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US forces are ill-equipped to stop illegal drugs and migrants, says a top military official

Mar 11, 2016, 22:47 IST

US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class David A. BrandenburgUS Navy

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - US forces responsible for disrupting the flow of illegal drugs and migrants to the US lack the airplanes and ships needed to perform their mission at the level set by the Pentagon, a top US admiral said on Thursday.

Admiral Kurt Tidd, head of US forces operating in Central and South America, told lawmakers the goal was for US forces to interdict 40% of the illegal traffic moving from the region toward the US.

"The simple fact of the matter is we do not" have the resources to achieve that goal, Tidd said.

"I do not have the ships, I do not have the aircraft, to be able to execute the detection-monitoring mission to the level that has been established for us to achieve," he added.

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Tidd said on any given day, the US had five to six ships operating in the region, most of them Coast Guard cutters under the Department of Homeland Security. He said only one to two US Navy ships were involved on average.

A significant amount of the illicit drugs consumed in the US are produced in Latin America and trafficked into the country through its southern approaches.

About 90% of the cocaine used by Americans is smuggled into the country through the Mexico/Central America corridor, according to a recent US government report. (Much of that cocaine is controlled by "El Chapo" Guzmán's powerful Sinaloa cartel.)

The vast majority of the world's cocaine is produced in Latin America, and much of it travels to the US.UN Office on Drugs and Crime World Drug Report

While much of the illegal narcotics smuggled into the US travel on land, there have been numerous high-profile drug busts at US ports and in the waters off US coasts, including a $172 million cocaine shipment intercepted earlier this year.

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"The drug traffickers have always used different routes. They're always seeking different routes; they're like a little ant army seeking vulnerabilities," Mike Vigil, the former DEA chief of international operations, told Business Insider in an interview.

A U.S. Navy P-3 Orion Maritime patrol aircraft takes off from Incirlik airbase in the southern city of Adana, Turkey, July 26, 2015. Kurdish militants killed two Turkish soldiers in a roadside bombing on Sunday, the military said, apparently retaliating for Ankara's crackdown on the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) launched in tandem with strikes on Islamic State insurgents in Syria. Long a member of the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State, Turkey made a dramatic turnaround this week by granting the alliance access to its air bases and launching air raids against both the jihadist movement and the PKK.REUTERS/Murad Sezer

Traffickers in the 1970s and '80s would often drop drug shipments off Florida's gulf coast to be recovered and sold in the US. Since then, they have expanded into more sophisticated methods of transport, including homemade submarines, to carry multiton shipments.

"They started to build the submarines and they're still using them, but it's aircraft, commercial freighters, speedboats, you name it and they have it," Vigil added. "They never settle on one method of transportation or on one route. They're always exploring, exploring."

According to Admiral Tibbs, US Navy forces deployed to assist with monitoring and interdiction efforts in US coastal waters are underequipped for the goals that have been set.

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To achieve the required 40% interdiction levels, Tidd said he would need 21 ships on average. Asked what portion of the required surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft he was receiving, he said about 11%, according to Reuters.

"We are able to see a significant amount of the movement of drugs at sea and in the air. The challenge that we have is the ability to interdict," Tidd told a Pentagon briefing after speaking to lawmakers.

Tidd told lawmakers the problem was the imbalance between the Defense Department's resources and the missions it is being asked to address.

"It's a question of resources and the allocation of resources and priorities across all of the threats the country faces," Tidd said.

(Reporting by David Alexander and Yeganeh Torbati; Editing by David Gregorio)

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