Pubdate: Wed, 02 Apr 2008
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Column: Television by Vinay Menon
Copyright: 2008 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Author: Vinay Menon

WAR ON DRUGS A TOTAL BUST

In The End, It All Seems So Futile.

Undoubtedly, this was not the intended message of DEA  (Spike TV, 11 
tonight), a new six-part series that  returns a spotlight to the 
battle that once occupied  the zeitgeist before terror: the war on drugs.

Executive-produced by Al Roker - yes, he does more  than the weather 
- - DEA takes viewers behind the  scenes in Detroit, where brawny 
agents navigate the  narcotics labyrinth while looking for the bad guys.

Cameras are rolling as Group 14 of the Drug Enforcement 
Administration - a unit that's tackled 100 cases over  the past year 
resulting in more than 200 busts and $9  million in seizures - 
executes warrants and high-risk  takedowns.

These scenes do not deviate from fictional portrayals:  unmarked 
vehicles roll into dodgy neighbourhoods  carrying a squad of heavily 
armed agents in flak  jackets. The agents race toward the target 
house in  stack formation. They use metal Hallagan tools to pry  open 
screens. They smash doors from hinges with  battering rams.

In a disorienting haze of shouts, threats and constant 
identification, they storm the premises, guns drawn.

If all goes according to plan, the suspects will be  subdued without 
incident during the controlled chaos.

As the opening graphic states, this is "one of the most  dangerous 
jobs in the world." Or in the words of agent  Roy Hoyt: "Anytime that 
dope and money come together  there is always the possibility of violence."

In fact, since the DEA was created in 1973 by executive  order of 
U.S. president Richard Nixon, 75 agents have  been killed in the line of duty.

This isn't mentioned tonight, nor is the cost of the  war on drugs, 
estimated to be $500 billion over the  past 35 years.

The mission here, it seems, is to provide some exposure  to an agency 
that lives in the pop-cultural shadow of  the FBI and CIA. DEA is 
about visceral danger, it is  about understanding street-level 
tactics, it is about  learning the vernacular: "buy-walk," 
"buy-bust," "the  flip," "confidential informants."

So what you get is a high-octane sprint across the  front lines of 
the drug war without any rooting sense  of context. As such, DEA has 
the pulse of Cops, the  heartbeat of World's Wildest Police Chases, 
but none of  the contemplative sobriety of The Wire.

There's no question these agents are brave.

But after one hour, you can't help but wonder if they  appreciate the 
intractable, cyclical and arguably  winless nature of the war they've 
been asked to fight.

This year, the DEA has a budget of $2.3 billion. The  administration 
employs more than 11,000 agents,  investigators and intelligence 
specialists. There are  227 offices in America alone, with another 86 
branches  in 62 countries.

Are these enormous resources making even the slightest  dent in the 
global drug trade? Or is the "war on drugs"  a metaphorical 
abstraction that, four decades later,  continues to be crushed by the 
weight of its own  impractical solutions?

"These people that we target, they're two- and  three-time 
offenders," says special agent Brad Ripken  tonight. "You know, 
they've been through the prison  system. They come back out and they 
go right back to  it."

In another scene, a 60-year-old suspect is arrested; we  learn he's 
been in and out of the system since 1974,  when he first started dealing.

That those in the drug racket are particularly prone to  recidivism 
is not surprising. What is surprising,  though, is that communities, 
governments and law  enforcement continue to fixate on supply, 
without adequately considering demand, which is to say,  treatment 
for addiction.

No, not much has changed since drug kingpin Pablo  Escobar was gunned 
down by Colombian agents in 1993.  And nothing ever will until this 
war gets new battle  plans.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom