Pubdate: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 Source: News-Sentinel (In) Copyright: 2001 The News-Sentinel Contact: Http://Www.Fortwayne.Com/ Details: Http://Www.Mapinc.Org/Media/1077 Author: Leo Morris, For The Editorial Board IN ANY WAR, THINGS TEND TO GET UGLY As Long As We Just Fight Drug Supply And Ignore Demand, We Will Fail. It's Called "Collateral Damage," Or, Sometimes, "Friendly Fire." In A War, Innocent People Get Killed Simply Because They Are In The Wrong Place At The Wrong Time. It's No One's "Fault" In The Conventional Sense Of That Word. There Are People Who Are Responsible -- But No One To Blame. That's Pretty Much How The U.S. Describes The Fate Of Veronica Bowers, 35, An American Missionary, And Her 7-Month-Old Daughter, Charity, Killed Last Week When Their Small Plane Was Mistaken For A Drug Carrier And Shot Down By The Peruvian Air Force. America Was Very Much Involved In This Incident. The U.S. Gives About $48 Million A Year To Peru To Fight Drug Trafficking, A Small Part Of $1.8 Billion We Spend On That Effort In Latin America. We Identify Potential Drug-Carrying Planes For Peru Officials, Who Send Out Interceptors To Force A Landing Or -- More Than Two Dozen Times Now -- Shoot A Plane Down. But Instead Of Accepting Our Role, American Officials Seem Intent On Placing All The Blame On Peru. White House Spokesman Ari Fleischer Said The U.S. Crew Of A Cia-Operated Surveillance Aircraft Tracking The Missionary Plane "Did Its Best To Make Certain That All The Rules Were Followed." But The Pilot Of The Peruvian Plane, We Say, Simply "Shot First And Asked Questions Later." Hey, We Tried, Honest, But They Screwed Up. Peru's Action Has Given Drug Traffickers Pause -- Not Being Stupid, They Don't Want To Be Shot Down. Drug Trafficking From Peru Has Been Cut -- But, Mostly, Moved To Colombia. So It Will Always Be As Long As The United States Thinks The Drug Crisis Is Mainly A Supply Problem. We Can Make It More Difficult In One Country Or Two, But The Money Is Just Too Great -- There Are Plenty Of Suppliers In Other Countries Who Will Be More Than Willing To Step In. The Drug Crisis Is Not A Supply Problem -- It Is A Demand Problem. There Are Legitimate Debates About How To Curb That Demand -- Everything From Education And Counseling To Draconian Sentences For The Users. But Until We Are Equally Prepared To Tackle The Demand Side, Continuing To Battle The Supply Side Will Just Waste Billions Of Dollars And Imperil Countless Lives. It's A Losing Fight We Seem Only Too Happy To Continue, Whatever The Cost. Seven Years Ago, The U.S. Stopped Assisting Peru In Its Aggressive Shootdown Policy, Precisely Because Officials Feared Americans Would Be Blamed For Incidents Such As This One. That Didn't Please Members Of Congress -- From Both Sides Of The Aisle -- Who Didn't Want To Be Seen As Soft On Drugs. So They Passed Legislation Giving Americans Immunity For Such Accidents, And The Assistance Resumed. Congress Can Grant Legal Immunity, But It Can't Ignore Moral Culpability, Including Its Own. If We're Going To Use This Pretty Little Metaphor -- The War On Drugs! -- To Get People Energized And Committed To The Cause, We Can't Stop Using It When The Unpleasant Truth Appears. In War, Ugly Things Happen, Not All Of Them Planned. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom