In a development that has shaken the criminal underworld to its very foundations (and possibly knocked over a few priceless Ming vases in the process), Australian federal police have uncovered a record 2.3 tonnes of cocaine stashed in an underground bunker in rural New South Wales. The haul, valued at an eye-watering $760 million, represents a crushing blow to the cartels, who must now scramble to find a new premises for their monthly meth-and-spreadsheet parties.
Let us paint you a picture. A fortified subterranean lair, complete with reinforced concrete walls and a ventilation system that would make a paranoid billionaire weep with envy. It was here, hidden beneath a pastoral property like a monstrous, powdered mole, that the drugs were discovered. Authorities say the bunker was designed to evade detection, which it did admirably until someone, presumably a disgruntled cartel accountant who didn't get his annual bonus, grassed them up.
‘This is a massive hit to organised crime,’ said a beaming AFP commissioner, practically frothing at the mouth with the glory of his department's latest scalp. ‘We have disrupted their supply chain at a critical point.’ He did not, however, elaborate on what constitutes a non-critical point for the supply of nose candy to the nation's bankerati and advertising executives.
One cannot help but chuckle at the sheer audacity of the operation. A bunker. In Australia. For cocaine. It is as if the cartels have been watching too many Cold War thrillers and decided that the best way to store their product was to mimic a nuclear fallout shelter. Perhaps they expected a Soviet invasion? Or maybe they just wanted to ensure their Peruvian Marching Powder remained chilled during the scorching Outback summers.
But the true irony, dear reader, lies in the fact that the bunker was discovered not by a crack team of SAS operatives or a James Bond gadget, but by a routine police inspection of a rural property. The moment the constable saw a freshly dug tunnel leading into a hill, he did not call in the cavalry. He called his boss, who called his boss, and so on, until a very tired-looking bureaucrat holding a bag of tea bags signed off on a raid. And thus, the mighty drug fortress fell to the most British of procedures: red tape.
The cartels, for their part, remain defiant. In a statement released via a series of inexplicable Insta stories, they vowed to ‘regroup and rebuild,’ which is cartel-speak for ‘wait until the heat dies down and bribe a few politicians.’ Already, there are whispers that the bunker was merely a decoy, and the real cocaine horde is hidden in plain sight, perhaps distilled into the water supply under the guise of a fluoride treatment.
Yet one must also spare a thought for the poor local fauna. Imagine the shock of an inquisitive wombat stumbling into this den of iniquity? The poor creature would have had its snout blown off by the sheer aroma of pure Bolivian marching powder. It would be like a koala wandering into a meth lab: utterly baffled and chemically transformed into a cartoon character.
What is to be done, then? The AFP will no doubt parade their seized bounty on television, a mountain of snowy contraband that will be incinerated with great ceremony, sending plumes of exhilarating smoke over the suburbs. The cartel will lose a shipment, but they will simply raise the price of their product, ensuring that your average hedge fund manager pays a little more for his weekend pick-me-up. The war on drugs, it seems, will continue its interminable cycle of seizure and re-supply, like a Ferris wheel made of handcuffs and cocaine.
As for this correspondent, I can only raise a glass of lukewarm gin to the brave men and women of the AFP, who have saved countless noses from a very expensive holiday. Cheers, chaps. You've earned a few day's rest, perhaps in a bunker of your own, insulated from the madness of a world that still believes you can snort your way to happiness.