Pubdate: Sat, 01 Sep 2001 Source: Providence Journal, The (RI) Copyright: 2001 The Providence Journal Company Contact: http://www.projo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352 Author: Robert Sharpe, M.P.A. Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1492/a02.html DRUG-WAR ADVOCATES MISTAKE FREE MARKET South Kingstown resident Martin Leprowski is to be commended for his noble efforts to raise awareness of the drug war's tremendous collateral damage in South America. The U.S.-backed Plan Colombia could very well spread both coca production and civil war throughout the region. Communist guerilla movements do not originate in a vacuum. U.S. tax dollars would be better spent addressing the socio-economic causes of civil strife than applying overwhelming military force to the symptoms. We're not doing the Colombian people any favors by funding civil war. Nor are Americans being protected from drugs. Destroy the Colombian coca crop and production will boom in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador. Destroy every last plant in South America and domestic methamphetamine production will increase to meet the demand for cocaine-like drugs. The self-professed champions of the free market in Congress are seemingly incapable of applying basic economics to drug policy. Rather than waste resources attempting to overcome immutable laws of supply and demand, policymakers should look to the lessons of our disastrous experiment with alcohol prohibition. "Tough" drug laws fuel organized crime and violence, which is then used to justify increased drug-war spending. A Bush administration proposal to add $676 million in South American counternarcotics aid to the Clinton administration's $1.3 billion Plan Colombia is a prime example of big government throwing good money after bad. A crackdown in one region will only lead to increased cultivation elsewhere. When faced with the choice of abject poverty and the inflated black- market profits of illicit crops, many farmers will choose the latter. Creating a global welfare state in which every developing country is paid not to grow illicit crops is a rather expensive proposition. ROBERT SHARPE, M.P.A. Washington, D.C. The writer is program officer for the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake