Pubdate: Mon, 11 Jul 2005 Source: Providence Journal, The (RI) Copyright: 2005 The Providence Journal Company Contact: http://www.projo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352 THE DUBIOUS DRUG WAR The pain and vast waste of the endless U.S. battle against the Latin American drug trade continues. Although the U.S. has spent at least $5.4 billion on its Andean Antidrug Initiative since 2000, the supply of cocaine and heroin on U.S. streets remains plentiful and prices low. Meanwhile, we continue to poison poor peasants' countryside with herbicides, and civil war continues in Colombia, the heart of our theological and unwinnable foreign "war on drugs." While U.S. and Colombian officials assert that violence related to drug trafficking has fallen sharply in Colombia, cocaine output has soared in Peru and Bolivia, as peasants there try to survive by growing coca -- their one reliable cash crop. The drug trade by definition moves around with great facility. If we must spend billions in the Andes, wouldn't it make more sense to help these farmers move to other crops than focus on coca-plant destruction? U.N. figures this month indicated that overall coca production rose 2 percent in the Andean region in 2004. The failure to provide viable agricultural alternatives to the peasants to permit them to make a living has not helped. We gather the main aim of the campaign is to reduce the drug problem in the United States, wherein live most users. So what are we doing? Does this harmful project continue out of sheer inertia, because some government contractors do well off it, or is it the theology of drug control itself? And why is there little indication that South American countries are any more willing and able to take over the "drug war" from Americans than they were five years ago? Whatever the war is, we should halt it. One way would be for Congress not to approve the Bush administration's request for $734.5 million for the initiative as part of the foreign-aid bill. Another would be to stop torturing impoverished Latin Americans for our problems, and move from criminalization to medicalization of America's drug problem. Making drug use a crime has, of course, increased crime. Treating it as the medical problem it is (like alcoholism) would remove much of the corrupt money that courses through the drug-distribution system. We join the National Taxpayers Union in thinking of one big word for the Andean Antidrug Initiative: boondoggle. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake