syria and others, have, over the last 25 years, initiated, developed and in some cases virtually dominated the drug business to finance terrorist activities. The author of this book bases her research and findings around the point that unless we recognise the geo-political aspects of the situation, the drug problem will be fought on the wrong fronts in the wrong way and with little chance of victory.
Reviews
Ehrenfeld contends that Soviet client states and various terrorist organizations are the world's dominant narco-terrorists, using the ill-gotten gains of drug trafficking to undermine democracies. Judging by the evidence she assembles, Castro has used narcotics profits to arm Colombian and Nicaraguan guerrillas; Bulgaria peddles heroin to supply weapons to the PLO; drugs, Lebanon's "single most important export," fuel that country's warring factions; and Peru, the world's leading producer of coca, may soon be subverted from within by drug pushers. Syria, the Sandinistas, Bolivia and the PLO are among the leading narco-terrorists identified in a stunning expose. Ehrenfeld, a criminologist at New York University School of Law, looks at the conflict between Jamaican drug gangs and the white Mafia in the U.S. Excoriating both the American left and right for failing to deal adequately with the drug epidemic, she raises important issues that many liberals and conservatives alike prefer to ignore.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Communism as a force in history may be dead, but the conspiracy theory lives on. Ehrenfeld levitates the latest bogeyman: the international drug trade in the service of the evil Russian empire. The author claims Marxist- and Leninist-oriented regimes, in collaboration with terrorist groups, have initiated, developed, and nearly totally dominated this particularly dirty business. Ehrenfeld's thesis is based on little original research and totally on material in the public domain. More polemical than scholarly, this book should be purchased only by those librarians building exhaustive collections on the international drug trade.
- Ron Chepesiuk, Winthrop Coll. Archives, Rock Hill, S.C.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.