Pubdate: Wed, 11 Apr 2001 Source: Cumberland Times-News (MD) Copyright: 2001 Cumberland Times-News Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1365 Website: http://www.times-news.com/ Author: Ronald Fraser, Ph.D. Editor's note: The DKT Liberty Project is a Washington-based non-profit, civil liberties organization. 'IRON TRIANGLE' FAVORS DRUG INTERDICTION OVER TREATMENT On his recent visit to Mexico, President George W. Bush signaled a shift in America's drug control policy -- from a traditional emphasis on cutting drug supplies to reducing drug demand here at home. He said, "The main reason why drugs are shipped through Mexico to the United States is because United States citizens use drugs. Our nation must do a better job of educating our citizenry about the dangers and evils of drugs." But in Washington, where dollars speak louder than words, a powerful iron triangle of interests wedded to the status quo, not drug education and treatment, will resist the change suggested by Mr. Bush. A speech alone will not turn things around. Washington's bureaucracy: The first side of the triangle consists of dozens of federal bureaus, including the Justice Department headed by John Ashcroft, whose budgets are fattened by drug war moneys. In 1997 Attorney General Ashcroft summed up his views this way, "A government which takes the resources that we would devote toward the interdiction of drugs and converts them to treatment resources...and also implements a clean needle program is a government that accommodates us at our lowest and least instead of calls us to our highest and best." And just a few weeks ago, on the Larry King Live show, Ashcroft said, "I want to escalate the war on drugs...We want to relaunch the war on drugs and we want to bring parents into the equation...But we'll enforce the law with vigor and with intensity." At budget time Ashcroft can't have it both ways. These law enforcement bureaus will pressure him to boost their already large budgets still higher: Bureau of Prisons, $2.5 billion; Drug Enforcement Administration, $1.5 billion; Coast Guard, $617 million; and the U.S. Customs Service, $840 million. Every dollar added to education and parental action will place funds for enforcement agencies at risk. Law Makers: Washington lawmakers occupy the second side of the triangle. When legislative and budgetary push comes to shove, committees with names like Early Childhood, Youth and Families, which view alcohol and drug abuse as education and treatment problems, have far less clout than committees that oversee drug enforcement. Members of Congress are eager to show the folks back home how hard they are cracking down on drug crimes. Congress also practices a "Yes...but" budget shuffle. For example, citing a lack of basic data needed to make drug treatment policy, a 1998 act of Congress ordered the Office of National Drug Control Policy to prepare a study of the status of drug treatment facilities in the United States. But, since Congress did not provide funding to actually carry out the study, nothing happened. Contractors: Vendors make up the triangle's third side. Here we find companies selling high tech intelligence gathering, communications and other law enforcement equipment. Ford and General Motors supply thousands of vehicles to federal, state and local police departments, and Sikorsky Aircraft Division in Stratford, Conn., will deliver 13 UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters this year for use in Colombia, South America, costing U.S. taxpayers at least $195 million. Then there's the booming prison industries. With hundreds of thousands of drug war convicts now in prison, the building material industries have been very busy. It costs about $8.6 billion annually to keep drug law violators behind bars, including 30,874 federal and 391,015 state correctional employees in American prisons. The three sides of the triangle work as one. Members of Congress, government bureaucrats and vendors are all determined to keep the interdiction drug war going, even though interdiction efforts in the1990s have failed to curtail the flow of drugs. Indeed, street drug prices have gone down, according to government data. From 1991 to 2001 every federal budget passed by Congress spent $2 of every $3 on law enforcement and drug interdiction. If Mr. Bush means what he says, his challenge is to reverse this ratio and put $2 of every $3 in his administration's budgets toward drug education, parental involvement and drug treatment programs. Doing so, however, will take more than words. It will require dismantling the three-sided drug policy straitjacket America finds itself in. Ronald Fraser, Ph.D. DKT Liberty Project - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake