December 12, 2007:
The
Colombian Navy took down another cocaine carrying submarine [PHOTO], off the Pacific
coast. This sub appeared to be carrying several tons of cocaine, but the crew
of four scuttled the craft before the navy could capture it. The water was
about 9,000 feet deep where the craft went down. The four crewmen of the
submersible were captured, and found to have traces of cocaine on their
clothing. The submersible was first spotted by an air force plane, which called
in a nearby navy patrol boat. That makes the third cocaine carrying sub to be
caught in the last three months. This makes ten such craft the Colombians have
captured in the last two years. One of the two recently captured (on land) subs
was under construction and about 70 percent complete. The other was ready for
use, a 56 foot craft capable of carrying five tons of cocaine. The Colombians
are not talking about any new air reconnaissance methods they may be using to
spot these stealthy craft, or if they are getting assistance from the U.S.
(something like long range heat sensors perhaps).
In late 2006, the U.S.
Coast Guard spotted and seized a similar "submarine" off the coast of Costa
Rica. They found the boat contained a crew of four, and 3.5 tons of cocaine.
That cargo was worth about $140 million dollars (wholesale price, when sold to
dealers). Certainly worth the several hundred thousand dollars or so it cost to
build the "submarine." Actually, these are not submarines in the true sense of
the word, but "semi-submersibles". The fiberglass boats, powered by a diesel
engine, have a small "conning tower" above the water, providing the crew, and
engine, with fresh air, and permitting the crew to navigate the boat. A boat of
this type is the only practical kind of "submarine" for drug smuggling. A real
submarine would be much more difficult to build, although you can buy
commercial subs for a million dollars or so. These, however, can carry only a
few hundred pounds of cargo, and not for long distances.
The main problem with
real subs is that they are not much more effective than the "semi-submersibles"
that are coming out of Colombia (and even Europe). Submarines can only travel underwater, on
battery power, for a short time. Otherwise, they are on the surface, or in a
"semi-submersible" state, running on diesel power.
So the drug gangs had the
right idea, but their "sub" was not stealthy enough to avoid detection all the
time. However, it appears that these "semi-submersibles" do work, because this
was not the first one encountered. In addition to the nine found recently in
Colombia, over a dozen have been encountered, mainly in South America, over the
last decade. Most of them are apparently getting through. Delivery by sea is
now the favored method for cocaine smugglers, because the United States has
deployed military grade aircraft detection systems, and caught too many of the
airborne drug shipments. The smugglers did their math, and realized that
improvised "submarines" were a more cost-effective way to go.