Narcotopia In search of the Asian drug cartel that survived the CIA

Patrick Winn

Book - 2024

"Nestled in the Golden Triangle of China, Burma, and Nepal, the Wa nation has existed and thrived for over five decades. Like mountain peoples from Chechnya to the Ozarks, the Wa like to do things their own way. A tribal authority called the United Wa State Army (or UWSA) controls their native terrain. The UWSA makes laws, defends the motherland, and builds roads and schools. It even issues driver's licenses. In every sense, it is a government. And as a nation, its armed forces command 30,000 troops and 20,000 reservists, more than the militaries of Sweden or Kenya. The Wa possess high-tech weaponry: cannons, drones, and missiles that can knock jets out of the sky. Yet the one difference from their nation and those that surround t...hem is their preferred commodity: drugs. Illegal drugs are indeed one of the UWSA's top revenue sources. Over the years, tons of narcotics produced on Wa soil have hit the black market and traffickers have smuggled them onto American shores. Their ability to have a functioning government, economic system, and freedom from their neighbors derives from their sophisticated, profitable, and illegal trade. Yet, the origin story of this narco-army is smudged with American fingerprints. Not only did the CIA create the conditions for its inception, but one of its foremost leaders was a DEA asset. In Narcotopia, Patrick Winn investigates and uncovers the true story of Wa, untangling the relationship between the DEA, CIA, and Wa people. The result is a saga of an indigenous people who have tapped the power of narcotics to create a nation where there was none before and the covert operations of US intelligence to transform and undermine it for their own agenda. Every empire needs its barbarians"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

364.13365/Winn
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 364.13365/Winn (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Nonfiction novels
True crime stories
Published
New York : PublicAffairs 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Patrick Winn (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiv, 364 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 323-346) and index.
ISBN
9781541701953
  • Author's Note
  • The Nations and People of Narcotopia
  • Maps
  • Prologue
  • Superstar
  • First Encounter
  • Stranger in the Peaks
  • Guns, Drugs, and Espionage
  • The League of Warlords
  • Enslaved No More
  • Unspeakable
  • The Prodigy
  • Mr. Success
  • Nativity
  • Confidential Informant
  • Kick the Cat
  • The Burn
  • Torpedo
  • The Summit
  • Manifest Destiny
  • The Great Migration
  • Vanilla Speed
  • Whiskey Alpha
  • Mountain Fortress China
  • The Reckoning
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix: Saw Lu's Manifesto
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this gripping history, NPR correspondent Winn (Hello, Shadowlands) follows the Wa people--a tribe situated along the Burma-China border and best known for head-hunting--over the last half-century as they established the United Wa State Army, an independent government in control of a 30,000-man fighting force and a colossal drug cartel that produced heroin and later switched to manufacturing methamphetamine. The book centers on several Wa figures, including Saw Lu, a Baptist who fought to unite and modernize his people (he led a successful campaign in the 1960s to get them to stop head-hunting) and to wean them off drug trafficking, all while serving as an informant for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration; and his nemesis Wei Xuegang, the secretive criminal genius who turned the UWSA into the dominant cartel in Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle region. Stirring the pot is the feud between the DEA, which backed Saw Lu, and the CIA, which nurtured the drug trade and sabotaged Saw Lu's efforts. Part gangster saga, part espionage thriller, and part liberation epic, Winn's narrative alternates between rollicking adventure and harrowing violence conveyed in vivid, muscular prose. It's a riveting portrait of how deeply the drug trade is embedded in Southeast Asia's modernizing economies--and in America's foreign policy. Photos. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A penetrating look at the failure of the war on drugs at the drug trade's ground zero. Because the war's "primary battlefields are in Latin America and the United States' own cities, most forget where it started: Southeast Asia." So writes journalist Winn, reporting from the Golden Triangle of Myanmar (formerly Burma), where a de facto independent nation called the Wa State has emerged. The region was originally the site of a heroin epidemic that first swept through soldiers in Vietnam, then wound up in those very cities; the trade has evolved to include a veritable pharmacopeia, including the being the site for the largest seizure of drugs in the history of Asia: "55 million ya-ba pills and 1.5 metric tons of crystal meth, hidden in beer crates." Ominously, while meth requires the chemical basis of a scarce substance called pseudoephedrine, Wa chemists have learned to make it from scratch, "new-age alchemy, turning lead into gold." Winn follows generations of warlords, foot soldiers, and federal agents and informants, and by his account, the Wa State has flourished largely because of the American government's missteps--and, in some instances, due to calculated assistance played out against a backdrop of geopolitics. One compelling player is an anti-drug crusader who later descended into heroin addiction, despairing under a regime whose kingpin was "a consummate capitalist" who had carved out minor satrapies for lesser narco-criminals. What is clear, Winn writes, is that the American government's approach is ineffectual at least in part because officials seem not to understand that they are dealing with "a state that is wrapped around a meth cartel," one that must be treated as a government on its own terms and that demands more nuanced diplomatic relations than it has been accorded to date. A valuable contribution to the literature on the international drug trade and its seemingly limitless power. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.