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entitled 'Drug Control: Cooperation with Many Major Drug Transit 
Countries Has Improved, but Better Performance Reporting and 
Sustainability Plans Are Needed' which was released on August 14, 2008.

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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

July 2008: 

Drug Control: 

Cooperation with Many Major Drug Transit Countries Has Improved, but 
Better Performance Reporting and Sustainability Plans Are Needed: 

GAO-08-784: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-08-784, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Each year, criminal organizations transport hundreds of tons of illegal 
drugs from South America to the United States through a 6 million 
square mile “transit zone” including Central America, the Caribbean, 
the Gulf of Mexico, and the eastern Pacific Ocean. Since fiscal year 
2003, the United States has provided over $950 million to support 
counternarcotics efforts in transit zone countries, which historically 
lacked the capacity to interdict drugs. GAO was asked to examine (1) 
how the United States has assisted transit zone countries in disrupting 
drug trafficking and (2) what factors have impeded these efforts. GAO 
analyzed relevant data, met with U.S. and foreign officials, and 
visited selected countries. 

What GAO Found: 

U.S. government assistance has improved international counternarcotics 
cooperation with the eight major drug transit countries GAO reviewed, 
except Venezuela. First, assistance programs have helped partner 
nations gather, process, and share information and intelligence leading 
to arrests and drug seizures. Second, they have enabled these nations 
to participate in counternarcotics operations—both at sea and on 
land—by providing assets (such as interceptor boats and vehicles), 
logistical support, and training for police units. Third, U.S. 
assistance has helped strengthen the capacity of prosecutors to work 
more effectively on drug-related cases. Assessing the impact of such a 
wide variety of programs is difficult because some are indirectly 
related to drug interdiction, and because results reporting has been 
limited and inconsistent. 
 

Despite gains in international cooperation, several factors, including 
resource limitations and lack of political will, have impeded U.S. 
progress in helping governments become full and self-sustaining 
partners in the counternarcotics effort—a goal of U.S. assistance. 
These countries have limited resources to devote to this effort, and 
many initiatives are dependent on U.S. support. Programs to build 
maritime interdiction capacity have been particularly affected, as 
partner nations lack fuel and other resources needed to operate and 
maintain U.S.-provided boats. Limited political support, particularly 
in Venezuela, and corruption have also hindered U.S. counternarcotics 
efforts. In addition, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has 
implemented a Container Security Initiative (CSI) that targets and 
scans containers for weapons of mass destruction and terrorist 
contraband. But CSI has not routinely been used for illicit drug 
detection, despite its applicability for this purpose. 

Figure: Major Drug Transit Countries in the Transit Zone and Principal 
Cocaine Vectors to the United States: 

[See PDF for image] 

This figure contains a map depicting major drug transit countries in 
the transit zone and principal cocaine vectors to the United States, as 
follows: 

Major drug transit countries (except Mexico): 
Bahamas; 
Dominican Republic; 
Ecuador; 
Guatemala; 
Haiti; 
Jamaica; 
Panama; 
Venezuela. 

Central American Corridor: 90% of traffic. 
Caribbean Corridor: 10% of traffic. 

Source: GAO based on a similar map in ONDCP's 2007 Interagency 
Assessment of Cocaine Movement; Nova Development (map). 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that State (1) report more comprehensively and 
consistently on the results of U.S. initiatives and (2) develop plans 
for sustaining U.S.-provided assets. State partially disagreed. GAO 
modified the first recommendation to emphasize reporting results rather 
than developing performance measures; however, GAO believes that plans 
are needed for sustaining U.S.-provided assets. GAO also recommends 
that DHS determine the feasibility of expanding its Container Security 
Initiative (CSI) to target and scan containers for illicit drugs. DHS 
disagreed, indicating that drug interdiction is not in CSI’s mandate. 
GAO notes that CSI’s 2006-2011 Strategic Plan envisions potential 
expansion to detect drugs and examining the feasibility of doing so 
would be a logical first step. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-784]. For more 
information, contact Jess Ford at (202) 512-4268 or fordj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Overall, U.S. Assistance Has Enhanced International Cooperation in 
Disrupting Illegal Drug Markets: 

Several Factors Impede the Effectiveness of the Counternarcotics 
Efforts: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Counternarcotics Maritime Law Enforcement Agreements: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement 
Administration: 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of State: 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Office of National Drug Control Policy: 

Appendix VII: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: U.S. Agencies' Support for Counternarcotics-Related Activities 
in Transit Zone Countries (Excluding Mexico), Fiscal Years 2003-2007: 

Table 2: U.S.-Supported Counternarcotics Initiatives in Eight Major 
Drug Transit Countries, Fiscal Years 2003-2007: 

Table 3: Estimated Cocaine Flow and Removal within the Transit Zone, 
Fiscal Years 2002-2006: 

Table 4: Transparency International Corruption Perception Index Scores 
for Eight Major Drug Transit Countries (2007): 

Table 5: Counternarcotics Maritime Law Enforcement Agreements with 
Countries in the Transit Zone: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Major Drug Transit Countries and Main Drug-Trafficking 
Vectors through the Transit Zone to the United States: 

Figure 2: U.S.-Provided Maritime Training and Equipment in Panama: 

Figure 3: Training Canines in Ecuador to Detect Drugs in Luggage and on 
Passengers: 

Figure 4: Interceptor Boat Provided to Panama under Defense's Enduring 
Friendship Program: 

Abbreviations: 

CBP: U.S. Customs and Border Protection: 

CPI: Corruption Perception Index (Transparency International): 

CSI: Container Security Initiative: 

DEA: Drug Enforcement Administration: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 

FARC: Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia: 

IACM: Interagency Assessment of Cocaine Movement: 

JIATF-South: Joint Interagency Task Force-South: 

ONDCP: Office of National Drug Control Policy: 

State/INL: State Department's Bureau of International Narcotics and Law 
Enforcement: 

USAID: U.S. Agency for International Development: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 15, 2008: 

The Honorable Charles E. Grassley: 
Co-Chairman: 
Caucus on International Narcotics Control: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Howard L. Berman: 
Chairman: 
Committee on Foreign Affairs: 
House of Representatives: 

The importation of illegal drugs, primarily cocaine, from countries in 
South America, continues to threaten the health and well-being of 
American citizens.[Footnote 1] Criminal drug trafficking organizations 
transport these drugs into the United States through a 6 million square 
mile "transit zone," encompassing Mexico, Central America, the 
Caribbean island nations, the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, and 
the eastern Pacific Ocean. The U.S. Office of National Drug Control 
Policy (ONDCP) reports that these organizations have smuggled between 
about 460 and 1,030 metric tons of cocaine through the transit zone to 
the United States annually since 2003. In recent years, ONDCP has 
reported that about 90 percent of that cocaine has come to the United 
States through Central America and Mexico, while approximately 10 
percent was trafficked through the Caribbean. 

One of the three priorities in the United States' National Drug Control 
Strategy is to disrupt the illicit drug market by eradicating drug 
crops, interdicting illicit drugs in the transit zone, and attacking 
drug trafficking organizations.[Footnote 2] As we have previously 
reported, countries in the transit zone have historically lacked the 
resources and institutional capacity to conduct counternarcotics 
operations.[Footnote 3] As a result, the United States has assisted 
nations in the region to strengthen their law enforcement, judicial, 
military, and other sectors. According to the Department of State's 
(State) International Narcotics Control Strategy Report,[Footnote 4] 
U.S. assistance is intended to help nations become "full and self- 
sustaining partners" in the international counternarcotics effort. 
[Footnote 5] From fiscal year 2003 through fiscal year 2007, the United 
States provided over $950 million to directly or indirectly support 
counternarcotics activities in transit zone countries, excluding 
Mexico. 

As requested, we examined U.S. counternarcotics assistance to selected 
countries in the transit zone since 2003. Specifically, we examined: 
(1) how U.S. agencies have assisted these countries in their efforts to 
disrupt drug trafficking and what results this assistance has yielded, 
and (2) the factors that have impeded counternarcotics efforts in these 
countries. 

To address these objectives, we analyzed program data and documentation 
relating to counternarcotics efforts in eight countries within the 
transit zone designated by the President as major drug transit 
countries--the Bahamas, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, 
Haiti, Jamaica, Panama, and Venezuela--from 2003 through 2007. We did 
not include Mexico because we reported on U.S. counternarcotics 
assistance to that country in 2007.[Footnote 6] We met with U.S. 
government officials from ONDCP; the Departments of Defense (Defense), 
Homeland Security (DHS), Justice (Justice), and State; and the U.S. 
Agency for International Development (USAID). We also met with 
officials at the Joint Interagency Task Force-South and U.S. Southern 
Command in Florida and traveled to four major drug transit countries 
(the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Panama) to meet with 
U.S. embassy officials, host government officials, and local program 
beneficiaries. While in country, we visited a number of project sites 
relating to maritime operations, port security, intelligence gathering, 
drug crop eradication, alternative development, and other activities. 
We also reviewed estimates of illicit drug flow and data on seizures 
and disruptions of drug trafficking operations. We determined that 
these data were sufficiently reliable to provide an overall indication 
of the magnitude and nature of the illicit drug trade and interdiction 
efforts since 2003. 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2007 to July 2008 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those 
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that 
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. See appendix I for a more 
complete discussion of our scope and methodology. 

Results in Brief: 

Since 2003, U.S. agencies, primarily State, Defense, Justice's Drug 
Enforcement Administration (DEA), DHS, and USAID, have undertaken a 
wide variety of efforts, which, overall, have improved international 
cooperation with the eight major drug transit countries we examined, 
except Venezuela. Assistance programs focused on three key areas: (1) 
intelligence-gathering and investigations, (2) maritime and land-based 
operations, and (3) criminal prosecutions. Through these programs, the 
United States has gained access to intelligence, evidence, and drug 
trafficking suspects that it might not otherwise have had to advance 
its counternarcotics activities. 

* Intelligence-gathering and investigations. State's Bureau of 
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), DEA, and 
Defense have helped all the countries we reviewed develop organizations 
and methods for gathering, analyzing, and sharing intelligence and 
information that have led to major arrests and drug seizures. DEA and 
State/INL have established vetted investigative units, staffed by local 
law enforcement officers, in all of the major drug transit countries in 
the region. These units have worked closely with U.S. officials to 
develop successful drug investigations. Justice has also helped 
governments draft legislation to broaden the scope of investigative 
tools available to law enforcement organizations. In addition, Defense 
has funded the installation of a computer network in six major transit 
countries through which participating countries have shared information 
in real time on aircraft and vessels suspected of transporting drugs. 

* Maritime and land-based counternarcotics operations. State/INL, 
Defense, and a variety of U.S. law enforcement agencies, including DEA 
and the Coast Guard, have enabled several partner nations to undertake 
or participate in law enforcement, military, and other counterdrug- 
related operations--both at sea and on land--including seizing drugs, 
weapons, and assets; arresting suspects; disrupting drug shipments; and 
eradicating drug crops. In addition to providing assets, such as boats, 
and logistical support for participation in short-and long-term joint 
maritime operations, the United States and several major drug transit 
countries have implemented maritime law enforcement cooperation 
agreements and procedures providing U.S. forces improved access to 
suspect vessels in international and territorial waters. The United 
States has supported the development of national counternarcotics 
police units in all the countries we reviewed, including special units 
to target drug traffickers at airports, seaports, and transit 
checkpoints. State/INL and Defense have also provided logistical 
support for manual eradication of opium poppy and coca plants in 
Guatemala and Ecuador, respectively. 

* Criminal prosecutions. State/INL and USAID, in cooperation with 
Justice, have supported justice sector reforms intended to make the 
judicial systems in some partner nations more fair, impartial, and 
efficient and have strengthened the capacity of prosecutors to work 
effectively on drug-related cases within those systems. In cases where 
prosecution in the United States is warranted and legal, most partner 
nations have also supported the deportation or extradition of drug- 
related defendants to the United States. 

Measuring the results of such a wide variety of counternarcotics 
initiatives is difficult, especially as some efforts are indirectly 
related to drug interdiction. And while State/INL, DEA, and others have 
reported on some of the results of their programs, they have not done 
so in a comprehensive and consistent manner among partner nations and 
over time. Thus, the effect of particular initiatives is often unclear, 
making it difficult for agency managers to assess progress in achieving 
agency goals, compare the relative effectiveness of their initiatives, 
and make results-based decisions concerning resource allocations. 

We noted several factors relating to U.S. assistance programs that have 
impeded international counternarcotics efforts. In particular, nations' 
limited ability to sustain assistance programs, limited political 
support of U.S.-funded initiatives, as well as corruption have kept 
these nations from becoming full partners in the international 
counternarcotics effort, which, according to State, is a key goal of 
U.S. assistance. 

* Limited ability to sustain programs. Most partner nations in the 
transit zone have limited resources to devote to counternarcotics, and 
many initiatives depend on U.S. support. Programs aimed at building 
maritime interdiction capacity have been particularly affected, as 
partner nations have been unable to use U.S.-provided boats for patrol 
or interdiction operations due to a lack of funding for fuel and 
maintenance. Assistance programs have not always included plans for the 
long-term sustainment of U.S.-provided assets. In 2007, Defense began 
providing new interceptor boats and related equipment to transit zone 
countries under its program Enduring Friendship without such a plan, 
expecting that the countries would continue funding the operations and 
maintenance of the assets after initial U.S.-support ends. 

* Limited political support. Unwillingness to implement 
counternarcotics initiatives for political reasons has also impeded 
cooperative counternarcotics efforts in some countries. This is 
particularly true in Venezuela, which, due to strained relations with 
the United States, has ceased cooperating in U.S. counternarcotics 
initiatives since 2005. 

* Corruption. State and DEA have reported that key law enforcement 
officials in some countries have undermined international 
counternarcotics operations or have been subject to corruption charges. 
This has limited the opportunities to involve those organizations in 
all aspects of planning and executing interdiction operations. 

In addition, U.S. initiatives relating to cargo container security have 
been limited and generally ineffective for the international 
counternarcotics effort. State/INL has funded assistance programs at 
container ports in four of the eight countries we reviewed and, in 
three of those countries, results have been unsatisfactory, according 
to State. DHS has implemented a program overseas as part of its 
Container Security Initiative (CSI) that could have potential for 
greater use in counternarcotics operations. CSI has provided foreign 
ports, including seven in the transit zone, with equipment and 
personnel to target and scan cargo containers for weapons of mass 
destruction and terrorist contraband. However, the program is not used 
routinely to screen for illicit narcotics. DHS officials raised several 
concerns about using CSI for this purpose, including the need for 
additional resources and potential difficulty gaining host country 
agreement, but they have not studied the feasibility of expanding the 
program. 

We are recommending that the Secretary of State, in consultation with 
ONDCP, Defense, DHS, Justice, and USAID, report the results of U.S.- 
funded counternarcotics initiatives for each country more 
comprehensively and consistently in State's annual International 
Narcotics Control Strategy Report. We are also recommending that State 
work with these agencies to develop a plan to ensure that U.S.-provided 
counternarcotics assets in partner nations are operated and maintained 
for the remainder of their useful life, report this plan to the 
Congress, and ensure that agencies providing an asset to partner 
nations determine the operations and maintenance costs over the asset's 
useful life and develop a plan for how these costs would be funded. We 
also recommend that the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation 
with State and Justice, determine the feasibility--by assessing the 
costs, benefits, risks, and other factors--of expanding CSI to include 
routine targeting and scanning of containers for illegal drugs in major 
drug transit countries in the transit zone and report their findings to 
the Congress. 

State, DHS, ONDCP, and Justice/DEA provided written comments on a draft 
of this report. State generally agreed with the report's conclusions, 
but disagreed with our recommendation on results reporting. State noted 
that it has already developed broad performance measures to reflect 
progress in achieving counternarcotics goals and development goals in 
general, though they do not necessarily capture program-specific 
results. We revised our recommendation to emphasize the need for more 
systematic reporting of program-specific results that would link U.S. 
counternarcotics efforts to State's broader performance goals and 
measures. State partially agreed with our recommendation on 
sustainability plans, indicating that its project designs, agreements 
with recipient countries, and monitoring mechanisms are appropriate for 
addressing sustainability concerns. Given past experience, we question 
whether donating assets is justifiable without more discreet 
sustainability planning that gives better assurances that the recipient 
country and participating agencies are committed to funding specified 
operations and maintenance costs. DHS disagreed with our recommendation 
to study the expansion of CSI, noting that the program is mandated to 
address the potential risk of terrorism and acts of terrorism. CSI's 
mandate does not prohibit narcotics interdiction, and we note that the 
program's 2006-2011 Strategic Plan envisions potential expansion to 
address narcotics trafficking, as a factor "known to support 
terrorism." ONDCP strongly concurred with this recommendation and State 
fully supported any consultation needed to implement it. 

Background: 

Virtually all the cocaine destined for the United States originates in 
the Andean countries of Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia and travels through 
the transit zone. The United States provides significant 
counternarcotics assistance toward reducing coca cultivation, 
disrupting cocaine production, and preventing cocaine from reaching the 
United States. Drug traffickers move cocaine and other drugs to the 
United States through two main vectors or "corridors." In recent years, 
approximately 90 percent of cocaine moving toward the United States has 
gone through the Central American/Mexican corridor and then over the 
border to the United States. The remainder, roughly 10 percent, 
transits the Caribbean and enters the United States through Florida, 
Puerto Rico, and other eastern locations. (See fig. 1.) More than 25 
countries lie within the transit zone. The President has designated 
eight of these as "major drug transit countries" based on the estimated 
volume of illicit drugs that pass through their territory each year. 
[Footnote 7] These countries are the Bahamas, the Dominican Republic, 
Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, Jamaica, Panama, and Venezuela.[Footnote 8] 

Figure 1: Major Drug Transit Countries and Main Drug-Trafficking 
Vectors through the Transit Zone to the United States: 

[See PDF for image] 

This figure contains a map depicting major drug transit countries in 
the transit zone and principal cocaine vectors to the United States, as 
follows: 

Major drug transit countries (except Mexico): 
Bahamas; 
Dominican Republic; 
Ecuador; 
Guatemala; 
Haiti; 
Jamaica; 
Panama; 
Venezuela. 

Central American Corridor: 90% of traffic. 
Caribbean Corridor: 10% of traffic. 

Source: GAO based on a similar map in ONDCP's 2007 Interagency 
Assessment of Cocaine Movement; Nova Development (map). 

[End of figure] 

Transit Zone Drug Trafficking Tactics: 

Drug trafficking organizations and associated criminal networks are 
extremely adaptive. They shift routes and operating methods quickly in 
response to pressure from law enforcement organizations or rival 
traffickers. They ship drugs through the transit zone primarily by sea, 
though their methods have become more evasive in recent years. They 
typically use go-fast boats and fishing vessels to smuggle cocaine from 
Colombia to Central America and Mexico en route to the United States. 
Go-fast boats are capable of traveling at speeds over 40 knots, are 
difficult to detect in open water, and are often used at night. When 
drug traffickers travel in daylight, they often use boats painted blue, 
or that can be quickly covered with a blue tarpaulin, thereby becoming 
virtually impossible to see. Even when detected, go-fast boats can 
often outrun conventional ships deployed in the transit zone. 
Traffickers also use "mother ships" in concert with fishing vessels to 
transport illicit drugs into open waters and then distribute the load 
among smaller boats at sea. In addition, traffickers use evasive 
maritime routes and change them frequently. Some boats travel as far 
southwest as the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific Ocean before heading 
north toward Mexico, while others travel through Central America's 
littoral waters, close to shore, where they can hide among legitimate 
maritime traffic. In addition, the Joint Interagency Task Force-South 
(JIATF-South), under Defense's U.S. Southern Command,[Footnote 9] has 
reported an increase in suspicious flights--particularly departing from 
Venezuela. In addition, traffickers fly loads of cocaine to remote, 
ungoverned spaces--such as northern Guatemala, near the Mexican border-
-and abandon the planes. Planes, however, generally carry much smaller 
loads than most maritime vessels used for drug trafficking. Traffickers 
also are using increasingly sophisticated concealment methods. For 
example, they have built fiberglass semisubmersible craft that can 
avoid both visual-and sonar-detection, hidden cocaine within the hulls 
of boats, and transported liquefied cocaine in fuel tanks. 

According to Defense's Office of Counternarcotics, 
Counterproliferation, and Global Threats, these shifts in drug 
trafficking patterns and methods have likely taken place largely in 
response to U.S. and international counternarcotics efforts in the 
Pacific Ocean and Caribbean, although measuring causes and effects is 
imprecise. In addition, according to Defense, drug trafficking 
organizations and associated criminal networks commonly enjoy greater 
financial and material resources (including weapons as well as 
communication, navigation, and other technologies) than do governments 
in the transit zone. 

U.S. Counternarcotics Strategy: 

The U.S. National Drug Control Strategy's goal is to reduce illegal 
drug usage in the United States. One priority is to disrupt the illegal 
drug trade abroad--including in the transit zone--by attacking the 
power structures and finances of international criminal organizations. 
This involves seizing large quantities of cocaine from transporters, 
disrupting major drug trafficking organizations, arresting their 
leaders, and seizing their assets. The strategy also calls for the 
United States to support democratic institutions and the rule of law in 
allied nations, strengthen these nations' prosecutorial efforts, and 
prosecute foreign traffickers. According to State's International 
Narcotics Control Strategy Report, the goal of U.S. counternarcotics 
assistance to other countries is to help their governments become full 
and self-sustaining partners in the fight against drugs. 

ONDCP produces the National Drug Control Strategy, establishes 
policies, priorities, and objectives for the nation's drug control 
program, and evaluates, coordinates, and oversees the counternarcotics 
efforts of executive branch agencies, including assistance to countries 
in the transit zone. State/INL manages and funds law enforcement 
assistance, including programs implemented by a variety of other U.S. 
agencies, such as DHS's Coast Guard, U.S. Customs and Border Protection 
(CBP), and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. State also administers 
security assistance programs generally implemented by Defense, 
including Foreign Military Financing and International Military 
Education and Training programs, which are intended to strengthen the 
overall capacity of foreign forces to address security threats, 
including violence and instability associated with drug trafficking. 
Defense, primarily through its Office of Counternarcotics, 
Counterproliferation, and Global Threats, provides guidance and 
oversight, as well as funds for counternarcotics and related security 
activities in the transit zone. DEA works to disrupt drug trafficking 
operations and dismantle criminal organizations, bringing leaders to 
prosecution either in the United States or in other countries; it 
maintains offices in countries throughout the transit zone. USAID also 
supports the U.S. counternarcotics effort indirectly through its rule 
of law and alternative development programs. 

Table 1 shows assistance provided by State, DEA, Defense, and USAID to 
support counternarcotics-related programs and activities in transit 
zone countries for fiscal years 2003 through 2007. 

Table 1: U.S. Agencies' Support for Counternarcotics-Related Activities 
in Transit Zone Countries (Excluding Mexico), Fiscal Years 2003-2007: 

Bahamas[E]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $4.1; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $20.4; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $20.4; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $11.3; 
Counternarcotics: $9.5; 
International Military Education and Training: $1.3; 
Foreign military financing: $0.5; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $35.7. 

Barbados[E]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $4.8; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $5.3; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $5.3; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $1.3; 
Counternarcotics: $1.3; 
International Military Education and Training: 0.0; 
Foreign military financing: 0.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $11.4. 

Belize[E]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $3.6;
DEA subtotal[B]: $4.0; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $4.0; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $6.2; 
Counternarcotics: $3.3; 
International Military Education and Training: $1.5; 
Foreign military financing: $1.4; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $13.7. 

Costa Rica[E]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $2.1; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $4.9; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $4.9; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $5.0. 
Counternarcotics: $4.6; 
International Military Education and Training: $0.4; 
Foreign military financing: 0.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $12.0. 

Dominican Republic: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $3.9; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $12.3; 
Special investigative units: $2.7; 
Other DEA: $9.6; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $14.3; 
Counternarcotics: $4.2; 
International Military Education and Training: $5.1; 
Foreign military financing: $5.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $14.3; 
Rule of law and human rights: $6.0; 
Good governance: $8.3; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $44.8. 

Ecuador[F]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $128.8; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $16.2; 
Special investigative units: $3.7; 
Other DEA: $12.5; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $9.4; 
Counternarcotics: $7.7; 
International Military Education and Training: $0.7; 
Foreign military financing: $1.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $91.7; 
Rule of law and human rights: $22.5; 
Good governance: $3.9; 
Alternative development: $65.3; 
Grand total by country: $246.1. 

El Salvador[F]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $2.1; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $2.7; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $2.7; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $39.2; 
Counternarcotics: $5.0; 
International Military Education and Training: $8.0; 
Foreign military financing: $26.1; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $13.1; 
Rule of law and human rights: $1.8; 
Good governance: $11.3; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $57.0. 

Guatemala: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $14.0; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $5.1; 
Special investigative units: $0.3; 
Other DEA: $4.8; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $6.8; 
Counternarcotics: $4.6; 
International Military Education and Training: $2.3; 
Foreign military financing: 0.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $66.6; 
Rule of law and human rights: $23.9; 
Good governance: $42.7; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $92.5. 

Haiti: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $29.7; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $5.2; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $5.2; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $4.4; 
Counternarcotics: $0.6; 
International Military Education and Training: $0.9; 
Foreign military financing: $3.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $21.4; 
Rule of law and human rights: $6.4; 
Good governance: $15.1; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $60.8. 

Honduras: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $2.4; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $1.8; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $1.8; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $15.2; 
Counternarcotics: $3.6; 
International Military Education and Training: $6.0; 
Foreign military financing: $5.6; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $5.1; 
Rule of law and human rights: $4.9; 
Good governance: $0.2; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $24.6. 

Jamaica: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $6.1; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $9.3; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $9.3; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $10.1; 
Counternarcotics: $3.4; 
International Military Education and Training: $3.8; 
Foreign military financing: $3.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $23.4; 
Rule of law and human rights: $14.0; 
Good governance: $9.4; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $48.9. 

Netherlands Antilles[F]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: 0.0; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $4.8; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $4.8; 
Defense subtotal[C]: 0.0; 
Counternarcotics: 0.0; 
International Military Education and Training: 0.0; 
Foreign military financing: 0.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $4.8. 

Nicaragua: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $2.9; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $3.5; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $3.5; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $10.1; 
Counternarcotics: $3.6; 
International Military Education and Training: $3.0; 
Foreign military financing: $3.5; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $5.2; 
Rule of law and human rights: $1.0; 
Good governance: $4.2; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $21.7. 

Panama: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $25.4; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $7.0; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $7.0; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $17.3; 
Counternarcotics: $8.3; 
International Military Education and Training: $3.3; 
Foreign military financing: $5.7; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $190.3; 
Rule of law and human rights: $92.1; 
Good governance: $98.2; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $240.0. 

Trinidad and Tobago[E]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $0.9; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $3.2; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $3.2; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $1.6; 
Counternarcotics: $1.0; 
International Military Education and Training: $0.2; 
Foreign military financing: $0.4; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $5.8. 

Venezuela[E]: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $13.3; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $11.1; 
Special investigative units: 0.0; 
Other DEA: $11.1; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $9.0; 
Counternarcotics: $8.4; 
International Military Education and Training: $0.7; 
Foreign military financing: 0.0; 
USAID subtotal[D]: 0.0; 
Rule of law and human rights: 0.0; 
Good governance: 0.0; 
Alternative development: 0.0; 
Grand total by country: $33.5. 

Grand total by program: 
State/INL subtotal[A]: $243.9; 
DEA subtotal[B]: $116.7; 
Special investigative units: $6.8; 
Other DEA: $110.0; 
Defense subtotal[C]: $161.3; 
Counternarcotics: $69.0; 
International Military Education and Training: $37.2; 
Foreign military financing: $55.1; 
USAID subtotal[D]: $431.2; 
Rule of law and human rights: $172.6; 
Good governance: $193.3; 
Alternative development: $65.3; 
Grand total by country: $953.1. 

Source: GAO analysis of agency data. 

[A] State/INL data reflect expenditures. 

[B] DEA data reflect expenditures for country and resident offices, 
less payroll expenses. 

[C] Defense data reflect estimates of counternarcotics-related support 
in these countries because Defense budgets by program, not by country. 

[D] USAID data reflect expenditures. 

[E] USAID does not have programs in these countries. 

[F] Defense supports forward operating locations for conducting 
counternarcotics operations from these three countries. To operate 
these facilities, Defense expended $95.9 million in Ecuador; $25.2 
million in El Salvador; and $83.5 million in Aruba and Curacao, which 
are part of the Netherlands Antilles. 

[End of table] 

As part of the "Merida Initiative," the President has asked the 
Congress to provide $1.1 billion in fiscal years 2008 and 2009 to train 
and equip Mexican and Central American security forces to combat 
criminal organizations. Of this amount, $950 million would be dedicated 
to Mexico, and $150 million would be dedicated to Central American 
countries.[Footnote 10] This proposal is under consideration by the 
Congress. The Administration's proposal is for all programs to be 
administered by the State Department, although other U.S. agencies may 
be involved in implementation. 

Overall, U.S. Assistance Has Enhanced International Cooperation in 
Disrupting Illegal Drug Markets: 

Since 2003, through U.S.-supported international counternarcotics 
programs, the United States and the eight major drug transit countries 
we reviewed, except Venezuela, have enhanced their cooperation in 
combating drug trafficking, primarily through improvements in 
investigations and intelligence gathering, maritime and land-based 
operations, and prosecutions of drug traffickers. Measuring the results 
of a wide variety of assistance programs across many countries over 
time is difficult as U.S. agencies have compiled limited and 
inconsistent performance data. Nevertheless, the improvements attained 
through these programs have contributed to the U.S. strategy of 
disrupting the illicit drug market through drug seizures, arrests, 
prosecutions, and drug crop eradication, according to information 
provided by State and DEA. 

Intelligence-Gathering and Investigations: 

Actionable intelligence is a critical component of interdiction, and 
the United States often requires access to raw information and sources 
from partner nations to develop this intelligence. State/INL, DEA, and 
Defense have helped all eight partner nations we reviewed develop 
organizations and methods for gathering, analyzing, and sharing 
intelligence and information that have led to arrests and seizures of 
drugs and assets. These efforts have included establishing vetted and 
specialized investigative units; strengthening investigative authority 
of local law enforcement; and installing data networks within and among 
countries to compile, analyze, and share information. 

DEA and State/INL have established vetted investigative units, staffed 
by local law enforcement officers, in all of the major drug transit 
countries we reviewed.[Footnote 11] These units have worked closely 
with U.S. officials to develop successful investigations. The United 
States provides these units with operational support, from money to pay 
agents and confidential sources to vehicles and surveillance equipment. 
For example, in the Dominican Republic, a vetted unit within the 
counternarcotics police used a U.S.-supported wire intercept program to 
conduct more than 730 wiretap operations in fiscal year 2007. The 
program provided daily support to numerous major investigations in the 
United States and abroad, including the investigation of eight priority 
target organizations. In Ecuador, DEA estimates that one vetted 
investigative unit has been responsible for 70 percent of all drug 
seizures in that country. In Jamaica, according to State, intelligence- 
driven operations coordinated with DEA and the vetted unit targeted 
major drug traffickers, and collaboration between Jamaican and 
international law enforcement agencies have resulted in significant 
seizures of cocaine and arrests of midlevel and major traffickers-- 
including kingpins--and the dismantling of their organizations, in 
Jamaica, the United States, the Bahamas, and Colombia. Since late 2004, 
almost all significant bilateral investigations with Jamaica have 
included a wire intercept component using DEA-funded facilities. In the 
Bahamas, according to State, intelligence gathering and surveillance 
equipment provided by State/INL enabled local law enforcement to 
dismantle two Bahamas-based drug trafficking organizations in 2006. 

DEA has also helped governments draft legislation to broaden the scope 
of investigative tools available to law enforcement organizations. For 
example, Guatemala's Organized Crime Bill, put into effect in 2007, 
authorizes wire intercepts and undercover operations, and allows drugs 
to be delivered under controlled circumstances in order to identify the 
traffickers involved--referred to as controlled delivery. DEA also 
encouraged legislation in Jamaica to authorize wire intercepts and 
fingerprinting of suspects. Similarly, legislation in Venezuela 
enhanced police investigative powers in 2005 by allowing controlled 
deliveries. 

In addition, with U.S. technical and financial assistance, several 
countries are operating information centers to collect, analyze, and 
disseminate statistical and case-related data to aid local and foreign 
law enforcement officials in criminal investigations. In the Dominican 
Republic, for example, the DEA-sponsored Caribbean Center for Drug 
Information serves as a clearinghouse for narcotics-related 
intelligence for countries throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. 
According to DEA, Caribbean countries are both frequent contributors to 
and beneficiaries of the center's intelligence analysis services. In 
addition, Defense funded the installation of a computer network in 
countries throughout the transit zone, including in six of the eight 
countries we reviewed,[Footnote 12] called the Cooperating Nation 
Information Exchange System, through which participating countries 
share information in real time regarding aircraft and vessels suspected 
of transporting drugs. Defense also posts liaisons throughout the 
region who facilitate the exchange of actionable intelligence between 
the United States and host nation counterparts to assist in planning 
counternarcotics operations. 

Maritime and Land-Based Operations: 

The United States generally cannot intercept shipments of drugs and 
their precursors and apprehend traffickers in the sovereign territory 
of another nation without the consent, and often the active 
participation, of that country's government. The United States has 
reached cooperative agreements with several partner nations that expand 
U.S. authority and U.S. ability to conduct interdiction operations in 
the transit zone. In addition, assistance provided by State/INL, 
Defense, and U.S. law enforcement agencies has enabled the countries we 
reviewed to undertake or participate in land-based police, military, 
and other counternarcotics operations involving seizures, arrests, and 
eradication. 

Maritime Operations: 

State/INL, Defense, and the Coast Guard have provided partner countries 
with equipment, such as new and refurbished boats; infrastructure, such 
as docks and piers; and training for maritime, littoral, and riverine 
patrol and interdiction operations. With this support, several 
countries have participated in short-and long-term maritime 
interdiction operations with the United States and other countries 
since 2003. For example, in the Bahamas, State/INL donated several 
"fast response" boats, which the Bahamian police force has deployed 
throughout the country for use with U.S. helicopters and personnel 
under Operation Bahamas, Turks and Caicos. According to State, these 
boats have been used in interdiction missions, participating in the 
seizure of go-fast drug smuggling boats. 

Figure 2: Photograph of U.S.-Provided Maritime Training and Equipment 
in Panama: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: Panamanian National Police. 

[End of figure] 

Since 2003, the United States has also entered into maritime law 
enforcement cooperation agreements or procedures with four of the eight 
major drug transit countries we reviewed, affording U.S. forces 
improved access to suspect vessels in international and territorial 
waters.[Footnote 13] (See app. II for a listing of maritime law 
enforcement agreements with transit zone countries.) For example, in 
2003, the Dominican Republic entered into a bilateral agreement 
granting the United States permanent over-flight rights for 
counternarcotics operations. In 2006, the United States and Ecuador 
negotiated operating procedures to facilitate interdiction of suspect 
Ecuadorian-flagged vessels. According to State, in fiscal year 2007, 
these new procedures enabled the United States to board seven 
Ecuadorian flagged vessels and remove about 26 metric tons of cocaine. 
In addition, according to State, under the terms of maritime 
agreements, Guatemala and Panama have provided valuable support for 
international interdictions by permitting the Coast Guard to fly 
suspected drug traffickers to the United States. This has allowed U.S. 
assets to remain on station and continue pursuing drug interdiction and 
homeland security missions. In Panama, according to State, the Coast 
Guard's 2007 seizure of over 32 metric tons of cocaine--including the 
single largest maritime drug seizure in U.S. history--was directly 
related to cooperative efforts executed under provisions of the 
bilateral agreement between Panama and the United States. Bilateral 
maritime agreements have proven valuable in the other major drug 
transit countries, as well. Even Venezuela, which has ceased to 
cooperate with the United States on many counternarcotics initiatives, 
continues to honor the provisions of its ship-boarding agreement, 
authorizing the United States to board Venezuelan flagged vessels on 
the high seas suspected of being engaged in narcotics trafficking. 

In addition, in Ecuador, the United States operates a counternarcotics 
forward operating location to support host nation and interagency drug 
detection and monitoring efforts in the transit zone. Facilities such 
as this permit the United States and allied nations to deploy 
interdiction assets closer to cocaine departure points in the source 
zone.[Footnote 14] According to U.S. officials at the forward operating 
location in Manta, Ecuador, this facility supported over 1,150 
counternarcotics missions in 2007 by providing logistical support for 
U.S. aircraft that detect and monitor narcotics trafficking. 

Land-Based Operations: 

In several countries, State/INL, in collaboration with DEA and DHS 
agencies, has helped finance the operations of special law enforcement 
units to target drug traffickers at airports, seaports, and other 
transit checkpoints using X-ray equipment, canines, and other methods 
and technologies. For example, since 2003, Jamaican authorities have 
arrested thousands of departing passengers at the country's two 
international airports on drug charges, aided by the use of drug 
detection equipment provided by the United States and Great Britain. 
With funding from State and USAID, DHS has deployed advisors and 
specialized teams for both short-and long-term details to provide 
training and technical assistance in such areas as customs 
documentation, airport/border/seaport interdiction operations, mail 
processing, container examination, security, firearms, and officer 
safety. 

In addition, due to Ecuador's close proximity to drug-producing regions 
of Colombia, Defense, State/INL, and DEA have provided extensive 
support for police and military counternarcotics operations there. 
According to State/INL, it and DEA have provided nearly all the 
logistical support for Ecuador's counternarcotics police, including 
construction or refurbishment of facilities and the provision of 
vehicles and equipment. State reported in 2007 that U.S.-supported 
canine units, which were deployed at airports and checkpoints, were 
involved in nearly all of Ecuador's drug interdictions. During 2007, 
the counternarcotics police conducted a series of interdiction 
operations throughout the country, which resulted in the largest amount 
of land-based seizures in the country's history. With logistical 
support from Defense and State/INL, the Ecuadorian armed forces 
conducted nine operations in 2006 and 17 in 2007, which led to the 
discovery and destruction of 47 camps used by the Revolutionary Armed 
Forces of Colombia,[Footnote 15] 36 hectares of coca plants, as well as 
a number of cocaine producing laboratories. 

Figure 3: Two photographs: Training Canines in Ecuador to Detect Drugs 
in Luggage and on Passengers: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

In Guatemala, which has recently experienced a growth in illicit opium 
poppy cultivation, State/INL and Defense have provided aerial 
reconnaissance, transportation, and other logistical support for 
several large-scale, manual eradication missions. In 2007, Guatemalan 
authorities destroyed nearly 450 hectares of poppy--over half of the 
estimated area of cultivation. 

Prosecution: 

Dismantling drug trafficking organizations requires the criminal 
prosecution of key traffickers. State/INL and USAID have supported 
judicial reforms within some partner nations intended to make judicial 
systems more fair, impartial, and efficient, and have strengthened the 
capacity of prosecutors to work effectively within those systems on 
drug-related cases. For example, in Ecuador and the Dominican Republic, 
State/INL and USAID sponsored training of police, prosecutors, and 
judges on the application of new criminal procedure codes. 

State/INL has also supported national task forces in several countries 
to prosecute drug-related crimes. In Guatemala, State/INL has worked 
with the country's Attorney General to support three task forces 
dealing with narcotics, corruption, and money-laundering cases. In 
2004, the anticorruption prosecutor in Guatemala brought cases against 
over 380 individuals, including many high-ranking former public 
officials, army officers, and police. In Venezuela, until 2005, State/ 
INL provided extensive logistical support, and DEA provided advice and 
supervision, to help develop the professional investigative and 
operational capability of the Prosecutors' Drug Task Force, which was 
composed of three dozen vetted prosecutors and investigators from three 
agencies.[Footnote 16] According to State and DEA, the work of this 
task force resulted in multi-ton seizures of drugs, the arrest of 
numerous traffickers (including at least one kingpin), and asset 
seizures. 

In many cases where prosecution in the United States is warranted and 
legal, partner nations have also transferred or extradited drug-related 
defendants. For example, in 2007, Haiti's President authorized the 
narcotics police to cooperate with DEA and U.S. Customs and Border 
Protection (CBP) personnel in locating, arresting, and removing nine 
high-level drug trafficking defendants. Also, according to State, the 
Dominican Republic and Jamaica have been particularly cooperative with 
the U.S. Marshals Service in locating, extraditing, and deporting 
defendants. 

Measuring Results Is Difficult, but Cocaine Interdiction in the Transit 
Zone Reflects International Cooperation: 

While State/INL, DEA, and others have reported the results of their 
assistance programs, they have not done so in a comprehensive and 
consistent manner among partner nations and over time. Reports we 
reviewed showed that some programs have helped disrupt drug markets 
through seizures and arrests. Other programs, such as alternative 
development, justice reform, and security service capacity building, 
are less directly related to drug interdiction operations but are 
designed to have longer-term and more systemic results, which are more 
difficult to measure. 

