What USAID cuts mean for Peru as it battles cartels on coca, gold trade

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In Peru’s Amazon region, drug gangs running the coca trade in cooperation with Mexican cartels have over recent years expanded into illegal mining, especially for gold.

In response, the U.S. Agency for International Development shifted some counternarcotics and development resources in Peru to buttress nongovernmental organizations combating illegal mining through environmental and sustainable-development initiatives.

But now, with the Trump administration eliminating USAID and folding reduced humanitarian and development assistance budgets into the State Department, some Peruvians worry that progress against illegal mining will be reversed.

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Peru received $135 million in USAID funding in 2024. Much was for projects combating narcotics and gold trafficking, which are now linked. But substantial contributions were also made in areas ranging from democratic governance to minority rights.

Moreover, the intertwined nature of the illegal trades that Peru confronts – from coca and gold to wildlife and even people – means that less attention to illegal mining is likely to mean smoother sailing for other trafficking operations as well.

“The new menace we face in Peru is the cocaine-gold connection, but the exit of USAID funding is going to set back the initial strides we have made to counter this threat,” says Ricardo Soberón, a former executive director of Devida, Peru’s National Commission for Development and Life Without Drugs.

Authorities eradicate illegal coca crops in Callería, Peru, Oct. 28, 2022.

“Overall for Peru, it’s a bad thing to lose USAID funding, for a variety of reasons,” he says. “But specifically for this new mining menace, it’s terrible timing.”

The elimination of USAID is part of a significant overhaul and downsizing of the State Department and its diplomatic functions that Secretary of State Marco Rubio is engineering.

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