Source: Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jun 1998 DRUG WAR U.N. should take lead in fighting this scourge Ambitious is the word to use in describing the global anti-drug strategy crafted by former anti-Mafia crusader Pino Arlacchi. Because the plan by the current head of the U.N. anti-drug agency is so sweeping - promising as it does massive reductions in the worldwide availability of cocaine and heroin - it virtually sets itself up for skepticism. But instead of carping at such a vision, the nations of the world should eagerly second Mr. Arlacchi's overriding message: the need to reduce demand and supply at the same time. Fortunately, the approach generally dovetails with the views of another influential player in the fight, President Clinton. In a speech Monday, he used the occasion of the U.N. General Assembly's first session in a decade dedicated exclusively to drug-related issues, to warn that merely pointing fingers helps no one. Cooperation can indeed work wonders in the context of an approach that centers on education and treatment, as well as interdiction, crop eradication and crop substitution. In this regard, Mr. Clinton has promised to request more than $17 billion in drug fighting money from Congress in the next fiscal year, with $6 billion to be set aside for reducing demand. But the U.N. proposal to extend infrastructure aid to producer countries such as Afghanistan and Burma for phasing out the cultivation of opium and coca leaf should remain a nonstarter as long as such nations continue to violate human rights. The fallout from noncooperation can be found in the ongoing spat between President Clinton and President Ernesto Zedillo over Operation Casablanca. The U.S. law enforcement sting last month netted 26 Mexican banker-money launderers, but was deeply resented by the Zedillo government because U.S. officials kept Mexico in the dark. Yet just as Mexico's frustration is understandable, so are the concerns of U.S. officials who feared for the lives of U.S. drug agents on both sides of the border. That hardly means that greater cooperation is unachievable. To the contrary, precisely because the goal is in everyone's best interests, the world must continue to strive diligently for it. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)