Assistance Programs Are Diffuse, and Results Are Not Reported 
Comprehensively and Consistently: 

The Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 requires federal 
agencies to develop performance measures to assess progress in 
achieving their goals and to communicate their results to the Congress. 
[Footnote 17] The act requires agencies to set multiyear strategic 
goals in their strategic plans and corresponding annual goals in their 
performance plans, measure performance toward the achievement of those 
goals, and report on their progress in their annual performance 
reports. These reports are intended to provide important information to 
agency managers, policymakers, and the public on what each agency 
accomplished with the resources it was given. Moreover, the act calls 
for agencies to develop performance goals that are objective, 
quantifiable, and measurable, and to establish performance measures 
that adequately indicate progress toward achieving those goals. Our 
previous work has noted that the lack of clear, measurable goals makes 
it difficult for program managers and staff to link their day-to-day 
efforts to achieving the agency's intended mission.[Footnote 18] 

U.S.-funded transit zone counternarcotics assistance encompasses a wide 
variety of initiatives across many countries, but State/INL and other 
agencies have collected limited information on results. Records we 
obtained from State/INL and DEA, including State's annual International 
Narcotics Control Strategy Reports and End Use Monitoring Reports, 
provide information on the outcomes of these initiatives but do not do 
so comprehensively. For example, in our review of State's International 
Narcotics Control Strategy Reports for 2003 to 2007, we identified over 
120 counternarcotics initiatives in the countries we reviewed, but for 
over half of these initiatives, the outcomes were unclear or not 
addressed at all in the reports. Table 2 depicts the range of U.S.- 
supported counternarcotics efforts in the countries we reviewed, 
including those described in State or DEA records as having negligible 
or unsatisfactory outcomes. 

Table 2: U.S.-Supported Counternarcotics Initiatives in Eight Major 
Drug Transit Countries, Fiscal Years 2003-2007: 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Special 
investigative unit; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Other vetted 
police investigative unit; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Financial 
intelligence unit; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having 
negligible or unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Wire intercept; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: [Empty]; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Hotline; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Information 
center; 
Bahamas: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Cooperating 
Nation Information Exchange System; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; JIATF-South 
intelligence liaison; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Intelligence gathering and investigation; Expanded legal 
authority for investigation; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Maritime operations; Initiative: Interceptor boats; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Haiti: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having 
negligible or unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Panama: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes. 

Initiative: Maritime operations; Maritime facilities; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Maritime operations; New maritime agreement or procedures; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Canine detection program; 
Bahamas: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Airport interdiction; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Cargo container inspection[A]; 
Bahamas: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Guatemala: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Interdiction checkpoints; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: [Empty]; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Dominican Republic: 
Panama: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Mobile units; 
Bahamas: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Guatemala: [Empty]; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Police bases; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Police vetting; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Land-based operations; Crop eradication; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Prosecution; Criminal procedures code training; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: [Empty]; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Prosecution; Prosecution task forces; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Prosecution; Anticorruption prosecutor; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007. 

Initiative: Prosecution; Fugitive apprehension; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: [Empty]; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-
2007; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Other; Alternative development; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: [Empty]; 
Haiti: [Empty]; 
Ecuador: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Jamaica: [Empty]; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Initiative: Other; Police reform; 
Bahamas: [Empty]; 
Guatemala: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Haiti: funded by United States during fiscal years 2003-2007; 
Ecuador: [Empty]; 
Jamaica: reported by State, DEA, or Defense as having negligible or 
unsatisfactory outcomes; 
Venezuela: [Empty]; 
Dominican Republic: [Empty]; 
Panama: [Empty]. 

Sources: GAO analysis of information provided by State, DEA, Defense, 
DHS, and USAID. 


[A] The Bahamas, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, and Panama have ports 
participating in DHS's Container Security Initiative, which is not 
explicitly counternarcotics-related. Sources: GAO analysis of 
information provided by State, DEA, Defense, DHS, and USAID. 

[End of table] 

State has attempted to measure the outcomes of counternarcotics 
programs in its annual mission performance reports, which report on a 
set of performance indicators for each country. However, these 
indicators have not been consistent over time or among countries. In 
our review of mission performance reports for four major drug transit 
countries covering fiscal years 2002 through 2006, we identified 86 
performance indicators directly and indirectly related to 
counternarcotics efforts; however, over 60 percent of these indicators 
were used in only one or two annual reporting cycles, making it 
difficult to discern performance trends over time. Moreover, nearly 80 
percent of these performance indicators were used for only one country, 
making it difficult to compare program results among countries. 

Cocaine Seizures and Disruptions Reflect Cooperation with Partner 
Nations: 

Program specific information we reviewed indicates that these U.S. 
counternarcotics assistance programs, along with other efforts, have 
contributed to an active international interdiction effort in the 
transit zone. Data reported by the U.S. interagency counternarcotics 
community indicate that, since 2002, the United States and its partner 
nations have removed, through seizures and disruptions,[Footnote 19] 
between 22 and 38 percent of the estimated amount of cocaine flowing 
through the transit zone, excluding Mexico (see table 3). 

Table 3: Estimated Cocaine Flow and Removal within the Transit Zone, 
Fiscal Years 2002-2006 (Amounts in metric tons): 

Total estimated cocaine flow[B]: Total removals (seizures and 
disruptions); 
2002: 460 to 760; Removals, 162; 
2003: 660 to 960; Removals, 164; 
2004: 540 to 900; Removals, 208; 
2005: 520 to 1,030; Removals, 254; 
2006: 460 to 1,010; Removals, 218; 
Total[A]: 2,650 to 4,650: Removals, 1006. 

Total estimated cocaine flow[B]: Central America; 
2002: 460 to 760; Removals, 17; 
2003: 660 to 960; Removals, 27; 
2004: 540 to 900; Removals, 30; 
2005: 520 to 1,030; Removals, 39; 
2006: 460 to 1,010; Removals, 27; 
Total[A]: 2,650 to 4,650: Removals, 140. 

Total estimated cocaine flow[B]: Ecuador and Venezuela; 
2002: 460 to 760; Removals, 27; 
2003: 660 to 960; Removals, 20; 
2004: 540 to 900; Removals, 30; 
2005: 520 to 1,030; Removals, 36; 
2006: 460 to 1,010; Removals, 27; 
Total[A]: 2,650 to 4,650: Removals, 140. 

Total estimated cocaine flow[B]: Caribbean Sea; 
2002: 460 to 760; Removals, 32; 
2003: 660 to 960; Removals, 51; 
2004: 540 to 900; Removals, 47; 
2005: 520 to 1,030; Removals, 67; 
2006: 460 to 1,010; Removals, 30; 
Total[A]: 2,650 to 4,650: Removals, 227. 

Total estimated cocaine flow[B]: Eastern Pacific; 
2002: 460 to 760; Removals, 86; 
2003: 660 to 960; Removals, 66; 
2004: 540 to 900; Removals, 101; 
2005: 520 to 1,030; Removals, 112; 
2006: 460 to 1,010; Removals, 134; 
Total[A]: 2,650 to 4,650: Removals, 499. 

Total estimated cocaine flow[B]: Estimated percentage of cocaine flow 
removed (seized and disrupted); 
2002: 21% to 35%; 
2003: 17% to 25%; 
2004: 23% to 39%; 
2005: 25% to 49%; 
2006: 22% to 47%; 
Total[A]: 22% to 38%. 

Source: 2007 Interagency Assessment of Cocaine Movement (IACM). 

Note: Data for 2007 were not available at the date of issuance of our 
report. 

[A] Totals may not add due to rounding. 

[B] The IACM reports low and high estimates of the metric tons of 
cocaine flowing through the transit zone. Because of the uncertain 
nature of the estimates involved, we rounded the figures to the nearest 
"10." 

[End of table] 

Results of Indirectly-Related Assistance Are More Difficult to Assess: 

U.S. agencies have supported a wide variety of programs that relate to 
the counternarcotics effort indirectly, and results are therefore 
difficult to assess. These programs generally focus on root causes of 
drug-related crime, as well as strengthening the overall rule of law 
and security of partner nations. Since these programs are not directly 
associated with interdiction efforts and outcomes, and some are long- 
term efforts, their results and effect on the overall success of 
counternarcotics efforts are even more difficult to assess. 

State/INL has funded programs, including training and public awareness 
campaigns, which address some of the underlying causes of drug 
trafficking, such as local drug consumption and corruption. Some 
programs are also aimed at strengthening institutions, such as public 
health, educational, and financial accountability organizations, which 
can help prevent drug-related crime by fostering a culture that does 
not tolerate drug consumption and corruption. Very limited data were 
available in State reports to discern trends in either corruption or 
drug consumption that could be attributable to these programs. However, 
in several countries, State/INL has reported an increased willingness 
among local law enforcement entities to prosecute public officials. 

Several USAID programs combat narcotics trafficking indirectly in 
vulnerable populations by addressing underlying social problems, such 
as crime, inadequate public services, and lack of economic 
opportunities. In Jamaica, according to State/INL, anticrime and 
community policing programs contributed to a 16 percent reduction in 
crime in 2006, but the crime rate rose again in 2007. Development 
programs in Ecuador have helped stabilize communities along the border 
with Colombia most likely to become involved in drug trafficking by 
providing social services and productive infrastructure, including 
water and sanitation systems, bridges, roads, and irrigation canals. 
These programs have also helped strengthen local governments and 
promote citizen participation in a number of municipalities and 
parishes. While these programs have focused national and international 
development assistance on these vulnerable communities, their effect on 
the drug trade in the Colombian border region of Ecuador has not been 
evaluated. 

Defense and DHS have implemented many programs aimed at building the 
overall capacity and professionalism of military and security 
organizations through international cooperation. Defense officials in 
both Ecuador and Panama told us they considered all U.S. cooperative 
programs with the security forces of those countries to be 
counternarcotics-related because they help counter the threats posed by 
trafficking organizations, including incursions by the irregular armed 
forces of neighboring Colombia. However, because many defense 
assistance programs in partner nations do not have specific goals 
related to interdiction, it is difficult to assess the effectiveness of 
the programs for counternarcotics. Similarly, State/INL has funded 
training programs through DHS agencies to help improve overall 
immigration, customs, and coast guard operations. 

Several Factors Impede the Effectiveness of the Counternarcotics 
Efforts: 

Several factors relating to U.S. assistance programs have impeded 
international counternarcotics efforts in the transit zone. Partner 
nations have limited resources to devote to counternarcotics efforts, 
and many U.S.-supported counternarcotics initiatives are not self- 
sustaining but, rather, are dependent on continued U.S. funding. 
Limited political support of U.S.-funded initiatives, as well as 
corruption, have also kept these nations from becoming full partners in 
the international counternarcotics effort--a goal of U.S. assistance, 
according to State. In addition, the effect of U.S. cargo container 
security assistance for the counternarcotics effort has been limited. 

Many Partner Nations Cannot Sustain U.S. Supported Initiatives: 

The inability of transit zone countries to patrol their shores 
effectively and conduct other maritime operations presents a major gap 
in drug interdiction. In many of the countries we reviewed, State has 
reported that partner nations cannot operate U.S.-provided maritime 
assets for counternarcotics missions due to a lack of operations and of 
maintenance resources. Some examples are as follows: 

* In the Dominican Republic, the United States has provided a wide 
range of new and refurbished boats, including interceptor and patrol 
craft, that the Dominican Navy has been unable to employ due to a lack 
of fuel, fuel filters, and other routine maintenance supplies. Also, 
several U.S. vessels that were transferred to the Dominican Navy as 
excess defense articles are in poor condition due to a lack of 
preventive maintenance and funds for repairs. State reported in 2006 
that the Navy's maintenance command lacked necessary equipment, parts, 
and training. 

* In Haiti, State/INL and the U.S. Coast Guard provided substantial 
support to the Haitian coast guard, including interceptor boats, vessel 
overhauls and retrofitting, infrastructure improvements, and training 
and equipment. However, according to State, a lack of necessary 
equipment, maintenance, fuel, and logistical support has continued to 
impair the Haitian coast guard's ability to conduct maritime operations 
and combat drug trafficking effectively. 

* In Guatemala, State/INL provided the counternarcotics police force 
with two fiberglass boats--one located on the Caribbean Coast and the 
other on the Pacific Coast--for limited counternarcotics operations. In 
2007, State reported that both boats were inoperable because the police 
had not maintained the engines. 

* In Jamaica, the United States donated several patrol vessels capable 
of intercepting go-fast boats. State reported in 2006 that the vessels 
had only limited operational capability because they were not in good 
working order. 

* In Panama, the U.S. Coast Guard donated a 180-foot cutter. However, 
Panama's National Maritime Service, which is highly dependent on U.S. 
support for operations and maintenance resources, has been unable to 
keep the vessel seaworthy. 

U.S. agencies have not always planned for the sustainability of the 
counternarcotics-related assets they provided to partner nations. 
According to State officials we spoke to, when receiving these assets, 
country officials have typically signed agreements accepting the long- 
term responsibility of operating and maintaining them, including 
providing the necessary staff, as well as fuel, parts, and other 
maintenance resources, unless these are provided for by the United 
States. However, the long-term cost of operating and maintaining the 
assets and the source of funding are not typically included in such 
agreements, according to these officials. 

In 2007, Defense began providing additional boats to partner nations, 
including Panama, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and the Bahamas, 
under its Enduring Friendship program, for use in maritime security 
operations.[Footnote 20] However, Defense has not developed plans to 
address long-term sustainability of these assets over their expected 10-
year operating life. These interceptor boats were accompanied by 
support equipment such as trucks and trailers for on-land mobility; 
radios; infrared cameras; as well as training and a limited maintenance 
program, at a cost of between $6 million and $11 million for each 
country. However, Defense did not make provisions to ensure that the 
partner countries can fuel the donated boats and maintain them beyond 
an initial short-term maintenance contract period. For the boats 
provided to the Dominican Republic, for example, the agreement between 
Defense and the Dominican Republic did not specify the estimated costs 
or funding source of operating the boats and related equipment. The 
agreement indicated the United States may provide some additional 
support for repair parts, contingent upon the availability of funds. 
The ability to provide the necessary resources to operate these assets 
over the long-term is a concern, according to the U.S. and partner 
nation officials we spoke to in the Dominican Republic and Panama. 
According to the Coast Guard attaché in the Dominican Republic, 
although the Dominican Navy has added these and other boats to its 
fleet in recent years, it has not increased its budget for fuel since 
2002, and the cost of fuel has since doubled. Similarly, according to a 
senior official of the Panamanian National Maritime Service, it has 
been operating under a static budget and fuel allotment, even as the 
number of assets and staff under its control has increased. State/INL 
officials in both Panama and the Dominican Republic told us that these 
countries have not effectively used the interceptor boats for 
counternarcotics purposes. 

In addition, the personnel operating the interceptor boats have limited 
maritime interdiction skills. Training included in the assistance 
package focused on operation and maintenance of boats and included some 
training in first aid, navigation, and communications but only limited 
training on interdiction tactics. The memorandum of understanding 
between Defense and the Dominican Republic for this program indicated 
that Defense may provide some additional training, contingent upon the 
availability of funds, but did not specify the training likely to be 
needed for conducting counternarcotics operations or its cost. 

Figure 4: Photograph of Interceptor Boat Provided to Panama under 
Defense's Enduring Friendship Program: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

In some cases, however, State/INL has recognized the long-term 
sustainability challenges associated with providing capital assets and 
has planned and budgeted for operations and maintenance costs, thus 
helping to ensure the assets will be used effectively for 
counternarcotics operations. For example, State reported that it has 
funded maintenance contracts in the Bahamas that provide a means for 
keeping U.S.-provided boats operational for drug interdiction missions. 
Also, State/INL helps sustain U.S.-funded initiatives along the Ecuador-
Colombian border by funding a large spare parts program, as well as 
maintenance training for the heavy trucks and other vehicles it has 
provided, and by budgeting for gas and maintenance costs over the long 
term. State/INL has also funded contractors to maintain the electrical 
and plumbing systems in the police buildings constructed for the police 
in Ecuador. 

According to State, the counternarcotics police of several partner 
nations are dependent on logistical and operational support of State/ 
INL and DEA, as the following examples show: 

* In the Dominican Republic, the police force's effectiveness in 
counternarcotics affairs is almost completely attributable to 
equipment, training, and close support provided by DEA and State/INL 
over several years. State also reported that the financial intelligence 
unit, begun with U.S. support in 2003, lacks the resources and 
institutional support to perform effectively and has reported no real 
successes in implementing its money-laundering legislation since the 
unit was established. 

* In Ecuador, State/INL and DEA provide almost all logistical and 
operational support to the Ecuadorian National Police Anti-Drug 
Division. 

* In Haiti, the lack of government resources makes the national police 
largely dependent upon DEA and State/INL for logistical and advisory 
support. 

Some Countries' Limited Political Support Impairs U.S. Counternarcotics 
Initiatives: 

According to State, a few governments in the region have demonstrated 
limited political support for U.S. counternarcotics efforts. In 
particular, Venezuelan cooperation has declined dramatically in recent 
years, and in 2006 and 2007 State reported that Venezuela had failed 
"demonstrably" to make substantial efforts in the war on drugs. 
[Footnote 21] In 2005, the Venezuelan President accused DEA of 
espionage and planning a coup, and the government eventually withdrew 
from both U.S.-supported vetted units and has refused counternarcotics 
cooperation with the United States. 

State has also reported that Jamaica has shown limited political 
support for some U.S. counternarcotics-related initiatives. For 
example, the United States helped develop a corporate reform strategy 
for the Jamaican constabulary forces, but it was never implemented due 
to a combination of internal resistance to change and a lack of power 
to ensure implementation of the strategy's recommendations. In 
addition, the government of Jamaica has not enacted an initiative to 
permit extended data-sharing between U.S. and Jamaican law enforcement 
agencies concerning money-laundering cases. 

In Ecuador, even though the government has generally supported U.S.- 
funded counternarcotics initiatives, political developments may 
threaten future international cooperation in maritime operations. 
Ecuador's President has stated that he no longer supports a U.S. 
military presence in Ecuador and that his government will not renew the 
agreement allowing the United States to operate its forward operating 
location there when the agreement expires in November 2009.[Footnote 
22] 

Corruption Undermines Interdiction Efforts: 

The United States relies on the cooperation of partner nations' law 
enforcement and security agencies in the transit zone to conduct 
successful counternarcotics operations. But, corruption in these 
agencies limits the extent to which U.S. law enforcement agencies can 
involve their counterparts in investigations. According to data 
compiled by Transparency International, a civil society organization 
that monitors corruption issues worldwide, corruption is a major 
problem in transit zone countries. Its Corruption Perception Index 
(CPI) ranks countries from 0 (highly corrupt) to 10 (highly clean) 
based on a series of indicators. Seven of the eight countries in our 
review received a score of 3.3 or lower (compared with a score of 7.2 
for the United States and 8.7 for Canada).[Footnote 23] The eighth 
country, the Bahamas, was not reviewed. (See table 4.) 

Table 4: Transparency International Corruption Perception Index Scores 
for Eight Major Drug Transit Countries (2007): 

Country: Bahamas; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): Data not available; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): Data not available; 
CPI score[A]: Data not available. 

Country: Mexico; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 72; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 13; 
CPI score[A]: 3.5. 

Country: Jamaica; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 84; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 19; 
CPI score[A]: 3.3. 

Country: Panama; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 94; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 20; 
CPI score[A]: 3.2. 

Country: Dominican Republic; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 99; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 21; 
CPI score[A]: 3.0. 

Country: Guatemala; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 111; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 25; 
CPI score[A]: 2.8. 

Country: Ecuador; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 150; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 30; 
CPI score[A]: 2.1. 

Country: Venezuela; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 162; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 31; 
CPI score[A]: 2.0. 

Country: Haiti; 
World-wide country rating (of 180 countries): 177; 
Regional rating (of 32 countries): 32; 
CPI score[A]: 1.6. 

Source: Transparency International. 

[A] The CPI score should be interpreted as a ranking of countries 
ranging from 0 (highly corrupt) to 10 (highly clean). 

[End of table] 

In addition, U.S. officials have noted instances of official 
corruption--particularly among military and police units--that have 
limited the opportunities for and scope of cooperation with the United 
States and, in some cases, undermined specific interdiction operations. 
Some examples of this official corruption are as follows: 

* Guatemala disbanded its antinarcotics police unit in 2002 in response 
to reports of widespread corruption within the agency and its general 
lack of effectiveness in combating the country's drug problem. The 
government reassigned most of the unit's law enforcement agents to the 
national civilian police, and the U.S. government suspended major joint 
operations in light of these circumstances. With U.S. assistance, 
Guatemala established a successor antinarcotics police force but, in 
2005, in a joint operation with DEA, the Chief and Deputy of this 
agency were arrested in the United States for corruption. Later that 
year, DEA suspected that members of the antinarcotics force stole 475 
kilograms of cocaine from an evidence storage facility. Further, 
according to DEA, Guatemalan antinarcotics agents misused intelligence 
leads provided by DEA to extort investigative targets. 

* In Haiti, in 2003, State reported strong evidence of Haitian law 
enforcement officials leaking information on planned operations and 
trafficking drugs. DEA reported that planes under surveillance for drug 
shipments were met and off-loaded by heavily armed uniformed police 
officials with vehicles that transported the drugs. In 2007, the 
Haitian government removed both the National Police Director of 
Administration and Director of Logistics for suspected corruption. 

* In the Dominican Republic, the government removed 24 judges from 
office for improperly handing out favorable sentences to known 
traffickers in 2006. Corruption has also hampered Dominican-based, 
money-laundering investigations, according to DEA. 

* In Panama, in 2005, the head of a police counternarcotics unit was 
arrested and charged with corruption. In 2007, after years of 
lackluster counternarcotics cooperation from the National Maritime 
Service, the former head of this organization was also arrested on 
corruption charges. 

* In the Bahamas, State reported in 2003 that it was reluctant to 
include Bahamian defense personnel in Operation Bahamas, Turks and 
Caicos and to share sensitive law enforcement information with them due 
to corruption concerns. 

* In Ecuador, in 2002, the Deputy Chief of Operations of the Ecuadorian 
Army was arrested for facilitating the transshipment of drugs through 
cargo containers by providing trafficking organizations with false 
security seals. 

Cargo Container Security Programs Have Had Limited Effect on the 
Counternarcotics Effort: 

According to DEA, drug smuggling on containerized cargo ships poses a 
significant threat to U.S. counternarcotics efforts. Both State/INL and 
DHS have provided cargo security assistance to countries in the transit 
zone. However, most of State/INL's initiatives have not been effective, 
and DHS has not routinely used its program of targeting and scanning 
cargo containers overseas to detect illicit drugs. 

State/INL has supported counternarcotics initiatives at cargo container 
ports in four of the eight countries we reviewed, and in three of those 
countries State's International Narcotics Control Strategy Reports 
indicate that these initiatives were largely ineffective. For example, 
in Guatemala, although State/INL has provided technical assistance, 
logistical support, and training for the country's port security 
program for several years, State reported in 2006 that the program had 
little interdiction success, and seizures were very low. In the 
Bahamas, State/INL supported a canine unit of the Bahamian Customs 
Department to help detect drugs shipments at the Freeport container 
port but discontinued the assistance in 2004 due to high maintenance 
costs and its failure to produce expected results. In Venezuela, the 
United States funded a sophisticated container inspection facility at a 
large port known to be an embarkation point for multiton shipments of 
cocaine, but the Venezuelan government has not put it into operation. 

DHS, through CBP, has implemented the Container Security Initiative 
(CSI) overseas, which may have potential for greater use in 
counternarcotics operations. CBP initiated CSI under its existing 
authority in January 2002 to assist selected overseas ports in 
targeting suspicious containers and scanning their contents.[Footnote 
24] The program subsequently received specific congressional 
authorization in 2006.[Footnote 25] By 2007, CSI operated in 58 ports, 
including seven in the transit zone.[Footnote 26] CBP officers 
stationed at foreign ports collaborating with host-country partners use 
intelligence and automated risk assessment information to target 
shipments and identify those that may contain weapons of mass 
destruction or other terrorist contraband. DHS has generally not used 
the technology to detect and interdict illicit drug shipments, though 
CSI technology can help detect illicit drugs. In fact, the automated 
targeting system that CSI uses to help target containers for inspection 
was originally designed for this purpose. The first time the CSI 
scanning equipment was used in the port of Caucedo in the Dominican 
Republic, operators detected a shipment of cocaine that was packed 
amidst canned fruit. Ultimately, several metric tons of cocaine were 
seized, and suspected traffickers were arrested. 

CBP officials we spoke with noted that including routine container 
screening for drugs in CSI's scope of operations would be difficult and 
could conflict with achievement of CBP's counterterrorism objectives. 
They indicated that CSI's budget and staffing are based on its 
counterterrorism-related workload, and targeting drugs would require 
additional research and analysis resources. They said that, without 
more funding, DHS would have to shift its priorities away from 
counterterrorism activities. Furthermore, they said that expanding 
existing agreements with CSI participating countries would entail 
difficult and sensitive negotiations. According to these officials, 
proposing that CSI should search for illicit drugs could undermine the 
international political support for CSI and other CBP counterterrorism 
initiatives because additional container screening could cause 
transshipment delays and related economic costs and involve other 
concessions that participating countries may not be willing to accept. 

However, CBP officials acknowledged that they have not formally 
assessed the feasibility of conducting additional container targeting 
and inspection in selected major drug transit countries. In particular, 
CBP has neither calculated the related costs, including human resource 
requirements, nor has it consulted with State and Justice on the 
related diplomatic and security risks or the potential law enforcement 
benefits. Senior officials we spoke to at State/INL, DEA, and ONDCP 
indicated that it would be useful to examine the feasibility of a 
limited expansion of CSI on an interagency basis. 

Conclusions: 

U.S. agencies, primarily State, DEA, Defense, DHS, and USAID, have 
supported initiatives that have fostered cooperation with partner 
nations in the transit zone, enabling these nations to engage in the 
counternarcotics effort in ways that the United States alone could not. 
Through these initiatives, U.S. law enforcement has been able to extend 
the scope and effectiveness of its drug interdiction activities by (1) 
gaining access to critical information and intelligence, (2) 
participating in seizure and eradication operations within the 
territory or jurisdiction of partner nations, and (3) bringing 
suspected drug traffickers to justice. 

The absence of comprehensive and consistent reporting on the results of 
these initiatives makes it difficult to monitor their outcomes over 
time, assess their relative effectiveness, and make resource allocation 
decisions based on results. However, available information concerning 
results indicates that the United States has not made significant 
progress toward its goal of assisting governments to become full and 
self-sustaining partners in the international counternarcotics effort. 
Partner nations are dependent on U.S. logistical, financial, and 
advisory support, and without this support many U.S. initiatives are 
not sustainable. U.S. agencies have funded initiatives and invested in 
assets, particularly for maritime operations, without planning for the 
long-term operations and maintenance of these assets, and partner 
nations have not utilized many of them to their maximum capacity. 

U.S. assistance in cargo container security has been largely 
ineffective for the international counternarcotics effort. However, DHS 
has invested in cargo container security programs overseas that in at 
least one instance helped detect illicit drugs being shipped in the 
transit zone. DHS has raised a number of concerns about using CSI 
routinely for this purpose, but has not assessed the feasibility of 
this program as another tool in the U.S. counternarcotics strategy. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To link U.S.-funded initiatives in transit zone countries to the 
priority of disrupting illicit drug markets and the goal of assisting 
nations to become full and self-sustaining partners in the 
international counternarcotics effort, we recommend that the Secretary 
of State, in consultation with the Director of ONDCP, the Secretaries 
of Defense and Homeland Security, the Attorney General, and the 
Administrator of USAID, report the results of U.S.-funded 
counternarcotics initiatives more comprehensively and consistently for 
each country in the annual International Narcotics Control Strategy 
Report. 

