Pubdate: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 Source: International Herald-Tribune (France) Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2003 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/212 Note: Originally published by the Boston Globe Tuesday, August 19, 2003 DRUG WAR DISTORTIONS Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's acknowledgment that opium production is on the rise in Afghanistan is most welcome if it spreads to others in the Bush administration. For more than two decades, Washington's war on drugs has tilted heavily toward supply-side strategies: arresting drug smugglers and dealers, attempting to squeeze off the production and availability of narcotics. But this approach has failed in Afghanistan, where U.S. forces and the U.S.-backed government have been less effective than the Taliban in controlling the production of opium and heroin. "My impression is that in a very real sense it's a demand problem," Rumsfeld said last week in a question-and-answer session with civilian and military employees of the Pentagon. "It's a problem that there are a lot of people who want it, a lot of people with money who will pay for it, a lot of people who will steal from others to pay for it." In the end, Rumsfeld characterized drug use as "a whale of a tough problem." "And I'm afraid that the ultimate solution for that," he added, "is going to be probably found by attacking it in all directions, not just the supply side but the education and demand side as well." Rumsfeld's candid assessment should be a lesson to those leading the war on drugs. Will Glaspy, spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration, insists the overall policy is balanced, "combining strong enforcement with education and treatment." Yet the proportion of federal drug funds going to treatment was cut in half during the Reagan administration and has never recovered. And with nearly all 50 states slashing budgets in response to revenue shortfalls, state and local drug treatment facilities have been hard hit. Afghanistan's blooming opium poppy fields are a deserved embarrassment to the United States. But Rumsfeld is right in pointing to the other side of the market. There will be few victories in the war on drugs until effective treatment and education lower demand. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk