Pubdate: Tue, 22 Apr 2014 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2014 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Jose De Cordoba Colombian President Santos Seeks New Path On Drug War Leader Says He Hopes for Breakthrough on Drug War in Peace Talks With FARC Guerrillas MEXICO CITY--Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said the war against drugs has failed, and the world must come up with new approaches to deal with a scourge that has killed thousands of Colombians. In an interview on Monday with The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Santos noted a softening of hard-line antidrug policies both in the U.S. and in Latin America. He said the world had to develop more "realistic and pragmatic" ways to fight drug trafficking. "How do I explain to a peasant in Colombia that I have to put him in prison for growing marijuana when in Colorado or in Washington state, it's legal to buy the same marijuana?" he said. "The world needs a more effective, fresher, more creative focus to win this war, because until now we haven't won, and the cost has been enormous." Mr. Santos was on a one-day visit to Mexico to attend a ceremony in honor of Nobel-prize winning Colombian writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez, who died here last week. The Colombian leader, who faces a critical re-election test in May, said that an important breakthrough in the war on drugs would be achieved if, as expected, negotiators for his government and for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, reach an agreement on stamping out drug trafficking by the guerrillas, the third point in a proposed peace plan. The FARC, which the U.S. considers to be a terrorist and drug trafficking organization, relies heavily on cocaine trafficking to finance its activities. The two sides have been locked in tough negotiations for the last 17 months in Havana to end the five-decade guerrilla insurgency. "I expect to reach an agreement on that third point in the near future," he said. If the FARC stops drug trafficking and becomes a partner with the government in eradicating drugs, it would have "enormous implications repercussions for Colombia and the world," he said. As Colombia cracked down on its cartels in the past 25 years, the drugs trade simply moved resources to other parts of the region, causing violence to soar in Central America, Mexico and the Caribbean, the president said. "We have arguably been the most successful country in learning how to dismantle these organizations, so we speak with a certain moral authority on this," he said. Mr. Santos said an Organization of American States report published last year, which said that it was time to seriously discuss legalizing marijuana as a way of reducing drug violence, should be widely discussed so when the United Nations holds a special general assembly meeting on drugs in 2016, "there is a critical mass to really reopen the discussion." Last December, Uruguay became the first country to legalize the growing, sale and smoking of marijuana, in an attempt to wrest the business from criminals. Before that, presidents such as Mr. Santos, and Guatemala's Otto Perez Molina had said it was time for a change of approach. The U.S. government has so far been cool to the change of attitude in Latin America, even as individual states, such as Colorado and Washington, have legalized marijuana. A former defense and finance minister, Mr. Santos has overseen a healthy economy in Colombia, where the economy may grow as fast as 5% this year, he said. Despite that, his approval ratings have fallen in recent months and he is under fire from both the left and right as he heads to elections. A poll last week from pollster Datexco suggested the president might lose in a runoff to former Bogota Mayor Enrique Penalosa. But Mr. Santos, who still leads a crowded field of five major candidates, said he was confident he would win re-election even though he may have to go to a second round if he doesn't win more than half the vote. "This time four years ago, I was 10 points behind in the polls, and I won with the largest victory margin in the history of the country," he said. From the right, Mr. Santos' attempt to negotiate a peace with the FARC has drawn the constant and sharp criticism of hard line former President Alvaro Uribe, who now sits in Colombia's senate. Mr. Uribe, a prolific and combative user of social media, accuses Mr. Santos nearly every day on his Twitter account of negotiating with terrorists. Mr. Santos dismissed Mr. Uribe's criticisms, saying the former president had tried and failed in his own attempts to seek a negotiated peace with the FARC, and had negotiated fruitlessly with another guerrilla group in Cuba for two years. "When I do it, it's legitimizing terrorism," he said. Mr. Uribe has also blasted Mr. Santos for not strongly criticizing the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, which has jailed opponents, cracked down on press freedoms, and harshly repressed street protests during the last two months. More than 40 people have died in the protests which show no sign of abating. "I have profound differences with...Maduro, but we respect each other," he said. He said Colombia was one of four countries, including the Holy See, that are involved in pushing for dialogue between the Venezuelan government and the opposition. "Dialogue is how we can resolve these very complicated situations that Venezuela is living through," he said. From the left, Mr. Santos has drawn fire from critics who say he was wrong to agree last month to remove leftist Gustavo Petro from his post as mayor of the capital Bogota, the country's second-most important political job. Mr. Petro was removed from office after his efforts to use the courts to thwart his firing by the country's conservative inspector general failed. Alejandro Ordonez, the inspector general, has the power to dismiss politicians he believes are incompetent or corrupt. Earlier, Mr. Ordonez had ruled that Mr. Petro had bungled the trash collection system in Bogota, a city of eight million people. But Mr. Petro, a former member of the M-19 guerrilla group who laid down his arms years ago to go into politics, struck a nerve with many Colombians, arguing that the decision to remove him put the peace process in peril because it showed that the government was unwilling to allow the left to rule in Colombia. Mr. Petro has drawn comparisons with the fate of another leftist party, the Patriotic Union, composed largely of guerrillas who had lay down their arms in a prior peace process.The party had 1,400 members assassinated by right-wing death squads in the late 80s and early 90s, scholars say. Mr. Santos said he didn't want to oust Mr. Petro, but he had to follow the law, even though it hurt him politically. He said he was ready to reinstate Mr. Petro if some judge ordered him to do so. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom