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Center for Local and State Solutions
Other Resources--Neal Peirce Column

Category: Article (Journal or Newspaper)
Jurisdiction:
City/County Government, International
Management Issues:
Catalytic Government, Community Based Strategies, Community/Economic Development
Policy Area:
Cities/Counties

For Release Sunday, September 2, 2007


© 2007 Washington Post Writers Group


DRUG WAR’S LATEST ‘ACHIEVEMENT” --
BOOSTING GLOBAL TERRORISM

By Neal Peirce

Thirty-eight million arrests, most for simple possession.  Lives ruined, families disrupted.  America turned into the most prison-happy nation on the face of the earth.  Illegal rewards incentivizing shooting fields in inner city neighborhoods -- enough bloodshed to appall even an Al Capone.  Over $1 trillion in taxpayer outlays.

Thirty-six years after President Richard Nixon inaugurated this country’s misbegotten “war on drugs,” worldwide narcotics markets are booming, drug ring profits are higher than ever, and drugs cost less than ever on the street.

Our “war” is a miserable, incredibly costly failure.
But now, we’re learning, there’s a jarring new dimension.  The drug war is directly feeding international terrorism.  The most startling new evidence comes from Afghanistan, where the U.S. is leading a full-blown NATO campaign to eradicate production of poppies, the plant from which heroin is derived.

Colossal failure is already apparent. Afghanistan is producing 95 percent of the world’s poppies; its production rose 58 percent last year alone.

And the biggest beneficiary?  It’s the Taliban, gaining popularity as it protects local poppy farmers against the Western-led eradication campaign.  Then it becomes the opium sales agent into international markets, reaping huge amounts of money it can plow back into its terrorist campaign against the West.

One result, it’s fair to say: American soldiers, dying in skirmishes in Afghanistan, are the latest casualties in the international campaign we’ve waged incessantly -- with friendly governments, inside the U.N., wherever we’ve had the chance --  to make drugs globally illegal.  American administrations, Republican and Democratic, persistently blame foreign countries and international drug supplies for our own domestic  narcotics appetite.

And then, notes Jack Cole, executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, “we go to countries like Afghanistan, spend millions, or billions over the years, to spray poppies and coca plants, in the process risking poisoning of other crops and people on the ground.  And despite that, every year we see bumper crops.”

The other prime example is “Plan Colombia” -- our multi-year, $4.7 billion (so far) campaign to stamp our coca production through spraying Colombia’s farms, together with providing the Colombian government with Black Hawk helicopters and sensitive intelligence-gathering technology.

Our billions are also supposed to fight back FARC -- the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia -- a 17,000-strong peasant-based army described by international crime and terrorism expert Misha Glenny as “by far the largest terrorist organization in the Southern Hemisphere.”  But FARC, like the Taliban, allies itself with local farmers and finances operations through the drug trade.  Last year, coca production was up 8 percent.

Will we ever learn? President Bush now wants to channel about $1 billion to Mexico to fight “narco-trafficking and violence at the border.” Like past Mexican presidents, Felipe Calderon has pledged a major anti-trafficking campaign, fighting drug cartels responsible just this year for more than 1,000 murders (including reporters, police and judges).

But more drug-fighting money to Mexico won’t do any good, says Cole: the United States’ prohibition policy has created a “super-obscene profit motive.”  The inducements are so powerful that for every drug kingpin, domestic or foreign, that we put out of business, there’s an aspirant ready to coerce, and if need be kill his way to dominance.

Will we find any presidential candidate willing to talk to us honestly about our disaster-strewn policy, to suggest rational paths toward drug legalization?  To credit us with intelligence -- that if we cared enough about our personal health to reduce drastically our consumption of readily available red meat, alcohol and tobacco, we might just be smart enough to resist dangerous narcotics? And that we could look to the Swiss and others for ways to wean addicts off truly dangerous substances?

I’m not holding my breath. Though, refreshingly, the rest of the world is starting to think afresh.

A prime example: the Senlis Council, a European-Canadian drug-policy institute that’s done major research in Afghanistan, proposes licensing Afghanistan with the International Narcotics Control Board to sell its opium legally.  Even a western subsidy to pay Afghan farmers the same price the Taliban and drug lords do -- about $600 million a year -- would be well below what we’re spending on eradication.

There’s a huge, unmet, global demand for the painkillers codeine and morphine, derived from opium.  Developing countries, with a vast majority of the world’s people, receive and use only 6 percent of medical opiates -- substances deemed by the World Health Organization as “absolutely critical” for treating severe pain.  As a result, hundreds of millions of people with cancer, AIDS and other painful conditions live and die in agony. And addiction is rare among pain patients.

Here’s a chance for the West to spend money, visibly, helping poor Afghan farmers survive, instead of destroying their livelihoods.  Simultaneously, the Taliban would lose its big revenue source for terrorist activities.  Couldn’t we be this humanitarian and smart -- for once?

Comments may be addressed to npeirce@citistates.com

 

 

 

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September 17
Washington, DC

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Academy Experts Recommend Strategies for Managing Effectively in Post-9/11 World

“The events of September 11, 2001 revealed serious deficiencies in government organization, systems and management. National Academy of Public Administration Fellows recommend strategies to manage effectively in a post-9/11 world in Meeting the Challenge of 9/11: Blueprints for More Effective Government, published this month.

The book, edited by Fellow Thomas H. Stanton, tackles a wide range of issues, including designing an organization that provides a strong government capacity to deliver services citizens need and deserve; making the Undersecretary for Management a key linchpin in bringing DHS functions together; restoring the President’s capacity to manage effectively; using the imperative of national security to improve federal, state and local relations especially with critical services like police, fire and health; capitalizing on tested and proven management strategies to surmount new and upcoming challenges for our nation; sorting through constitutional alternatives for holding government contractors accountable for the work they perform; and transforming military personnel system policies to avoid staffing crises during the War on Terror.

“This book provides invaluable insights and recommendations on how to improve government organization and performance as our nation faces new and imposing threats here and abroad,” Academy President Howard Messner said.

Buy “Meeting the Challenge of 9/11: Blueprints for More Effective Government”

The views expressed in this book are those of the Fellow. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Academy as an institution.


 

 

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