'); //-->
Home
Help

Latest News

Related Coverage

FOLLOW-UPS Antidrug efforts sowing fear in Colombia, 4/10/00

THE SERIES

Day One, 2/20/00
Target: coca

Not all drugs are leaving the country

Day Two, 2/21/00
A deadly grip

Rhetoric, budget priorities are an
uneven matchy

Day Three, 2/22/00
Worlds apart

Editorial, 2/23/00
Targeting addiction

Sections
Boston Globe Online: Page One
Nation | World
Metro | Region
Business
Sports
Living | Arts
Editorials

Weekly
Health | Science (Tue.)
Food (Wed.)
Calendar (Thu.)
Life at Home (Thu.)

Sunday
Automotive
Focus
Learning
Magazine
Real Estate
Travel

Local news
City Weekly
South Weekly
Globe West
North Weekly
NorthWest Weekly
NH Weekly

Features
Globe archives
Book Reviews
Book Swap
Columns
Comics
Crossword
Horoscopes
Death Notices
Lottery
Movie Reviews
Music Reviews
NetWatch weblog
Obituaries
Special Reports
Today's stories A-Z
TV & Radio
Weather

Classifieds
Autos
BostonWorks
Real Estate
Place an Ad


Buy a Globe photo

Help
E-mail addresses
Send us feedback

Alternative views
Low-graphics version
Acrobat version (.pdf)


The Boston Globe OnlineBoston.com Boston Globe Online / Nation | World

Endless War

Targeting addiction

Globe Editorial, 02/23/2000

The Globe's recent series on the scourge of hard drugs, as experienced from Boston to the coca fields of Colombia, returned again and again to the hard truth of its title, "The Endless War."

The participants in that war who spoke to reporters Richard Chacon and John Donnelly shared an assumption that there will be no surrender, no cease-fire, and no peace treaty to conclude this conflict. Even General Barry McCaffrey, the Clinton administration's drug czar and a man who led the successful "left hook" of ground forces that drove Saddam Hussein's troops out of Kuwait, does not envision an imminent victory in the war on drugs.

McCaffrey foresees a tactical advance, not ultimate triumph, in his brief for the administration's request to Congress for $1.4 billion to equip and train Colombian forces to fumigate coca crops, rout drug lords, and fight the leftist insurgents known in Colombia by their Spanish acronym, FARC. The determined general is making the best case he can for drug interdiction.

But when Chacon and Donnelly take the reader to the apartments and treatment centers where addicted users of cocaine or heroin are living proof the war has not been won, McCaffrey's well-intentioned campaign to attack the drug supply in the Andes looks insufficient or even futile.

A devoted clinic worker, Brianne Fitzgerald, says of the expensive interdiction effort in Colombia: "People just laugh at it." Even if it did result in driving up prices and reducing supply, she told the Globe, the Colombian venture would not diminish the number of hard-core addicts.

The Clinton proposal for US intervention in Colombia's civil war - the inevitable byproduct of trying to eradicate crops and destroy drug refineries - is dubious enough as a foreign and security policy. When judged for its effectiveness in the war against drugs, it seems a distortion of priorities. History suggests that increased funding for treatment of addicts and programs for prevention - attacking the demand for drugs - can accomplish more to ameliorate the individual and social pathologies associated with the endless war on drugs.


Click here for advertiser information

© Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company
Boston Globe Extranet
Extending our newspaper services to the web
Return to the home page
of The Globe Online