Pubdate: Mon, 29 Dec 2003 Source: Weekly Standard, The (US) Copyright: 2003 The Weekly Standard Contact: http://www.weeklystandard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/808 Cited: Office of National Drug Control Policy (www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov ) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) WHY IS THERE STILL A WAR ON DRUGS? This is the question our libertarian-leaning friends were asking over at National Review Online last Friday, December 19. And they weren't asking it because they think the war has been won. They assume it has been badly lost. That same day, however, the president's Office of National Drug Control Policy released an astonishingly good piece of news: The latest federal survey shows "an 11 percent decline in drug use by 8th, 10th, and 12th grade students over the past two years. The finding translates into 400,000 fewer teen drug users over two years." Says Bush drug czar John P. Walters: This means "teen drug use has [declined to] a level that we haven't seen in nearly a decade." And what was a big factor in changing teen attitudes toward drug use? The controversial anti-drug advertising campaign run by the drug czar's office, one of whose themes--the link between terrorism and revenues from trafficking--was also highlighted on December 19. The Navy announced that day that it had intercepted a boatload of hashish in the Persian Gulf. Three of the men on board were believed to have al Qaeda ties. Bruce Hoffman, a RAND terrorism expert, was quoted by the AP as calling this "the first empirical evidence I've seen that conclusively links al Qaeda with the drug trade." Between the teens and the war on terror, that adds up to 400,001 good reasons why there's still a war on drugs.