Pubdate: Thu, 28 Feb 2002 Source: Boston Phoenix (MA) Copyright: 2002 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/54 Author: Robert Sharpe Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COLLATERAL DAMAGE Patrick Keaney's article on "Colombia's 'Dirty War' " [News and Features, February 15] was excellent. With the expansion of the Clinton administration's $1.3 billion Plan Colombia military-aid package into a broader Andean initiative, it's becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish US anti-drug efforts from Cold War-era counterinsurgency. Not only is the US government turning a blind eye to paramilitary human-rights violations, it's facilitating a very real environmental threat. In an effort to eradicate coca plants, toxic herbicides are sprayed indiscriminately from above, hitting water supplies, staple crops, and people. This drives peasants further into the Amazon basin, which in turn leads to more rain-forest destruction. Plan Colombia could very well spread both coca production and civil war throughout the region. Communist guerrilla movements do not originate in a vacuum. US tax dollars would be better spent addressing the socioeconomic causes of civil strife than by applying overwhelming military force to attack the symptoms. We're not doing the Colombian people any favors by funding civil war. Nor are Americans being protected from drugs. Destroy the Colombian coca crop, and production will boom in Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Destroy every last plant in South America, and domestic methamphetamine production will increase to meet the demand for cocaine-like drugs. Sooner or later, Congress's self-professed champions of the free market will have to wake up to the inherent failure of the supply-side drug war. Robert Sharpe, MPA, Program officer, Drug Policy Alliance, Washington, DC - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl