Pubdate: Mon, 01 Oct 2001
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Issue: 01 Oct 2001
Copyright: 2001 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author:  Howard LaFranchi, Staff writer, Christian Science Monitor

LESSONS FROM DRUG WAR: IT TAKES TIME, ALLIES

Combatting Terrorism, Like Narcotics, Is Expected To Involve Unlikely Partners

WASHINGTON - It is a long war, often unseen by Americans, and has no 
foreseeable end. It requires the US to align itself with regimes that might 
not otherwise be to its liking, but this is overlooked for the benefit of 
the war. Lots of money is spent, some citizens believe the war tramples 
their rights, and with no victory in sight, support for the war wanes.

This is the war on drugs - which the US has been waging at home and abroad 
for three decades and counting.

Now, as the US launches another international war, this one on terrorism, 
the parallels with the widely discredited war on drugs are worth 
contemplating. Is this new "ideas" war - which President Bush says will be 
a "different kind of war" - different enough to avoid the quagmire of the 
war on drugs?

Officials and former warriors in the drug war say yes. For starters, this 
war doesn't have to deal with millions of "terrorism consumers" undermining 
the struggle, while the combination of huge profits and a huge global 
market makes the drug war particularly difficult to advance.

But they also warn that this war, like the drug war, will display a down 
side as necessary foreign allies, questionable on other fronts, are 
recruited to the cause. It will also require of the public patience and 
broad backing of the government, two elements missing from the war on drugs.

Easier war to fight? "In many ways this war will be easier to fight," says 
Gen. Barry McCaffrey, former White House drug czar under the Clinton 
administration. "In the drug war, we have 5 million addicts craving the 
very product we're trying to stop, but I'd be astonished if we have even 
1,000 terrorists in America, of all kinds."

While the government certainly starts out with more unified support than it 
has ever enjoyed in the drug war, others say disappointments during a long 
war with few obvious victories would take their toll. In the past, focus on 
terrorism has "had a short half-life," says Paul Bremer, who chaired the 
National Commission on Terrorism.

"People will have more patience with a long fight against terrorism, 
because they now realize how terrorism threatens the very sinew of 
civilization," says Myles Frechette, who was US ambassador to Colombia - 
the world's largest supplier of cocaine - in the mid-1990s. "Still, if five 
years from now Osama bin Laden is still out there in some cave, he may not 
be doing anything, but there will be voices raised, saying the war against 
terrorism was a failure."

Mr. McCaffrey notes that some are "already saying nothing is happening, 
when in fact a lot is happening, but it's not military or flashy. There 
have been hundreds of arrests and hundreds of investigations under way 
around the world, so these organizations have been thrown off."

Like the drug war, the war against terrorism will be played out to a 
significant degree overseas, and require a carrot-and-stick approach to 
solicit the cooperation of key countries. Much as the US has a 
certification process to condemn or reward drug-supplying countries, 
President Bush says countries will have to choose: They are either with the 
US, or with terrorists.

Recent US aid to Afghanistan But as the case of Afghanistan and the war on 
drugs demonstrates, the division of "good" and "bad" countries based on one 
criterion can backfire.

Afghanistan's Taliban government may soon feel the wrath of US military 
might, but only months ago, the Bush administration gave the Taliban 
millions of dollars - a reward for enlisting in the war on drugs by banning 
the growing of opium poppies.

In May, Secretary of State Colin Powell announced $43 million in 
humanitarian aid to Afghanistan, including $10 million specifically in 
recognition of the Taliban's announced ban on poppy production.

Since then, US officials have increasingly come to suspect that the Taliban 
continues to supply the global market for illicit drugs with stocks it has 
saved up. Now, some international narcotics experts believe chief suspect 
in the Sept. 11 attacks, Osama bin Laden, derives at least some money from 
the narcotics trade.

"We have to pay more attention to money as a nexus between the drug trade 
and terrorism," says Ted Carpenter, vice-president of the Cato Institute 
and a drug-trade specialist. That link between drug revenues and Colombia's 
major subversive groups - which the State Department lists as terrorist 
organizations - is already well known. But the link in Afghanistan and 
Central Asia remains in the shadows, he says.

Despite Afghanistan and its poppies, the war on terrorism will likely 
witness the same kind of cozying up to unlikely allies, as the US seeks to 
build the broadest possible international coalition. The US will 
subordinate some of its own principles for the urgent need to curtail 
terrorism, experts say.

Speaking recently in Washington, Mr. Bremer said concerns about human 
rights will be subordinated to our military objectives. And he is clear 
about what those objectives must include: "There is no solution that does 
not include a regime change in Afghanistan."

But to accomplish that, the concessions to key partners may be large. 
"Pakistan's cooperation will come at a price," says Mr. Carpenter. That 
means less pressure on Pakistan to democratize, and more pressure on the US 
to sell arms to Pakistan.
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