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From Pablo to Osama: Trafficking and Terrorist Networks, Government Bureaucracies, and Competitive Adaptation
 
 
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From Pablo to Osama: Trafficking and Terrorist Networks, Government Bureaucracies, and Competitive Adaptation [Hardcover]

Michael Kenney (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0271029315 978-0271029313 May 30, 2007
From Pablo to Osama is a comparative study of Colombian drug-smuggling enterprises, terrorist networks (including al Qaeda), and the law enforcement agencies that seek to dismantle them. Drawing on a wealth of research materials, including interviews with former drug traffickers and other hard-to-reach informants, Michael Kenney explores how drug traffickers, terrorists, and government officials gather, analyze, and apply knowledge and experience.

The analysis reveals that the resilience of the Colombian drug trade and Islamist extremism in wars on drugs and terrorism stems partly from the ability of illicit enterprises to change their activities in response to practical experience and technical information, store this knowledge in practices and procedures, and select and retain routines that produce satisfactory results. Traffickers and terrorists 'learn,' building skills, improving practices, and becoming increasingly difficult for state authorities to eliminate.

The book concludes by exploring theoretical and policy implications, suggesting that success in wars on drugs and terrorism depends less on fighting illicit networks with government intelligence and more on conquering competency traps--traps that compel policymakers to exploit militarized enforcement strategies repeatedly without questioning whether these programs are capable of producing the intended results.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

The United States has struggled to win its wars on drugs and terror. Why do our adversaries always seem to be one step ahead? Michael Kenney provides an original and provocative answer to the question of why the ability of drug cartels and terrorist groups to learn, adapt, and move quickly surpasses ours. Our technical and military advantages are not enough in a contest that rewards agility and information superiority. This book is an important contribution to our understanding not just of the adversary but of the limitations of our response. --Martha S. Feldman, University of California, Irvine

From Pablo to Osama is a well-researched and well-organized book that is written in clear, expressive language. It will be of interest to practitioners and scholars alike.... Kenney has made an important contribution to the literature analyzing the organization and operation of illicit networks and the governmental structures established to protect society from them. --Melvyn Levitsky, International Studies Review

This is an impressive book. It applies organizational theory to understand the dynamic relationships within two little-understood sets of complex, mutually dependent enterprises. The first set pairs narcs and narcos (or Colombian drug trafficking cartels and U.S. and Colombian drug enforcement organization). The second set looks at terrorist organizations, particularly Al Queda and U.S. and international counter-terror organizations. Kenney shows how drug cartels and terrorist organizations continually adapt to the counter-narcotics measures and anti-terrorist forces.  Competitive adaptation means that apparent 'success'  by law enforcement agencies or others is generally short-lived. The conceptual framework is very useful --indeed penetrating and necessary--for all current and future scholars and policy makers concerned with these issues. --Marc Chernick, Georgetown University

About the Author

Michael Kenney is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at Penn State Harrisburg.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State Univ Pr (May 30, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0271029315
  • ISBN-13: 978-0271029313
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #994,707 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The never ending conflict. . . ., May 9, 2009
By 
Steven A. Peterson (Hershey, PA (Born in Kewanee, IL)) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This is a fascinating book. It uses data from two seemingly different realms--drug smuggling to terrorism--to illustrate some key organizational issues facing both drug traffickers and terrorists, on the one hand, and the governments that combat them, on the other. The book examines the interaction between these actors and draws some important lessons for governments. The linkage is made explicitly on page 1: "As members of the U.S. intelligence community acknowledge, drug enforcement raids in Colombia during the 1990s serve as models for today's counterterrorism missions. . . ."

There are a handful of key concepts that underlie the analysis. One of these is competitive adaptation. The author defines this in the following terms (page ix): ". . .terrorists and counterterrorists not only learn, they learn from one another, through complex interactions in shared social systems. . . ." Another key concept is "organizational learning." This book explores how organizations learn. Methods of learning might include "metis," experience in the field, and "techne," abstract technical knowledge. Terrorists and drug traffickers use experience based in practice, the lessons of which will vary from context to context. States and their competitors tend to develop "competency traps," in which they come to depend on what has worked in the past and do not anticipate organizational learning from their nemeses.

The book's first part looks at drug trafficking in Colombia as a case study. The second chapter lays out how the traffickers' decentralized networks "allow them to process information and adapt their activities in response to knowledge and experience" (page 23). Because they are more agile, the small networks have an advantage over state organizations. Chapter 3, to provide symmetry, focuses on governmental responses to drug traffickers. Competitive adaptation is not a one way street. Chapter 4 uses the concept of competitive adaptation to explain the governments' versus traffickers' dynamic relationship. Chapters 5 and 6, in essence, reprise this analysis, with the case study being the relationship between terrorists and counterterrorists.

The conclusion explores key lessons from the two case studies. Among these: (a) governments simply cannot be as agile as their non-state based antagonists; (b) governments should not simply mimic terrorist/traffickers tactics, since these would violate the very essence of America's commitment to civil liberties and processes of popular government [As the author says on page 226: ". . .we must avoid sacrificing the political values and institutions that define us as a society"]; (c) governments must avoid "competency traps," in which they come to depend upon particular tactics that seem to work, without realizing that their antagonists will adapt and that the tactics that once worked may cease to do so and without continuing to experiment with alternative approaches that might work together; (d) government agencies must stay away from developing vested interests in magnifying the threats posed against them to justify their missions.

This is an important work that those interested in the contestation between governments, on the one hand, and drug traffickers and terrorists (and like organizations), on the other, will find thought provoking. The methodology is based on qualitative techniques, and one can always raise questions about how representative those being interviewed are or how accurate their comments are. However, that said, this book makes a strong case in support of its thesis.

Truth in advertising: the author is a colleague of mine. However, my response to his book is pretty much independent of that fact.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A unique and valuable asset to terrorism literature, March 28, 2007
This review is from: From Pablo to Osama: Trafficking and Terrorist Networks, Government Bureaucracies, and Competitive Adaptation (Hardcover)
I've read many books on terrorism and have found many of them well written. This literature is one of the very best. It uses information by practitioners and provides like no other resource. A must for anyone in the terrorism/trafficking field.
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5.0 out of 5 stars About more than drug trafficking and terrorism, November 11, 2011
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This review is from: From Pablo to Osama: Trafficking and Terrorist Networks, Government Bureaucracies, and Competitive Adaptation (Hardcover)
Michael Kenney gives us valuable and unexpected insights into how organizations learn and innovate under adverse economic and social conditions. Possibly without realizing it, he takes the Mertonian notion of creative deviance and expands it into an image of a self-organizing and emergent process that is more responsive to environmental change than structured problem solving on the part of government agencies. Drug traffickers and terrorist, to be sure, are extreme cases of criminality. They are also organizations that are persisting in their attaining of objectives and survival in what can at best be considered uneeven competitive arenas. The techniques they employ are replicable in legitimate organizxations that must nevertheless engage in market creative deviance (competing outside the box) to survive. It would be an unusual but valuable book for managers engaged in highly comeptitive and hostile markets to read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
illicit adversaries, counterdrug law enforcement, former traffickers, former drug trafficker, trafficking enterprises, other terrorist networks, competitive adaptation, wheel networks, transportation rings, electronic surveillance orders, counterterrorism agencies, cell managers, intergroup networks, trafficking networks, human couriers, extremist networks, trafficking groups, trafficking systems, electronic surveillance technologies, illicit networks, law enforcement crackdowns, law enforcement pressure, trafficking conspiracies, terrorist systems, human informants
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, White House, Colombian National Police, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, Los Angeles, Department of Homeland Security, Pablo Escobar, Miguel Rodriguez-Orejuela, Alec Station, Ali Mohammed, Mohammed Atta, Central America, Counterterrorist Center, Guillermo Pallomari, John Cloonan, State Department, The Architecture of Drug Trafficking, Abu Zubaydah, Cali Cartel, Counterterrorism Security Group, Delta Force, Operation Banshee, Richard Clarke, Thomas Cash
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