Source: Los Angeles Times Author: Paul Richter, Times Staff Writer Contact: 2132374712 Drug Czar Attacks Pentagon's Effort in Fight WASHINGTONThe official who heads the administration's war on narcotics picked a rare public quarrel with the Pentagon on Thursday over the conduct of the federal antidrug crusade on the Mexican border and elsewhere in the world. In an unprecedented move, Barry R. McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of Drug Control Policy, announced that he would not approve the Pentagon's fiscal 1999 budget, as required by law, unless the department boosts proposed antidrug spending by $141 million. But defense officials insisted that his proposal would crimp other needed military programs while shoveling more money at the antidrug effort than it could productively absorb. 'We think the amounts are excessive," said Kenneth Bacon, the chief Pentagon spokesman, "particularly at a time when we, like other agencies, are being asked to do more, with less money, every day." While McCaffrey, who is a retired Army general, has statutory authority to reshape the defense budget, Pentagon officials hope to appeal to officials at the White House to override his decisions. McCaffrey, pointing out that other federal agencies have increased their antidrug spending at a much faster rate, demanded that the Pentagon step up its allocation for the drug fight in four areas: * An increase to $150 million, from $75 million, to carry on the antidrug fight in the Andes, where U.S. and local officials are working together to interdict traffic in cocaine. * An increase to $162 million, from $132 million, to support the antidrug activities of the National Guard, which inspects goods and monitors traffic on the Mexican border. * An increase of $24 million for a program that trains Mexican officials to locate and arrest drug traffickers and money launderers in the border region. * An increase of at least $12 million for a program that attempts to intercept traffickers in the Caribbean basin, which includes southern Florida. In a letter to Defense Secretary William S. Cohen, McCaffrey asserted that federal law gives him authority to direct the Pentagon's spending on the drug fight. And he said he cannot certify next year's defense budget without the changes. "There's nothing personal in this," said one official of the drug agency who asked to remain unidentified. "We're doing this to make a point: that the director is serious about his job." But Bacon questioned the value of added spending in each of the categories. He pointed out that while McCaffrey wants to double spending in the Andean region, "we do not believe [officials] can productively spend so much new money." He said the National Guard antidrug program is already "adequate." And he asserted that the program to train Mexican law enforcement officials has already been required to set aside some funds because the program has not been able to put them to good use. Bacon disputed whether the military could make a worthwhile contribution to the Caribbean interdiction program. It is properly a job for customs agencies and the Coast Guard, with "no clear defense role," he said. The Pentagon, which expects flat budgets for the next several years, had planned to keep its antidrug spending at $809 million. Copyright Los Angeles Times