Pubdate: Mon, 08 Jan 2001 Source: Duluth News-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2001 Duluth News-Tribune Contact: 424 W. First St., Duluth, MN 55802 Website: http://www.duluthnews.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?duluth Author: Christopher S. Wren, New York Times Bookmark: Barry McCaffrey http://www.mapinc.org/mccaffrey.htm RETIRING DRUG WARRIOR WOULD RATHER TREAT THAN FIGHT "I doubt that I've ever seen in combat the misery such as I've encountered through watching what drug abuse does to people." Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who prepared Saturday to step down as the White House director of national drug control policy WASHINGTON -- Reflecting upon nearly five years as the Clinton administration's top drug policy official, Gen. Barry McCaffrey looks back even further, to 31 years in the Army, where he became its most highly decorated general after fighting in Vietnam and the Persian Gulf War. "I doubt that I've ever seen in combat the misery such as I've encountered through watching what drug abuse does to people," McCaffrey said Saturday as he prepared to step down as the White House director of national drug control policy. "They're doing things which they know to be morally and physically repulsive," he said. "They're ashamed of themselves. They're fearful, they're sick, they're driven." And they are fellow Americans, added McCaffrey, a professional soldier who refuses to accept the metaphor of a war on drugs. Beginning with his Senate confirmation hearings in early 1996, the retired four-star general has likened America's drug problem to a cancer that must be treated. In an interview, he said that treatment for addiction and mental illness should be covered by the same health insurance that recognizes physical illnesses. McCaffrey was instrumental in persuading President Clinton to extend such parity in health coverage to 9 million federal employees. McCaffrey called it "silly" for federal law to impose harsher penalties for selling or possessing crack cocaine than for powder cocaine because they are the same drug pharmacologically. He criticized predetermined prison sentences for drug felons. "I am unalterably opposed to the system of mandatory minimums," he said. "I think we need to give this authority back to the judges." And most nonviolent addicts behind bars, he said, belong in treatment centers, not in prison, where they learn to become better criminals. The solution to drug abuse and its $110 billion annual consequences, he said, is "to engage in a more coherent, rational way the chronically addicted as we encounter them in our communities. And we find them in the criminal justice system, in the health-care system and the welfare system." "At that point, it seems to me," McCaffrey said, "if you want to save taxpayer dollars, and you want to reduce violence in your communities, if you want to accomplish all of these larger social goals, you have to draw them into effective drug treatment." McCaffrey conceded that appropriating money to treat every addict had been a hard sell, on Capitol Hill and elsewhere. "That's the argument that has to be made to state legislatures and county councils," he said. "Then we've got to tell the health insurance industry: `Look, you're going to pay for it one way or another. You can pay for it in the emergency room, you can pay for it with a lot less dollars in drug treatment centers. You can wait till they're HIV-infected and then pay a quarter of a million dollars to deal with AIDS as a medical condition.' " But he acknowledged that drug abuse elicited more revulsion than sympathy from the majority of Americans. "They get a better feel for it when it's their son or daughter, or their mother," McCaffrey said. Even as he leaves the White House, McCaffrey continued to challenge the perception of a lost war on drugs, which he said was fueled by "a very deliberate, well-thought-out strategy by drug legalization forces" seeking public resignation to drug use. - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer