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The Politics Of Heroin : Cia Complicity In The ... -

Upon its initial 1972 release, the CIA attempted to suppress the book's publication by pressuring the publisher, Harper & Row, to allow the Agency to review and "correct" the manuscript. The publisher eventually proceeded after McCoy refused to make significant changes.

McCoy argues that CIA complicity was rarely a matter of agents directly selling drugs. Instead, it was a "coincidental complicity" where the Agency allied with local warlords, political leaders, and criminal syndicates who used the drug trade to finance their own activities. In exchange for their anti-communist loyalty, the CIA provided these allies with: The politics of heroin : CIA complicity in the ...

The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade is a seminal work by historian that explores the intersection of U.S. foreign policy, covert operations, and the global narcotics trade. First published in 1972 as The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia , the book was the first to provide meticulous documentation of how the CIA and other U.S. government entities facilitated drug trafficking to achieve Cold War geopolitical goals. Core Argument: Strategic Complicity Upon its initial 1972 release, the CIA attempted

During the Vietnam War, the CIA supported Hmong tribesmen in Laos and South Vietnamese officials who were heavily involved in the opium trade. This led to a heroin epidemic among U.S. soldiers serving in Vietnam, with estimates suggesting up to 15% were users by 1971. Instead, it was a "coincidental complicity" where the

Covert funds were sometimes funneled to paramilitary groups deeply embedded in opium production. Key Geographical Focus Areas

The work also connects U.S. policy in Colombia and the Contra war in Nicaragua to the growth of regional cocaine and heroin markets. Controversy and Legacy

Using CIA-owned airlines like Air America to transport opium from remote mountainous regions to refineries.

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