Pubdate: Tuesday,October 12,1999 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ WHAT NEXT IN THE COLOMBIA DRUG WAR The most disturbing aspect of the current crisis in Colombia is the extent to which the U.S. war on drugs has strengthened the most violent and ruthless elements in Colombia and given them every reason to continue their war-like ways. Unless some way is found to ameliorate, or even eliminate, the disruptive effects of the way the war on drugs has been carried out in Colombia, sending more money and more aid is likely only to increase the killing and the suffering. Her's why. A civil war between the government and leftist guerrillas has been waged at various levels of intensity, mostly in the rural portions of Colombia, for some 40 years. In recent years, with the temporary success of coca eradication programs in Peru and Bolivia, more coca and poppy growing has moved to the rural southern parts of Colombia, where people live in poverty. The United States pressured the Colombian government- and offered equipment and help - to intensify the military aspects of the war on drugs - airplane and helicopter attacks and the like - which has given growers and distributors an incentive to turn both to leftwing guerrilla forces and rightwing paramilitary opponents of the guerrillas for protection. That has given both the guerrillas and the paramilitaries more money, better weapons and more support, escalating violence and reducing any incentive to seek peace. We asked Adam Isaacson, Colombia expert at Washington's Center for International Policy, a liberal think-tank, to forget about feasibility and fantasize for a moment. What if the United States simply stopped waging the war on drugs, at least in Colombia? The first result, he suggested, would be that the price of coca would plummet. That would reduce the incentive for marginal farmers to plant coca instead of coffee, rice, bananas or corn. The second result would be that the guerrillas and the paramilitaries would no longer be able to extort more from coca farmers than they can extort from cattle ranches or coffee farmers. Their revenue would drop precipitously and they would no longer be able to pay recruits as well. Very soon, the guerrillas, with less popular support, less money and less ability to buy weapons, would be forced to the negotiating table to make something resembling peace. The paramilitaries - formed to protect ranchers from attack by guerrillas but often with close ties to the official military and to drug traffickers - - would face the same revenue loss and corresponding incentives to disband or go legitimate. That wouldn't solve all of Colombia's problems, of course. Forty years of civil war and drug trafficking have weakened the country's democratic institutions, especially the judiciary. It would take a long time to re-establish respect for private property, open markets and an independent judiciary. But the effort would at least take place in an atmosphere of relative peace in which trust could be built gradually. It's probably safe to assume that the U.S. government is not going to drop its foolish war on drugs tomorrow, however sensible that might be. What steps might at least ameliorate the damage being done in Colombia and other supplier countries? The best bet would be to de-emphasize to the vanishing point the military aspects of the drug war and use the resources freed up to work on demand reduction and drug treatment. Almost every study suggests that is a more cost-effective way to reduce drug consumption than emphasizing law enforcement and military skirmishes in foreign countries. The result in a country like Colombia would be almost the same as abandoning the drug war entirely. It could be supplemented by a program, which could be privately funded, of sending experts in the burgeoning field of law and economics to help Colombia set up a stable rule-of-law system that would lay the foundation for economic growth and development. What both the administration and Congress want to do (there is much disagreement over details but some consensus on the general idea) is to beef up military aid to Colombia under the guise of beefing up the drug war. That would increase violence, strengthen the most skillful and vicious drug traffickers, guerrillas and paramilitaries and eliminate any incentive any of them might have to sue for peace. It would make almost every aspect of the Colombia crisis worse rather than better. Americans should demand better from their government. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart