Pubdate: Tue, 17 Oct 2000 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2000 Globe Newspaper Company. Contact: P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378 Feedback: http://extranet.globe.com/LettersEditor/default.asp Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Author: Anjetta McQueen DIRECTOR OF WAR ON DRUGS TO RESIGN WASHINGTON - Barry McCaffrey, the former military commander who has directed the nation's war on drugs for nearly five years, plans to leave in early January. He says he's considering teaching offers, including a return to West Point. "I'm enormously proud of what we've done," McCaffrey said yesterday in an interview. "We had exploding rates of adolescent drug use and we've reduced it." His resignation as director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy is effective Jan. 6, two weeks before President Clinton leaves office. By law, McCaffrey's term is indefinite. He said his announcement gives the presidential candidates a clean slate to draft their policies on drug abuse. "It's important for me to put up the notion that my name's off the table," he said. McCaffrey, a retired Army general, has been Clinton's chief drug adviser since 1996 and previously was head of the US Southern Command. In the mid-1970s, he was an associate professor at West Point, teaching courses in American government and national security. "In the nearly five years McCaffrey has led our war on drugs, we have made significant progress both at home and abroad," Clinton said in a statement yesterday during emergency peace talks in Egypt. Critics, who include Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush, have said the Clinton administration consistently undermined McCaffrey's efforts to control drug abuse. McCaffrey dismissed that notion and any suggestion that he's leaving out of frustration. He said that federal funds to fight drugs have increased and that adolescent drug abuse has fallen since he was appointed. "We've taken important strides in addressing a problem that costs our society 52,000 deaths and more than $100 billion a year," he said. The White House job was created in 1988 by Congress in an effort to cut use of illegal drugs, especially among youth. The office coordinates the efforts of federal agencies and state and local law enforcement officers and health officials. When McCaffrey assumed the helm, his military background raised hopes the office would gain purpose and focus, and be less political. Some of his critics said yesterday that his policies have been harsh and costly. "His fight against medical marijuana has caused untold pain and suffering among the seriously ill," said Chuck Thomas, spokesman for the Washington-based Marijuana Policy Project, which seeks to decriminalize the drug. McCaffrey has also backed rigorous drug-testing programs in sports and a plan in which the office reviewed television scripts for antidrug messages before the shows aired. Recently McCaffrey had been overseeing a controversial $1.3 billion US aid package to Colombia that includes combat helicopters, weapons, and training by the elite US Special Forces to stanch the flow of drugs out of the country. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst