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Bolivia: Drug Enforcement Administration Unwelcome Despite Normalization Of U.S.-Bolivia Diplomatic Relations

Bolivia Vice President Drug Enforcement Administra

VIVIAN SEQUERA   11/ 8/11 10:12 PM ET   AP

BOGOTA, Colombia — Bolivian President Evo Morales said Tuesday that U.S. drug agents are not welcome back in his country despite the newly announced normalization of diplomatic relations with Washington.

Morales told reporters during a regional summit in the Colombian capital that it is a question of "dignity and sovereignty."

As a coca growers' union leader before his 2005 election, Morales added, he was "personally a victim" because U.S agents controlled Bolivia's military and police.

Bolivia's anti-narcotics police, working closely with the Drug Enforcement Administration, often clashed with coca growers and Morales has said they once beat him unconscious.

"They repressed us in Bolivia. That has ended," Morales said.

"For the first time since Bolivia was founded, the United States will now respect Bolivia's rules" and laws, he added, under the agreement restoring full diplomatic ties that Bolivia and Washington signed Monday.

It comes three years after the Andean nation's leftist government expelled the U.S. ambassador and DEA for allegedly inciting the opposition.

The pact calls for the restoration of ambassadors as soon as possible and close cooperation in counternarcotics, trade and development, said a U.S. official familiar with the agreement. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the subject's sensitivity.

Morales said Tuesday that he still considers the ambassador he expelled in September 2008, Philip Goldberg, to have been "a conspirator." Less than two months later, he ejected the DEA.

The U.S. government denies the Bolivian government's allegations that Goldberg schemed with lowlands agrobusinessmen to unseat Morales, an Aymara Indian raised poor in the country's poor, windswept highlands.

Bolivia is the world's No. 3 producer of cocaine. Drug control officials say cocaine production has been on the rise there since the DEA was expelled with Mexican and Colombian traffickers moving in and building ever more sophisticated processing labs.

That, despite limited growth in the country's coca crop, which the U.N. says only grew by 0.3 percent last year to 31,000 hectares (120 square miles).

The agreement normalizing relations does not address the issue of restoring trade preferences with the United States, which Washington suspended in December 2008 and which Bolivian officials said cost them thousands of jobs and millions of dollars.

The tariff exemptions have allowed the region's cocaine-producing nations – Peru, Bolivia and Colombia – to export thousands of products to the United States duty-free since 1991 as an incentive for trying to wean peasants off coca.

Analyst Kathryn Ledebur of the Andean Information Center said the normalization of relations "doesn't represent the end of friction between the U.S. and Bolivia, but it does create a new diplomatic framework to attempt to resolve (it)."

Washington continues to be without an ambassador in Venezuela, whose President Hugo Chavez is a close ally of Morales' Bolivia.

____

Associated Press Writers Frank Bajak in Lima, Peru, and Carlos Valdez in La Paz, Bolivia, contributed to this report.

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02:15 PM on 11/17/2011
MANDATORY RANDOM DRUG TEST FOR EVERY DEA AGENT, and DOJ, and every G*%#DAMN
POLITICIAN.
02:12 PM on 11/17/2011
DEA: one of the biggest aggregate collection of corrupt, lying, hypocrites in the nation.

I SAY MANDATORY RANDOM DRUG TESTING FOR EVERY AGENT.

They should also have to watch "REEFER MADNESS" in it's entirety.
06:39 PM on 11/09/2011
The coca leaf is not cocaine..it has been used since the dawn of time by Native Americans of the Andean Region. It is something sacred to the Aymara, Quechua and other Indian tribes in that region. It is regarded to be the "face of mother earth" or "pachamama" as my Aymara History professor once told me.
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homerc85
03:37 PM on 11/09/2011
zx
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philliplojek
Irritating liberals one at a time.
01:12 PM on 11/09/2011
Bolivia is just holding out for a few billion in aid.
03:33 PM on 11/09/2011
If that's what Bolivia has to do. I believe these so called drug agents to more like spies from the CIA than drug agents anyway.
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Linda Stare
Your post collapsed by the community.
08:41 PM on 11/09/2011
Exactly. And wasting our tax dollars while they're at it.
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seawarriorteam
12:10 PM on 11/09/2011
Who would want to go there. The weather must be horrible, after all, they are knee deep in snow.
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Linda Stare
Your post collapsed by the community.
04:32 PM on 11/09/2011
In Bolivia's southeast is the Chaco Desert; southwestern Bolivia is where the great Siloli Desert is located, and the world's largest salt flat: the Salar de Uyuni. In central Bolivia at near 12,000 feet--where practically nothing can grow--is the Altiplano-Puna plateau. Like anywhere else in the world where there are the high elevations of mountains, climate and temperatures vary drastically within such a short distance from one locale to the other; the same is true with Bolivia. It's Bolivia's Amazon Basin, low mountains and valleys, that are more temperate and humid, with less dramatic temperature changes and an abundance of subtropical plants and greenery. But yet, even in this region, freezing temperatures are possible overnight in the austral winter (May-Oct.) as the "surazo" (an unpredictable cold wind that blows northward from Patagonia and Argentina's pampas) affects this part of the Amazon Basin and dries out the very warm, humid air, much like when colder, drier air invades South Florida during the winter in the U.S.

