Pubdate: Mon, 11 Sep 2000 Date: 09/11/2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author: John W. Ekstedt As executive director of the Justice Development Commission and senior policy advisor to the provincial attorney general during the 1970s, I became familiar with the strategies employed by the United States and supporting interests within Canada to promote the "drug war." By the late 1960s, it had become clear to anyone who was paying attention that the draconian measures being proposed to control distribution and sale, as well as punish and rehabilitate users, could only lead to personal suffering and increases in crime at the street level while creating the conditions of poverty, dislocation and danger at the national and international level that are associated with any armed conflict. Many people with intimate knowledge of these issues have been publicly protesting for decades and often have suffered significant damage to their personal reputations and careers for doing so. My own work in B.C. during the push within Canada to implement the Narcotic Control Act and, closer to home, the Heroin Treatment Plan, provided personal experience with the treatment of dissenters. In later years, I was able to understand the force of U.S. power in this area while working as a consultant with policy analysts on drug law enforcement in Colombia. This war is not about drugs, but drugs are an important and deadly armament within it. John W. Ekstedt, New Westminster