Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jan 2001 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 2001 Daily News, L.P. Contact: 450 W. 33rd St., New York, N.Y. 10001 Website: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Forum: http://www.nydailynews.com/manual/news/e_the_people/e_the_people.htm Author: A.M. Rosenthal WAR ON DRUGS NEEDS W'S LEADERSHIP On the day of his inauguration, George W. Bush can carry out one legal duty and show what presidential compassion means for Americans. It means using power, persuasion and passion to save more American lives than have been lost in wars. It means increasing the safety, health and spiritual growth of American children and the protection of the bouquet of cultures that makes up American society. Bush can use the day of his accession to presidential power to appoint his administration's leader of the war against narcotics. He can give his judgment that this man or woman has the knowledge and sophistication to develop and lead the strategy and tactics of the struggle. This American will need the strength to take the insults and unceasing pressure of the enemies of the drug war at home and abroad, as did Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who resigned with the change in administrations. Maybe the President could twist the arm of the first drug czar, William Bennett, until he came back. On Inauguration Day, Bush can take another step. He can promise the world that he will consider himself the commander-in-chief of the American battle against heroin, cocaine, marijuana and manufactured drugs and that he will never abandon his innermost sense of responsibility toward emancipation from them. In doing so, he will be laying the foundation of his legacy on his first day in office. I have no mad confidence he will do all this on Inauguration Day. Neither he nor his opponent talked much about drugs during the campaign. But if he does not at least move swiftly and strongly, he will play a different and shameful kind of role - indirectly strengthening the relatively small but overly influential clique of Americans who belittle and befoul the advances made in fighting illegal drugs. Using a well-financed and skillful propaganda machine, they tell us that America has lost the drug war. They tell us that the supply, mostly provided by Latin American and Asian killer gangs, cannot be cut off. They tell us the only way to deal sensibly and humanely with drugs is to end punishment. They say among themselves that the goal is legalization - but now say it rarely in print. They know the public would not buy that. So with money from a few billionaires, they set up and win innocuous-sounding state referendums, disguised simply as permitting the use of narcotics for sick folk. That's already possible, but with the tight medical supervision that is absent from the referendums. This is a sly crawl to legalization. For shameful reasons - a social network, a press that is mushy about drugs, the chic influence of a handful of prominent writers and academics - the government anti-drug drive has failed to do real combat with the pro-drug lobbyists. It has not directed the disgust of society against them. Even using the phrase "drug war" makes officials and journalists sneer. Anti-drug organizations outnumber the legalizers, open or concealed, by about 10 to 1. But you would never guess that by the press coverage. Anti-drug organizations like National Families in Action don't get ink because they are considered conservative. This politically correct and socially vile attitude has persuaded some normally sensible people to believe the war is being steadily lost. That is a lie. Since 1985, monthly use of illegal drugs has dropped 42%. Most anti-drug people fully understand the importance of therapy in fighting narcotics. It is the government and anti-drug private donors that finance therapy with money. Legalizers contribute their mouths. They pretend that prisons are stuffed with Americans behind bars for a puff of pot. But McCaffrey reports that in fiscal 1998, only 33 federal inmates were in for offenses involving less than 5,000 grams of marijuana and only 55 for crimes involving less than 25 grams of cocaine. More than 70% of 221,000 state inmates were in for trafficking in drugs, not just possessing them. So be sorry for some, but don't break up for all the prisoners. Visit a pediatric AIDS ward and shed some tears for newborn infants infected in the womb. Or for victims of violent crimes committed by addicts before the cell door closes. There is no one way to deal with addiction and the drug wars. It takes a combination of steps, each critical: law enforcement, more money and beds for long-term therapy - and eradication of drugs everywhere they are grown or made. Anti-drug warriors know there's no easy road; all three are essential. The President-elect has not been a leader in the drug war. But he can become one if it is in him - on Inauguration Day or soon after, very soon. Not out of panic in losing the war, but joy and honor in winning it. - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer