Source: Wall Street Journal, Interactive
Edition
Pubdate: April 28, 2000
Contact: letter.editor@wsj.com
Website: http://www.wsj.com/
Just Say No to
More Money For the Colombia Drug War
By Kevin B. Zeese,
president of Common Sense for
Drug Policy, based in Falls Church,
Va.
Current congressional consideration of a $1.7 billion military
aid
program for Colombia is the most recent escalation of the
U.S.
government's war on drugs with a total federal budget of over $250
billion
since 1980. Each administration has fought the drug war aggressively,
using
the military, spraying herbicides, extraditing leaders of cartels,
providing
intelligence and other assistance to the military and police forces
of the
Americas.
The results have been dismal. The street price of
both cocaine and heroin
has dropped to one fourth what it was in 1981 while
the potency has
increased dramatically. Drugs arriving from Colombia today
are practically
pharmaceutical grade, and they've never been easier to get.
According to a
government survey 35% of high school seniors now say heroin is
readily
available a proportion that has doubled in two
decades.
A policy failure this spectacular would normally call for
rolling heads or at
the very least a congressional hearing. But instead of
questioning a course
that is steering us onto the rocks, we're about to push
the throttles to flank
speed. No eradication or interdiction program in the
past 35 years has had
any serious impact on the supply of illegal drugs in
the U.S. Rather than
cutting off the supply, these campaigns have
consistently spurred new
source countries, new trafficking routes and new
drugs. Yet the White
House and Congress are assembling a military aid package
for Colombia
that ignores this history.
Among the many examples of the
law of unintended consequences are
several disasters that illuminate the
problem. In the early 1980s South
Florida was the entry point for Colombian
marijuana, and the Reagan
administration moved marijuana interdiction to top
priority. For the first
time in history the Department of Defense was drafted
for drug war duty,
complete with troops and high tech resources.
The
Colombian traffickers responded almost overnight. Since marijuana is
bulky
and easily seized, they needed something more compact. And since
smuggling
was now more dangerous, they needed to up the profit margin.
Cocaine was the
obvious choice almost as easy to produce, much more
profitable, and
compact enough to be hidden in the normal stream of
commerce. Thus, the
cocaine explosion of the 1980s which also brought
us crack can be
viewed as a direct consequence of drug enforcement
efforts directed at the
marijuana supply.
This lesson should have been obvious from catastrophic
experience with a
previous interdiction campaign. In 1969 the Nixon
administration virtually
shut down the Mexican border in an effort to stem
the tide of marijuana
and heroin. U.S. Customs was ordered to search one out
of every three
vehicles entering the U.S. The backups stretched for miles,
Mexico was
outraged, and the policy was soon shelved.
But the brief
disruption of normal drug traffic lasted long enough to spur
fundamental
changes in the dynamics of drug trafficking and use. There are
indications
that prescription drug use filled the temporary void. Seizure
reports
demonstrate that traffickers adapted to the land blockade by
switching to
boats and planes. And Asian drug lords saw an opportunity to
expand their
heroin markets. Thus the end result was increased use of
prescription drugs,
expanded supplies of "China White" and the
development of sea and air routes
by the Mexican cartels. The rapid
escalation of drug use in the 1970s can be
directly connected to this effort.
It's not only interdiction efforts
that have backfired. Eradication programs
have an even worse track record.
When President Carter decided to nip
marijuana and heroin supplies in the bud
by spraying herbicides in Mexico
in 1977, the Mexicans simply shipped the
stuff anyway. Health, Education
and Welfare Secretary Joseph Califano
announced that contaminated
marijuana showing up in the U.S. posed a
significant health risk. American
pot smokers responded. Instead of throwing
the seeds away, they planted
them, and with typical Yankee know how they
refined the humble weed
into a potent plant that made the Mexican stuff look
like dandelions. The
National Drug Intelligence Center now reports marijuana
is cultivated in
every state in the union.
In the unlikely event that
the Colombian campaign has any impact on the
cocaine trade, it could trigger
an even more dangerous backlash.
Methamphetamine, far more dangerous, is a
less expensive, domestically
produced substitute that can be manufactured in
a motel room. Another
likely impact is increased coca production in other
countries. Peru reports
that the price of raw coca has tripled and new coca
cultivation expanded
by 3,700 acres in 1999.
Since the problem we face
today can be traced in large part to our
misguided enforcement campaigns, a
rational person might ask why we are
about to commit once again to a program
that is probably doomed at the
outset and almost certain to make everything
worse. One might also ask
why we are ignoring the mountains of data that show
us a better way.
The White House says there are five million serious U.S.
users who need
treatment. It is this group addicts who have to get
drugs several times a
day that drives the narcotics market. Studies by
the RAND Corp. tell us
that treatment is 10 times as cost effective as
interdiction, yet U.S.
treatment facilities have room for only 43% of these
hard core addicts.
The government could also be a lot more effective in
preventing drug abuse
in the first place. The best prevention programs for
American youth are
after school and alternative activity programs. The U.S.
spends $600
million on after school programs, and they help kids "just say
no" by giving
them something to say "yes" to. If there is a decision to be
made between
spending more resources on eradication and interdiction or on
youth
programs, the latter should be chosen. It has proved to be far
more
effective.
These simple steps involve no military hardware, but
they could have a
major impact on the drug market. For anyone who cares to
look, the
evidence is unequivocal. Focusing on demand reduction at home is
the
most effective way to undermine the Colombian drug markets.
Military
intervention cannot repeal the laws of supply and
demand.