Strategic Planning and the Drug ThreatDIANE Publishing - 187 pages The authors illustrate how the principles and techniques of strategic and operational planning can be applied to the supply reduction side of our national effort to curb the trafficking of illicit drugs. They provide a detailed overview of the drug problem and discuss key ingredients and how an effective strategy can be formulated, including better ways to synchronize and sustain cooperative multiagency assaults on drug trafficking networks. While recognizing that eliminating the demand for drugs is the best and perhaps only lasting solution to the larger problem, the authors acknowledge that such can never be achieved without complementary supply reduction actions that curtail the international drug producers, the traffickers and the local pusher from selling their wares. |
From inside the book
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Page iv
... MULTIAGENCY CAMPAIGN PLAN PPENDIX C. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE GUIDANCE SUPPORTING THE NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL STRATEGY PPENDIX D. DRUG LAW ENFORCEMENT AND MILITARY ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS . . . PPENDIX E. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS FIGURES ire 1 ...
... MULTIAGENCY CAMPAIGN PLAN PPENDIX C. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE GUIDANCE SUPPORTING THE NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL STRATEGY PPENDIX D. DRUG LAW ENFORCEMENT AND MILITARY ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS . . . PPENDIX E. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS FIGURES ire 1 ...
Page vii
... multiagency assaults on drug trafficking networks. Never before has this been more important. The United States is at a critical juncture in its campaign to eliminate the rampant drug problem. Past gains are in danger of being lost ...
... multiagency assaults on drug trafficking networks. Never before has this been more important. The United States is at a critical juncture in its campaign to eliminate the rampant drug problem. Past gains are in danger of being lost ...
Page ix
... multiagency efforts. It includes a sample HIDTA strategy format. The next two chapters discuss the translation of policy documents/grand strategy of the upper echelons into planning documents at the operational level. This operational ...
... multiagency efforts. It includes a sample HIDTA strategy format. The next two chapters discuss the translation of policy documents/grand strategy of the upper echelons into planning documents at the operational level. This operational ...
Page 26
... multiagency task forces that fight drug crime. This is consistent with the HIDTA Program Director's strategic intent to push “power down” to the local officers and agents who face the drug scourge every day. The HIDTA resources will ...
... multiagency task forces that fight drug crime. This is consistent with the HIDTA Program Director's strategic intent to push “power down” to the local officers and agents who face the drug scourge every day. The HIDTA resources will ...
Page 29
... multiagency organization of about 200 agents , analysts and technicians . The 1990 National Drug Control Strategy established the requirement for an agency as a coordinating center for law enforcement intelligence . NDIC is under the ...
... multiagency organization of about 200 agents , analysts and technicians . The 1990 National Drug Control Strategy established the requirement for an agency as a coordinating center for law enforcement intelligence . NDIC is under the ...
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Common terms and phrases
actions American assets assistance Border Patrol budget Bureau campaign planning Caribbean Coast Guard cocaine Committee concepts cooperation counterdrug effort counternarcotics country team crime DAICC demand reduction Department of Defense detection and monitoring develop direction Director DLEAs drug abuse Drug Control Policy Drug Control Strategy Drug Enforcement Administration drug law enforcement drug trafficking El Paso Federal Group guidance heroin host nation illegal drugs illicit drugs implement Intelligence Center interagency investigations law enforcement agencies lead agency marijuana methamphetamine Mexico military support mission multiagency Narcotics National Drug Control National Guard National Security Office of National ONDCP Operation Alliance operational level operational planning overseas participating Paso Pena-Martinez percent personnel Phase priority Project North Star provides regional Secretary of Defense smuggling Southwest Border Staff strategic objectives supply reduction U.S. Army U.S. Border U.S. Border Patrol U.S. Customs Service U.S. Government U.S. Southern Command United Washington West Star
Popular passages
Page 134 - Goal #3: Reduce health, welfare, and crime costs resulting from illegal drug use. Between 1990 and 1995, drug abuse cost our nation more than 100,000 dead. Drug-related social costs are estimated at $67 billion each year. About 70 percent of this cost is directly related to crime. US health care costs are growing steadily. In 1994, there were over 500,000 drug-related hospital emergencies.
Page 64 - Council is to advise the President with respect to the integration of domestic, foreign, and military policies relating to national security.
Page 67 - Goal 4: Shield America's air, land, and sea frontiers from the drug threat. Goal 5: Break foreign and domestic drug sources of supply.
Page 161 - Memorandum for Secretaries of the Military Departments. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Under Secretaries of Defense Director, Defense Research and Engineering. Assistant Secretaries of Defense, General Counsel of the Department of Defense, Inspector General of the Department of Defense, Director, Operational Test and Evaluation, Assistants to the Secretary of Defense, Director, Administration and Management, Directors of the Defense Agencies...
Page 12 - Educate and enable America's youth to reject illegal drugs as well as alcohol and tobacco.
Page 157 - Detecting, monitoring, and countering the production, trafficking, and use of illegal drugs is a high priority national security mission of the Department of Defense.
Page 26 - States for International Narcotics Matters, the Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Commissioner of the US Customs Service, the Special Assistant to the Secretary of HEW, the Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division of the Justice Department, the Commandant of the US Coast Guard, and myself, the Associate Director for Drug Policy on the White House Domestic Policy Staff. These meetings not only...
Page 33 - To this end, the study is sponsored jointly by the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict (OASD/SO/LIC) and the Office of the Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs (DOS/R).
Page 153 - Andean countries, a sustained, multi-year effort to provide economic, security, and law enforcement assistance is an essential element for a successful fight against illegal drugs abroad. Drug-producing criminal organizations control what amounts to private armies that challenge the law enforcement and military forces of their countries. Often such organizations are intertwined with insurgent forces that challenge directly the governments of their countries. The National Drug Control Strategy calls...
Page 27 - Such appointees shall be considered to have a security clearance at the level necessary by virtue of such appointment and effective as of the date of entrance on duty. (a) Security clearances of employees of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Immigration and Naturalization Service (Immigration) for access to classified Information shall be made In the manner provided by the respective head of each such organization.