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Bush Asks for
Funding to Escalate Mexico's Drug War
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Last week President Bush asked Congress to approve $500 million in aid
for Mexico, the first chunk of a $1.4 billion drug war aid package. The
money would go for police training, helicopters, surveillance planes,
and other military and security endeavors.
This package would continue a failed pattern in which the U.S.
responds to domestic demand for illicit drugs by trying to stop them in
other countries. Tens of billions of dollars have been spent on
supply-side drug control efforts over the last 30 years, yet illegal
drugs remain readily available in the U.S.
Bill Piper, director of DPA's office of national affairs, said,
"Supply-side strategies have failed for cocaine, heroin, marijuana and
virtually every drug to which they have been applied--including alcohol
during Prohibition. Fundamental economic principles demonstrate why: as
long as a strong demand for drugs exists, there will be a supply to meet
it."
If the Mexico aid plan succeeds in reducing supply in the short term,
the result will be to make cocaine more valuable, increasing profits for
drug cartels and expanding the black market. Even if the aid package
brings cartel leaders to justice, they will simply be replaced. There
are already violent power struggles taking place in Mexico's drug
cartels in the wake of the extradition of several major leaders to face
trial in the U.S.
Instead of trying to control supply, the U.S. could make a bigger
impact on drug abuse by making treatment more available. According to a
RAND Corporation study, treatment is ten times more effective at
reducing cocaine abuse than interdiction and 23 times more effective
than attempting to eradicate cocaine at its source.
Piper said, "An estimated 20 percent of cocaine users account for 80
percent of the quantities consumed. Providing treatment to everyone who
needs it--without threat of imprisonment or fear of criminal
sanctions--could significantly reduce demand and make drug selling less
profitable."
Lower profit margins would translate to less power for drug cartels.
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Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of DPA, urged both the U.S. and
Mexico to examine the link between their drug war policies and organized
crime and corruption. He wrote in a San
Francisco Chronicle op-ed this week, "Leaders in both
countries would do well to provoke a discussion about the failures of
drug prohibition and the damage it is causing. ... Until policymakers
start rethinking failed drug-war policies, the violence and corruption
inherent in prohibition will continue." |