Pubdate: Sun, 20 Jun 2010 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Andrew Hanon A FORCE TO BE RECKONED WITH ON DRUGS It's a noteworthy case, mostly because it's so small. Twelve current and former members of Canada's military were charged last week with drug related crimes under the National Defense Act. It's one of the biggest cases of this nature in Canadian Forces history. Military police announced that they had seized a drug lab in a housing unit at CFB Wainwright, along with about $10,000 worth of Dimethyltryptamine or DMT, cocaine, marijuana, ecstasy and prescription drugs. That's all. If the Mounties or city police made a similar bust, they might not even have issued a public announcement. They usually reserve that kind of fanfare for seizures 10 or 20 times that size. One must also look at the charges. Two of the suspects were charged with operating the lab, which was allegedly used to manufacture the DMT, one of the most powerful hallucinogens in the world. They were also charged with trafficking and possession. Two others were also charged with trafficking and possession. But the remaining eight were charged only with possession and using controlled substances, which implies they were buying, not selling, the drugs. In fact, no one in the civilian world would even be charged with using drugs unless they were driving under the influence. Military police said that at this point, there's nothing to indicate these narcotics were being distributed anywhere outside the military. The only reason the arrests got as much attention as they did is because it involved the military, where illicit drug use is much lower than in the general population. Testing has shown that only 4.8% of soldiers admit to smoking marijuana - the most popular illicit drug - compared to upwards of 14% of Canadians as a whole. In general, the rate of drug use in the military is about half that of the general population. The Canadian Forces has a zero-tolerance policy when it comes to drugs, and the vast majority of soldiers seem to buy into that stance. As Lt. Col. Paul Duff, the commander of CFB Wainwright put it last week, "people are handling live-ammunition weapons. People who are on drugs are a danger to themselves and their colleagues, in training and in operations. What we want in battle is a soldier who can make quick decisions. and people on drugs aren't usually capable of doing that." Soldiers in combat must have their wits about them at all times. That's why the military does so much drug testing. All forces members can be subject to random testing, and everyone who's shipping out to a combat zone must submit to a short-notice test. Everyone who fails - or refuses - is kept back and subject to discipline. If anything, last week's charges show that the Canadian Forces' tough stance on illicit drugs is working. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart