Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jul 2000 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Orange County Register Contact: P.O. Box 11626, Santa Ana, CA 92711 Fax: (714) 565-3657 Website: http://www.ocregister.com/ EXPANDING DRUG WAR Perhaps the most amazing thing about Congress' quick passage of emergency aid for Colombian government last week was the lack of debate that it triggered. A caution here and there, but by and large Democrats and Republicans were united in the belief that America should draw itself more deeply into a violent drug war taking place in South American jungles. By modern congressional standards, the $1.3 billion aid package isn't that large. But it well be used to provide training and helicopters for the Colombian military and police forces. They are in a long-running and exceedingly violent war against left-wing insurgents who finance their operations with drug profits. There are a number of issues that should have been debated more thoroughly and that should have engendered the interest of the national media and the American public. Sending U.S. advisers and arms to complex political struggles in far-off lands poses obvious dangers. The nation should be discussing whether any realistic objectives can be achieved, what timetable is being set for pulling the advisers out of there, what safeguards are in place to ensure that the United States doesn't became more deeply enmeshed in a guerrilla struggle. Instead, both parties dealt mainly in platitudes. Because drugs are produced in Colombia and end up on the streets of New York and L.A., supporters of aid argue, America should help stop those drugs at their source. But the Colombia situation spotlights the convergence of two of America's most misguided policies - the war on drugs and its police-the-world foreign policy. By prohibiting illegal dugs, the United States has driven up their costs and made it lucrative for armed gangs and revolutionary thugs to traffic in them. Then in response to a problem the American government helped create, it now sends in military aid and training to clean up the mess a continent away. But as long as the demand exists for illegal dugs, drug dealers will find a way to sell them. And the Colombian civil war is unlikely to go away anytime soon - even with more U.S. aid. Those arguments didn't hold much swat last week. But the more that Americans raise them the more reluctant Congress and the president may be to waste U.S. tax dollars - and endanger U.S. lives - on a pointless Colombian anti-drug strategy. - --- MAP posted-by: greg