Pubdate: Fri, 18 May 2001 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2001 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 NO SURRENDER Try Harder Against Drugs The tempest over President Bush's nomination of John P. Walters as the new drug "czar" is obscuring a larger, and reassuring, reality. Whatever Walters' past reservations about drug treatment as a component strategy in the so-called drug war, the Bush administration is already committed to a balanced national drug policy that includes more, not less, drug treatment. This balance means focusing alike on the complementary objectives of reducing the supply of illicit narcotics while increasing efforts to reduce the domestic demand for drugs. The latter objective, in turn, requires what Barry R. McCaffrey, Walters' able predecessor as director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, fervently recommended in his final report -- more anti-drug education, more research into addiction, and more drug treatment. Bush left no doubt that this is where his drug policy is headed. At the White House announcement of Walters' nomination and that of Rep. Asa Hutchinson, R-Ark., to head the Drug Enforcement Administration, the president declared: "This administration will focus unprecedented attention on the demand side of this problem. We recognize that the most important work to reduce drug use is done in America's living rooms and classrooms, in churches, in synagogues and mosques, in the workplace and in our neighborhoods." These aren't the words of someone who imagines that America could arrest its way out of the drug problem or somehow end the flow of drugs. Bush's proposed 2002 budget includes a 16 percent increase in funding for the National Institute on Drug Abuse and an 11 percent boost for the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. In addition, Bush has directed Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson to conduct a state-by-state inventory of drug treatment needs. These are tangible markers of the administration's commitment. But Walters and former drug czar William J. Bennett, for whom he worked, also have a potent point when they argue that the misnamed war on drugs wasn't so much lost as abandoned during the 1990s. Walters was briefly ONDCP director in 1993. He resigned in protest when President Clinton slashed its staff and budget, the former by 75 percent. McCaffrey and his mission never had Clinton's personal support or commitment. Walters believes revitalized interdiction efforts in places like Colombia (where 80 percent of America's cocaine originates) and along U.S. borders could, in fact, stop more of the drugs that poison 14 million Americans. Tough law enforcement and assertive foreign policy can no more be excluded from a balanced counter-drug strategy than drug treatment, education and prevention. An effective strategy needs to employ them all. That's Bush's policy and Walters' mandate. Their pledge is no surrender on the drug front. We, and most Americans, agree. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew