ZEROZEROZERO - ROBERT SAVIANO
I’ve kept on my Italy shit but this time I figured I’d read some non-fiction. Plus, I like that movie, Gomarrah, which is based on Saviano’s more famous book about Naples and the Camorrah. This is supposed to be a broader book about cocaine and the cocaine business, with an emphasis on European (especially Italian) criminal organizations. Sadly, this book is not good. For someone who is obsessed with shadowy underworlds and subterranean machinations, Saviano stops short every time of actually getting to the bottom of things. For example, at the very beginning of the book, he recounts the murder of DEA officer Kiki Camarena, who was tortured and murdered by the Guadalajara cartel in 1984 for leading an operation that busted up an enormous (perhaps the largest of all time) marijuana farm. The cartel was a major supplier of cocaine into the US at the time and Saviano as a springboard to talk about how this even both shows the power of the cartel and how the subsequent crackdown on the cartel lead to a splintering whose ripples are still being felt. The problem is that he leaves out the fact that the CIA had Camarena killed and CIA agent Félix Rodríguez was present at the torture to see what Camarena knew about this angle. This is why some but not all of the tapes made of this torture were recovered. The CIA was doing business with the cartel because they were using the cocaine money to surreptitiously fund anti-communists terrorists and fascist mercenaries in El Salvador and beyond. This is an established fact, Saviano could mount a case that this isn’t true (it is) but he ignores this part of the story, the part where crime and drugs intersect with real power, and instead paints it as a story of powerful cartels who are trying simply to make money. That’s one level short of what’s actually going on. As another example, he mentions that Bolivian cartels have stamped swastikas onto bricks of coke as a sort of fun-fact, not mentioning that actual Nazi Klaus Barbie ran that nation and cartel for decades, again, supported and guided by the USA in furtherance of broader Cold War strategy. It is as if you spoke about the opium trade in Afghanistan without mentioning the fact that the biggest dealers were protected by Amerika for exactly the same reasons. There is a level above the cartel bosses. The book goes into the fact that our banking system is deeply compromised by the drug money and other illegally laundered cash, he correcly points out that illegal money was the only money moving during the 2008 financial crisis and keep dozens of major banks, and thus our economy writ large, afloat. But he never really dives into what this actually means and perpetuates that idea that there is a line between the under and overworlds. Otherwise, the book is a bit all over the place. There’s this strange thing where some of the chapters are short prose-poems about cocaine. There are long bios about crime figures like Semion Mogilevich (who isn’t really a big drug guy and whose lawyer is the former FBI director, which he doesn’t mention) or Grisleda Blanco. There’s stuff about the Guatemalan special forces unit/death squad, the Kaibiles. There is interesting and new-to-me information about the ‘Ndrangheta. Very all over the place and ultimately disappointing. If you want to understand how international crime and drugs really works, you need to go a level deeper than what is available here.