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The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia

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The book demonstrates the complicity of the CIA and the US government in the global drug trade. There was once a war called Prohibition, during which alcohol was officially banned, leading to the rise of the Mafia in America. It became a huge illegal business. The war on drugs, which the US continues to pursue worldwide despite the failure of this earlier experiment, has had not only similar but even worse consequences. In his classic work on the entanglement of the CIA and politics in international drug trafficking, Alfred W. McCoy masterfully recounts how drugs transformed from a private matter into a gigantic business, aided by politicians and intelligence agencies. From the Opium Wars in China to Vietnam, Europe, Afghanistan, Mexico, and the USA: everywhere, the enormous profit margins of the drug trade, made possible by aggressive prohibition policies, serve as a lubricant for corruption and abuse of power. McCoy shows that victims of all kinds testify to how the puritanical dream of a drug-free world became a nightmare for many, as it plays into the dark intentions of the powerful.

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The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia, Alfred W. McCoy

Langue
Année de publication
1972
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Titre
The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
Harper & Row
Publié
1972
Format
rigide
Séries
Titre original
The politics of heroin
Description
The book demonstrates the complicity of the CIA and the US government in the global drug trade. There was once a war called Prohibition, during which alcohol was officially banned, leading to the rise of the Mafia in America. It became a huge illegal business. The war on drugs, which the US continues to pursue worldwide despite the failure of this earlier experiment, has had not only similar but even worse consequences. In his classic work on the entanglement of the CIA and politics in international drug trafficking, Alfred W. McCoy masterfully recounts how drugs transformed from a private matter into a gigantic business, aided by politicians and intelligence agencies. From the Opium Wars in China to Vietnam, Europe, Afghanistan, Mexico, and the USA: everywhere, the enormous profit margins of the drug trade, made possible by aggressive prohibition policies, serve as a lubricant for corruption and abuse of power. McCoy shows that victims of all kinds testify to how the puritanical dream of a drug-free world became a nightmare for many, as it plays into the dark intentions of the powerful.