Pubdate: Mon, 21 Oct 2002 Source: Duluth News-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2002 Duluth News-Tribune Contact: http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthtribune/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/553 Author: Paul Richter PENTAGON TO SCALE BACK DRUG WAR NARCOTICS: Citing the war on terrorism, officials say they want to reduce the resources used to fight drug trafficking. WASHINGTON - Citing the need to redirect resources to the war on terrorism, the Pentagon has quietly decided to scale back its effort to combat international drug trafficking, a central element of the national "war on drugs" for 14 years. Officials are still weighing how exactly to pare the $1 billion-a-year program, but they want to reduce deployment of special operations troops on counternarcotics missions and cut back the military's training of antidrug police and soldiers in the United States and abroad. And they want to use intelligence-gathering equipment now devoted to counterdrug work for counterterrorism as well. But the military's counternarcotics effort is highly popular among some on Capitol Hill, where the retrenchment plans could run into trouble. The plans have not yet been spelled out for lawmakers; however, Defense Department memos and interviews with current and former officials make the Pentagon's intentions clear. Congress ordered a reluctant Pentagon to enter the drug war in 1988, when surging cocaine traffic from South America sparked a sense of crisis in the United States. "We should not be relaxing our efforts in the war on drugs," said Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla., chairman of the House Select Committee on Intelligence and an important advocate for the effort. "Terrorism is the highest priority, but drugs are still insidious." The Pentagon's plans have been couched in indirect terms. They were signaled this summer in a memo from Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and distributed to senior uniformed and civilian officials. He said the department had "carefully reviewed its existing counternarcotics policy" because of "the changed national security environment, the corresponding shift in the department's budget and other priorities, and evolving support requirements." The Pentagon will now focus its counternarcotics activities on programs that, among other things, "contribute to the war on terrorism," he added. But even before the Sept. 11 attacks, senior officials including Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had bluntly stated their lack of enthusiasm for the antidrug mission, which they contend is better handled by civilian agencies. Thus, some experts believe the Defense Department may be taking advantage of the war on terrorism to scale back a mission they never wanted. In an interview, Pentagon counterdrug chief Andre Hollis emphasized that the Pentagon wants to retain parts of the program that have worked well but that all the pieces are being examined to determine if each "is still a priority mission. The top priorities now are to defend the homeland and to win the war on terrorism." In its drug interdiction role, the U.S. military acts as the lead U.S. agency for gathering intelligence on drug trafficking, and uses an array of aircraft, ships, radar and other eavesdropping tools. While barred from conducting drug raids directly, troops provide some real-time technical help -- such as communications and intelligence analysis - -- during antidrug operations being carried out by law enforcement and foreign military organizations. The military's counterdrug efforts have not exactly "won" the drug war, some experts note. The price and supply of cocaine, for example, have been relatively stable since 1989. "They're certainly working at the margins in making a difference," said Peter Reuter, a University of Maryland economist and former director of Rand Corp.'s Drug Policy Research Center. And liberal critics have argued that by training foreign police and soldiers, the U.S. military has in some cases given new tools to brutal regimes that often abuse human rights. Yet the Pentagon's work has led to important drug seizures and arrests, and has helped build U.S. ties and open doors for U.S. military access in many countries. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh