Is there evidence that communists supplied drugs to West Berlin?

Upvote:0

For the DDR the general rule existed that for transit the shortet route must be taken. From Schönefeld Airport the bus had to be taken to the crossing point Rudow which was about 1500 meters away.

By Allied law, foreigners were allowed to remain 30 days without a visa.

It is however known that certain persons or groups of persons where allowed to go through Bahnhof Friedrichstraße for 'political' reasons (often under escort).

From Bahnhof Friedrichstraße there are 5 different ways to get into the western sectors (2 U-Bahn, 3 S-Bahn), where checks may have accured once in 5 years (Customs looking for duty free cigarettes or alcohol which were sold inside the station).

Around 1981 thousands of pennyless Tamils arrived within a 48 hour period this way and was reported by the eastern media as 'social chaos in the West... '.

It was believed that RAF and Red Army terrorists were allowed in in this way since the Rudow crosspoint passport checks were (sometimes) done by customs.

It was not believed by the authorities that the DDR tolerated wholesale importation of drugs. (I was a police resevist at the time and that was what we were told)

Upvote:4

I found some news reports from the 1970s saying that the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) had evidence that heroin was being smuggled into West Berlin, and that the smuggling was being done with the knowledge of the East Germans. The Senate investigation was prompted by reports that the heroin was being targeted at US military personnel in Germany.

I looked to see whether any DEA reports from this period had been released under the US Freedom of Information Act, but I couldn't find anything relating to West Berlin. I suppose that, if it involved US military personnel, the details may still be classified.

However, as with the previous answer, this seems to suggest that the East Berlin authorities acted as a conduit for smugglers from Turkey and the Middle East.

Upvote:6

Looks like it's unlikely that anyone will provide a definite answer anytime soon so let this be a temporary answer.

In the book "The substance abuse problems" by Sidney Cohen (as well as in some newspaper articles) the availability of drugs in West Berlin (mostly heroine and hashish) is explained by the trafficking done by guest workers from Turkey and middle east. The East Berlin authorities are still somewhat implicated, because the guest workers mostly landed in Schönefeld airport, which is in East Berlin, and underwent customs checks there. Then they could proceed to West Berlin without going through the customs again. It remains to be researched whether East Berlin customs officers were instructed to keep a blind eye on drugs, knowing that their destination is the other side of the wall.

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