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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

An Examination of Moral Leadership and Hypocrisy in Webs of Smoke: Smugglers, Warlords, Spies, and the History of the International Drug Trade.

There were many great leaders during the period of the late 1800s to the mid-1900s that held themselves to a moralistic, opium opposing code. There was a great many more individuals, and companies that fell into the pit of hypocrisy and greed, serving their own self-interests, political agendas, and bank accounts. The book Webs of Smoke gives an in depth narrative of the opium trade, and the way the web of smuggling opium was sown around the world. It provides the needed proof that the global smuggling web wasn’t a government conspiracy as many have believed.
Webs of Smoke was written by Kathryn Meyer and Terry Parssinen. Both were highly educated in general and in respect to the information throughout the book.  Kathryn Meyer graduated with her bachelors from the University of Vermont, and received her doctorate from Temple University. She was a professor of East Asian History and was a teacher at Temple University-Japan, Ohio Wesleyan University, Lafayette College, and Wright State University. She was awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship for support in research for this book. Terry Parssinen graduated with Bachelors from Grinnel College and his Ph.D. from Brandeis University. Both were in history. He was a teacher at Grinnel College, Temple University, the University of Maryland, College Park, and the University of Tampa. He has previous writing experience in the narcotics trade. (WOS: about the authors) Both of these authors have significant experience necessary in order to be professionals writing a book such as this. They used countless case files, books, and interviews in order to combine all of the needed information to present a historical story of the days before during and after the peak of the illicit opium smuggling days.
            As the book highlights throughout the beginning chapters, in the middle nineteenth century, the opium trade was something that went about without much hassle. Traffickers in opium saw it as just another commodity that they could use a good profit maker because it had low bulk and high value however, this low hassle profit maker wouldn’t last long. 1906 marked the year that the British, Americans, and Chinese would work toward regulations that would rid illegal uses of opium within ten years. (WOS 2)
            There were several key players that would be at the forefront of this mission to eradicate illicit opium use: Sir Malcolm Delevingne and Harry Anslinger. They would make their careers sole purpose eradicating the practice of smuggling, and using opiates. Their careers were plagued with problems from beginning to end. They were plagued with uncooperative countries that had lenient sentences for criminals caught trafficking, politicians and movements that used opium to their advantage, wars that stalled conferences, resourceful smugglers and crime rings that found new sources when others dried up.
            It is unfortunate that their careers were so plagued with problems. Their mission would have been much more successful if it weren’t for the rampant hypocrisy throughout the world in relation to opium use. Instead of ultimate success in all areas there was an enduring legend that the political world imposed genocide among different ethnic groups, such as was the case with the article “Dark Alliance” when the author accused a link between the CIA and the cocaine traffickers that sold to the black community. (WOS 278)
            The book does a good job throughout proving that rampant political hypocrisy was the reason that certain ethnic groups fell into the grips of opium, not a global conspiracy to impoverish certain ethnic groups. Every country was guilty, to a degree, of providing china with opium to further their cause. The British, Turks, Japanese, Chinese military leaders, and even the Chinese Communist party, as well as others all had some involvement with providing Chinese citizenry with opium. When it was legal, the British were a major shipper of the drug, but they were willing to gradually reduce the supply “if the Chinese could demonstrate a willingness to end opium use in their kingdom.” (WOS 42) As all sides worked towards tighter control the supply of opium shifted from a legitimate shipping source to more nefarious illicit trafficking. That was the point in the book where the magnifying glass transitioned from countrywide scope of shipping, to the individual groups. Some were corrupt politicians that turned a blind eye, some were warlords using the opium as a source of funding, some were businessmen who needed capital; and others militant organizations looking for a way to rise in power. The interesting thing is that none of these groups could really function independently of one another. They needed cohorts from other groups that wanted either money or drugs, or both, to be able to accomplish their missions.
One interesting example was the case of Du Yuesheng, Huang Jinrong, and Zhang Xiaolin. “The men belonged to the Green Gang, a secret society that dominated the wharves and water transport along the Yangzi River.” (WOS 145) These men were involved in many things, but they were also interested in shipping opium for cash. This was troubling because being caught was never good for future business prospects. “Huang brought to the opium organization a second crucial link for success: police contracts.” (WOS 146)
This evidence is central to the premise of the book, as well as other similar tracts, because it shows that the whole government itself typically wasn’t involved with the trafficking of narcotics. It was dirty dealings between organized crime rings and corruptible government officials. Often government officials would be bribed to turn a blind eye, sometimes they were also members of the crime racket itself. It was hypocrisy of government officials, not a clandestine conspiracy theory.
Though the book is very good at narrating a general timeline but, it is slightly chopped up from chapter to chapter. Instead of a normal general from beginning to end story, it is more like a textbook used for chapter learning. All of the chapters cover and recover a slowly progressing timeline, but each chapter is a story in its own category. Such as a chapter on warlords from the period of 1916 to 1937(WOS 141), then the following chapter involving soldiers of fortune, which covers 1927 to 1937(WOS 175). Each is like its own book. The reader has to remember the names from chapter to chapter to gain the ability to put any general storyline together. Such as with the fact of the quick mention of Harry Anslinger in the beginning, and then the whole chapter involving him near the end. That choppiness is somewhat troublesome for character development. It was time consuming at times to go back and re-read a section on a specific person, such as Goto Shimpei. He was mentioned, and briefly talked about seven times, over the course of about one hundred pages.
This book could have benefited with a better linearized track from the beginning to the end. A good book to use as an example for a more linear path would be The Lizard King: True Crimes and Passions of the World’s Greatest Reptile Smugglers by Bryan Christy. Both of these books were very similar in the smugglers actions throughout them. Smugglers in both instances operated in much the same way: fake shipping labels, fake compartments, dirty deals, paid off officials, and double crosses all to make money from a low bulk item. It was just easier to follow Christy’s book than it was it follow Meyer’s and Parssinen’s book.

Webs of Smoke is definitely a book worth reading. Most people have passing knowledge of the fact that China had opium dens, but outside of movies and pop culture, most people don’t know what really happened during the war on opium. The authors do a good job of informing the prospective reader about the major events surrounding the trade, and, many minor events and players in the trade. With a little imagination, the reader is able to imagine being in the opium dens watching the users smoke opium. They are able to imagine being a fly on the wall listening to all of the backroom planning needed to coordinate a big shipment, or seeing paid off officials just brush by what they know are chests full of opium. It was an in depth historical story of the action, deals, money, and treachery of the big players on both sides of the law. It portrayed a real wild-west story during the turbulent years before, during and after the world wars.

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