Pubdate: Fri, 17 Jul 1998 Source: New York Times (NY) Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Author: MARLISE SIMONS Note: Letters must include the writer's name, address and telephone number. Those selected my be shortened for space reasons. Short letters have a better chance to get in, so don't write a complete essay. Fax letters to 212-556-3622 or send by email to or by regular mail to Letters to the Editor, The New York Times, 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036. U.S. DRUG CHIEF SEES HOW DUTCH MANAGE LIBERAL DRUG PROGRAM THE HAGUE, Netherlands; The Netherlands had its jaw tightly set Thursday for the arrival of Gen. Barry McCaffrey, the outspoken commander of the American war on drugs. Several days ago the general prepared for his visit by dealing a few public punches against the Dutch and their tolerance for narcotics. McCaffrey is on an eight-day tour of European cities, looking at how Europeans fight and cope with drugs. That includes the Netherlands, which more than any other country has painstakingly developed a division between "soft" and "hard" drugs. It is where over the counter one can buy small bags of "space cake," "northern light" or "zeropolm," all forms of marijuana, and not go to jail. The Dutch policy to disconnect cannabis from the criminal underground of so-called hard drugs by allowing small quantities of marijuana to be sold in cafes has earned it the envy of some countries and the derision of others. McCaffrey has made it clear that he belongs to the critics. In recent days he has called the permissive Dutch policy "an unmitigated disaster." He further said, mistakenly, that the Dutch murder rate far outstripped that of the United States, and his office issued a statement that all but scolded the Dutch government. Government officials expressed their annoyance publicly. The foreign minister called in the American ambassador. The fracas has made the general the talk of the nation, not just in government offices, but also in the "soft drug" bars. One newspaper headline returned the criticism, saying it was the general who was "an unmitigated disaster" for drug policy. Thursday, he returned to more conventional diplomacy by praising his hosts and saying that he had gained valuable insights from meetings with the police, doctors, social workers and policy makers in several cities. He said he had appreciated the chance to learn of experiments in treating heroin and cocaine addicts. "I came here to listen and see what I can borrow," the general said. "Most important for me is to discover how to use methadone as a tool to deal with heroin addiction. The Dutch have 20 years of experience doing that, and we want to watch that carefully." Programs to treat addicts are more thorough in the Netherlands than in the United States, McCaffrey said. And Dutch treatment projects "also have a much higher rate of contact with addicts than we have," he added. McCaffrey visited a pilot project in Rotterdam where heroin addicts in a supervised center receive free heroin in an effort to reduce drug-related crimes and reduce their exposure to HIV. But the general clearly disapproved of such projects, which are also under way in other European countries, including Switzerland and Germany. Supplying heroin may reduce crimes and AIDS rates, he said, but the users remain addicts, marginalized from society and, perhaps, discouraged from joining methadone programs. The general did not visit any of the 800 or so cafes that the country licenses to sell marijuana and hashish in small quantities for private use. An aide said he was convinced that they were dangerous for young people, because they made drug use seem normal. Besides, the aide said, the general would not want to glamorize such places. - ---