Coast Guard hunts drug-running semi-subs
5/19/2008 4:19:22 PM
Colombians actually came close to buying a Soviet diesel sub in the early 90s after the wall came down. They were all set to pay $100 million for it before the feds shut it down.
5/19/2008 4:28:32 PM
5/19/2008 4:29:56 PM
5/19/2008 4:32:34 PM
trying to stop a product with that kind of profit margin is laughable
5/19/2008 4:33:58 PM
5/19/2008 4:34:54 PM
^^^ Did you even bother to read the report? Of course you didn't. 1. Drug subs are difficult to locate.2. They can be towed behind another vessel and cut loose quickly.3. They can be scuttled quickly.4. Some may be operated remotely.5. Coast Guard snipers can't shoot out the engines--they're submerged. Difficult to slow down.6. They can carry about 12 metric tons and their speed has increased to 12 knots, which is "a pretty good speed on the ocean."^^ Look, I have a number of issues with the "War on Drugs," but by your logic, the authorities should give up on trying to stop, say, murder, rape, and robbery, too.
5/19/2008 5:33:00 PM
anybody remember that movie No Escape with Ray Liotta where they would send prisoners to this one island? reminds me of the boat they made to try and escape
5/19/2008 5:35:48 PM
Murder, rape, and robbery all involve real victims.Technically, there are no victims of drugs.And since when is there a profit margin on rape?
5/19/2008 5:40:34 PM
^ Look, I want the government out of my life, too. But saying illegal drug use is a "victimless crime" is just retarded. And there certainly is some sort of payoff in rape or rapists wouldn't do it.Did you think the thread title read "Chug Subs"? This thread isn't about sandwiches--FYI. [Edited on May 19, 2008 at 6:00 PM. Reason : .]
5/19/2008 5:59:49 PM
Well, I suppose this gives us an excuse to leverage and purchase more of all that anti-submarine warfare equipment we developed during the Cold War.
5/19/2008 6:19:40 PM
The Germans had U-Boats in WWI and WWII. It really doesn't surprise me that drug dealers would have subs in today's age. If anything, I'd expect them to be far more sophisticated than the ones described in the article.
5/19/2008 9:07:24 PM
I don't see why Navy anti-sub warfare folks don't jump on this for real world testing and practice.
5/19/2008 11:09:02 PM
5/19/2008 11:29:15 PM
it's funny because it sounds just so effective.What's next, suborbital trafficking?
5/19/2008 11:36:33 PM
5/19/2008 11:55:24 PM
any organization that regularly runs truckloads of drugs into the US could get a WMD in.They are not very big.
5/20/2008 9:30:14 AM
They are, however, very difficult to procure, which is why a terrorist group wouldn't want to use a conventional method like a speedboat or dune-buggy border crossing that features high risks.If methods like a semi-sub have a very high success rate, our border defenses become even less of a deterrant to criminals and terrorists. [Edited on May 20, 2008 at 9:43 AM. Reason : 2]
5/20/2008 9:41:33 AM
yeah, a WMD would be like your king in a chess game.you're not going to risk seizure by running a sketchy route in a speedboat manned with Mexicans that has only a "probable" chance of success, even if it might have worked for drug smuggling just fine.you'd break out the best your group has. but nevertheless, you could do it.
5/20/2008 9:59:52 AM
5/20/2008 10:57:48 AM
^ LOL! That needs a theme song:http://youtube.com/watch?v=0eYM9wHLHeM
5/20/2008 11:21:47 AM