Pubdate: Sun, 06 May 2001 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Michael Massing A LOOK AT . . . THE DRUG WAR'S FUTURE THE WRONG MAN AND THE WRONG DIRECTION In the more than three months since George W. Bush became president, the drug-policy world has eagerly awaited his choice of drug czar. Bush's repeated campaign references to his compassionate conservatism and his candid remarks about his own battles with alcohol raised expectations that he might name someone familiar with the social and medical dimensions of drug addiction. Now the president has indicated his choice: John P. Walters. And he seems to be exactly the wrong man for the job. That's because, if Walters's background is any guide, he will put prosecution before prevention, tougher laws before treatment. During the many years I spent researching the U.S. war on drugs, I became fascinated with Walters's evolution from a political scientist enamored of Plato and Edmund Burke to a Washington player captivated by the glamour and romance of the drug war. As a senior official at the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) from 1989 to 1993, serving under William Bennett and Bob Martinez, Walters became known for his preoccupation with the national security dimensions of drug policy. Every morning, Walters would preside over an hour-long intelligence briefing, meeting with representatives from the Defense Department, CIA, DEA, Customs and the State Department. Some people in the office found the meetings so long and inconclusive that they did all they could to stay away, but Walters relished discussing such arcana as radar sightings, marijuana seizures and choke points in the Caribbean. As his top aide, he hired a former Navy SEAL who loved to boast about his daring feats on secret missions. Walters also became known for his conviction that the best way to fight drugs is at their source. Before joining ONDCP, Walters had never been to Latin America, but he began making regular visits to the heartland of cocaine. There, this former student of the neo-conservative intellectual Allan Bloom waded into coca fields, visited police barracks, flew on C-130 transports. In Peru, Walters urged the government to go after local coca producers and to intercept smugglers. In Colombia, he prodded officials to go pursue Pablo Escobar and other leaders of the Medellin cartel. He was taken with the "kingpin" theory of drug enforcement -- that the best way to disrupt the drug trade was to lop off its heads. Back in Washington, Walters helped fashion the Andean Strategy, a five-year, $2 billion program to provide the region's officials the military and economic assistance they needed to fight the drug trade. The Andean plan -- Walters's chief legacy at ONDCP -- brought about a major escalation in the U.S. military's involvement in the drug war. It marked the start of the Peruvian air force's shoot-down policy that resulted in last month's attack on an American missionary plane. And it was a forerunner of Plan Colombia, Washington's $1.3 billion program to fight cocaine production there. Overall, in the decade since Walters's handiwork was adopted, the United States has spent many billions of dollars trying to stem the flow of drugs into this country. It hasn't worked. Today, according to recent government studies, cocaine is cheaper and more plentiful here than ever before. So is heroin. Marijuana is peddled in shopping malls, schoolyards and urban parks across America, and methamphetamine has become a fixture in rural and working-class communities in the western United States. By now, even many drug war hawks have begun to acknowledge the futility of our effort to keep drugs out of the country and to recognize that the true root of our problem is demand. But, on this front, we have made little headway. While casual drug use has dropped significantly since the mid-1980s, hard-core use has not. Today, according to ONDCP, the United States has an estimated 5 million chronic users of heroin, cocaine, crack and methamphetamine. And, as I found during my research, many of them are stealing to support their habit, neglecting their kids while getting high, passing out on subway trains, cycling in and out of the courts. In short, this hard-core group causes most of the social problems associated with drugs. Yet we have made only half-hearted efforts to help it. For the past 20 years, the federal government has devoted most of its resources to arresting, prosecuting and confining these users. Year after year, the single largest expenditure in the drug budget goes for prison space to house drug offenders. We don't do this to alcohol abusers -- we recognize they need help. So do drug abusers. Yet help is often not there. According to government statistics, treatment is available for only about half of those who need it. Traveling around the country, I've been struck by how many communities lack even a single residential center or methadone clinic. Of course, not all addicts want help. But many do -- witness the long waiting lists in many cities. Improved outreach can help bring in more from the street. Dollar for dollar, studies show, treatment is far more effective in reducing drug use than is law enforcement, border interdiction or hunting kingpins in Latin America. Over the years, I have met many people, from musicians to homeless people, who have gotten better in treatment. Needless to say, many of those who enter programs will eventually relapse. But even if they stay off drugs for only a limited period, treatment more than pays for itself. And its value grows when it is combined with vocational training, job placement and other services designed to ease users back into society. Nonetheless, treatment remains seriously underfunded. According to some estimates, the federal government would have to spend $4 billion more a year on treatment over current levels to make it available on request. Surely it's time we had a drug czar committed to doing this. John Walters is not that person. During his time at ONDCP, federal spending on treatment did increase some, but not nearly enough to meet the demand. In a conversation after he left office, Walters told me that "there's a lot of skepticism about treatment. People think it's a revolving door." Bob Martinez, he said, wanted to leave as his "trademark" as drug czar a shift in drug spending away from supply reduction toward demand reduction. Martinez also wanted to do more about alcohol abuse. On both counts, however, Walters indicated, he was dissuaded. Since leaving ONDCP, Walters has directed both the New Citizenship Project and the Philanthropy Roundtable and appeared before Congress more than a dozen times to talk about drug policy. Reading his statements, I was struck by their partisan and hawkish tone. At a hearing in July 1996, for instance, he attacked the Clinton administration for attempting to provide more treatment for hard-core users. This "ineffectual policy," he declared, was "the latest manifestation of the liberals' commitment to a 'therapeutic state' in which the government serves as the agent of personal rehabilitation." Walters also expressed unbending support for tough penalties for drug offenses and dismissed the idea that there are too many low-level drug offenders in prisons. An "all-too-common myth," he called it. Increasing numbers of Americans disagree. Most telling of all has been the outpouring of acclaim for the movie "Traffic." Its depiction of the failures of the drug war in Mexico, and its portrayal of drug abuse as a problem deeply embedded in our families and communities, have driven even such hard-liners as Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah to acknowledge the need for a more enlightened policy. In short, a sea change seems to be taking place in American attitudes toward drugs. Unfortunately, President Bush, in putting forward John Walters, seems oblivious to it. If Walters does become drug czar, it would represent a giant step backward in how we deal with addiction.Michael Massing is the author of "The Fix" (University of California Press), a critique of the U.S. war on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom