Pubdate: Sat, 03 Nov 2001
Source: Charlotte Observer (NC)
Copyright: 2001 The Charlotte Observer
Contact:  http://www.charlotte.com/observer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78
Author: Neal Peirce, Washington Post Writers Group
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism)

TO FIGHT TERRORISM, FIRST SCUTTLE THE DRUG WAR

The war on drugs helps terrorist networks and diverts law enforcement.

If we expect to win the war on terrorism, we have to call off the war on 
drugs. There are three reasons: We can't afford both.

The drug war feeds terrorist networks and diverts law enforcement from 
focusing on immense new perils. The drug war was failing anyway. If we want 
to reduce drug dependency and the crime associated with it, then intensive 
treatment programs will be far more effective.

Sadly, official Washington isn't admitting any of these truths. House 
Speaker Dennis Hastert has gone so far as to declare that "by going after 
the illegal drug trade, we reduce the ability of terrorists to launch 
attacks against the United States."

First flaw in the argument: If our primary goal is Osama bin Laden and his 
network, choking off drug demand here (even if we could) wouldn't help 
much. Virtually all the heroin flowing out of Afghanistan goes to Europe, 
not the United States.

But there's a larger flaw: What makes America's drug market so lucrative to 
suppliers in Latin America and elsewhere is our effort to keep it illegal. 
Black markets always generate huge profits and networks of brutal, 
underground operators. Ties to terrorists are inevitable.

"We have spent a half-trillion dollars on the drug war since 1990 and we 
are less safe and less healthy than ever," says Kevin Zeese, president of 
Common Sense for Drug Policy and long-term opponent of the prevailing 
national policy. "We're making more arrests and incarcerating more people, 
but the supply of drugs is up and prices are down."

Zeese, like most reformers, favors a legally controlled market that would 
focus on treatment and remove the hyperprofits of today's illegal trade.

He charges the drug war actually "blinded our government to terrorism," 
citing reports in Boston news media that FBI agents in the '90s actually 
apprehended Raed Hijazi, an admitted al-Qaida member. Hijazi, according to 
the reports, provided the agents with information on the Boston-area 
terrorist cell later involved with the Sept. 11 hijackings. But the FBI was 
reportedly interested only in information Hijazi had on heroin trafficking.

Such incidents suggest that even if our federal, state and local 
governments found enough cash to fight a simultaneous war on drugs and war 
on terrorism, split agendas could mean that we end up losing both struggles.

In a contorted way, one can argue America could "afford" to lose the war on 
drugs. Through the 1990s, times were good, government budgets sufficiently 
elastic, and the criminal justice system was kept busy. City neighborhoods 
may have been devastated, but there was little political outcry because the 
millions who got incarcerated tended to be the poor and minorities.

But terrorism is different. It's not some social choice (alcohol is OK, 
marijuana or crack get you prison, etc.). Rather, terrorism is a grim, 
undeniable force. Fed by global poverty and religious extremism, it could 
well be the most frightening, multifaceted threat to the lives, homes, 
cities and livelihoods of Americans since the Civil War.

The harsh fact - especially for state and local governments - is that 
resources are finite. Every cop who isn't chasing a kid selling cocaine on 
a city street is a cop who could be guarding a subway station, a stadium or 
public plaza. Every detective not tied up in drug cases can be checking 
leads on potential assaults on city water reservoirs or local power stations.

"Every dollar spent intercepting cocaine, heroin or marijuana," suggests 
Zeese, "is a dollar that could be spent intercepting bombs."

Or take the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. Every DEA agent who 
isn't involved in a futile effort to stop an easily replaceable drug 
shipment from entering the United States can be investigating terrorist 
cells or working to prevent bioterrorism or nuclear terrorism. Yes, nuclear 
terrorism, which almost surely will be tried against us.

It is time to get serious, and deal with dire threats first.

Instinctively, some federal agencies are shifting already. The FBI has 
changed its focus to terrorism. The Coast Guard has reportedly switched 
close to three-fourths of its personnel and boats from drug interdiction to 
antiterrorist patrols. Sharp moves in priority are also reported at the 
Customs Service, Public Health Service and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and 
Firearms.

But until we flip our drug policy, putting prevention and treatment first, 
and stop pursuing the millions of drug users in our own population, we'll 
have neither the resources nor the focus to pursue the very real terrorist 
threat that we face.

Neal Peirce is a nationally syndicated columnist who writes about state and 
local government and federal relations.

"Every dollar spent intercepting cocaine, heroin or marijuana is a dollar 
that could be spent intercepting bombs." Kevin Zeese
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