Source: Reuters Pubdate: 17 Jul 1998 DUTCH OFFICIALS SAY U.S. DRUG TSAR VISIT USEFUL AMSTERDAM, July 17 (Reuters)- The exchange of ideas on policy with the United States' top drugs adviser was useful, despite a diplomatic row in the runup to General Barry McCaffrey's visit, Dutch officials said on Friday. But they said Dutch and U.S. views on drugs remained far apart. ``There's been a huge profit-- we have been able to hold an open dialogue... but convincing each other would be one bridge too far,'' a health care official said after McCaffrey visited a pilot project in Rotterdam where hardcore drug users are administered free heroin. Els Borst, health minister in the outgoing government, had dinner with McCaffrey on Thursday evening. She said the drugs tsar had been more amenable to open discussion than she had expected. But McCaffrey refused to accept some of facts on the results of Dutch drugs policy, she said. Borst added McCaffrey was certainly aware that the U.S. policy of harsh repression of all kinds of drug abuse did not keep young people from experimenting. ``When I say we (the Dutch authorities) prefer they only experiment with cannabis, he just falls silent and gazes ahead,'' Borst told Dutch radio. The Netherlands, considered a front-runner in the area of drugs tolerance, argues there should be a strict separation between hard and soft drugs policy. It tolerates the small-scale production and sale of soft drugs but actively discourages the abuse of hard drugs. Addiction to hard drugs like heroin is less common in the Netherlands than in other countries, according to the Dutch. McCaffrey, who said visiting coffee shops selling marijuana during his visit seemed useless, argued the toleration of soft drugs was dangerous. ``When I'm asked what the most dangerous drug in America is, my response is: It's a 12-year-old regularly using marijuana,'' he told reporters on Thursday. McCaffrey clashed with Dutch authorities earlier this week, calling Dutch drugs policy a ``disaster'' and saying the murder rate in the Netherlands outstripped that in the United States. Although, according to the Dutch, his figures were based on incorrect data, McCaffrey has not apologized for the error, arguing the figures came from Interpol. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski