Posted on 08/12/2004 10:13:20 AM PDT by DaveCooper
Another One Bites the Dust
Plan Colombia is the latest failed drug-war policy.
John Walters, the head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, recently startled the media by admitting that the $3.3 billion Plan Colombia, now in its fourth year, has failed to make a significant dent in the amount of cocaine flowing out of that country. Walters added hastily, however, that he expected to see substantial progress in the next year or so.
His comments are the latest in a familiar and dreary pattern. Each new initiative in Washingtons international campaign to stem the supply of illegal drugs is launched with great fanfare. During the early phases, isolated examples of success are touted as evidence that the overall strategy is working. Ultimately, though, reality intrudes, and it becomes clear that the drug supply is as plentiful as ever. Thrown on the defensive, drug warriors admit that the task has proven more difficult than anticipated, but argue that, if we stay the course, success is just around the corner. When such predictions prove faulty often enough, the existing initiative is quietly buried and a new one is launched with the appropriate fanfare.
That is what has occurred with Plan Colombia. The Clinton administration initiated the program in 2000, and within months U.S. officials boasted about the amount of coca plants (the raw ingredient for cocaine) that the aerial-spraying program was eradicating. Similar claims of success continued until recently. The State Departments most recent annual International Narcotics Control Strategy Report contended that the amount of coca cultivation in Colombia fell from 420,000 acres in 2001 to 280,000 acres in 2003.
That statistic was superficially impressive, but it ignored two important factors. First, although the acreage devoted to coca cultivation may have declined in Colombia, the acreage in Peru and Bolivia (the other two major players) had risen sharply. That reversed the trend of the mid and late 1990s, when U.S.-funded antidrug measures led to a crackdown that reduced cultivation in Peru and Boliviaonly to see it explode in Colombia, and spread to new locales such as Ecuador and Brazil.
Second, even if the acreage devoted to coca in the entire Andean region has declined slightly in recent years, drug traffickers have become more efficient. In other words, they are able to produce the same amount of cocaine from a smaller number of cultivated plants. The bottom line is that the supply of cocaine flowing into the United States (and other markets) remains plentiful, as even the nations drug czar now admits.
Indeed, the situation in Colombia may be even worse than Walterss remarks suggest. Washington has placed great confidence in the willingness of Colombian President Álvaro Uribe to wage a vigorous war on drugs. But a 1991 assessment by the Defense Intelligence Agency concluded that Uribe was in league with drug-trafficking organizations. Indeed, the DIA concluded that Uribe himself was one of the top 100 drug traffickers.
Uribe has denied those allegations, and the U.S. State Department criticized the DIAs assessment and expressed continued confidence in him. Nevertheless, given how thoroughly drug-trafficking cartels have penetrated Colombias political establishment over the years, the episode creates more than a little doubt.
The Colombian police and military are certainly notorious for drug-related corruption. Just last month, the police commander of one of the major drug-producing provinces and his deputy were sacked after an 80-lb. cocaine seizure mysteriously disappeared. That was the latest in a series of scandals that included the resignation of the head of the National Police when it became apparent that members of his force took more than $1 million in bribes to return some two tons of cocaine they had seized from traffickers.
Plan Colombia has not succeeded any better than earlier antidrug initiatives. And contrary to the drug czars tenacious optimism, that pattern is not likely to improve in the next yearor the next ten years. One wonders how many times U.S. officials have to travel down the road of failed prohibitionism before they realize that it always leads to a dead end. Given the huge profit margin that exists because drugs are illegal, supply-side campaigns are doomed to fail. It is time that Walters and other policymakers recognize that reality.
Ted Galen Carpenter, vice president for defense and foreign-policy studies at the Cato Institute, is the author or editor of 15 books on international affairs, including Bad Neighbor Policy: Washingtons Futile War on Drugs in Latin America.
The really ironic part of this whole war on drugs is that we in America profess to be the bastion of freedom, yet we repeatedly send the message around the world that people can't handle freedom.
Capitalism wins out every time.
The way to stop it is to kill the importers.
Any foreigner caught smuggling drugs into the US should be executed on the spot as an un-uniformed enemy combatant and all goods in their possion confiscated to fund better border control.
We can defend our borders if we so choose
There is only one way to go about this war on drugs, IF you are serious about it.
If you are caught using, selling or otherwise involved with drugs, and convicted in a court of law, you are to be taken out to a place of execution where you are hung by the neck until dead.
I hate the thought of it, but it IS the only thing that will make a serious dent in this abhorrent habit.
Like cops don't plant evidence now to convict innocent people. Some of which even leads to death?
The fact remains there is no way of shutting this down that I have seen short of capital punishment.
2. It doesn't work. Several Islamic countries impose such penalties, but still have serious drug smuggling going on.
IMO, this is moral question, which will never be completely addressed in a country where morals are shrugged off as unimportant.
As of 2002, there were 94,946,000 people who had used marijuana in the US. How many of them do we need to kill before we "win" the War on Drugs?
I disagree. I can guarantee that no foreigner executed for attacking this country with drugs will ever attack us again. It has a 100% deterrence rate
Dunno, ask them
Great, they are losing the war on drugs. Lets all celebrate by getting coked up. :::sarcasm off:::
Here I disagree. The main purpose of these efforts may be what you present it to be but it should be something more. The main effort should be in eradicating the bad guys (foreigners attacking us with illegal cargo, be it human or drug or weapon). Dead enemies don't attack again.
going out and killing a lot of people isn't going to turn that failure into a success.
Killing a bunch of criminals always results in less criminals. (Since the total pool of criminally minded people is smaller) It also greatly reduces repeat offenders
I'm a public defender.
noted
I represent a lot of people caught carrying large amounts of drugs ....
Every one ever convicted of a crime was really innocent. Or at least that's the story you hear from the convicts. If they are innocent they wouldn't have been convicted. If they had taken the measure to be sure of what they were importing they wouldn't have been caught with the attacking item. If they were illegal aliens in the first place then they need to be executed anyway.
I'm not a big fan of the death penalty,
Obviously. and just as obviously I am (for undocumented foreigners (or those attacking this country) I'd go as far as execution on the border. Get caught with the stuff, get snuffed)
I'm really opposed to it when all we are talking about is marijuana, the drug most often being smuggled.
I don't care if they are smuggling sugar. If it's coming in illegally the carrier deserves to die. The law is the law. No excuses for shades of illegality. These are foreign invaders we are talking about here.
The guy "attacking our country" with a couple of hundred pounds of pot in his trunk is causing far less misery and problems here than the guy "attacking our country" by driving the Budweiser truck, or coming from south of the border driving the Corona Beer truck or the Jose Cuervo tequila truck. Killing the marijuana delivery driver while we pat these other guys on the back makes absolutely no sense to me.
The marijuana driver is a foreigner. Case closed. As to the corona driver, IMHO that beer sucks and they should probably be offed too. Likewise I prefer whiskey over tequila when it comes to harder liquors. In any event though, bringing in a truckload of pot is illegal while bringing in a truckload of booze (with the proper paperwork etc) is perfectly legal.
If you want to survive at the border you shouldn't be doing illegal activities.
Admittedly that would be the best solution (think of the resources that would free up) but we couldn't really do that until they attack us. I may be xenophobic but I'm not blood thirsty
"If they are innocent they wouldn't have been convicted."
I've got a bridge in Brooklyn up for sale if you're interested.
So what percentage of convicted felons are really innocent? 1?, 2?. More likely than not the number would be around 0.25% if that many. Yet every con claims to be innocent.
"If they were illegal aliens in the first place then they need to be executed anyway."
We'd probably be better served ridding the gene pool of nutjobs like you.
Apparently you have something against defending our borders against un-uniformed enemy combatants. typical
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