Pubdate: Fri, 24 Jan 2003 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2003 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Author: James W. Crawley, SUT Staff Writer MILITARY'S STAKE RISES IN WAR ON DRUGS Support Role Exacts A Precious New Cost The U.S. military has been fighting the war on drugs since the 1980s in a wide-ranging effort that has cost billions of tax dollars. Wednesday, it cost more: the lives of four Marine reservists. On any given day, soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines - active duty, National Guardsmen and reservists - help federal and state law-enforcement officers track down suspected drug smugglers. The military uses warships, helicopters, radar planes, special operations troops and submarines. The war on drugs also has claimed the lives of civilians, including an 18-year-old Texas man killed by a Camp Pendleton Marine in 1997. The Pentagon's role is not one of direct law enforcement, but one of support. The military has helped federal, state and local law enforcers with surveillance, transportation and training. Military aircraft, ranging from Army, Marine Corps and National Guard helicopters to sophisticated Navy Hawkeye radar planes, have become airborne eyes for the U.S. Customs Service and Drug Enforcement Agency. For more than five years, San Diego-based destroyers and frigates, with Coast Guard law enforcers on board, have deployed to the eastern Pacific and the Caribbean. But, is the military winning the war on drugs? "They've had many successes, but it hasn't stopped the flow (of drugs)," said Heritage Foundation defense analyst Jack Spencer. "It hasn't worked real well." The anti-drug effort hasn't been too burdensome, said Chris Hellman, a defense expert at the Center for Defense Information in Washington. There even have been some benefits, because the anti-drug role provides realistic training for some military personnel, he added. "A guy in a Hawkeye (radar plane) looking for low-flying aircraft . . . that's great training," Hellman said. In California, the National Guard has been actively supporting local officials since 1990, said spokeswoman Maj. Kim Oliver. Last year, 425 Guardsmen participated in 566 support missions, she said. National Guard members regularly fly aerial surveillance for the Border Patrol and search for backcountry marijuana plots for the Drug Enforcement Agency. It was on a marijuana search that a Guard helicopter started a fire near Julian in July that eventually burned 61,690 acres. The part-time troops and airmen all are volunteers, and most have received specialized training to assist law enforcement, Oliver said. "They go through thorough training before they go on those missions." Because of the National Guard's extensive counter-drug flights, she said, California has the most experienced pilots and crews throughout the National Guard. The military's drug battle isn't limited to the United States. In Central and South America, the Pentagon is training counter-narcotics and anti-terror squads in several nations, including Peru and Colombia. Air Force and Navy surveillance aircraft fly from bases in Honduras, Peru and the Caribbean island of Aruba. Radar sites scan for drug planes in South America. The Pentagon's domestic and international drug war cost $871 million this fiscal year, said Pentagon spokesman Maj. Ben Owens. Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, a debate has ensued on whether the military has the wherewithal to combat drugs while fighting a worldwide war on terrorism. "When we need all our men and women in the armed forces to fight the war on terrorism, can we be fighting the war on drugs?" defense analyst Spencer asked. Said Hellman: "It's a war on drugs and it's a war on terrorism," particularly in Colombia, where an aggressive U.S. program is helping the government fight guerrillas involved in cocaine-trafficking. The military's drug war has been controversial. "We're concerned about military involvement in civilian law enforcement," said Chris Ford, co-director of the Border Action Network, a Tucson, Ariz., organization that opposes U.S. immigration policy. "The military's main job is killing people; law enforcement's main job is figuring out who commits a crime," Ford said. "There is a blurring of lines between the military and civilian law enforcement." The group was founded after the May 1997 shooting of a Texas man by a Camp Pendleton Marine who was on a counter-drug patrol near the Rio Grande. Esequiel Hernandez Jr., 18, was herding goats when he apparently fired several shots toward Marines hiding in brush. They fired back and killed him. The death generated protests along the border and ended the patrols by military personnel. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)