Pubdate: Thu, 02 Apr 1998 Source: Washington Post Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Jim Hoagland JOE CAMEL GOES TO EUROPE In 1986, Witold Zatonski, a Polish physician who brings a missionary's zeal to his work, told a Washington Post reporter a "state secret": Poland's Communist rulers contributed to the nation's appalling health problems. The secret police came knocking on Zatonski's door shortly afterward. Today the secret police are gone. But Zatonski continues his struggle in Warsaw, focusing on a new threat to the health of the people of Poland, the former Soviet empire and the Third World: American tobacco companies. "You want us to join NATO and fight for the free world," Zatonski said during a visit to Washington this week. "But how can our children fight for this if your tobacco companies target them as the replacement market for sales Philip Morris and others are losing in the United States?" Zatonski, director of Warsaw's most important cancer research and treatment center, spluttered as he described big tobacco's push to outflank the restrictions contained in legislation being shepherded through the Senate by John McCain, Ron Wyden and others. Sitting beside him was an equally outraged Mark Palmer, U.S. ambassador to Hungary as the Cold War ended. The United States and its allies "worked for 45 years to get the Communists out. And when we did, the Marlboro Man rode into town to claim the victory," Palmer said. "In Ukraine a few weeks ago I counted 25 billboards on the way into town from the airport, and 19 were selling cigarettes with messages that said directly or indirectly: Be American. Smoke American." In Russia, the first advertisement in Red Square was for a cigarette called "West," a word symbolizing modernity and freedom to those who had lived under tyranny. In Poland, L&M cigarettes are advertised as "Really American." In Hungary, where smoking and tobacco-related deaths have soared, U.S. companies are expanding free sample promotions and advertising now being restricted or outlawed in the West. Palmer, Zatonski and others at the Center for Communications, Health and the Environment, a Washington public health advocacy group, are sketching in an important foreign policy component of the American debate about smoking, health and politics. The next big battlefield concerns America's responsibility for the enormous cultural and social impact it now has abroad, where smoking is being marketed as a national U.S. characteristic others should emulate. Replacing GI Joe with Joe Camel could harm U.S. national interests. The argument that the United States will eventually reap a harvest of resentment and financial claims from abroad rests on two assumptions that I find persuasive: One is that American and other Western companies are knowingly preying on societies that are particularly vulnerable to the marketing of a product that causes disease and death. The grim public health statistics of the Communist era were in fact state secrets. These societies have not developed the public health infrastructure and educational programs that finally led to declines in smoking in the United States and Western Europe. "To keep the people quiet, the Communists provided cheap cigarettes, vodka and fatty sausages," says Zatonski, who was warned but not arrested when he made similar comments for publication in 1986. "Is it any wonder that the life expectancy of young males in Russia and much of Eastern Europe today is lower than in sub-Sahara Africa?" In former Warsaw Pact countries, in China, India and elsewhere, cigarette taxes provide a major source of government revenue. Campaign contributions, or bribery, make the politicians look the other way as smoking skyrockets. "Governments fight all diseases except tobacco-related disease, which many of them actually promote," says Palmer. Second, it is now clear that U.S. companies have decided to make up for lost profits at home by maximizing profits abroad. Chinese and Hungarian teenagers are fenced in as American teenagers are fenced out of cigarette marketing campaigns. Apparently worried about upsetting the proposed domestic settlement with the tobacco industry, the Clinton administration has been curiously reticent about legislative proposals designed to prevent U.S. tobacco companies from doing abroad what they cannot do at home. U.S. embassies no longer help promote smoking and cigarette sales overseas, as they once did, but Palmer and others complain there has been no clear U.S. leadership to help anti-smoking campaigns abroad. There should be. Here is a chance for President Clinton to show that he can do more than deliver apologies abroad. Here, he can take action to prevent a successor's having to tour Eastern Europe or India one day to apologize for a lack of American sensitivity to and fair play for the vulnerable abroad. © Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company