Pubdate: Thu, 07 Mar 2002 Source: Daily Breeze (CA) Copyright: 2002 Daily Breeze Contact: http://www.dailybreeze.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/881 Author: Stan Nelson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) DRUGS, TERRORISM GO HAND IN HAND A few local residents seem concerned about the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy advertising in the Super Bowl last month in an attempt to connect drugs and terrorism. The suggestions that "casual drug users" are partly responsible for things like judges being murdered, and other atrocities, seem to have irked these folks -- especially when you consider that the U.S. government spent a few million dollars for these ads. For over three decades, I was involved in the enforcement of the "drug war," on a local and international level at varying times. The Super Bowl, given that our national interest in sports dwarfed our interest in national security until 9-11, was the appropriate place to get several hundred million people worldwide to view these ads, and the implication of illegal drugs with terrorism. Terrorism and drugs began with the opium wars, and perhaps before. Whole countries have been seized and governments changed by the shipping of drugs and maintenance of drug profits. The Mexican government and the Colombian government, until recent times, have been manipulated by the power of drug profiteering. Elections have been decided as a result. Asian governments have long been influenced by the control of drug lords. Murders in foreign countries and high-level assassinations in several countries have all been the result of drug traffickers. The Taliban, more recently, showed rigid opposition to heroin trafficking in Afghanistan -- while winking at the terrorists operating within their country, moving opium and producing heroin for the purchase of masses of weaponry and funds to promote the inevitable incident of 9-11, among others. Locally, the majority of daily crimes you hear about, violent and chillingly demonstrative as they are, are committed by drug users. Most of the police pursuits we see, which terrorize our highways and surface streets, are led by an initiated drug user. Recently a person shot four police officers, kidnapped two very young female children and shot one of them. His excuse was that the "casual drugs" he chose to use affected his judgment. He said this to a hostage negotiator on a cellular telephone. He unfortunately died in an intense gunbattle with SWAT officers. The coroner revealed the man had a .51 percent methamphetamine level in his blood -- an inhuman amount to have been ingested. Drug Wars. Did they cause terrorism to succeed by concentrating on the traffickers? Highly unlikely. The traffickers were the terrorists. STAN NELSON Redondo Beach - --- MAP posted-by: Beth