Pubdate: Sat, 20 Dec 2008 Source: Las Vegas Sun (NV) Copyright: 2008 Las Vegas Sun, Inc Contact: http://www.lasvegassun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/234 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico AN AMERICAN PROBLEM This year the killings just across the Mexican border made headlines as much for their brutality -- including beheadings -- as for their numbers, more than 5,000. It is nothing short of mass slaughter as drug gangs torture and kill rivals and use the same tactics against Mexican soldiers, police, judges, journalists and anyone else who goes against them. Here in the Unites States, we can perceive the bloodshed as a Mexican problem. Or we can think about it more accurately -- as an American problem. After all, what is fueling the drug gangs' violence, which often spills into our border towns? The answer is control of smuggling routes leading into the United States, where millions of addicts and recreational drug users buy an estimated $23 billion worth of illegal drugs a year. CBS News recently interviewed Bill Gore, the undersheriff of San Diego County and a former FBI agent. Gore told the network American drug users should realize they have blood on their hands. Illegal drug use "is not a victimless crime," Gore said. It is a point that needs to be reflected in this country's public policies and laws. For all of the logical-sounding aggressiveness contained in our ongoing war on drugs, the results are pitiful. A recent Government Accountability Office report documented that just a fraction of the thousands of tons of drugs bound for the United States from Mexico every year is intercepted. Our view is that drug interdiction should continue, along with another program of the same size and scope -- that of treating addicts. The number of treatment centers in this country nowhere near reflects the size of the addiction problem, which also contributes heavily to crime in our cities. Cutting America's appetite for drugs is a solution that could take decades, but it is the solution that has the best chance of working. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin