
This will reduce actual drug use in Bolivia and rehabilitate those afflicted by drug addiction. Strengthen the ministerial National Drug Prevention Coordinating Council (CONALTID) that coordinates the GOB's anti-drug strategy, develop the coordination and policy development capacity of the Vice Ministries of Social Defense and Integrated Development and Coca help the GOB develop and implement its social communication policies related to counternarcotics activities and form a national demand reduction network within civil society. USG assistance in these areas will allow the Bolivian Special Counternarcotics Police (FELCN) to interdict at least 16 percent of Bolivia's potential cocaine production and reduce the amount of hectares of coca in the country as established by Law 1008, beginning with 5,000 until reaching the goal of 8,000 hectares annually. Increase the GOB's institutional capability to interdict narcotics and precursors produced within or transiting through Bolivia, and its ability to control the marketing of legal coca and to eradicate illicit coca. Program Objectives and Performance IndicatorsĬounternarcotics assistance to the Government of Bolivia (GOB) in FY 2008 will focus on continuing to fortify law enforcement cooperation and strengthen law enforcement capability in areas such as interdiction, building local support for coca control and eradication, and highlighting the damage to Bolivian society and Bolivia's neighbors caused by increased coca cultivation, cocaine, and human trafficking. AD and AOJ funding will fall under the ESF Account from FY 2008 onward, which for FY08 totals $17 million. *FY 2008 is the first year that funding for Alternative Development (AD) and Administration of Justice (AOJ) is not included in the ACI Account. Western Hemisphere (Latin America, the Caribbean, Canada).Near East (northern Africa, Middle East).Counterterrorism & Countering Violent Extremism.Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment.Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights.Arms Control and International Security.Alphabetical List of Bureaus and Offices.CIA accountability boards can look at both current and former employees.


The State Department at the time said the other planes were shot down only after "exhausting international procedures for interception."ĬIA Director Michael Hayden is appointing a six-person board, including two current CIA officers, to determine whether disciplinary action is warranted, according to spokesman Mark Mansfield. The CIA report directly contradicted the State Department's findings in 2001. The classified report was completed in August and sent to Congress in October. The IG report said the CIA withheld from the National Security Council, Justice Department and Congress the results of multiple investigations that documented continuous and significant violations of aircraft interception procedures created to prevent the shoot-down of planes unconnected with the drug trade. The CIA report said that in most of the shootdowns, pilots fired on aircraft "without being properly identified, without being given the required warnings to land, and without being given time to respond to such warnings as were given to land." Excerpts from a CIA inspector general's report released in November raised questions about whether the missionaries' plane was the only craft mistakenly suspected of drug smuggling.
