Pubdate: Tue, 30 May 2000
Source: The Dominion Post (WV)
Copyright: 2000 The Dominion Post
Contact:  1251 Earl L. Core Rd., Morgantown, WV 26505
Website: http://www.dominionpost.com/
Author: Jack Anderson

THE DRUG WAR IS BEING LOST

We must fight the Drug War or surrender. Surrender would be the 
legalization of drugs, which is simply the acknowledgement by government 
that individuals are responsible for what they consume or inject into their 
own bodies.

On the other hand, drugs are poison, and if it is a poison we wish to 
eliminate, then we had better accept the idea that we are fighting a losing 
war.

And make no mistake, the Drug War is here, not in the endless jungles of 
South America.

The front lines of the Drug War are in America's inner cities. It is an 
urban war, not a jungle war, and our resources should be allocated accordingly.

Whereas a 50,000-man expeditionary force could not begin to search and hold 
the vast jungle areas of the drug-producing countries, a million-man force 
might be able to do so -- but at what cost in lives and money?

In short, the conquest of the producers and the occupation of their lands 
are not viable objectives, at least not until the criminals have been 
separated from the populace. First a wedge must be driven between them, and 
that wedge is the absence of money .

It is on the demand front, not the supply front, upon which the primary 
battles must be waged, and two tools are required: education and 
governmental presence (the second being a prerequisite for the first). 
After all, how much drug buying, selling and u sing can go on when 
policemen are standing on every other street corner?

Presence -- the implied threat of force rather than the actual use of force 
- -- is the key. Just as a military presence provided a deterrence in the 
Cold War, so such a presence can provide deterrence in the Drug War.

Consider, for example, the deterrence factor that would be provided by 
2,000 additional policemen in each of 100 American cities. That is only 
200,000 officers.

It would be a force sufficient to do the job, to overawe drug users and 
pushers alike. Combined with existing police forces, these 200,000 
reinforcements would appear overwhelming, thereby making confrontations 
less likely and casualties accordingly few .

This would not be tantamount to martial law, nor would any rights be suspended.

It would simply be the reinforcing of America's law enforcement personnel, 
which currently only number approximately one officer on duty for every 
2,000 citizens. The police of America are simply outnumbered.

Rather than fighting a jungle war against an enemy whose lines of retreat 
are virtually unending, the war needs to be fought in the finite jungles of 
America's cities, where reinforced police forces can transform the war into 
a pacification effort.

Pacify the cities, and the problem in the suburbs will wither away. 
Interdiction of the demand end of the chain will dry up the money that 
drives the drug cartels.

And the absence of money will quickly erode their support among the 
thousands of people employed in the harvest, transportation and processing 
of the poison.

But reverse the procedure, make war against the supply side of the problem, 
and the war will be lost -- and at a terribly high price.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D