Pubdate: Wed, 16 May 2001 Source: Galveston County Daily News (TX) Copyright: 2001 Galveston Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.galvnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/164 Author: Heber Taylor NEW DRUG CZAR WITH OLD IDEAS On taking office, John P. Walters, the new drug czar, said: "Our country has made great progress in the past in reducing drug use, and we will do it again." It's a memorable line. It ranks up there with Major Gen. John Sedgwick's remark, meant to reassure nervous troops, that a sharpshooter "couldn't hit an elephant at this range." The unfortunate general uttered those words just before the fatal shot hit home. The problem with Walters' remark is that our country has not made great progress in the past. It has been no more successful at winning the war on drugs than Gen. Sedgwick was at warding off sharpshooters' bullets. The government has, for four decades, thrown increasingly greater amounts of money at efforts to stop drugs from getting into this country. The amount of drugs getting in has continued to rise. That pattern is well documented. Ironically, the best documentation is by the federal agencies that are supposed to be curtailing drug imports. Each year, these agencies go to Congress, asking for more money. The reason they need more money is that the supply of illegal drugs is increasing. In the private sector, if you ask for more money for new programs, you'd better produce results. That doesn't apply to the drug czar's office. Walters is not new to the Office of National Drug Control Policy. He was its deputy director for supply reduction when William Bennett was drug czar and Bush's father was in the White House. While the former president had his successes, curbing drug imports was not among them. The policies that were in place then failed. It was an era of rapid expansion of the Colombian cartels -- and rapid expansion of the cash flowing through the Office of National Drug Control Policy. The failed policy continued through the Clinton Administration. So did the increases in funding. On his return to the drug policy office, Walters will oversee $19 billion in anti-drug programs. Walters has championed several standard policies. He's for tough criminal penalties for drug users. He's against the use of marijuana for medical purposes. He supports the drug-certification program that is so hated in Mexico. All those policies have been in place a long time. If you see the War on Drugs as something that has made "great progress," you can look forward to Walters' energetic continuation of these policies with hope. If you don't see that progress, you see little promise in Walters' appointment. What is needed is a new approach to drug policy. There is no prospect for winning this war on drugs as it is now being fought because this business is so profitable. What could take the profit out? A sharp decrease in American consumption. What will it take to do that? More credible efforts to convince individual Americans to stop a behavior that is destructive individually and socially. More money for the treatment of addicts. Less money wasted on locking up people whose only crime is their addiction. That would be a start. But to get to the starting line we're going to have to try some new ideas. The most needed new idea is a frank admission that what we've done so far hasn't been adequate. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager