The Australian Federal Police, in a moment of theatrical bravado likely rehearsed in front of a mirror, announced the largest cocaine seizure in the nation’s history. A whopping 2.3 tonnes of the marching powder, enough to keep an entire 1980s rock band vertical for a decade, was intercepted. British intelligence, in a rare moment of not being preoccupied with deciphering which royal is feuding with whom, have hailed this as a ‘joint success’. But let us peel back the layers of this onion, for it smells less of victory and more of a bureaucratic turf war fought with very, very expensive dust.
The operation, codenamed something predictably dull like ‘Operation Whiteout’ or ‘Operation Snowdrop’, involved a ship, a cargo of white beans, and a cast of characters so absurd they could only be real. The boat was tracked from South America, where the cartels apparently still think the market is in Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs. They were unaware that the entire Australian coast is now one giant CCTV camera manned by men in shorts and Crocs, who drink flat whites and call everyone ‘mate’ while running one of the most sophisticated surveillance states outside of North Korea.
And what did British intelligence contribute? I imagine a man in a Savile Row suit stood on a pier in Portsmouth, pointed vaguely at a map, and said, ‘I say, there’s a lot of cocaine heading that way. Jolly good luck.’ For this, they get to share the podium. The Australians, who did the actual heavy lifting of intercepting a boat full of twitchy men and their powdered gold, now have to share the credit with a nation that cannot even successfully deliver a pint of warm beer without a queue.
But the real comedy lies in the language used. This is a ‘joint operation success’. That phrase is Westminster’s favourite semantic fig leaf, deployed whenever a terrible failure needs a patriotic coat of paint. If the Spanish Armada had been a joint operation, they’d have called the sinking a ‘positive outcome’ and invited the wrecked galleons for tea. Here, the seizure is celebrated as a triumph of international cooperation. Yet one wonders: if the cocaine had slipped through, would the British be falling over themselves to share the blame? History suggests a swift invocation of ‘operational independence’ and a pointed finger at the Antipodeans.
Let us also consider the sheer volume. Two point three tonnes. That is the weight of a small car or the collective ego of the House of Lords. To celebrate this as a victory is to admit defeat. It means the supply chain is functioning so robustly that a £200 million shipment is a mere dent. This is not a victory; it is a sticking plaster on a haemorrhaging wound. The only true winners are the journalists who can now use the phrase ‘white powder’ in print without being sued.
Meanwhile, the drug dealers, having lost one shipment, are already placing orders for three more. The real message of this bust is that the war on drugs is a farce performed by men in suits for other men in suits. The only people not laughing are the addicts, but they don’t get a speaking part in this play.
As for British intelligence, they should stick to what they do best: bugging the bedrooms of minor celebrities and pretending they know who is behind the latest terror alert. The cocaine battle is a lost cause, and the only thing more absurd than celebrating a seizure is sharing a medal for it. I’ll raise a glass of gin to the Australian police for their hard work, but the toast should be one of sombre acknowledgement that this is a war with no end, only a series of ever more expensive skirmishes.
So let us hail the ‘victory’ with appropriate cynicism. The cocaine will still flow, the suits will still pose, and the rest of us will be left with the hangover and the bill.