We recommend that the Secretary of State, in consultation with the 
Director of ONDCP, the Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security, 
and the Attorney General, (1) develop a plan to ensure that partner 
nations in the transit zone can effectively operate and maintain all 
counternarcotics assets that the United States has provided, including 
boats and other vehicles and equipment, for their remaining useful life 
and report this plan to the Congress for the fiscal year 2010 
appropriations cycle and (2) ensure that, before providing a 
counternarcotics asset to a partner nation, agencies determine the 
total operations and maintenance cost over its useful life and, with 
the recipient nation, develop a plan for funding this cost. 

To help maximize cargo container security assistance, we recommend that 
the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary 
of State and the Attorney General, determine the feasibility of 
expanding the Container Security Initiative to include routine 
targeting and scanning of containers for illicit drugs in major drug 
transit countries in the transit zone, and report the results to the 
Congress. Factors to be assessed should include the cost, workload and 
staffing ramifications, the potential benefits to international 
counternarcotics law enforcement efforts, the political support of CSI 
participating countries, statutory authority, and any risks associated 
with such an expansion. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to Defense, DHS, Justice/DEA, ONDCP, 
State, and USAID for their comment. DHS, Justice/DEA, ONDCP, and State 
provided written comments, which are reproduced in appendixes III 
through VI. All agencies provided technical corrections, which we 
incorporated into the report, as appropriate. 

State generally agreed with the report's conclusions, but disagreed 
with our recommendation on results reporting. State noted that it has 
already developed performance measures to reflect progress in achieving 
broad counternarcotics goals and development goals in general, though 
they do not necessarily capture program-specific results. We modified 
our recommendation to emphasize the need for more systematic reporting 
of program-specific results that would link U.S. counternarcotics 
efforts to State's broader performance goals and measures. State also 
noted that there is substantial variation in assistance programs in 
particular countries in terms of program types and funding levels. 
However, we observed that many programs in several countries are 
similar in nature and lend themselves to the comparison of results 
among countries. Developing a method of reporting these results more 
comprehensively and consistently across years and among country 
programs in the International Narcotics Control Strategy Report would 
address our concern. 

State partially agreed with our recommendation on sustainability 
planning and indicated that its project designs, agreements with 
recipient countries, and monitoring mechanisms are appropriate for 
addressing sustainability concerns, given the unpredictability of 
recipient countries' long-term priorities and budgetary resources. 
Furthermore, State commented that it has limited ability to influence 
the coordinated sustainability planning of other agencies and has no 
influence over Defense's Enduring Friendship program. Given past 
experience, we question whether providing assets is justifiable without 
more specific and detailed plans that give better assurances that the 
recipient country and participating agencies are committed to funding 
specified operations and maintenance costs. State is in a unique 
position as the lead foreign affairs agency to ensure that all 
participating U.S. agencies involved in providing counternarcotics 
assets agree on a discrete sustainability plan. State, in particular, 
can influence Defense's sustainability planning when it approves 
security assistance programs, such as Enduring Friendship. Section 1206 
of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2006, under which Enduring 
Friendship was authorized, requires State and Defense to jointly 
approve all projects and coordinate their implementation.[Footnote 27] 

State fully supports any consultation needed to determine the 
feasibility of expanding DHS's container security assistance program. 

DHS did not concur with our recommendation to study the feasibility of 
expanding the CSI program. According to DHS, expanding CSI to include 
narcotics interdiction would unnecessarily broaden the program's 
strategic goals and is inconsistent with its mandate to secure the 
international supply chain from high-risk shipments with a potential 
risk of terrorism and acts of terrorism. CSI's mandate does not 
prohibit leveraging the program's resources for other agency missions. 
In addition, the CSI Strategic Plan for 2006-2011 states that, "at some 
point in the future, consideration should be given to potential 
expansion of the program from focusing on terrorism alone to 
encompassing other activities known to support terrorism, such as 
smuggling narcotics, violations of intellectual property rights and 
currency violations." A logical first step would be for relevant 
stakeholders to study the feasibility of enlisting CSI as a 
counternarcotics tool, formally assessing the program's statutory 
authority, among other factors. DHS also noted that 90 percent of 
cocaine moves through Mexico, but that no CSI ports are located in 
Mexico. However, as we reported, approximately 90 percent of the 
cocaine flowing toward the United States has gone through the Central 
American/Mexican corridor, in which four CSI ports are located. 

ONDCP accepted our recommendation that it assist other agencies in 
developing performance measures and sustainability plans for U.S.- 
provided counternarcotics assets. In addition, ONDCP strongly concurred 
with the recommendation to determine the feasibility of expanding CSI. 

DEA said that, while it is difficult to measure the outcome of all U.S. 
counternarcotics efforts, it has tracked statistical data to ensure 
that it is achieving its strategic goals and assists State and ONDCP in 
developing overall performance measures for U.S. counternarcotics 
programs. 

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to the Secretaries of Defense, Homeland Security, and State; the 
Attorney General; the Administrator of USAID; the Director of ONDCP; 
and interested congressional committees. We also will make copies 
available to others upon request. In addition, this report will be 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-4268 or fordj@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff members who made major 
contributions to this report are listed in appendix VII. 

Signed by: 

Jess T. Ford, Director: 
International Affairs and Trade: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Our review encompassed U.S.-funded counternarcotics initiatives during 
2003 through 2007, in countries in the Caribbean Sea and Central 
America, as well as Ecuador and Venezuela. We specifically focused our 
efforts on eight countries designated by the President as "major drug 
transit countries." Those countries include the Bahamas, the Dominican 
Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, Jamaica, Panama, and Venezuela. 
Although Mexico is also a major transit country, we excluded it from 
our review because we reviewed U.S. counternarcotics assistance to that 
country in 2007.[Footnote 28] 

To identify U.S.-funded assistance programs and initiatives, we 
reviewed the Department of State's (State) International Narcotics 
Control Strategy Reports (INCSR), Mission Performance Plans for fiscal 
years 2003 through 2007, and end use monitoring reports, as well as 
work plans, activity reports, and country summaries provided by the 
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). We also met with Washington, 
D.C.-based representatives of the White House's Office of National Drug 
Control Policy (ONDCP); the Department of State's (State) Bureau of 
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (State/INL); the Department 
of Justice's Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and Criminal 
Division; the Departments of Defense's (Defense) Office of Deputy 
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Counternarcotics, 
Counterproliferation and Global Threats; the Department of Homeland 
Security's (DHS) Office of Counternarcotics Enforcement, Immigration 
and Customs Enforcement, U.S. Coast Guard, and U.S. Customs and Border 
Protection (CBP); and the U.S. Agency for International Development 
(USAID).[Footnote 29] We also met with cognizant officials at the U.S. 
Southern Command in Miami, Florida, and the Joint Interagency Task 
Force (JIATF)-South in Key West, Florida. We included among the 
initiatives we reviewed those cooperative endeavors that may not have 
had any identifiable costs associated with them, including support for 
legislative reform in partner nations and efforts to reach agreements 
that enhance international cooperation in interdiction, including 
bilateral maritime law enforcement agreements and agreements to 
establish forward operating locations. 

To document the cost of U.S. counternarcotics support, we focused on 
fiscal years 2003 through 2007 by reviewing and analyzing program 
funding data from the various departments and agencies in Washington, 
D.C., including State and Defense,[Footnote 30] USAID, and DEA for 
background purposes. While we performed some checks on the data, we did 
not perform a full reliability assessment of them. We believe the data 
provide a reasonable indication of spending on counternarcotics-related 
activities, but we recognize that the data the agencies gave us 
included funding for some activities that go beyond counternarcotics 
assistance and may include some U.S. interdiction-related activities. 

To assess program results and factors that have impeded 
counternarcotics efforts, we reviewed State's International Narcotics 
Control Strategy Reports and Mission Strategic Plans for fiscal years 
2002 through 2007, End Use Monitoring reports, and other relevant State 
documents. At DEA, we reviewed Significant Action Reports and "blue 
notes"--reports to the agency's Administrator on selected significant 
drug interdiction and other activities--as well as all available 
"rightsizing reports" and all country and work plans for the eight 
major drug transit countries in our review. We also reviewed 
evaluations, midterm and final reports, and other program documents for 
those activities which USAID officials and State/INL documents had 
identified as related to the international counternarcotics effort. In 
addition, we reviewed Transparency International's Corruption 
Perception Index to evaluate the level of corruption in these 
countries. The index is based on the results of surveys of business 
people and citizens and analysis by country experts. It ranks countries 
by the degree of corruption perceived to exist in each country rather 
than by actual corruption, which is difficult to measure directly. In a 
previous GAO report, we determined that Transparency International's 
data were sufficiently reliable to provide a broad gauge of corruption 
and demonstrate that levels of corruption vary among countries. 
[Footnote 31] 

To obtain more detailed information on program results and impediments, 
we traveled to four of the eight major drug trafficking countries in 
our review: the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Panama. We 
chose these four countries based on: (1) the size of the U.S. 
assistance program; (2) the location within the various geographic 
regions of the transit zone, including Central America, South America, 
and the Caribbean Islands; (3) designation as a major money-laundering 
country; (4) posting of senior embassy officials representing State/ 
INL, DEA, DHS, ICE, and CBP, and Defense; and (5) implementation of 
major USAID rule of law and alternative development initiatives. During 
our visits we obtained information from U.S. embassy officials, host 
government officials, and local program beneficiaries. While in 
country, we visited a number of project sites relating to maritime 
operations, port security, intelligence gathering, drug crop 
eradication, alternative development, and other activities. 

To identify trends in cocaine flow, seizures, and disruptions, we 
reviewed data from the Interagency Assessment on Cocaine Movement from 
2002 through 2007, with limited updated data provided by ONDCP. In the 
course of previous work, we discussed how cocaine flow data were 
developed with officials from the Defense Intelligence Agency and the 
Central Intelligence Agency, Crime and Narcotics Center. In addition, 
we discussed how seizure and disruption data were developed with 
officials from ONDCP. Overall, the data have limitations, due in part 
to the illegal nature of the drug trade and the time lag inherent in 
collecting meaningful data. Notwithstanding the limitations of the drug 
production and seizure data, we determined that these data were 
sufficiently reliable to provide an overall indication of the magnitude 
and nature of the illicit drug trade since 2003. We supplemented this 
data with information about trends in drug trafficking, interdiction, 
and cooperation with transit zone countries obtained from officials at 
JIATF-South. 

Finally, the information and observations on foreign law in this report 
do not reflect our independent legal analysis but are based on 
interviews with cognizant officials and secondary sources. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Counternarcotics Maritime Law Enforcement Agreements: 

The United States has signed Counternarcotics Maritime Law Enforcement 
agreements with 25 countries in the transit and source zones. According 
to Coast Guard officials, these agreements have improved cooperation 
with nations in the region and increased the United States' and, in 
particular, the Coast Guard's capability to board suspect vessels and 
detain suspected drug traffickers. These bilateral agreements typically 
have six provisions to them. The United States and the other countries 
negotiate each provision separately, which means that some countries 
may agree to some provisions and not others. The six parts provide for 
the following: 

* Ship-boarding provisions establish an expedited process for U.S. law 
enforcement agencies to obtain authorization from the competent 
authority of a designated country to board and search a vessel flying 
its flag and suspected of being engaged in illicit traffic outside the 
territorial waters of any nation. In certain limited circumstances, 
U.S. vessels may stop, board, and search suspicious vessels flying the 
flag of a designated country without having specific permission. 

* Ship-rider provisions permit countries to place law enforcement 
officials on each other's vessels. 

* Pursuit provisions allow U.S. law enforcement agencies, under very 
limited circumstances, to pursue aircraft and vessels in a country's 
airspace and territorial waters. In particular, the provisions permit 
U.S. law enforcement agencies to stop, board, and search a suspect 
vessel if the country does not have a vessel or aircraft available to 
respond immediately. 

* Entry-to-investigate provisions allow the U.S. law enforcement 
agencies, under very limited circumstances, to enter a country's 
airspace or territorial waters to investigate aircraft or vessels 
suspected of illicit drug trafficking. Specifically, the provisions 
permit U.S. law enforcement agencies to board and search a suspect 
vessel if the country does not have a vessel or aircraft available to 
respond immediately. 

* Over-flight provisions permit the U.S. law enforcement aircraft to 
fly over the country's territorial waters, with appropriate notice to 
the country's coastal authorities. 

* Relay order-to-land provisions allow U.S. law enforcement agencies to 
relay an order to land from the host country to the suspect aircraft. 

Moreover, an additional International Maritime Interdiction Support 
clause permits U.S. law enforcement agencies, principally the Coast 
Guard, to transport suspected drug traffickers through that country to 
the United States for prosecution and provides for expedited access to 
that country's dockside facility to search suspect vessels. Since 2003 
the United States has entered into support clauses with five countries. 

Table 5 lists the law enforcement agreements, including the 
international maritime interdiction support clause, that the United 
States has negotiated with countries in the transit and source zones. 

Table 5: Counternarcotics Maritime Law Enforcement Agreements with 
Countries in the Transit Zone: 

Country: Antigua and Barbuda; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: 
[Check][A]. 

Country: Bahamas; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: 
[Check][A]. 

Country: Barbados; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Belize; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Colombia; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Empty]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Empty]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Empty]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Empty]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: 
Costa Rica; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Check]. 

Country: Dominica; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Empty]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Dominican Republic; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check][A]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: 
[Check][A]. 

Country: Ecuador[B]; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Empty]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Empty]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Empty]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check][C]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: El Salvador; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Empty]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Empty]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Empty]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Empty]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check][C]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Grenada; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Guatemala; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check][A]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: 
[Check][A]. 

Country: Haiti; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Honduras; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Check]. 

Country: Jamaica; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: v; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Netherlands Antilles and Aruba; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Empty]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check][C]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Nicaragua; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check][A]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check][A]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: 
[Check][A]. 

Country: Panama; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Check]. 

Country: St. Kitts and St. Nevis; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: St. Lucia; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: St. Vincent and Grenadines; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Empty]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Trinidad and Tobago; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Check]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Check]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Check]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Check]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Turks and Caicos; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Empty];
Provision: Ship-rider: [Check]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Empty]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Empty]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Empty]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Country: Venezuela; 
Provision: Ship-boarding: [Check]; 
Provision: Ship-rider: [Empty]; 
Provision: Pursuit: [Empty]; 
Provision: Entry-to-Investigate: [Empty]; 
Provision: Over-flight: [Empty]; 
Provision: Relay order-to-land: [Empty]; 
Provision: International Maritime Interdiction Support clause: [Empty]. 

Source: JIATF-South. 

[A] Indicates that the provision or clause was agreed to since 2003. 

[B] The United States and Ecuador do not have a counternarcotics 
maritime law enforcement agreement for ship-boarding but have agreed to 
ship-boarding procedures. 

[C] Over-flight rights have been negotiated in the context of a forward 
operating location agreement through which the United States is allowed 
the use of aviation and other facilities. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528: 

June 27, 2008: 

Mr. Jess T. Ford: 
Director: 
International Affairs and Trade: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G, St. NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Ford: 

The Department of Homeland Security (OHS) appreciates the opportunity 
to review and comment on the Government Accountability Office's (GAO's) 
draft report GAO 08-784 entitled Drug Control: Cooperation with Most 
Major Drug Transit (Countries Has Improved, but Better Performance 
Reporting and Sustainability Plans Are Needed (GAO job code 320530). 

In the aforementioned draft report. GAO recommends that: "To help 
maximize cargo container security assistance, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary of 
Stare and the Attorney General. determine the feasibility of expanding 
the Container Security Initiative (CSI) to include routine targeting 
and scanning of containers for illicit drugs in major drug transit 
countries in the transit zone, and report the results to the Congress. 
Factors to be assessed should include the cost, workload and staffing 
ramifications, the potential benefits to international counternarcotics 
law enforcement efforts, the political support of CST participating 
countries, statutory authority, and risks associated with such an 
expansion." 

DHS does not concur with the recommendation and expressed its concerns 
to GAO during a meeting held prior to the issuance of the draft report. 
We requested that GAO reconsider issuing a recommendation for the 
potential expansion of the CSI program to include narcotics 
interdiction as it would unnecessarily broaden CSI's current strategic 
goals that support the U.S. Customs and Border Protection's (CBP's) 
priority mission, among other things. Despite DHS efforts, GAO moved 
forward with making the recommendation. As a result, we reiterate the 
mission of the CST program in this response with the goal of providing 
information that will support DHS's position of non-concurrence with 
the recommendation. [See comment 1] 

Congress has provided clear direction as to the mission of the CSI 
program, which is securing the international supply chain from high-
risk shipments with a potential threat of terrorism and acts of 
terrorism. The Security and Accountability for Every Port Act of 2006 
(SAFE Port Act). Title II (Security of the International Supply Chain), 
Section 205, established and codified the implementation of the CSI to 
identify and examine or search maritime containers that pose a security 
risk before loading such containers in a foreign port for shipment to 
the United States, either directly or through a foreign port. [See 
comment 2] 

CSI was created to ensure the twin goals of CBP are met - presenting 
terrorists and terrorist weapons from entering the United States, while 
facilitating the flow of legitimate trade and travel. CSI's 
effectiveness and success can be measured by several factors. At CSI's 
core is the unique and unparalleled cooperation and information sharing 
between the CBP officers at the foreign seaports and the host 
government customs personnel when pre-screening maritime containerized 
cargo destined to the United States for weapons of mass destruction or 
other terrorist related activities. 

In the draft report, GAO states that 90 percent of cocaine moves 
through Mexico; however, no CSI ports are located in Mexico. The report 
also states that the U.S. government efforts to interdict narcotics in 
the Central American and Caribbean corridors have not made significant 
progress due to these countries' limited resources. limited political 
support (within their own govenment). inability to maintain equipment 
and vessels provided by the United States and corruption of government 
officials. The CSI program is no the mechanism to address these vast 
discrepancies. [See comment 3] 

As stated above, CSI was implemented to address the threat to border 
security and global trade posed by the potential for terrorist use of a 
maritime container to deliver a weapon of mass destruction. 
Importantly, CSI focuses efforts And resources on maritime 
containerized cargo destined to the United States with a nexus to 
terrorism. The CST program is a voluntary program and there are no 
binding agreements which can be enforced if a country refuses to 
continue with the CST program. CSI's focus, as stipulated in the SA FE 
Port Act. is the security of the international supply chain. [See 
comment 4] 

In March 2008, CRP met with the Office of National Drug Control Policy 
(ONDCP) and representatives of the Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 
South) to discuss the CSI program and its mission. At this meeting, 
ONDCP and JIATF South inquired whether CSI tracked maritime containers 
not destined to the United States, such as maritime containers from the 
Central American end Caribbean corridors destined to Europe and/or 
Mexico. CBP reiterated that the CSI program. as mandated by Congress, 
only pre-screens and targets maritime containers destined to the United 
States. In essence. what GAO and ONDCP are requesting, is not only 
expanding the CSI program to target for narcotics, but to also target 
maritime containers that are destined to other countries. Such an 
expansion is outside the mandate of the CSI program. [See comment 5] 

In addition, although the draft report does not recognize CBP's counter-
narcotics program, CRP will continue to use its assets within its 
domestic operations to target for narcotics and will continue to work 
with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and our 
foreign counterparts in that we believe is an effective counter-
narcotics program. [See comment 6] 

With regard to GAO's comment and observations made on intelligence-
gathering and investigations, we would like to emphasize that a 
constant flow of information pertaining to drug trafficking networks 
and organizations is the key to our targeting and interdiction efforts. 
[See comment 7] 

The draft report also tends to focus principally on Drug Enforcement 
Administration (DEA) or military assistance given to host governments. 
The report does not mention that DHS has deployed advisors (funded by 
Department of State or U.S. Agency for International Development) for 
both shot and long term details in provide training and technical 
assistance. 

DHS advisory presence has existed in Ecuador since 2001. In addition, 
DHS has provided support to other transit zone countries by deploying 
specialized teams to those locations. The advisors have provided 
guidance or training in the following areas: customs documentation, 24 
hour rule, targeting/risk management, integrity awareness, 
airport/border/seaport interdiction operations. management, mail 
processing. container examination, security, firearms, and officer 
safety. [See comment 6] 

Lastly, the draft report does not include the significant efforts 
contributed by CBP Air and Marine (A&M). All of these efforts are 
resource intensive for an office of its size whose personnel, assets,
and budget are self contained and do not receive the benefit of State 
Department funding. Some specific examples of CBP A&M efforts include 
but are not limited to: 

* P-3 Transit. Zone Operations - Currently CBP's entire fleet of P-3 
aircraft supports counterdrug operations in the Transit Zone, to 
include missions flown from Central and South America; 

* Operation Halcon - Up until November 30, 2006, legacy Customs and CRP 
aircraft supported a continuous joint interdiction operation with 
Mexico that began in 1990; 

* Air to Air Interdiction, Dominican Republic - Art interdiction effort 
that was reinstituted after a resurgence of airborne smuggling activity 
near the island nations of Hispaniola; 

* Longstanding Support to The Bahamas - CBP A&M has placed an Aviation 
Advisor the U.S. Embassy in Nassau to provide enhanced support to 
Operation Bahamas Turks and Caicos (OPBAT), which targets smuggling 
operations destined to the Bahamas from other source countries as well 
as smuggling operations from the Bahamas to the United States, 
specifically southern Florida. 

In addition to sustained efforts by P-3 aircraft in the Eastern Pacific 
conducting maritime operations and the Citation (C-530) interceptors 
conducting airborne interdiction operations in Mexico. CBP A&M re-
initiated the airborne interdiction and Blackhawk helicopter endgame 
operations in the Dominican Republic to combat smuggling operations. 
These interagency joint nation operations, are assisting in the 
disruption of smuggling operations operating in the transit vector to 
the Dominican Republic. CBP A&M was also instrumental in providing 
maritime enforcement interdiction training to the Government of 
Colombia Coast Guard. including high speed boat-to-boat tactical 
enforcement techniques and disabling procedures. 

We thank you again for the opportunity to offer comments on this draft 
report and look forward to working with you on future homeland security 
issues. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 
Penelope G. McCormack: 
Acting Director: 
Departmental Audit Liaison Office: 

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of Homeland 
Security's letter dated June 27, 2008. 

GAO Comments: 

1. A decision on whether to enlist CSI as a counternarcotics tool 
should be based on a reasoned study of its feasibility by relevant 
stakeholders, formally assessing the program's statutory authority 
among other factors. ONDCP and State support this recommendation. 

2. CSI's mandate does not prohibit leveraging the program's resources 
for other agency missions. In addition, DHS/CBP notes in the CSI 
Strategic Plan for 2006-2011 that, "at some point in the future, 
consideration should be given to potential expansion of the program 
from focusing on terrorism alone to encompassing other activities known 
to support terrorism, such as smuggling narcotics, violations of 
intellectual property rights and currency violations." 

3. As noted in our report, seven CSI ports are located the Caribbean 
and Central America. Four of those ports (Balboa, Colon, and Manzanillo 
in Panama and Puerto Cortes in Honduras), are located on the central 
American isthmus and, as such, are included in the "Central American/ 
Mexican Corridor," through which nearly 90 percent of cocaine destined 
for the United States moves. (See figure 1.) 

4. As DHS notes in its letter, the United States has "unique and 
unparalleled cooperation and information sharing between the CBP 
officers at the foreign seaports and the host government customs 
personnel." CSI's way of working with host country partners may serve 
as a model for combating corruption and gaining the political support 
necessary to make U.S. efforts successful. 

5. We are not recommending that CSI target maritime containers destined 
for other countries. Rather, we are recommending that, in addition to 
the factors CSI currently uses to target containers for inspection, DHS 
study the feasibility of using potential narcotics trafficking as one 
of the targeting factors. 

6. We added information on CBP's advisory program. 

7. The focus of our review was on U.S. initiatives to assist selected 
major drug transit zone countries and we intentionally did not address 
many U.S. interdiction operations DHS described. We have reported 
previously on CBP's activities. See GAO, Drug Control: Agencies Need to 
Plan for Likely Declines in Drug Interdiction Assets, and Develop 
Better Performance Measures for Transit Zone Operations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-200] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 
15, 2005); and GAO, Drug Control: Difficulties in Measuring Costs and 
Results of Transit Zone Interdiction Efforts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-13] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 
25, 2002). 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement 
Administration: 

U.S. Department of Justice: 
Drug Enforcement Administration: 
[hyperlink, http://www.dea.gov]: 

June 19, 2008: 

Mr. Jess T. Ford: 
Director, International Affairs and Trade: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Ford: 

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) appreciates the opportunity 
to review and comment on the Government Accountability Office's (GAO) 
draft report, entitled: Drug Control: Cooperation with Major Drug 
Transit Countries Has Improved, But Better Performance Reporting and 
Sustainability Plans Are Needed, GAO-07-784. This letter constitutes 
DEA's formal response. 

GAO's draft report addressed how U.S. agencies have assisted with 
disrupting drug trafficking through the eight major transit zone 
countries in Central and South America and the Caribbean. GAO's report 
also focused on U.S. efforts to assist these countries with becoming 
self-sustaining partners in the international counternarcotics effort. 

The report recognized the significant accomplishments of DEA's vetted 
investigative units. These vetted units are located in the principal 
drug transit countries in the region and are staffed by local law 
enforcement officers working in cooperation with DEA. These units have 
conducted numerous successful investigations targeting priority drug 
trafficking organizations (DTO). The report also noted DEA' s efforts 
to assist these countries with developing methods for gathering, 
analyzing, and sharing intelligence. 

In the report, GAO acknowledged the difficulty in measuring the 
collective outcomes of all U.S. counternarcotics efforts for each 
transit zone country. While it is difficult to measure the outcome of 
all efforts, DEA has tracked statistical data to include financial and 
drug seizures, arrests, intelligence sharing, and the disruption/ 
dismantling of DTOs in the transit zone countries to ensure DEA is 
achieving its strategic goals. DEA utilizes its performance goals 
regarding disrupting and dismantling DTOs to assist the Department of 
State and the Office of National Drug Control Policy in developing 
overall performance measures for US counternarcotics programs. 

DEA has also reviewed the draft report for sensitivity and technical 
issues and has no recommendations for redactions or revisions. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 
Gary W. Oetjen: 
Deputy Chief Inspector: 

Cc: Richard Theis, ALG: 
AD, OC, NC, CC, CP, OG: 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of State: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

United States Department of State: 
Assistant Secretary for Resource Management and chief Financial 
Officer: 
Washington, DC 20520: 

June 25, 2008: 

Ms. Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers: 	
Managing Director International Affairs and Trade: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548-0001: 

Dear Ms. Williams-Bridgers: 

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report,
"Drug Control: Cooperation with Most Major Drug Transit Countries Has 
Improved, but Better Performance Reporting and Sustainability Plans Are 
Needed," GAO Job Code 320530. 

The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report. 

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact Pat 
Yorkman, Procurement Specialist, Bureau of International Narcotics and 
Law Enforcement Affairs at (202) 776-8806. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Bradford R. Higgins: 

cc: GAO - Al Huntington: 
INL - David Johnson: 
State/OIG - Mark Duda: 

U.S. Department of State Comments on GAO Draft Report: 

Drug Control: Cooperation with Major Drug Transit Countries Has
Improved, but Better Performance Reporting and Sustainability Plans Are
Needed, (GAO-08-784/Code 320530): 

The Department has reviewed the draft report, "Drug Control: 
Cooperation with Major Drug Transit Countries Has Improved, but Better 
Performance Reporting and Sustainability Plans Are Needed," and 
generally agrees with its main conclusions. However, we partially 
disagree with the recommendations concerning the establishment of 
performance measures and the operation and maintenance of donated 
counternarcotics assets. 

Specifically, we disagree with the recommendation that the Secretary of 
State, in consultation with the Director of ONDCP, the Secretaries of 
Defense and Homeland Security, the Attorney General, and the 
Administrator USAID, establish performance measures for U.S. assistance 
efforts and report the results annually for each country in the 
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report (INCSR). [See comment 
1] 

The recommendation is duplicative of uniform performance measures 
already established by the State Department and USAID as part of the 
Transformational Diplomacy Initiative, which is designed not only to 
assess the impact of counternarcotics efforts but to evaluate 
development assistance in general. [See comment 2] 

While these measures do not necessarily capture the impact of specific 
projects such as boats for maritime interdiction, they do indicate 
movement toward the larger, long-term objective of assisting countries 
to become full and self-sustaining partners in the international 
counternarcotics effort, especially when incorporated into a holistic 
program performance plan. 

While true that the standard measures of cooperation appearing in the 
INCSR are not directly aligned by country and program, there is 
substantial variation in assistance programs to particular countries in 
terms of program types and funding levels. Additional variation occurs 
due to the fact that many countries in the INCSR receive no program 
assistance at all. [See comment 3] 

The Department agrees in part with the recommendation that "the 
Secretary of State, in consultation with the Director of ONDCP, the 
Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security, and the Attorney General, 
(1) develop a plan to ensure that partner nations in the transit zone 
can effectively operate and maintain all counternarcotics assets the 
U.S. has provided... and report this plan to the Congress for the 
fiscal year 2010 appropriations cycle; and (2) ensure that before 
providing a counternarcotics asset to a partner nation, agencies 
determine the total operations and maintenance cost over its useful 
life, and, with the recipient nation, develop a plan for funding this 
cost." 

The Department recognizes the need to consider the sustainability of 
donated assets; we address this concern in designing projects and in 
drafting letters of agreement (LOAs) with partner countries. However, 
we caution that foreign assistance cannot always be preconditioned on 
the recipient government's ability or willingness to sustain donated 
equipment for its projected useful life. 

While we strive to forge agreements with the recipient governments for 
sustainability, it is difficult to project another government's 
budgetary resources; moreover, governments and priorities change. A 
case in point involved the donation of two C-26 surveillance aircraft 
for maritime interdiction operations to the Regional Security System of 
the Eastern Caribbean in 1999. According to the "plan", the U.S. would 
support the operation and maintenance of the aircraft for a period of 
five years, after which the RSS would gradually assume responsibility 
for the program over a four-year period. Despite our best efforts, in 
2004 the RSS refused to begin cost-sharing, the U.S. cut funding 
completely in 2006, and the planes are no longer being used for 
surveillance and interdiction operations. Sustainability is an 
important goal, but given the unpredictability of foreign partners' 
long-term priorities, we believe our existing oversight mechanisms are 
appropriate to monitor partner nations' commitment towards 
counternarcotics efforts. [See comment 4] 

Developing an interagency plan beyond the Department's present 
monitoring capability is impractical. Agencies presently work together 
collegially at an interagency level. Sustainability of assets is one of 
the aspects considered in State's decisions to provide development 
support to other countries. However, options are limited beyond the 
ability to influence other agencies for a coordinated plan when, for 
example, competing program objectives arise. For example, the 
Department has no influence over a Department of Defense program like 
"Enduring Friendship" which has donated boats to foreign countries who 
then request fuel and maintenance assistance from State to keep the 
boats operational. [See comment 5] 

The Department fully supports any consultations needed to implement the 
recommendation that "the Secretary of Homeland Security (should) 
determine the feasibility of expanding its container security 
assistance program to include routine targeting and scanning of 
containers for illegal drugs in major drug transit countries." 

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of State's letter 
dated June 25, 2008. 

GAO Comments: 

1. We modified our recommendation to emphasize the need for State to 
report the results of U.S.-funded counternarcotics initiatives more 
comprehensively and consistently for each country in its annual 
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report. Such information would 
complement and aid interpretation of the broad performance measures 
State includes in its performance plan. 

2. While the broad performance measures State has developed are 
important, they do not capture results of specific assistance programs, 
and, without other information, their usefulness in managing 
counternarcotics programs is limited. Reviewing program-specific 
results in a particular country over time or comparing results among 
countries with similar programs can help identify patterns and lessons 
learned that may be useful in evaluating and managing these programs 
more effectively. Furthermore, without consistently reported program- 
specific results information, State cannot assess the extent to which 
the results of specific programs have contributed to overall progress 
reflected in State overall performance measures. 

3. While we agree that assistance programs vary, we observed that many 
programs in several countries are similar and comparable. 

4. Past experience with U.S.-provided assets has shown that State's 
monitoring of nation's commitment alone has not been sufficient to 
ensure that such assets are utilized effectively. We question whether 
such U.S. investments are justifiable without stronger up-front 
assurances, beyond an agreement, that recipient countries or sponsoring 
U.S. agencies can afford the long-term operations and maintenance costs 
and are committed to providing those resources. We continue to believe 
that explicit sustainability plans are needed that include a projection 
of total asset ownership costs that have been considered and agreed 
upon by all relevant parties with adequate contingency plans in case 
assumptions change about sustainability and commitment. 

5. State is in a unique position as the lead foreign affairs agency to 
ensure that all participating U.S. agencies involved in providing 
counternarcotics assets agree on a discreet sustainability plan. State, 
in particular, can influence Defense's sustainability planning when it 
approves security assistance programs, such as Enduring Friendship. 
Section 1206 of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2006, under 
which Enduring Friendship was authorized, requires State and Defense to 
jointly approve all projects and coordinate their implementation. 
[Footnote 32] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Office of National Drug Control Policy: 

Executive Office Of The President: 
Office Of National Drug Control Policy: 
Washington, D.C. 20503: 

June 23, 2008: 

Mr. Jess Ford: 
Director, International Affairs and Trade Issues: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548-0001: 

Dear Mr. Ford: 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft GAO 08-784 Report 
to Congressional Requesters, entitled Cooperation with Most Major Drug 
Transit Countries Has Improved, but Better Performance Reporting and 
Sustainability Plans Are Needed. Your report comes during a unique 
period in our bi-lateral relations with many of these major transit 
countries. We are diligently working to improve the effectiveness of 
counternarcotics cooperation throughout the Western Hemisphere. 

We accept your recommendation that ONDCP provide technical assistance 
to the National Drug Control Program agencies in the development of 
appropriate performance measures, and also in the development of plans 
to ensure that partner nations are able to effectively operate and 
maintain all counternarcotics assets provided by the United States. In 
addition, we strongly concur with your recommendation that DHS 
determine the feasibility of expanding the Container Security 
Initiative to include routine targeting and scanning of containers for 
illicit drugs. 

Once again, we appreciate the opportunity to review this report and 
believe we are already on the right course concerning your 
recommendations. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

John P. Walters: 
Director: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Jess T. Ford, (202) 512-4268, or fordj@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, A. H. Huntington, III, 
Assistant Director; Joseph Carney; Miriam A. Carroll; and James Michels 
made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO has published several related reports, including: GAO, Drug 
Control: U.S. Assistance Has Helped Mexican Counternarcotics Efforts, 
but Tons of Illicit Drugs Continue to Flow into the United States, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-1018] (Washington, 
D.C.: Aug. 17, 2007); GAO, Drug Control: Agencies Need to Plan for 
Likely Declines in Drug Interdiction Assets, and Develop Better 
Performance Measures for Transit Zone Operations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-200] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 
15, 2006); GAO, Drug Control: Difficulties in Measuring Costs and 
Results of Transit Zone Interdiction Efforts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-13] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 
25, 2002); and GAO, Drug Control: Update on U.S. Interdiction Efforts 
in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO/NSIAD-98-30] (Washington, D.C.: 
Oct. 15, 1997). 

[2] The strategy's other priorities include stopping drug use before it 
starts and healing America's drug users. 

[3] See GAO, Drug Control: U.S. Efforts in Latin America and the 
Caribbean, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO/NSIAD-00-
90R] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 18, 2000) and [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO/NSIAD-98-30]. 

[4] International Narcotics Control Strategy Report is a 
congressionally mandated report (22 U.S.C. sec. 2291h(a)). It requires 
that State report annually on the efforts of source and transit 
countries to attack all aspects of the international drug trade. 

[5] The 1988 UN Drug Convention sets forth a number of obligations that 
the parties agree to undertake. Generally, it requires the parties to 
take legal measures to outlaw and punish all forms of illicit drug 
production, trafficking, and drug money-laundering, to control 
chemicals that can be used to process illicit drugs, and to cooperate 
in international efforts to these ends. 

[6] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-1018]. 

[7] As defined in State's International Narcotics Control Strategy 
Report, a major drug-producing, or transit country, is one: (a) that is 
a significant direct source of illicit narcotic or psychotropic drugs 
or other controlled substances significantly affecting the United 
States or (b) through which such drugs or substances are transported. A 
country's presence on this list is not necessarily an adverse 
reflection of its government's counternarcotics efforts or level of 
cooperation with the United States. 

[8] The President has also designated Mexico as a "major drug transit 
country;" however, because we reported on the U.S. drug assistance to 
Mexico in 2007, we are not reviewing it in this report. 

[9] JIATF-South includes representatives from Defense, Justice, DHS, 
and other U.S. agencies; nations such as France, the Netherlands, and 
the United Kingdom; and several nations in the transit and source 
zones. 

[10] Including Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, 
Nicaragua, and Panama. 

[11] The vetted unit in Venezuela is no longer cooperating with U.S. 
law enforcement officials, due to political tensions between the U.S. 
and Venezuelan governments. 

[12] Venezuela discontinued its participation in this system in 2005. 

[13] These countries' consent is required to interdict vessels 
operating in their territorial waters or vessels operating under their 
flag in international waters. 

[14] The United States operates three other forward operating locations 
in Aruba, Curacao, and El Salvador. 

[15] According to ONDCP, all fronts of the Revolutionary Armed Forces 
of Colombia (FARC) are involved in the drug trade at some level, which 
includes controlling cocaine production, securing labs and airstrips, 
and, at times, cooperating with other organizations to transport 
multiton quantities of cocaine from Colombia through transit zone 
countries to the United States and Europe. 

[16] The task force ceased operation in 2005, when the government of 
Venezuela began refusing nearly all counternarcotics cooperation with 
the United States. 

[17] Pub. L. No. 103-62, as amended. 

[18] See GAO, Results-Oriented Government: GPRA Has Established a Solid 
Foundation for Achieving Greater Results, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-38] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 
10, 2004). 

[19] Seizures are defined as taking physical possession of the cocaine. 
Disruptions are defined as forcing individuals suspected of 
transporting cocaine to jettison or abandon their cargo. 

[20] Enduring Friendship is a regional multiyear initiative that 
provides maritime security assistance to select countries in Latin 
America and the Caribbean. Enduring Friendship is intended to 
strengthen partner nations' maritime domain awareness and operational 
capabilities to anticipate and respond to threats, maritime 
emergencies, and natural disasters, and to enhance control over illicit 
trafficking lanes. This program is intended to improve partner nation 
maritime command, control, and communications capability; increase 
interoperability; and integrate maritime operational pictures, thus 
laying the foundation for maritime theater-wide information sharing and 
coalition operations. The first of three Enduring Friendship phases 
focused on the Dominican Republic, Panama, Jamaica, and the Bahamas. 
Phase two will include Belize, Honduras, Guatemala, and Nicaragua. The 
eastern Caribbean and the Regional Security Systems countries will be 
included in phase three. 

[21] Section 706 of the Foreign Assistance Act requires that the 
President identify any country that has "failed demonstrably... to make 
substantial efforts" to adhere to international counternarcotics 
agreements and to take certain counternarcotics measures set forth in 
U.S. law. Any country so identified may not receive U.S. assistance 
except under certain conditions. This prohibition does not affect 
counternarcotics, humanitarian, and certain other types of assistance. 

[22] According to the agreement, signed in November 1999, following the 
initial 10-year period, it may be renewed by both countries for 
additional 5-year periods or terminated by either country, effective 1 
year later. 

[23] We present the Transparency International Corruption Perception 
Index as a useful, broad gauge of corruption; however, the index is an 
imprecise measure. It gauges survey respondents' perceptions of 
corruption rather than directly measuring the incidence of corruption. 
The index is not intended to guide specific program or policy 
decisions. 

[24] In 2007, CBP and the Department of Energy also began the Secure 
Freight Initiative, a pilot program implemented at selected CSI 
seaports to scan 100 percent of U.S.-bound cargo containers for nuclear 
and radiological materials overseas. Honduras is the only transit zone 
country with a Secure Freight Initiative program. 

[25] Pub. L. No. 109-347, sec. 205 (codified at 6 U.S.C. 945). 

[26] The seven CSI ports in the transit zone are: Puerto Cortes, 
Honduras; Caucedo, Dominican Republic; Kingston, Jamaica; Freeport, the 
Bahamas; and Balboa, Colon, and Manzanillo, Panama. 

[27] National Defense Authorization Act of 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-163, § 
1206. 119 Stat. 3136, 3456-58 (2006). See GAO, Section 1206 Security 
Assistance Program--Findings on Criteria, Coordination, and 
Implementation, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-
416R] (Washington, D.C.: February 28, 2007). 

[28] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-1018]. 

[29] The Department of the Treasury (Treasury) implements a relatively 
small amount of counternarcotics related assistance in the transit 
zone, primarily relating to training on money-laundering 
investigations; however, since State funded and reported on this 
assistance, we relied on State-provided information and did not meet 
with Treasury officials, other than officials from the Office of 
Foreign Assets Control, who indicated they had undertaken very little 
activity in the countries we reviewed. 

[30] Defense counternarcotics data reflect estimates of 
counternarcotics-related support in these countries, because Defense 
budgets are by program, not by country. 

[31] GAO, Foreign Assistance: U.S. Anticorruption Programs in Sub- 
Saharan Africa Will Require Time and Commitment, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-506] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 
26, 2004). 

[32] National Defense Authorization Act of 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-163, § 
1206. 119 Stat. 3136, 3456-58 (2006). See GAO, Section 1206 Security 
Assistance Program--Findings on Criteria, Coordination, and 
Implementation, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-
416R] (Washington, D.C.: February 28, 2007). 

[End of section] 

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