http://www.ehow.com/list_6117906_deserts-bolivia.html
http://www.boliviahostels.com/Weathers_Bolivia.html
http://www.weatherpages.com/rainshadow/
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Linda Stare
Your post collapsed by the community.
04:33 PM on 11/09/2011
Actually, it's only the very highest of peaks in Bolivia that MAY get "knee deep in snow." Remember, this is a nation totally within the tropics: snow melts fast and much of Bolivia is actually a desert, as my sources below illustrate. And to Bolivia's west is the offshore Humboldt Current over the Pacific which blows northward from Antarctica and is an extremely arid current which contributes to severe aridity in the Atacama Desert regions of Chile, Peru, and Bolivia (the driest region of the world with some areas not ever receiving any rain or snowfall in over a decade). The Humboldt Current, along with the rain shadow effect of the lofty Andes Mountain Range, contributes further to such neglible snowfall even atop Bolivia's highest mountain peaks.
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seawarriorteam
04:52 PM on 11/09/2011
Thanks for the wealth of information Linda but I must have failed trying to be witty using the word "snow" as in "blow" as in cocaine for humor ;)
11:56 AM on 11/09/2011
Trying to "wean the peasants off of coca," so they can sell their child-manufactured sneakers and garments for pennies, rather than coca or cocaine for real dollars?

At least it's a positive and far less expensive solution than internationalized militarized law enforcement. But ending the futile, astronomicall costly, and often tragic "War on Drugs" and removing the criminalized status of all intoxicants other than our U.S. seal-of-approval dangerous, addicitve drug of choice - ethanol - would make far better sense.
11:19 AM on 11/09/2011
Lets see, we have a country that's number one export is drugs, and they will not allow our drug enforcement in to their country, hmmmmmmmmmmmm ya think?
10:42 AM on 11/09/2011
The nerve what do you mean we can't come down their and impose our bs laws on U .
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Al Kero
Born free...think free
10:33 AM on 11/09/2011
They're just spoil sports because Butch and Sundance use to rob their banks. They should get over it.
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manfrommars
space blogger from afar
10:32 AM on 11/09/2011
Didn't Bush declare "Mission Accomplished " on the drug war years ago? Or was that Reagen?
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manfrommars
space blogger from afar
10:29 AM on 11/09/2011
usda - the kiss of death!
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snapper123
Blah blah woof woof
10:27 AM on 11/09/2011
The United States should buy all the coca leaves from the farmers and burn them. The farmers win, the cartels lose. Americans will have to pay more and accept lesser quality for Columbian cocaine.
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10:41 AM on 11/09/2011
Why burn such a good thing, it's great for "medicinal purposes."
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Linda Stare
Your post collapsed by the community.
01:22 PM on 11/09/2011
Traditional medicines of coca are foremost as a stimulant to overcome fatigue, hunger,
and thirst . . . considered particularly effective against altitude sickness . . . used as an
anesthetic to alleviate pain of headaches, rheumatism, wounds and sores, etc. . . . also
used for broken bones, childbirth, and during trephining operations on the skull [as well as]
. . . for nose bleeds. Indigenous use of coca has also been reported as a treatment for
malaria, ulcers, asthma, to improve digestion, . . . bowel laxity, as an aphrodisiac and
credited with improving longevity.

So it does not surprise me that Bolivian President Evo Morales rightfully told the DEA and the U.S. to butt-out of Bolivian affairs. It's high time that the United States and Britain stop treating Latin and indigenous, Central and South Americans, like naughty little children, violating the sovereignty of their republics, while hypocritically making their social problems Central and South America's social problems.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coca
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snapper123
Blah blah woof woof
01:41 PM on 11/09/2011
Cocaine is one of the worlds most addictive drugs. It is also a much abused drug. I agree that the US needs to butt out of other countries matters.
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snapper123
Blah blah woof woof
01:41 PM on 11/09/2011
My sister visited Peru recently and said that the coca leaves were readily available. I asked her if she saw cocaine for sale and she said no.
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llozano
Live and let live...
10:20 AM on 11/09/2011
So the world's police is not welcome in Bolivia? Why don't we let Bolivia open an army base in the U.S.? Tit for tat sounds good to me. Same for any other country we have troops in. Our military presence in other countries has been an excuse to meddle in the their politics in the past. Why should they trust us now?
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Linda Stare
Your post collapsed by the community.
03:25 PM on 11/09/2011
FAVED!
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snapper123
Blah blah woof woof
08:05 PM on 11/10/2011
I like your post. At this time I am reading a book called Down By The River about how the Mexican Cartels have grown. Although I have only finished half of the book I can see where it is going. The Mexican politicians are greedy and want their share of revenue. Ulitimately the US government can use this bribery to control or influence the politicians to do things that favor our foreign policy.
09:22 PM on 11/09/2011
I wish we could get rid of the DEA in Canada.
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10:17 AM on 11/09/2011
Pot is the most evil drug out there. many more people are smoking pot than using cocaine, the DEA should use all of their resources to stop the pot from coming into the country. it is destroying america, not heroin, cocaine, alcohol, or prescription medications, its pot! Please do all you can to stop this scourge from ruining america