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An anti-narcotics policy that ignores the social consequences of drug crops eradication only manages to further radicalize and isolate the population in areas in which lawlessness and potential terrorist activity thrive. It also strengthens the bond between disaffected social groups and guerrilla organizations in these areas. Washington cannot continue to be blind to the fact that the three current US policies on counterterrorism, anti-narcotics, and democratization in Peru and elsewhere in Latin America, are not working in harmony. Paradoxically, the eradication of drug crops —the core of Peru’s US-sponsored anti-narcotics policy— enlarges pockets of poverty and fuels anger against the government. It also perpetuates the proverbial quagmire of alienation in which terrorism breeds. Instead of strengthening the State, drug eradication, particularly in the way it is currently carried out in the Andean countries, increases the risk of State failure.

Vanda Felbab-Brown

Fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
Felbab-Brown, V. (2010). Trouble Ahead: The Cocaleros of Peru. Desafíos, 14, 304–317. https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/desafios/a.743

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