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The Great Heroin Coup: Drugs, Intelligence, & International Fascism

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The Great Heroin Coup probes into the netherworld of narcotics, espionage, and international terrorism. In so doing, Krüger uncovers the alliances between the Mafia, right wing extremists, neo-Fascist OAS veterans in France, and Miami-based Cuban exiles.

240 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1980

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Henrik Krüger

22 books2 followers

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5 stars
38 (60%)
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17 (26%)
3 stars
8 (12%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
94 reviews2 followers
January 12, 2019
Five stars for the astonishing stories about government corruption in multiple countries. Lots of corroborating detail and meticulously noted evidence. One star for the laboured and disconnected narrative which is all but impossible to follow. Fascinating but needs a complete re-write.
Profile Image for Julian.
23 reviews2 followers
July 31, 2023
Intelligence agencies never met an organized crime group they didn't love.
22 reviews
September 20, 2016
Henrik Kruger had set out to tell the story of Christian David, a legendary French Drug Lord who never seemed to go away, despite incarceration. The Great Heroin Coup revolves around the hypocrisy of the Drug War that has spawned men like David. The Cold War and the psychotic hatred engendered towards Communism led to symbiotic entanglements with dictators and drug lords. The French connection devolves into the Golden Triangle....French gangsters become Laotian Warlords, Meo tribal warriors....The players change, the war drags on, casualties mount, profits exponentially rise, corruption ensues. David's up and downs are paralleled with the Nixon Administration's attempts to assume control of the Drug War in every facet. Hit squads run roughshod in fascist banana republics, drug use numbers are manipulated, alliances come back to haunt the US. The war is seen as being fruitless, at least for the true victims...Drug using soldiers, victims of drug & political violence, tax payers. But there is always hope, especially with this book seeing the light of day.
Profile Image for Count Gravlax.
157 reviews37 followers
June 10, 2025
Poorly written, confusing and badly sourced, at certain times resembling more of a rambling than a work either of history or journalism

Yet the central thesis of the book holds. That is:

1) The American intelligence services protected and gave logistical support to the international narcotics trade

2) Intelligence agencies use the collaboration of drug dealers and organized crime to suppress left-wing movements

3) Intelligence agencies use the profit of said trade to arm right wing guerrillas and plot military coup in the Americas

I think that for anyone interested in Intelligence, none of these are very controversial. I don't think that another central claim - that there was a coordinated clamp down on the Corsican Mafia in benefit of Latin American and Southeast Asian drugs - is well substantiated. A lot of it seems to hinge on he said, she said.
1,376 reviews25 followers
December 4, 2016
Great book on what happens when governments (following short-sightened policies) decide to look another way when it comes to crime because it hurts the other side (USSR in this case). As a consequence underground shadow state(s) emerged that just kept on with criminal activities. These organizations did not disappear with USSR but kept thriving and strengthening its links to official forces while now seeking some other common enemies as a reason for continuing existence.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Daniel Z. .
14 reviews
March 19, 2012
Big caveat: The rating is based on information in the book, not the presentation or writing. Honestly, at many points, I got lost in a blur of arrests and names and links, but this is a very valuable reference work in terms of naming names for anyone interested in organized crime, the real history of drug wars, and hidden history.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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