The work also connects U.S. policy in Colombia and the Contra war in Nicaragua to the growth of regional cocaine and heroin markets. Controversy and Legacy
The book traces this pattern across multiple decades and regions, showing how U.S. intervention consistently correlated with surges in drug production: The politics of heroin : CIA complicity in the ...
Updated editions of the book detail how the CIA-backed Mujahideen in the 1980s transformed Afghanistan into the world's leading opium producer. McCoy asserts that while the U.S. provided arms to fight the Soviets, it ignored the massive heroin trade that sustained these guerrilla forces. The work also connects U
During the Vietnam War, the CIA supported Hmong tribesmen in Laos and South Vietnamese officials who were heavily involved in the opium trade. This led to a heroin epidemic among U.S. soldiers serving in Vietnam, with estimates suggesting up to 15% were users by 1971. During the Vietnam War, the CIA supported Hmong
Using CIA-owned airlines like Air America to transport opium from remote mountainous regions to refineries.