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{{Infobox military conflict
| partof=the [[War on Drugs]]
| place=Primarily [[Bolivia]], [[Peru]] and [[Ecuador]]<br />Also Guatemala, Panama, Costa Rica, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Venezuela, Colombia and Mexico.
| date=1987-1995
| result=
| combatant1= {{flagu|United States}}
* [[DEA]]
* [[7th Special Forces Group (United States)|7th Special Forces Group]]
* [[United States Border Patrol|USBP]] [[BORTAC]]
* [[US Coast Guard]] [[Deployable Specialized Forces|DAIT]]
* [[Navy SEALs]]/[[Special warfare combatant-craft crewmen|Special Boat Teams]]
* [[State Department]] [[Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs|ISM]]
* [[State Department Air Wing]]
* [[United States Department of Defense|DOD]]
{{flagu|Bolivia}}
* [[UMOPAR]]
* [[Bolivian Navy]]
* [[Bolivian Air Force]]
{{flagu|Peru}}
* [[Civil Guard (Peru)|Civil Guard Police]]
* [[Peruvian National Police]]
{{flagu|Colombia}}
* [[Colombian National Police]]
| combatant2= [[Cali cartel]]<br />[[Shining Path]] guerrillas<br />Illicit cocaine manufacturers
| commander1= DEA SAS Frank White
| commander2= unknown
| strength1= about 140 DEA Agents
| strength2= Unknown
| casualties1 = six DEA Agents, five State Department contractors, and twelve Peruvians were killed in two plane crashes
| casualties2 = hundreds of tons of cocaine seized, thousands of suspected traffickers arrested, several hundred thousand gallons of precursor chemical seized, hundreds of precursor facilities destroyed, dozens of aircraft and vehicles seized
}}
{{Campaignbox Operations in the War on drugs}}
{{Campaignbox Operations in the War on drugs}}
'''Operation Snowcap''' (1987–1994) was a [[War on drugs|counter-narcotics]] operation conducted by the [[Drug Enforcement Administration]] (DEA), BORTAC (U.S. Border Patrol Tactical Unit) and military/police forces in nine [[Latin American]] countries. At an annual cost to the DEA of $80 million, and involving approximately 140 agents at its onset,<ref>Though the U.S. government expected the number of agents to increase to 180. ([https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep/page/177 Chepesiuk, 1999: p. 177])</ref> Snowcap was the largest counter-narcotics operation that had been launched in Latin America.<ref name="chepesiuk-177">[https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep/page/177 Chepesiuk, 1999: p. 177]</ref> The [[U.S. Department of Defense]] leased 6 [[UH-1 Huey]] helicopters, and provided flight training to Bolivian air force pilots and [[United States Army Special Forces|Special Forces]] training for [[UMOPAR]] and DEA agents.<ref>{{cite book|author=Bewley-Taylor, David R.|title=The United States and international drug control, 1909-1997|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|year=2001|isbn=978-0-8264-5813-1|page=189|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ESxOHZZwQXoC&pg=PA189}}</ref><ref>See also: {{cite book|author=Ledebur, Kathryn|chapter=Bolivia: Clear Consequences |editor=Youngers, Coletta |editor2=Rosin, Eileen|title=Drugs and democracy in Latin America: the impact of U.S. policy|publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers|year=2005|isbn=978-1-58826-254-7|page=150|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jAzNQGZ0AV4C&pg=PA150}}</ref> Operation Snowcap recruited U.S. Army infantry officers attending the Army Infantry Officer's advanced course in the late 1980s. Senior lieutenants and captains attending the course were given classified briefings attempting to recruit them from the Army to participate for operations in Bolivia and Peru.


'''Operation Snowcap''' (1987–1995), launched in the spring of 1987, was a [[War on drugs|counter-narcotics]] operation conducted by the [[Drug Enforcement Administration]] (DEA), BORTAC (U.S. Border Patrol Tactical Unit) and military/police forces in nine [[Latin American]] countries. Operation Snowcap followed Operation Blast Furnace, a four month operation that started in July 1986, which deployed 160 Army personnel and six Blackhawk helicopters to assist Bolivia in operations against cocaine laboratories in the Beni and Santa Cruz regions of Bolivia.<ref name="UPI">{{Cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1986/09/17/Bolivia-agrees-to-keep-US-troops-in-drug-war/1404527313600/|title=Bolivia agrees to keep U.S. troops in drug war|first=Richard C.|last=Gross|date=September 17, 1986|publisher=UPO}}</ref> At an annual cost to the DEA of $80 million, and involving approximately 140 agents at its onset, Snowcap was the largest counter-narcotics operation that had been launched in Latin America. The [[U.S. Department of Defense]] leased 6 [[UH-1 Huey]] helicopters, and provided flight training to Bolivian air force pilots and [[United States Army Special Forces|Special Forces]] training for [[UMOPAR]] and DEA agents.<ref>See also: {{cite book|author=Ledebur, Kathryn|chapter=Bolivia: Clear Consequences |editor=Youngers, Coletta |editor2=Rosin, Eileen|title=Drugs and democracy in Latin America: the impact of U.S. policy|publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers|year=2005|isbn=978-1-58826-254-7|page=150|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jAzNQGZ0AV4C&pg=PA150}}</ref>
In late 1987, Clandestine Laboratory and Chemical Program Czar, Gene R. Haislip, Deputy Assistant Administrator of DEA and Douglas A. Snyder, frequent Snowcap operative, convinced high level DEA officials that change was needed in the Snowcap program. They successfully lobbied DEA brass, David Westrate, Terry Burke and Chuck Guttenson, for Frank E. White, Chief of DEA Special Training, to become the new head of Snowcap because of his breadth of military experience and no-nonsense law enforcement perspective. The top brass accepted their recommendations. In one incident in a remote jungle location, DEA Operatives White and Snyder, and Navy Seals R. Gonzales and Red Hernandez were cornered by several dozen local campesinos wielding machetes and the team barely escaped harm by boarding an air transport provided by DEAs Addison Air Wing. In a 1988 memo, White, as new head of Snowcap, charged that agents were not being given adequate to support for their mission, warning that without immediate changes, "DEA agents are going to agonize along through an excruciating death on an isolated jungle floor." DEA brass supported his request for more U.S. Military special forces assistance to field DEA agents deployed under Snowcap, with the additional deployment of Navy SEALS/medics. However, Frank White never thought the level of support was adequate to protect deployed DEA agents in such remote jungle locations, but trudged forward.


==History==
On May 20, 1989, a US or Peruvian-owned [[Cessna 208 Caravan]] that had left [[Tingo María]], in the Peruvian Amazonian highlands, on a [[DEA]] [[coca]] eradication mission taking place in the context of Operation Snowcap,<ref>https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1989/05/23/drug-agents-bodies-found-in-peru-crash/a61fe494-5123-4f3a-bb10-45e65667021b/</ref> crashed into Mount Huacranacro, 100&nbsp;km (62.5 mls) east of [[Huaral]]. The nine occupants, six Americans and three Peruvians, were killed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19890520-0|title=ASN Aircraft accident Cessna 208 Caravan I PNP-021 Huaral}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1989-05-23-8902030488-story.html|title=Air Crash Impairs Drug War in Peru|website=[[Chicago Tribune]]}}</ref> The plane may have suffered an engine failure.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/05/22/Detroit-DEA-agent-among-Peruvian-crash-victims/5014611812800/|title = Detroit DEA agent among Peruvian crash victims}}</ref>
Operation Snowcap recruited several special operations units across U.S. federal agencies and military forces to conduct "[[Black operation]]s". Leadership was selected by high-level U.S. military personnel in the late 1980s. Senior lieutenants and captains attending advanced courses were given classified briefings, attempting to recruit them from the Army to participate in operations in Bolivia and Peru.<ref>See also {{cite book|author=Menzel, Sewall H.|title=Fire in the Andes: U.S. Foreign Policy and Cocaine Politics in Bolivia and Peru|publisher=University Press of America|year=1997|isbn=978-0-7618-1001-8|page=44|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-jPscPbFKk0C&pg=PA44}}</ref>


In late 1987, Clandestine Laboratory and Chemical Program Czar, Gene R. Haislip, Deputy Assistant Administrator of DEA and Douglas A. Snyder, frequent Snowcap operative, convinced high level DEA officials that change was needed in the Snowcap program. They successfully lobbied DEA brass, David Westrate, Terry Burke and Chuck Guttenson, for Frank E. White, Chief of DEA Special Training, to become the new head of Snowcap because of his breadth of military experience and no-nonsense law enforcement perspective. The top brass accepted their recommendations.<ref>{{cite book|author=Bewley-Taylor, David R.|title=The United States and international drug control, 1909-1997|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|year=2001|isbn=978-0-8264-5813-1|page=189|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ESxOHZZwQXoC&pg=PA189}}</ref>
By the end of 1990, [[Colombian National Police]] participating in Operation Snowcap had seized 53 metric tons of [[cocaine]], arrested about 7,000 suspected [[drug trafficking|traffickers]], destroyed over 300 processing facilities, and seized over 700,000 gallons of [[precursor (chemistry)|precursor]] chemicals.<ref>{{cite book|author=Menzel, Sewall H.|title=Cocaine Quagmire: Implementing the U.S. Anti-Drug Policy in the North Andes-Colombia |publisher=University Press of America|year=2000|isbn=978-0-7618-1643-0|page=88|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6poIQNLKIe0C&pg=PA88}}</ref><ref>See also {{cite book|author=Menzel, Sewall H.|title=Fire in the Andes: U.S. Foreign Policy and Cocaine Politics in Bolivia and Peru|publisher=University Press of America|year=1997|isbn=978-0-7618-1001-8|page=44|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-jPscPbFKk0C&pg=PA44}}</ref> Snowcap was successful in temporarily reducing the amount of [[Colombian cocaine]] entering the United States, however, it ended up handing control of [[narco-trafficking]] from the powerful [[Medellín Cartel|Medellín]] and [[Cali Cartel|Cali]] [[drug cartel|cartels]] over to the smaller Mexican cartels. According to the SAC who was in charge of Operation Snowcap, Tony Laza, the DEA's "success with Medellín and Cali essentially set the Mexicans up in business, at a time when they were already cash-rich thanks to the budding [[methamphetamine]] trade in Southern California."<ref>{{cite book|author=Reding, Nick|author-link=Nick Reding (journalist)|title=Methland|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA|year=2010|isbn=978-1-60819-207-6|page=157|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qYOFM6aXSyEC&pg=PA157}}</ref>


In a 1988 memo, White, as new head of Snowcap, charged that agents were not being given adequate support for their mission, warning that without immediate changes, "DEA agents are going to agonize along through an excruciating death on an isolated jungle floor." DEA brass supported his request for more U.S. Military special forces assistance to field DEA agents deployed under Snowcap, with the additional deployments of [[United States Naval Special Warfare Command#structure|Navy SEALS & Special Boat Teams]] and Coast Guard special operation elements. However, Frank White never thought the level of support was adequate to protect deployed DEA agents in such remote jungle locations, but trudged forward.<ref name="chepesiuk-177">{{Cite web|url=http://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep|title=The war on drugs : an international encyclopedia|first=Ronald|last=Chepesiuk|date=March 7, 1999|publisher=Santa Barbara, CA. : ABC-CLIO|via=Internet Archive}}</ref>
On 27 August 1994, tragedy struck again when a DEA [[CASA 212]] Aviocar light tranport aircraft (reg. N119CA) crashed into a mountain (or at the end of a [[box canyon]]) north of Puerto Pizana, in the [[Amazonian rainforest|Amazonian jungle]] department of [[Department of San Martín|San Martín]], [[Peru]]. The crash reportedly happened while on a flight from Santa Lucia to [[Pucallpa]], in the [[Huallaga River]] Valley region, and apparently owed to bad weather and low visibility (rainy and foggy) conditions during a reconnaissance operation.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.baaa-acro.com/crash/crash-casa-212-aviocar-200-near-puerto-pizana-5-killed|title=Crash of a Casa 212 Aviocar 200 near Puerto Pizana: 5 killed &#124; Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives|website=www.baaa-acro.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19940827-0|title=Descripción del Accidente ASN 27 AUG 1994 CASA C-212 Aviocar 200 N119CA - Puerto Pisana|first=Harro|last=Ranter|website=aviation-safety.net}}</ref><ref>https://books.google.be/books?id=-9Oii_7JzscC&pg=PA83&lpg=PA83&dq=operation+snowcap+1994+casa+212+peru&source=bl&ots=ytj1927Ng9&sig=ACfU3U3-7RD-z8owzEZGL37xjdQHD40cOg&hl=es&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiXu9b0rtP1AhXKzaQKHf3AA-MQ6AF6BAgvEAM#v=onepage&q=operation%20snowcap%201994%20casa%20212%20peru&f=falseInside Dea: Operation Snowcap, p. 83</ref> This accident, and precipitated the end of Operation Snowcap<ref>Inside Dea: Operation Snowcap, p. 83</ref> The plane's five occupants, DEA Special Agents Frank S. Wallace, Jay W. Seale, Juan C. Vars, Meredith Thompson, and Frank Fernandez Jr., were killed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/frank-s-wallace-jr|title = Frank S. Wallace Jr}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/jay-w-seale|title = Jay W. Seale}}</ref><ref>https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/juan-c-vars</ref><ref>https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/meredith-thompson</ref><ref>https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/frank-fernandez-jr</ref> This crash, plus a new focus in the Andean counter-narcotics strategy by the newly-inaugurated [[Clinton administration]] (supported by [[United States Congress|Congress]]), and reduced funding by the new DEA administration of Thomas A. Constantine, eventually led to the end of Operation Snowcap that same year.<ref>Inside Operation Snowcap, p. 83-84</ref>

On May 20, 1989, tragedy struck when a US or Peruvian-owned [[Cessna 208 Caravan]] that had left [[Tingo María]], in the Peruvian Amazonian highlands, on a DEA [[coca]] eradication mission taking place in the context of Operation Snowcap,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1989/05/23/drug-agents-bodies-found-in-peru-crash/a61fe494-5123-4f3a-bb10-45e65667021b/|title=DRUG AGENTS' BODIES FOUND IN PERU CRASH|first=Michael |last=Isikoff|date=May 23, 1989|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]}}</ref> crashed into Mount Huacranacro, 100&nbsp;km (62.5 mls) east of [[Huaral]]. The nine occupants, six Americans and three Peruvians, were killed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.asndata.aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19890520-0|title=ASN Aircraft accident Cessna 208 Caravan I PNP-021 Huaral|first=Harro|last=Ranter|website=www.asndata.aviation-safety.net}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1989-05-23-8902030488-story.html|title=Air Crash Impairs Drug War in Peru|website=[[Chicago Tribune]]|date=23 May 1989 }}</ref> The plane may have suffered an engine failure.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/05/22/Detroit-DEA-agent-among-Peruvian-crash-victims/5014611812800/|title = Detroit DEA agent among Peruvian crash victims}}</ref>
After Operation Just Cause U.S. Army added an additional element of soldiers from an Airborne Unit in Panama to assist in helping with this mission. A small group of soldiers were sent to areas in Colombia and Peru to recon and help target drug facilities. They also acted in supporting roles as security for agents when engaging in their narcotic stings. This unit provided this additional support until mid-1990 when it was deemed that their engagement was overtaxing the unit's other mission in the region.

By the end of 1990, [[Colombian National Police]] participating in Operation Snowcap had seized 53 metric tons of [[cocaine]], arrested about 7,000 suspected [[drug trafficking|traffickers]], destroyed over 300 processing facilities, and seized over 700,000 gallons of [[precursor (chemistry)|precursor]] chemicals.<ref>{{cite book|author=Menzel, Sewall H.|title=Cocaine Quagmire: Implementing the U.S. Anti-Drug Policy in the North Andes-Colombia |publisher=University Press of America|year=2000|isbn=978-0-7618-1643-0|page=88|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6poIQNLKIe0C&pg=PA88}}</ref> Snowcap was successful in temporarily reducing the amount of [[Colombian cocaine]] entering the United States, however, it ended up handing control of [[narco-trafficking]] from the powerful [[Medellín Cartel|Medellín]] and [[Cali Cartel|Cali]] [[drug cartel|cartels]] over to the smaller Mexican cartels. According to the SAC who was in charge of Operation Snowcap, Tony Laza, the DEA's "success with Medellín and Cali essentially set the Mexicans up in business, at a time when they were already cash-rich thanks to the budding [[methamphetamine]] trade in Southern California."<ref>{{cite book|author=Reding, Nick|author-link=Nick Reding (journalist)|title=Methland|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA|year=2010|isbn=978-1-60819-207-6|page=157|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qYOFM6aXSyEC&pg=PA157}}</ref>

On 27 August 1994, tragedy struck again when a DEA [[CASA 212]] Aviocar light transport aircraft (reg. N119CA) crashed into a mountain (or at the end of a [[box canyon]]) north of Puerto Pizana, in the [[Amazonian rainforest|Amazonian jungle]] department of [[Department of San Martín|San Martín]], [[Peru]]. The crash reportedly happened while on a flight from Santa Lucia to [[Pucallpa]], in the [[Huallaga River]] Valley region, and apparently owed to bad weather and low visibility (rainy and foggy) conditions during a reconnaissance operation.

This crash, plus a new focus in the Andean counter-narcotics strategy by the newly inaugurated [[Clinton administration]] (supported by [[United States Congress|Congress]]), and reduced funding by the new DEA administration of [[Thomas A. Constantine]], eventually led to the end of Operation Snowcap in 1995.<ref>Inside Operation Snowcap, p. 83-84</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.baaa-acro.com/crash/crash-casa-212-aviocar-200-near-puerto-pizana-5-killed|title=Crash of a Casa 212 Aviocar 200 near Puerto Pizana: 5 killed &#124; Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives|website=www.baaa-acro.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19940827-0|title=Descripción del Accidente ASN 27 AUG 1994 CASA C-212 Aviocar 200 N119CA - Puerto Pisana|first=Harro|last=Ranter|website=aviation-safety.net}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-9Oii_7JzscC&q=operation+snowcap+1994+casa+212+peruInside&pg=PA83|title=Inside Dea: Operation Snowcap|first=Bob|last=Hartman|date=March 7, 2011|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|isbn=9781426972881|via=Google Books}}</ref> The plane's five occupants, DEA Special Agents Frank S. Wallace, Jay W. Seale, Juan C. Vars, Meredith Thompson, and Frank Fernandez Jr., were killed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/frank-s-wallace-jr|title = Frank S. Wallace Jr}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/jay-w-seale|title = Jay W. Seale}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/juan-c-vars|title = Juan C. Vars}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/meredith-thompson|title = Meredith Thompson}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dea.gov/wall-of-honor/1994/1994-08/frank-fernandez-jr|title = Frank Fernandez Jr}}</ref>

Late 1995-1996 during a counter drug operations in Colombia, a support element of special boat teams came under attack in the Antioquia Valley region while conducting reconnaissance operations by members of Columbian insurgents believed to be part of Colombia's counter revolutionary movement (FARC). The boat team members held off a force of roughly 150 rebels. Throughout the three days and nights of fighting, the special boat crew was repeatedly surrounded and cut off from escape. Short of ammunition and water, the team held on until first light on day three, regrouped and counter-attacked, punching a hole in the insurgents defense line and linking up with Navy SEAL support and Colombian special forces sent there to assist them.<ref>Though the U.S. government expected the number of agents to increase to 180. ([https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep/page/177 Chepesiuk, 1999: p. 177])</ref>

During the rescue portion in a remote jungle, DEA Operatives White and Snyder, and Navy Seals R. Gonzales and R. Hernandez were injured after being cornered by several dozen local campesinos wielding machetes and the teams barely escaped harm by boarding an air transport provided by DEAs Addison Air Wing. Members of the teams were cited for their heroism and bravery. The U.S. soon withdrew afterwards and ended all operations.<ref name="War in Columbia: Guerilla Warfare">{{Cite web|url=https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB69/part1.html|title=War in Columbia: The Andean Strategy|first=Michael|last=Evans|date=March 7, 1999|publisher=National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book|via=National Security Archive}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 18: Line 62:


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* {{cite book|author=Chepesiuk, Ron|chapter=Operation Snowcap|title=The war on drugs: an international encyclopedia|Thomas A. Constantine|publisher=ABC-CLIO|year=1999|isbn=978-0-87436-985-4|page=[https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep/page/177 177]|url=https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep|url-access=registration}}
* {{cite book|author=Chepesiuk, Ron|chapter=Operation Snowcap|title=The war on drugs: an international encyclopedia <!-- Thomas A. Constantine -->|publisher=ABC-CLIO|year=1999|isbn=978-0-87436-985-4|page=[https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep/page/177 177]|url=https://archive.org/details/warondrugsintern0000chep|url-access=registration}}

{{Colombia_conflict|state=collapsed}}
{{Internal conflict in Peru}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Snowcap, Operation}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Snowcap, Operation}}
[[Category:Drug Enforcement Administration operations]]
[[Category:Drug Enforcement Administration operations]]
[[Category:Operations against organized crime]]
[[Category:Operations against organized crime]]
[[Category:Multinational law enforcement operations|Snowcap]]

Latest revision as of 19:45, 18 May 2024

Operation Snowcap
Part of the War on Drugs
Date1987-1995
Location
Primarily Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador
Also Guatemala, Panama, Costa Rica, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Venezuela, Colombia and Mexico.
Belligerents

 United States

 Bolivia

 Peru

 Colombia

Cali cartel
Shining Path guerrillas
Illicit cocaine manufacturers
Commanders and leaders
DEA SAS Frank White unknown
Strength
about 140 DEA Agents Unknown
Casualties and losses
six DEA Agents, five State Department contractors, and twelve Peruvians were killed in two plane crashes hundreds of tons of cocaine seized, thousands of suspected traffickers arrested, several hundred thousand gallons of precursor chemical seized, hundreds of precursor facilities destroyed, dozens of aircraft and vehicles seized

Operation Snowcap (1987–1995), launched in the spring of 1987, was a counter-narcotics operation conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), BORTAC (U.S. Border Patrol Tactical Unit) and military/police forces in nine Latin American countries. Operation Snowcap followed Operation Blast Furnace, a four month operation that started in July 1986, which deployed 160 Army personnel and six Blackhawk helicopters to assist Bolivia in operations against cocaine laboratories in the Beni and Santa Cruz regions of Bolivia.[1] At an annual cost to the DEA of $80 million, and involving approximately 140 agents at its onset, Snowcap was the largest counter-narcotics operation that had been launched in Latin America. The U.S. Department of Defense leased 6 UH-1 Huey helicopters, and provided flight training to Bolivian air force pilots and Special Forces training for UMOPAR and DEA agents.[2]

History[edit]

Operation Snowcap recruited several special operations units across U.S. federal agencies and military forces to conduct "Black operations". Leadership was selected by high-level U.S. military personnel in the late 1980s. Senior lieutenants and captains attending advanced courses were given classified briefings, attempting to recruit them from the Army to participate in operations in Bolivia and Peru.[3]

In late 1987, Clandestine Laboratory and Chemical Program Czar, Gene R. Haislip, Deputy Assistant Administrator of DEA and Douglas A. Snyder, frequent Snowcap operative, convinced high level DEA officials that change was needed in the Snowcap program. They successfully lobbied DEA brass, David Westrate, Terry Burke and Chuck Guttenson, for Frank E. White, Chief of DEA Special Training, to become the new head of Snowcap because of his breadth of military experience and no-nonsense law enforcement perspective. The top brass accepted their recommendations.[4]

In a 1988 memo, White, as new head of Snowcap, charged that agents were not being given adequate support for their mission, warning that without immediate changes, "DEA agents are going to agonize along through an excruciating death on an isolated jungle floor." DEA brass supported his request for more U.S. Military special forces assistance to field DEA agents deployed under Snowcap, with the additional deployments of Navy SEALS & Special Boat Teams and Coast Guard special operation elements. However, Frank White never thought the level of support was adequate to protect deployed DEA agents in such remote jungle locations, but trudged forward.[5]

On May 20, 1989, tragedy struck when a US or Peruvian-owned Cessna 208 Caravan that had left Tingo María, in the Peruvian Amazonian highlands, on a DEA coca eradication mission taking place in the context of Operation Snowcap,[6] crashed into Mount Huacranacro, 100 km (62.5 mls) east of Huaral. The nine occupants, six Americans and three Peruvians, were killed.[7][8] The plane may have suffered an engine failure.[9] After Operation Just Cause U.S. Army added an additional element of soldiers from an Airborne Unit in Panama to assist in helping with this mission. A small group of soldiers were sent to areas in Colombia and Peru to recon and help target drug facilities. They also acted in supporting roles as security for agents when engaging in their narcotic stings. This unit provided this additional support until mid-1990 when it was deemed that their engagement was overtaxing the unit's other mission in the region.

By the end of 1990, Colombian National Police participating in Operation Snowcap had seized 53 metric tons of cocaine, arrested about 7,000 suspected traffickers, destroyed over 300 processing facilities, and seized over 700,000 gallons of precursor chemicals.[10] Snowcap was successful in temporarily reducing the amount of Colombian cocaine entering the United States, however, it ended up handing control of narco-trafficking from the powerful Medellín and Cali cartels over to the smaller Mexican cartels. According to the SAC who was in charge of Operation Snowcap, Tony Laza, the DEA's "success with Medellín and Cali essentially set the Mexicans up in business, at a time when they were already cash-rich thanks to the budding methamphetamine trade in Southern California."[11]

On 27 August 1994, tragedy struck again when a DEA CASA 212 Aviocar light transport aircraft (reg. N119CA) crashed into a mountain (or at the end of a box canyon) north of Puerto Pizana, in the Amazonian jungle department of San Martín, Peru. The crash reportedly happened while on a flight from Santa Lucia to Pucallpa, in the Huallaga River Valley region, and apparently owed to bad weather and low visibility (rainy and foggy) conditions during a reconnaissance operation.

This crash, plus a new focus in the Andean counter-narcotics strategy by the newly inaugurated Clinton administration (supported by Congress), and reduced funding by the new DEA administration of Thomas A. Constantine, eventually led to the end of Operation Snowcap in 1995.[12][13][14][15] The plane's five occupants, DEA Special Agents Frank S. Wallace, Jay W. Seale, Juan C. Vars, Meredith Thompson, and Frank Fernandez Jr., were killed.[16][17][18][19][20]

Late 1995-1996 during a counter drug operations in Colombia, a support element of special boat teams came under attack in the Antioquia Valley region while conducting reconnaissance operations by members of Columbian insurgents believed to be part of Colombia's counter revolutionary movement (FARC). The boat team members held off a force of roughly 150 rebels. Throughout the three days and nights of fighting, the special boat crew was repeatedly surrounded and cut off from escape. Short of ammunition and water, the team held on until first light on day three, regrouped and counter-attacked, punching a hole in the insurgents defense line and linking up with Navy SEAL support and Colombian special forces sent there to assist them.[21]

During the rescue portion in a remote jungle, DEA Operatives White and Snyder, and Navy Seals R. Gonzales and R. Hernandez were injured after being cornered by several dozen local campesinos wielding machetes and the teams barely escaped harm by boarding an air transport provided by DEAs Addison Air Wing. Members of the teams were cited for their heroism and bravery. The U.S. soon withdrew afterwards and ended all operations.[22]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gross, Richard C. (September 17, 1986). "Bolivia agrees to keep U.S. troops in drug war". UPO.
  2. ^ See also: Ledebur, Kathryn (2005). "Bolivia: Clear Consequences". In Youngers, Coletta; Rosin, Eileen (eds.). Drugs and democracy in Latin America: the impact of U.S. policy. Lynne Rienner Publishers. p. 150. ISBN 978-1-58826-254-7.
  3. ^ See also Menzel, Sewall H. (1997). Fire in the Andes: U.S. Foreign Policy and Cocaine Politics in Bolivia and Peru. University Press of America. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-7618-1001-8.
  4. ^ Bewley-Taylor, David R. (2001). The United States and international drug control, 1909-1997. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 189. ISBN 978-0-8264-5813-1.
  5. ^ Chepesiuk, Ronald (March 7, 1999). "The war on drugs : an international encyclopedia". Santa Barbara, CA. : ABC-CLIO – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Isikoff, Michael (May 23, 1989). "DRUG AGENTS' BODIES FOUND IN PERU CRASH". The Washington Post.
  7. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Cessna 208 Caravan I PNP-021 Huaral". www.asndata.aviation-safety.net.
  8. ^ "Air Crash Impairs Drug War in Peru". Chicago Tribune. 23 May 1989.
  9. ^ "Detroit DEA agent among Peruvian crash victims".
  10. ^ Menzel, Sewall H. (2000). Cocaine Quagmire: Implementing the U.S. Anti-Drug Policy in the North Andes-Colombia. University Press of America. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-7618-1643-0.
  11. ^ Reding, Nick (2010). Methland. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 157. ISBN 978-1-60819-207-6.
  12. ^ Inside Operation Snowcap, p. 83-84
  13. ^ "Crash of a Casa 212 Aviocar 200 near Puerto Pizana: 5 killed | Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives". www.baaa-acro.com.
  14. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Descripción del Accidente ASN 27 AUG 1994 CASA C-212 Aviocar 200 N119CA - Puerto Pisana". aviation-safety.net.
  15. ^ Hartman, Bob (March 7, 2011). Inside Dea: Operation Snowcap. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 9781426972881 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ "Frank S. Wallace Jr".
  17. ^ "Jay W. Seale".
  18. ^ "Juan C. Vars".
  19. ^ "Meredith Thompson".
  20. ^ "Frank Fernandez Jr".
  21. ^ Though the U.S. government expected the number of agents to increase to 180. (Chepesiuk, 1999: p. 177)
  22. ^ Evans, Michael (March 7, 1999). "War in Columbia: The Andean Strategy". National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book – via National Security Archive.

Bibliography[edit]