Pubdate: Sat, 30 Nov 2002 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2002 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Peter B. Bensinger DRUG DANGERS Steve Chapman's "The war on drugs vs. the war on terrorism" (Commentary, Nov. 10) is frightening. While Chapman cannot deny the historic and direct connection between drug trafficking and terrorism, he suggests that we should make cocaine legal. If teddy bears were illegal, he says, then the terrorists would sell teddy bears. How many people will die tonight from hugging teddy bears? At least four will die from cocaine. There is no question that the major illegal drug trafficking source countries fuel terrorist groups, and have done so since the opium war in China 150 years ago. Recently terrorist groups attempted to trade heroin for missiles, and cocaine for grenade launchers and $25 million worth of weapons. The way to hurt the terrorists is to seize their assets, to destroy the drug trafficking networks and to reduce the demand for illegal drugs. Chapman does not comment on how drugs that are now illegal would affect our population in terms of health, addiction, productivity, accidents, social welfare and health costs, vigilance or safety. He suggests that if drugs were legal there would be no organized crime. Who is he kidding? England made available heroin to registered addicts 30 years ago in the hope, as Chapman suggests, that it would eliminate illegal drug trafficking and organized crime. The registered addicts received the less potent and safe heroin at their chemists (drug stores) and then immediately went out and bought more powerful stuff illegally. Illegal heroin imports doubled in the United Kingdom. So did the time Scotland Yard spent on the heroin trade. The U.K. abandoned that idea very quickly. Let's applaud the parent groups, scientists, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the United Nations that recognize marijuana, cocaine and heroin for what they are: unsafe, unhealthy and illegal. Peter B. Bensinger, Chairman Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, Former administrator, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration - --- MAP posted-by: Beth