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US: Bush's War On Pot

Robert Dreyfuss

Rolling Stone

Thursday 28 Jul 2005

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Forget Meth And Other Hard-Core Drugs -- The Administration Would Rather Waste
Taxpayer Dollars In An All-Out Assault On Marijuana

America's long-running war on drugs has, literally, gone to pot.

More than two decades after it was launched in response to the spread of crack
cocaine -- and in the midst of a brand-new wave of methamphetamine use sweeping
the country -- the government crackdown has shifted from hard drugs to
marijuana.

Pot now accounts for nearly half of drug arrests nationwide -- up from barely a
quarter of all busts a decade ago. Spurred by a Supreme Court decision in June
affirming the right of federal agents to crack down on medical marijuana,

The Drug Enforcement Administration has launched a series of high-profile raids
against pot clinics in California, and police in New York, Memphis and
Philadelphia have been waging major offensives against pot smokers that are
racking up thousands of arrests.

By almost any measure, however, the war has been as monumental a failure as the
invasion of Iraq. All told, the government sinks an estimated $35 billion a
year into the War on Drugs. Yet illegal drugs remain cheap and plentiful, and
coca cultivation in the Andes -- where the Bush administration has spent $5.4
billion to eradicate cocaine -- rose twenty-nine percent last year. "Drug
prices are at an all-time low, drug purity is at an all-time high, and polls
show that drugs are more available than ever," says Bill Piper, national
affairs director for the Drug Policy Alliance, a drug-reform organization in
Washington, D.C. Drug smugglers and South American cocaine growers, he adds,
are fast developing new ways to evade U.S. eradication efforts. "All they
have to do is double their efforts," he says. "They can adapt more quickly
than the government can."

Given the government's failure to halt the flow of drugs, many soldiers who
eagerly enlisted in the war are beginning to desert the cause.

In March, the archconservative American Enterprise Institute published a report
-- titled "Are We Losing the War on Drugs?" -- that concluded "criminal
punishment of marijuana use does not appear to be justified." Scores of states
and cities, whose jails and courts are bursting at the seams with people
serving lengthy sentences for minor drug offenses, are rejecting harsh
sentencing laws backed by the White House. And most schools and employers are
deciding not to test students and workers for drugs, despite a national testing
push by John Walters, the tough-talking drug warrior who became America's "drug
czar" in 2001. Even the Pentagon, engaged in fighting real wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq, has quietly cut back on its efforts to interdict drug traffickers in
the Caribbean and Central America.

"Americans will be disappointed to learn that the War on Drugs is not what they
thought it was," says Mitch Earleywine, associate professor of psychology at
the University of Southern California. "Many of us grew up supporting this
war, thinking it would imprison high-level traffickers of hard drugs and keep
cocaine and heroin off the streets.

Instead, law enforcement officers devote precious hours on hundreds of
thousands of arrests for possession of a little marijuana."

Since taking over as drug czar, Walters has launched an extraordinary effort to
depict marijuana as an addictive "gateway" to other, more powerful drugs.
"Marijuana use, especially during the teen years, can lead to depression,
thoughts of suicide and schizophrenia," he declared in May. Trying to
capitalize on fears of terrorism, Walters has linked drugs to terror, running a
much-derided series of television ads suggesting that the money marijuana users
spend on pot winds up funding terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda.

"For Walters, it's all marijuana, all the time," says Graham Boyd, director of
the Drug Law Reform Project of the American Civil Liberties Union. "He is
reinforcing the atmosphere that marijuana is the drug we should care about, and
that the government will do everything it can, including locking everyone up,
if that's what it comes to."

In June, the anti-pot crusade got a boost from the Supreme Court, which ruled
that federal authorities can crack down on medical marijuana, even in states
where it has been legalized.

A few weeks after the ruling, as part of Operation Urban Harvest, scores of
federal agents swooped down on pot clubs that supply patients in San
Francisco. They raided dozens of homes, businesses and growing areas, seizing
9,300 pot plants and arresting fifteen people on federal drug charges.

At one dispensary, the Herbal Relief Center, agents seized computer records,
medical files and plants.

"We can't disregard the federal law," said Javier Pena, special agent in charge
at the DEA. "The Supreme Court reiterates that we have the power to enforce
the federal drug laws -- even if they are not popular.

We're going to continue to do that."

Since 1992, according to a recent analysis of federal crime statistics by the
Sentencing Project, arrests for marijuana have soared from 300,000 a year to
700,000. The government spends an estimated $4 billion a year arresting and
prosecuting marijuana crimes -- more than it spends on treating addiction for
all drugs -- and more and more of those busts are for possession rather than
dealing.

One in four people currently in state prisons for pot offenses are classified
as "low-level offenders." In New York, arrests for possession -- which now
account for nine of every ten busts -- are up twenty-five-fold during the past
decade.

In Memphis, marijuana arrests are up nineteenfold, and large spikes have also
been recorded in Philadelphia, Las Vegas and Houston.

Walters insists that the surge in arrests is having a "deterrent effect,"
scaring kids away from smoking pot. Testifying before Congress in February, he
reported that the administration has exceeded its goal of reducing teen drug
use by ten percent. "Over the past three years," he declared, "there has been
a seventeen percent decrease in teenage drug use."

But in reality the numbers for pot use have remained remarkably steady. About
a third of all teens and young adults report having smoked pot in the past
year, as do one in seven adults over thirty-five. And despite the government's
all-out assault on marijuana, there's still plenty to go around.

According to the National Drug Intelligence Center, part of the Justice
Department, as much as 19,000 tons of pot are still harvested each year in the
United States, with more coming from abroad.

To catch more marijuana users, Walters has launched a nationwide effort to
persuade schools to conduct drug tests on student athletes -- and even entire
student populations. The drug czar has asked Congress for $25 million to
support drug testing next year, up from $10 million this year and just $2
million in 2004, and he is leading a series of national summits on student drug
testing.

The Supreme Court has upheld drug testing of students involved in sports and
other extracurricular activities, and the Bush administration believes
"extracurricular activity" can be stretched to include any student who parks on
campus. "The court did not elaborate on random drug testing of student
populations," says Jennifer de Vallance, a spokeswoman for the Office of
National Drug Control Policy. "But we think that schools would be on very safe
ground to conduct that kind of testing."

Studies have shown, however, that such tests fail to deter students from using
drugs.

They're also inaccurate: Because hard drugs such as cocaine and crack exit a
user's system quickly, most tests manage to detect only marijuana use. "Drug
testing is, in effect, marijuana testing, because that is what stays in your
system," says Boyd of the ACLU. As a result, fewer than five percent of
schools currently conduct drug tests, and many companies are giving up on the
practice as well. According to a survey by the American Management
Association, only forty-four percent of firms currently screen employees for
drugs -- down from sixty-eight percent a decade ago. The administration is
also running into widespread opposition over its efforts to force welfare
recipients and public-housing residents to pass drug tests in order to qualify
for benefits. Michigan, the only state that requires welfare recipients to
undergo drug testing, recently suspended its program when a federal court
declared such testing illegal.

Even more striking, states are backing away from the tough mandatory-minimum
sentencing laws that have put tens of thousands of pot smokers behind bars for
years, stretching state budgets to the breaking point. Unlike federal drug
hawks, who continue to call for even harsher penalties, more than two dozen
states have rolled back or repealed state mandatory minimums. "The federal
government continues its love affair with mandatory minimums, but the states
are moving in the other direction," says Monica Pratt, spokeswoman for Families
Against Mandatory Minimums. "Most people aren't worrying as much about drugs
these days. It's just not at the top of their list anymore."

The war on pot diverts money and manpower from fighting far more harmful
drugs. While the feds target pot smokers, a burgeoning meth epidemic is
swamping rural communities, especially in the West and the Great Plains.
Nearly half of state and local law-enforcement agencies identify meth as their
greatest drug threat -- compared with only one in eight for marijuana - -- and
more than 1 million Americans use the highly addictive drug, which is linked to
violent crime, explosions and fires at meth labs, severe health problems, and
child and family abuse.

In 2003, drug agents busted a staggering 10,182 meth labs, and the fight
against meth is straining the resources of local police and sheriffs in small
towns. But the White House has proposed slashing federal aid for rural
narcotics teams by half. "If those cuts go through, they're going to totally
wipe us out," says Lt. Steve Dalton, leader of a drug task force in southwest
Missouri.

Over the past four years, as the War on Drugs has been eclipsed by the War on
Terror, the administration has been forced to scale back its expensive and
ineffective efforts to stem the tide of drugs from South America. President
Bush has barely mentioned drugs since September 11th, and key federal agencies,
from the Department of Defense to the FBI, are quietly bowing out of the
anti-drug crusade to concentrate their attention on Iraq and Al Qaeda. "The
number-one stated priority for the FBI is to prevent another attack," says a
spokesman for the bureau, which has diverted hundreds of agents from its
anti-drug task forces to anti-terrorism work. "Other things are not the
primary focus.

We've had to retool."

For the agencies now grouped within the new Department of Homeland Security,
the ones responsible for border security -- the Coast Guard, Immigration and
Customs -- preventing terrorists from entering the country trumps their
anti-drug mission.

The Pentagon, meanwhile, has shipped troops responsible for drug interdiction
in South and Central America to the Middle East. Surveillance flights in the
Caribbean have been cut back by more than two-thirds. "We're concerned about
the ability of the Defense Department to continue to provide support to law
enforcement for drug interdiction," says an aide to Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind.,
who chairs the House subcommittee that oversees the War on Drugs.

For the military, the drug war has become a convenient training ground for
troops heading to Iraq and Afghanistan. Joint Task Force North, a unit under
the U.S. Northern Command, is supposed to provide military assistance to U.S.
law enforcement agencies, especially in Southwestern states along the Mexican
border.

But after soldiers from a Stryker brigade based in Alaska recently spent sixty
days training in "rugged desert terrain" to support the border patrol, they
were promptly given their marching orders for Iraq.

"This is what we term a win-win situation," says Armando Carrasco, a Northcom
spokesman. "We provide assistance, and we get training directly related to our
activities."

Those "activities" have left the feds with fewer troops to fight the drug war.
With America engaged in a quagmire in Iraq, at great cost in lives and money,
the administration is simply unable to push its anti-drug agenda with the same
intensity. "The president could sell the War on Drugs in peacetime," says
Timothy Lynch, director of the Project on Criminal Justice at the conservative
Cato Institute. "But they don't want to embarrass themselves now that we're in
the midst of an honest-to-God shooting war. To continue that kind of rhetoric
in the middle of a real war, when American soldiers are getting blown up in
Iraq, makes it look trivial.

There's just no comparison."




 

 

 

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