Amazing! According to drug czar John Walters our drug policy
has not delivered the results promised but...victory is just around the corner.
If that sounds familiar it's because it is familiar. As the promised "Drug-free
America" of whatever year fails to materialize we hear the same thing from
government sources. And why not? Since the policy doesn't change why should the
results? And with the announcement a few weeks ago that the man largely
responsible for our admittedly failed Colombia policy, Rand Beers is
Kerry's choice for foreign policy advisor it seems that the players won't be
changing either.
click here for this article's associated links America admits drug war has
failed
New cartels keep surfacing,
but US drug czar insists the cocaine supply will fall within a
year
MEXICO CITY - The US drugs czar has
admitted that Washington's anti-narcotics policy in Latin America has so far
failed.
Mr. John Walters, who heads the US Office of National Drug
Control Policy, acknowledged that billions of dollars of investment over
many years have failed to dent the flow of Latin American cocaine onto
US streets, but he predicted progress would be seen soon.
He made a
similar statement last year but insisted on Thursday that the campaigns to
eradicate coca crops and to go after drug-smuggling gangs across the Americas
would soon produce results on US streets.
'The estimate is in the next 12
months, we will see a reduction in the availability of cocaine in the United
States,' he told reporters during a visit to Mexico.
'This is what we
hope will be the first demonstration that multiple efforts in the hemisphere
produce a substantial change.'
The US government has spent more than US$2
billion (S$3.4 billion) to train and equip Colombian anti-narcotics agents in
a war against cartels that produce and export cocaine for the US
market.
Crop-eradication programmes in Colombia and elsewhere in South
America as well as close cooperation with Mexico against smuggling gangs
were supposed to cut supply.
However, so far new groups have stepped
in to fill the vacuum when others came under pressure.
'We have not
seen yet in all these efforts what we are hoping for on the supply side,
which is a reduction in the availability,' Mr Walters said.
He said the
US government planned to develop a similar 'systematic attack' on the supply
lines of other illicit drugs like heroin, marijuana and
amphetamines.
Mr Walters' comments, which came just after a visit to
Colombia, could be seen as an admission that the so- called Plan Colombia has
been a failure.
This initiative to wipe out drug-smuggling gangs and
eradicate coca crops has seen the Colombian government become the
third-largest recipient of US military aid in the world, after Israel and
Egypt.
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