Pubdate: Fri, 11 May 2001 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2001 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: John Donnelly BUSH NAMES LAW-AND-ORDER DRUG CHIEF WASHINGTON - President Bush named a drug policy director yesterday known for his tough law-and-order policies, but the president said that the most effective way to reduce the nation's supply of illegal drugs is to ''reduce demand.'' The apparent contradiction in Bush's appointment of John P. Walters, a former top aide in the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the president's call for greater emphasis on treatment and prevention, confused many specialists on drug use. The analysts also noted something remarkable about Bush's speech in the Rose Garden: He never uttered the words ''drug war.'' ''I don't remember a single major speech on drug policy by a president of the United States that did not use the term `war,''' said Joseph A. Califano Jr., secretary of health, education, and welfare under President Carter and now head of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse in New York City. ''We have never had a president talk about demand reduction, treatment, drug courts, about the role of families, as Bush talked about that today.'' Bush, who in the past has expressed an understanding of those in the grips of addiction based on his own experiences of drinking too much alcohol, instructed Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson to make a state-by-state inventory of treatment needs, aimed at ''how to most effectively close the treatment gap in this country.'' While recreational drug use has fallen dramatically since the mid-1980s, the number of hard-core drug users has stubbornly remained at about 5 million people. National studies suggest that more than 60 percent of them are not receiving any treatment. In part because of the movie ''Traffic,'' which depicts the devastating impact of drug use on the family of the fictional US drug policy director played by actor Michael Douglas, and in part because many law enforcement officials have concluded that the 30-year ''war on drugs'' has failed miserably, drug policy specialists forecast much more support in Congress for drug treatment. Yesterday Bush highlighted an increase of $1.1 billion in the budget to counter illegal drugs, pushing it to a total of $19 billion. That includes new money for treatment, local antidrug coalitions, and research on prevention and treatment. Walters, 49, was the top deputy to the first US drug policy director, William J. Bennett. In the past, he has favored tough prison sentences for violent felons, drug smugglers, and repeat offenders. He also is a strong believer in ''coerced treatment,'' which includes drug court sentences for treatment that, if not followed, result in jail terms. He now faces confirmation hearings in the Senate. Subtly jabbing at the efforts against drugs during the Clinton administration, Walters said in a short statement yesterday, ''Our country has made great progress in the past in reducing drug use, and we will do it again. ''Our efforts rest on the knowledge that when we push back, the drug problem gets smaller,'' he said. ''This fact is beyond question today, even if it is not always beyond denial.'' In ''The Fix,'' a history of America's war on drugs, author Michael Massing wrote about how in the first Bush administration, Walters ''became taken with the glamour of the drug war ... and began immersing himself in such arcana as radar capabilities, herbicide potencies, and Caribbean choke points.'' During his first tenure at the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Walters helped fashion a $2 billion, five-year program to help Andean countries fight drugs. In an interview yesterday, Massing said that ''with Walters, the question is, is the past prologue?'' ''If it is, I think we are in for a continuation or even escalation of the drug war, particularly in its international dimensions,'' Massing said. Last year, after protracted debate, Congress approved a $1.3 billion plan to fight drugs in Colombia and the Andean nations. But since then, several moderate Democrats and Republicans have expressed reservations about the wisdom of deepening US involvement in a complex jungle war. ''If Walters realizes the climate has changed politically on the drug war, which I think it has, then perhaps he could change direction,'' Massing said. ''But I'm not optimistic.'' Califano, a liberal Democrat, said people should focus on Bush, rather than Walters. ''The drug czar is a White House staff job,'' said Califano, who attended the Walters announcement and was praised by Bush for his policy work on drug abuse. ''The drug czar is going to do what the president tells him to do.'' ''He's been tagged anti-demand,'' the official said. ''But he was head of supply reduction before, and so it wasn't surprising he would talk a lot about reducing the supply of drugs. I think he'll push the treatment agenda now.'' Coincidentally yesterday, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said that 650 people working in the Executive Office of the President had been tested for drugs before they were employed. First in line, back in January, were Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, he said. A White House aide said all 650 passed the test. Globe reporter Anne E. Kornblut contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: GD