Pubdate: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Anick Jesdanun, Associated Press Writer GOP WANTS DRUG SMUGGLING STOPPED WASHINGTON - House and Senate Republicans accused President Clinton on Thursday of failing to get tough on drugs by funding programs to stop smuggling from other nations. Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla., called Clinton's drug policy one of "Just say maybe" rather than "Just say no." "The only way we can win this is to just say `no,"' he said at a news conference. "This is a serious war. This is not a war you just say `maybe' about. This is a war you win." Clinton's budget proposal for fiscal 2000 seeks $17.8 billion for drug-fighting programs, a slight decrease from the $17.9 billion this year, which includes $844 million in emergency supplemental funding. About 14 percent of the 2000 funding would go to international and interdiction programs, compared with nearly 18 percent in 1999. "As this number goes down, the supply goes up," said Sen. Paul Coverdell, R- Ga. "As the supply goes up, the price goes down. As the price goes down, use goes up. That's why interdiction is useful." Jim McDonough, director of strategy at the White House Drug Control Office, said the administration had a planned approach that balanced both sides of the drug equation. "The theory is, if there's no demand there's no supply. The more you can lower demand you really can cut supply," he said. In particular, Republicans were upset they could find no evidence that Clinton funded a special program that Congress and the White House agreed to last fall. That law authorizes more than $2 billion over three years for equipment, training and other interdiction tools for the Coast Guard and other agencies. Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla., chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee on crime, called the omission a travesty. "We are not even beginning in the president's plan to wage the kind of war we said a couple of months ago we should do," McCollum said. McDonough did not have specifics on those line items, but he said that the overall cuts Republicans decried compared a regular year's funding with extra, supplemental funding added at GOP insistence. Without the supplemental funding, the overall budget would increase in 2000, and the percentage for interdiction would remain roughly the same. Last fall's anti-drug law included provisions that mandated the use of foreign aid as leverage to urge other nations to keep up anti-drug efforts, upgraded some technology and intelligence tools that American law enforcement officers use in intercepting illegal drugs and provided U.S. aircraft and helicopters to Bolivia, Colombia and Peru to help eradicate drug crops. - --- MAP posted-by: derek rea