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Colombia's narco-sub 'museum' gives a peek into drug trafficking tactics

For years, smugglers have been using semi-submersibles to traffic drugs. As the US wages the war on drugs, Colombia鈥檚 Pacific coast is the Silicon Valley of narco-innovation.

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Colombian Navy/Reuters
A makeshift submarine is lifted out of the water at 叠补丑铆补 Malaga on the Pacific coast, in 2007. Stacked along one edge of the 叠补丑铆补 惭谩濒补驳补 naval base is what authorities call 'the museum' 鈥 a long row of impounded vehicles that chart the evolution of the drug trafficking industry.

Stacked along one edge of the 叠补丑铆补 惭谩濒补驳补 naval base is what authorities call 鈥渢he museum鈥 鈥 a long row of impounded vehicles that chart the evolution of the drug trafficking industry. There are the lumbering fishing boats that used to run marijuana in the 1970s and 1980s, Miami Vice-era 鈥済o-fast鈥 boats, and an entire fleet of manned and unmanned semisubmersibles.

But the crown jewel of the display, and the stuff of drug enforcement nightmares, is a fully functional narco-sub. Built in the jungle, the hulking blue submarine can carry eight tons of cocaine and is similar to the nation鈥檚 own tactical sub, with one addition: This one has indoor plumbing. Discovered last year in the dense mangroves that make this region a smugglers鈥 paradise, the submarine 鈥 technically a 鈥渟norkel sub鈥 鈥 can hit speeds of 12-15 knots and travel 8,000 miles. That鈥檚 more than enough to make it to the coast of California and back, said Capt. Nelson Hernandez. Designed to travel 32 feet below water with only a small intake valve protruding, it would have been virtually undetectable if it were launched, he said.

鈥淲ith this kind of technology we might see a huge flow of drugs, or guns or anything heading north,鈥 Hernandez said.

As the United States wages the war on drugs, this stretch of Colombia鈥檚 Pacific coast is the Silicon Valley of narco-innovation. When the trafficking industry develops new maritime technology to stay ahead of the law, this is often where it appears first.

RELATED: Think you know Latin America? Take our geography quiz!

For years, smugglers have been using semi-submersibles, which glide just below the water鈥檚 surface leaving no wake and a weak radar signature. Authorities began busting them in the late 1990s, but a local port manager in nearby Buenaventura recalls seeing the first one in the 1980s.

But full-fledged submarines are relatively new. Only three have been found in South America in recent years 鈥 two in Colombia and one in neighboring Ecuador. A fourth, much earlier, version was discovered in Colombia鈥檚 capital in 2000.

In Senate testimony last year, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency鈥檚 Chief of Intelligence Rodney Benson said the advent of 鈥渟elf-propelled fully submersible vessels鈥 underscores the incredible lengths drug traffickers will take to move their product.鈥

鈥淎lthough these vessels are unlikely to supplant more traditional drug trafficking conveyances, analysis suggests that fully submersible vehicles carry large loads of cocaine and are extremely difficult to detect,鈥 he said.

About 60 percent of Colombia鈥檚 submersible busts relied on intelligence sources and investigative work 鈥 not technology like radar, Hernandez said.

Authorities monitor charter flights into the region and track new moons and high tides to try to predict traffickers鈥 moves. Smugglers are superstitious, so authorities keep tabs on the local brujas, or witches, for clues, he said.

鈥淲hen does the bruja bring in her herbs? When is the bruja alone? When is the bruja at home? When does the bruja have guests?鈥 Hernandez said. 鈥淎ll of these things are part of the analysis.鈥

Authorities have impounded 23 semisubmersibles and detected 96 over the years. Countless others have been scuttled by traffickers to keep from being caught, Hernandez said.

For the vessels that make it away from the Colombian shores, an intelligence center in Key West, run by the U.S. Southern Command, guides Coast Guard and DEA agents to suspect boats in collaboration with Central American law enforcement.

Colombia has dramatically cut down its coca-leaf and cocaine production over the last decade, but it remains the largest supplier of the narcotic to the United States. This year along Colombia鈥檚 Pacific, more than 80 tons of cocaine has been seized, the Navy said.

While the submarine may be the most dramatic innovation, it鈥檚 not the only one.

Tucked between the vessels at the 鈥渕useum鈥 are what look like steel torpedoes 鈥 or what officials here call 鈥渦nmanned submersibles.鈥

The torpedoes are streamlined containers that can carry several tons of cocaine and be towed behind an inconspicuous fishing vessel or attached to the hull of a boat. If the traffickers suspect they are about to be raided, they simply cut it loose.

鈥淎bout a month ago, we noticed that they were starting to use electronic beacons on the unmanned submersibles,鈥 Hernandez said. The technology allows smugglers to ditch their cargo and recover it days or weeks later.

Another recent innovation is the use of drop boxes that can be packed with cocaine and buried on a beach in, say, Costa Rica or Nicaragua.

RELATED: Think you know Latin America? Take our geography quiz!

鈥淲hen the payment comes through, the client is given the coordinates of where to find the boxes,鈥 Hernandez explained, 鈥渟o there鈥檚 never a face-to-face meeting.鈥

As he peered into the hatch of one of the semisubmersibles, Lt. Diego Areiza described the drug war as a cat-and-mouse technology race.

鈥淭his is an example of the evolution of criminal innovation,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also an example of the way we鈥檙e evolving. Otherwise, you wouldn鈥檛 see all these vessels here.鈥

Capt. Ricardo Benitorevollo is a submariner in the Colombian Navy and has studied the narco-sub carefully. He said the machine has sophisticated submersion and trim controls, a ballast management system and central AC. When they discovered it, it was loaded with packages of caustic soda, suggesting the machine also was going to have an oxygen scrubber. He estimated it might cost $2 million to build.

Asked how it compared to Colombian subs, he said it was very similar to the Navy鈥檚 tactical sub but had more amenities. On the Colombian sub, officers have to go on deck to use the bathroom. The narco-sub has an interior bathroom.

There鈥檚 also another difference, he said: 鈥淭heir beds are bigger.鈥

Miami Herald staff writer Carol Rosenberg contributed to this report from Miami.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/12/03/176143/colombias-narco-sub-museum-gives.html#storylink=cpy

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