Pubdate: Thu, 28 Aug 2003 Source: Khaleej Times (UAE) Copyright: 2003 Khaleej Times Contact: http://khaleejtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/996 DECLARING WAR ON DRUGS WITH war in Iraq and reconstruction in Afghanistan, the Bush administration is preparing to escalate its military intervention on another continent. Recent visits by the US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers to Colombia suggest that President Bush is planning an increasing role for US forces in defeating Colombia's Marxist insurgents and drug lords. The US is describing drugs from Colombia as "weapons of mass destruction", and has warned that instability there could create "safe havens" for "international terrorist organisations". Drugs are the civilian equivalent of weapons of mass destruction. Like WMD, drugs kill people in large numbers, the only difference being that, whereas WMD obliterate its victims in an instant, drugs claim human lives through a slow process of torture. The visit by Rumsfeld, which followed that of General Myers by barely a week, was aimed in part at reassuring country's right-wing president, Alvaro Uribe, of Washington's support in the wake of the Bush administration's cut-off of military aid to Colombia last month. While the US and Colombian governments point to various signs of success in their anti-drug campaign, there is no evidence so that the effort has had a major effect on reducing the amount of cocaine flowing out of the Latin American country. This time, the US should go all the way to destroy the drug trade at its roots by sending the military into rebel-held areas where the coca is cultivated with impunity. Only when there is a significant decline in the amount of cocaine and other psychotropic drugs available in the global markets, can the US intervention be considered effective. It is now three years since then-president Clinton initiated Plan Colombia, approving $1.3 billion in military aid aimed at countering drug trafficking from the country, the main source of cocaine for the US market. The US military assistance has since risen to more than $3 billion. Under Uribe's rule, Colombia has become a key state for US intervention throughout the region. Both Myers and Rumsfeld stressed during their visits the regional implications of the Colombian civil war. Colombia is currently the third-largest recipient of US military aid, trailing behind only Israel and Egypt. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake