Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 Source: Barry's Bay This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 OSPREY Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.barrysbaythisweek.com/feedback1/LetterToEditor.aspx Website: http://www.barrysbaythisweek.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3614 Author: Rick Reimer THE 'WAR ON DRUGS' HAS A 28-YEAR LEGACY OF FAILURE "Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." - - Albert Einstein To the Editor: The North American "War on Drugs" has been a dismal failure since it was declared by Richard Nixon in 1971. Jurisdictions with the harshest penalties have the highest drug use rates. Countless so-called "criminals" languish in jails although they represent no harm except (arguably) to themselves. Nonsensical criminal records impede employment, trade and travel. Mind-boggling amounts of resources go into the investigation, prosecution and punishment of people for committing no crime other than choosing drugs of which the government does not currently approve. Other acts that are truly crimes may be committed by people in the "drug trade," but those criminal acts result not from the use of drugs, but from the prohibition,which drives those people into a black market. Police, in order to investigate, enter into unholy alliances that would make the average citizen cringe. In the meantime, virtually none of the avowed goals of this war have been achieved and, as in all conflicts, the poor have suffered the worst. Sound familiar? All wars are alike. So, having lost this one at home for almost four decades, we are now going to export it halfway around the world and try to insinuate it into a country and culture we know nothing about. Defence Minister Peter MacKay recently announced that Canadian troops will attack drug traffickers in Afghanistan if they are "linked" to the Taliban. What constitutes a sufficient connection is not defined, nor are we told how Canadian soldiers will make this determination in the heat of battle. My guess is that the rules will start out vague and get worse from there. There is speculation this conduct might make Canadian troops guilty of war crimes. NATO forces are not supposed to target criminals in other countries, no matter how heinous their crimes. This makes perfect sense. It's not our place to enforce the internal laws of another nation, and Canadian troops certainly don't need more enemies to contend with nor more investigations or attacks to undertake. Aren't we supposed to be focusing on restoration efforts now? Unfortunately, the Bush-inspired "War on Terror" mentality has decimated all the rulebooks. If the Geneva Conventions can be successfully skirted, the nebulous Taliban connection will certainly be used to legitimize this dangerous enterprise of expanding the list of enemies. In the end I suspect we will find in Afghanistan, as we have at home, that the demand for drugs will remain fairly constant (and ever-increasing in step with population) regardless of attempts to burn, bully or legislate them out of existence. Increased prohibition efforts will simply create a blacker market and higher prices and will ensure that ever more dangerous people are involved in the trade. I suspect some poppy farmers might be driven into the arms of the Taliban, in order to have some muscle around for crop protection when NATO comes calling. The world needs opium for legitimate medical purposes. Wise people, such as Elizabeth May of the Green Party, have suggested that Afghanistan's poppy crop be legalized and controlled - which would certainly put more legitimate dollars into the hands of farmers than the current black market does. This would cut out the middle position, which is the only place any terrorist group could occupy. Everyone would win, instead of four more decades of steady losing. Rick Reimer - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin