Book Review: Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs by Antony Loewenstein – USAPP American Politics and Policy (blog)

In Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs, Antony Loewenstein offers an expansive medley of facts, figures and accounts of life in the midst of the drug war, based on travels to six countries on five continents: Honduras, Guinea-Bissau, the Philippines, the UK, the US and Australia. While the books ambitious breadth means it sometimes struggles to draw rigorous interconnections, this is a well-intentioned and wide-ranging study that gives a voice to those caught up in the global War on Drugs, writes Alessandro Ford.

Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs. Antony Loewenstein. Scribe. 2019.

The global War on Drugs is a many-headed beast. Like the parable of the elephant and the blind men, who in touching only one part of the creature think they know what an elephant is, so understanding the drug war requires grasping the beasts many dimensions: domestic politics, narco-history, drug capitalism, racial inequality, cultural trauma and the economic and psycho-spiritual roots of addiction. It also means genuinely seeing it as the lie it is.

US President Richard Nixon launched his War on Drugs in 1971, calling illegal substance use public enemy number one. This mendacious campaign to demonise substance users was born of twin ambitions: to deflect blame for the failure in Vietnam onto soldiers using evil drugs and away from Washingtons political and strategic short-sightedness, and to neuter Nixons domestic opposition (i.e. the anti-war left and black people). It implicitly meant tapping into subliminal western anxieties about modernity that have existed since the industrial revolution, anxieties that have historically found expression in spasmodic moral panics about the use of certain substances. Yet if there have been prior Wars on Drugs, none has matched the scale and brutality of the one (or ones: the drug war is not a monolith) we currently find ourselves in.

Like any war, the human and economic cost strains comprehension: the US alone devotes some 50 billion US dollars annually to trying to suppress a drug trade collectively worth at least 500 billion US dollars, while addiction rates skyrocket, millions of the poor and marginalised are incarcerated and hundreds of thousands of civilians are murdered worldwide. Like any war, those who suffer have not been those who started it: the US-led global prohibition regime has sacrificed countless nations (Colombia, Peru, Mexico) on the altar of drug control, has funded repressive states into detaining the migrants that a militarised US drug policy has created and has weaponised the issue in order to further coercive domestic and foreign policies. And, like many a war, it has neither been a victory nor a defeat, but has instead benefitted the few at the expense of the many.

These are but some of the ideas contained in Australian journalist Antony Loewensteins new book. Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs is an expansive medley of facts, figures and accounts of life in the midst of the drug war. Loewenstein travels to six countries on five continents: Honduras, Guinea-Bissau, the Philippines, the UK, the US and Australia.

As the author of Disaster Capitalism, he is refreshingly direct in his political and personal views, arguing that the entire drug trade should be legalised, regulated and preferably nationalised, with the state holding a monopoly on the production and sale of all drugs. Given the increasing corporatisation of the emerging cannabis industry (and of the nascent psychedelic industry), one can see why this last point is important.

Furthermore, he presents voices that challenge Manichean narratives of legal versus illegal markets, of state versus cartel. Two such voices are that of Mexican journalist-turned-academic Oswaldo Zavala and Italian journalist Roberto Saviano, the latter of whom has been under heavy police protection since 2006 after death threats from the Calabrian Ndrangheta. Through them, Loewenstein underlines the relationship between the global drug trade and capitalist financial institutions. It was the Head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, Antonio Maria Costa, who famously admitted after the 2008 financial crisis that it was drug money, in the hundreds of billions, that saved many banks and kept the global financial system afloat for only the cartels possessed the necessary liquidity. As Saviano writes, its not the world of cocaine that must orbit around the markets, but the markets that must rotate around cocaine.

Zavala in turn challenges the idea that Mexican cartels have overwhelmed the Mexican state rather they mutually benefit from the drug war. There exists in that country a triangle between authorities, cartels and multinational corporations: the logic of the drug war allows Mexican administrations to grant multinationals access to natural resources, the cartels do the dirty work by forcibly displacing people from those areas and killing journalists and environmental activists, and authorities get payouts from certain cartels in exchange for targeting their rivals (all while receiving US funding to fight the cartels). To some, Los Zetas one of Mexicos most vicious crime syndicates are not a cartel but a paramilitary, performing the black ops missions the military cant do to further the interests of the mining, fruit and energy companies.

A different, though similar, triangle exists on the US side between politicians, certain state institutions and defence contractors: politicians get to be tough on crime (and thereby deflect from other issues), certain state institutions (i.e. the military, law enforcement and intelligence agencies) can justify increased budgets and accrue political capital and defence contractors exploit new markets hungry for weapons and military technology. This practice has exacerbated armed conflict, human rights abuses and structural oppression in many countries in Central and South America. In his chapter on Guinea-Bissau, Loewenstein highlights concerns that Americas greater focus in recent years on drug trafficking in West Africa is partly driven by the neoliberal capitalist desire to create a new market for military, surveillance and anti-terrorism hardware and software in the region.

Loewenstein is a good storyteller and is adept at showcasing ideas from the most famous figures writing about drugs today. He engages with a broad and eclectic range of topics: mass incarceration and racialised targeting for drug possession across western countries, debates about harm reduction and safe injection sites, scientific research into the value of psychedelic psychotherapy, the targeted killing of drug users in certain countries like the Philippines, the role of the dark web in transforming drug retailing and so on. He also shows his heart is clearly in the right place by casting off the false mantle of journalistic objectivity and accepting he may be labelled an advocate.

Yet the book has some serious faults. Loewensteins idiosyncratic choice of countries (Guinea-Bissau? Australia?) feels rather arbitrary as if hes writing more about what he happens to know than what the reader would find most illuminating. This impression isnt helped by regular updates from the Jerusalem-based journalist on Israeli weapons sales to this-or-that dictator, with only peripheral connections to the topic in question.

The War on Drugs is fundamentally a war on people, so Loewenstein is commendable in interviewing many lay people affected by the drug war, people who arent normally given a voice. Yet this tendency can sometimes mean sacrificing intellectual rigour and depth for a quote from a passing fisherman in Guinea-Bissau or a random Australian who uses drugs. The book can therefore come across as lacking the cohesion and interconnections necessary for a truly interdisciplinary global work, reading more as a mishmash of information and regional analysis. Finally, the book doesnt have an especially clear audience: its somewhat derivative for anyone who already knows much about the War on Drugs and somewhat niche for anyone that doesnt. The latter would be better off engaging with many of the authors Loewenstein cites.

That said, any author would find it a challenge to adequately cover the breadth that such a work attempts. In sum, if you dont know much about drugs in Guinea-Bissau or Australia, the quirky and well-intentioned Pills, Powder and Smoke may be the book for you.

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Note: This article gives the views of theauthors, and not the position of USAPP American Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics.

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Alessandro Ford Kings College LondonAlessandro Ford is an MSc student in War and Psychiatry at Kings College London. His research areas are collective trauma; sexual violence in conflict; drugs in conflict; and addiction and substance use in history.

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Book Review: Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs by Antony Loewenstein - USAPP American Politics and Policy (blog)

Blood on the Ground – Living and Dying in Nod – Leecountycourier

To Ken Fairly, a father figure when I needed one. To Claude Stuckey, the truest friend I ever had. To all the agents who thought it would never end. To those who never let fear spoil the journey. To wanderers longing for home. Merle Temple

PREFACE

The grizzled old crime reporter leaned back in his chair and turned the page on his notepad. Given to old habits, he wetted the graphite in his pencil with his tongue to get a darker line and make it flow like ink.

The springs in his chair creaked as he rocked back and forth and studied an old black-and-white photo of a young Michael Parker. He looked from the image to the old man sitting in front of him and then back again. James shook his head and thought about the high price time and trials exact.

The first drug wars were a long time ago. Merle Temple has written all these books about your life. What do you think about them? he asked, tugging at the chin whiskers of his gray beard.

Michael Parker laughed. That guy is inside my head, he answered.

What was it like when the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics was brand new and still feeling those birthing pains? Yall didnt really think you could win the war on drugs, did you? the reporter asked as he handed the old photo to a silver-haired Parker.

Michael squinted as he tried to find himself in the image captured in the faded picture when youth was his armor and innocence his currency. Time was growing short, the clocks ticked loudly, and the hands spun faster and faster. Here he was when his life was little more than a minor footnote in history.

I cant speak for the others, but I wanted to save the world, rescue damsels in distress, and slay dragonserrant knights, tilting at windmills, and all that. We were young, nave, and thought we would outlive the stars. We didnt know we were drunk on our dreams until the world sobered us up. Maybe theyll wake us one day to say none of it was real, just a daydream or a nightmare. They say reality is overrated, but what do they know, Michael said, with a sardonic smile.

Some of your fellow agents died young, others ran afoul of the law, and some lost their families. Do you ever think of them? the reporter asked.

Their faces haunt my dreams. They gave all they had to giveso many temptations, living on the edge. We didnt think about consequences or the end of the road. Everyone wanted to go to heaven, but no one wanted to die. My professor gave me a note when I left Ole Miss. I didnt understand it, but Ive kept it in my wallet all these years, he said, as he read from a crumpled scrap of paper.

I am sending you out like sheep among wolvesbe as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves. Be on guard; youll be handed over to the local councils and floggedbut when they arrest you, do not worry about what to say or how to say it. At that time you will be given what to say, for it will not be you speaking, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you. Matthew 10:16.

I can see how that must seem prophetic to you now, the reporter said. But lets get back to the undercover dayswhen it was fresh and raw, and you were in the thick of the brambles and briars and unbowed. The war, the corruption, the temptations, the casualtieswhat did A Ghostly Shade of Pale leave out?

Michael clutched the yellowed Scripture and closed his eyes. Emotions and images from a prodigal life came rushing to shore, messages in bottles set adrift by the castaways of yesterday. The past washed over the present, the barricades of time were breached, and a police radio crackled in the fog of yesteryear: Come in, 822! Michael, are you there? He has a gun! Look out! Get Down!

He stumbled into the Last Chance Saloon where a hollow-eyed bartender told him hed already had his last chance, and there were no second acts. The undertaker leaned against the gates of hell and licked his chops while Delilah cut Michaels hair, but God came to where he was and fed him in the wilderness.

A man with a crown of thorns offered shelter from the storms as men cast lots for His garments. Weeds of sorrow were browned and frayed, flowers of youth wilted inside a ring of fire, and the lost begged for salvation and banged on the doors of heaven. Sparrows were falling, but Gods eye was on them all. And Michael forgave it all, as he was forgiven.

Michael whispered, Give us eyes to see Thee in our hour of need.

Few of us ever live in the present. We are forever anticipating what is to come or remembering what has gone. Louis LAmour

PROLOGUE

Americas public enemy number one in the United States is drug abuse. In order to fight and defeat this enemy, it is necessary to wage a new all-out offensive. Ive asked the Congress to provide the legislative authority and the funds to fuel this kind of offensive. President Richard M. Nixon, June 14, 1971

We rebelled in the late sixties. With us, it wasnt an apple, it was heroin, but it was the fall all over again. The serpent didnt tempt us, or at least we didnt see him, but we figured Adam and Eve were the first hippies, just looking to throw off their shackles like us. We rejected the God of the Garden, evicted Him. If He created Adam and Eve, he must have created the serpentmaybe the Vietnam War, social injustice, and the CIA, too. It didnt all work out as planned. Mistakes were made. Some, who we thought were friends, betrayed us with bad trips and dirty needles, that Cain and Abel thing, too. People overdosed and died. The blooms of flower power withered and wilted. People got sick, homeless and penniless, but we loved Communism. All that recoil, but we flocked like lemmings to the tree of knowledge and shook hands with the devil who was homeless like us. We wanted to be our own gods, knowing both good and evil. We smoked grass, and we wanted the green, green grass of a new Garden to cover the gravesite of America. We uncorked the jug and let the genie out of the bottle, and all the kings horses and all the kings men...you know. We sowed the seeds of destruction and the red, white, and blue was twisted by the whirlwind. Milkwood Jones

They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld Of Paradise, so late their happy seatThey, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow, Through Eden took their solitary way. John Milton, Paradise Lost

Fallen man is not simply an imperfect creature who needs improvement: he is a rebel who must lay down his arms. C.S. Lewis

CHAPTER ONE

I stand amid the roar of a surf-tormented shore, and I hold within my hand grains of the golden sandHow few! Yet how they creep through my fingers to the deep while I weep!Edgar Allan Poe, Dream Within a Dream Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland. Isaiah 43:18-19

As the world turned in 1972, the cost of the average home in America was $27,550, the average annual salary $11,800, gasoline 55 cents per gallon, and a new Ford Pinto was $2,078.

Jesus Christ Superstar was playing in New York. The endless ground war in Vietnam appeared in living color on American TV sets every night, courtesy of NBCs peacock. Two-thirds of America's troops had returned home, but 20,000 North Vietnamese Army troops were massing near the DMZ to attack allied positions and force the South Vietnamese army into retreat and chaos.

The New York Times had published the Pentagon Papers, a secret history of the Vietnam War leaked by Daniel Ellsberg. The White House plumbers unit burglarized a psychiatrists office to find files on Ellsberg, and a group of shadowy figures plotted a break-in at the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C.

This is the 1st excerpt from Blood on the Ground by Lee County author Merle Temple. If you subscribe to The Lee County Courier, you'll naver miss another word from this manuscript.

Hope you enjoy. Jim Clark, publisher

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Blood on the Ground - Living and Dying in Nod - Leecountycourier

Congressional police-reform bill falls short of the moment – San Francisco Chronicle

The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which recently passed the House, takes baby steps to protect Americans civil rights from police, while maintaining the systemic racism that has driven millions worldwide to protest. The bills modest bans on chokeholds, milquetoast requirements for police training, and long overdue criminalization of lynching are better than the Republicans toothless joke of a bill. But millions of Americans are demanding bolder action, and this bill falls vastly short.

Rep. Karen Bass, D-Los Angeles, sponsored HR7120, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has eagerly championed it. But the bill has predictably languished in the Senate, where it faces a hopeless future. It is deeply inadequate a mere Band-Aid rather than the urgently needed amputation. At a time when murders of Black Americans by militarized police have become shockingly common, this proposal settles for half-measures. It sadly echoes Pelosis recent statement that she doesnt regret voting for the 1994 crime bill at all. San Francisco deserves better.

The most significant step that Pelosis bill fails to take which Minneapolis has already done, and which millions support across the country is to defund the police. Police departments receive tens of billions of federal dollars, padding local budgets that starve municipal services while militarizing our streets, turning them into war zones. The SFPDs proposed budget for 2021 is a whopping $700 million (recently rejected by the police commission). Police have taken over functions that would be far more effectively served by community groups, mental health organizations and social workers.

This mission creep has driven an authoritarian metastasis of policing. Police should be deployed only to address threats of potential violence, particularly emphasizing nonlethal measures and de-escalation tactics. But the House bill doesnt defund the police or do much to shift their responsibilities to civilian agencies.

Congressional reticence might reflect corporate corruption: many House members including Pelosis top ally, Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md. receive large campaign contributions from powerful police unions that are aggressively political associations with a history of defending police abuses, promoting institutional racism and offending civil rights. Just this week, top California Democrats demanded that the party stop taking money from police groups. I strongly support that demand, while Pelosi remains silent.

Pelosi has dodged questions about police mission creep by claiming it is a local issue but this is demonstrably false. Local and state police receive substantial federal funds, which I support curtailing and strictly limiting.

Also overlooked by Pelosis bill is the long overdue federal legalization of cannabis. Cannabis is legal in many states (including California), but in states from Alabama to Idaho, possession remains a pretext to search, abuse, detain, arrest and charge nonviolent people most of them Black and Latino.

Federal legalization offers massive benefits: tax revenue, a wave of green jobs across the country and carbon sequestration that can help undo the damage caused by our senseless addiction to fossil fuels.

Beyond the bills failures, Pelosi hypocritically claims to champion civil rights despite a disturbing record that includes the disastrous Clinton crime bill, which she doesnt regret supporting. It led to the mass incarceration of generations of Black and brown people for minor nonviolent offenses.

Most Democrats and even many Republicans support ending the racist war on drugs. Yet the Pelosi-backed Justice in Policing Act falls short of addressing that established consensus.

There are other steps we should take, like eliminating cash bail. District Attorney Chesa Boudin has already accomplished this locally. But as long as Pelosi remains in office, these common-sense reforms will remain stalled at the federal level: She voted yes on the Republicans draconian 2018 Protect and Serve bill, which classifies an intentional crime against law enforcement as a hate crime; yes on the 2018 Republican-backed proposal to expand policing in schools; and yes on a huge federal police spending increase back in 2007, as well as the infamous 1994 omnibus crime bill. Our communities have waited too long for justice.

We have seen too many paramilitary police violently escalate minor incidents, and even murder nonviolent people on camera. We are done waiting.

Our Constitution applies to all Americans but Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic leaders are stifling vital police reforms needed to make this promise a reality. San Franciscos communities deserve better, as does the rest of America.

Shahid Buttar is a candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives in Californias 12th congressional district, and the first Democrat to ever challenge House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a general election. He is the former director of grassroots advocacy at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

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Congressional police-reform bill falls short of the moment - San Francisco Chronicle

Essay: Reparations would help cities. Now is the time for urbanists to advocate for them. – WHYY

Katrina Johnston-Zimmermans recent column on how white urbanists can best use their privilege resonated with me. I am truly grateful for her courage to step away from the fray and say some things to white people that Ive wanted to say for pretty much my entire professional career. I was particularly excited that she referenced the need for a heart-centered city, which sounds quite similar to the All-In Cities initiative I help to lead at PolicyLink, a national nonprofit research and action institute dedicated to advancing racial and economic equity headquartered in Oakland, California. I am proud that it is my job to work with community coalitions across the country, working inside and outside of government to as she described drive the design, management, policy, and priorities through values of co-creation, compassion, and care for our fellow humans starting with those who need it most. This goal epitomizes the PolicyLink definition of equity just and fair inclusion into a society in which all can participate, prosper, and reach their full potential.

While I fully agree with Johnston-Zimmermans goals, her approach falls as flat as a room- temperature soda on a hot summer day: better than nothing, but not quite satisfying. Johnston-Zimmerman and the white urbanists whose attention she may have piqued with her article should be bolder and more creative in their solutions, especially given the profound urgency that this moment demands. Across all fields, including urbanism, now is the time for a serious conversation about the need for reparations and how to advance a reparative framework that addresses the impacts of past harm.

The idea of reparations in this country is not new. It can be traced back to Special Field Order 15, which was issued by General William T. Sherman of the Union Army on January 16, 1865 in the final days of the Civil War. This edict was developed under the guidance of 20 Black community leaders in Savannah, Georgia where Sherman was stationed at the time. Special Field Order 15 included a provision where formerly enslaved Africans would receive portions of the 400,000 acres of land that had been seized from the treasonous white landowners in the South who had betrayed this country and seceded from the United States out of anger and frustration that they would no longer be able to own enslaved human beings as chattel.

General Sherman was able to understand the importance that the ownership of land, and the economic security that it provides, was critical if formerly enslaved Africans were ever truly going to be integrated into the American body politic. A shared understanding of the importance of redistributing land led Congress to pass An Act to Establish a Bureau for the Relief of Freedmen and Refugees on March 3, 1865, later known as the Freedmens Bureau. Regrettably, this agency was never appropriately resourced to accomplish the transformative goal with which it was tasked and, upon Abraham Lincolns assassination in April 1865, President Andrew Johnson opted to rescind Special Order 15 and return the seized land to the white Confederate traitors to the United States, rather than redistribute the land to the enslaved Africans that had risked their lives to fight to defend this country.

The failure to enact Special Order 15 and fully equip the Freedmens Bureau isnt the only example of how failed government policies have prevented wealth-building opportunities for Black people in this country. For example, University of Pennsylvania Associate Professor Amy Hillier has written extensively about redlining, and the effect it has had on Black people here in Philadelphia. Redlining refers to the practice where banks and governmental institutions such as the Federal Housing Administration refuse to issue mortgages in Black neighborhoods. To be clear, the denial of these loans was not based on creditworthiness. Rather, they were based on the demographic composition of the neighborhood. Sadly, while redlining was banned with the Fair Housing Act of 1968, the residual impacts of the practice can still be felt to this day. Recent analysis by the Center for Investigative Journalism confirmed that racialized disparities in mortgage lending persist in Philadelphia. Similarly, research by Dr. Andre Perry at the Brookings Institution has revealed that homes in Black neighborhoods continue to be assessed on average $48,000 less than comparable homes in majority white neighborhoods, causing a cumulative loss of $156 billion in assets. Equity scholars have already developed a reparations framework that will address the intergenerational harm caused by racism in the banking industry through strategies such as providing interest-free mortgages to Black homebuyers.

While the value of land and homeownership undergird many discussions around the merit of reparations, there are several jurisdictions that have embraced a much more holistic approach for addressing the harms caused by flawed government policies. For example, the growing number of states that have legalized marijuana has highlighted the hypocrisy of granting vendor licenses to sell the same drugs that contributed to the incarceration of so many people of color during the War on Drugs. The City of Oakland has attempted to address these disparities by prioritizing vendor applicants that have previously been arrested and convicted of a marijuana law violation. Oakland also established a $3 million revolving loan fund to provide no-interest loans to such applicants to start their business. Similarly, Evanston, Il is specifically using revenue from the sale of legalized marijuana to seed a fund for reparations for Black residents.

Other jurisdictions have developed a reparative framework to address the gentrification and displacement of low-income people of color that has occurred as a growing number of young, professional families seek out city living and shun the suburbs. For example, in Buffalo, New York, PolicyLink has been working with the coalition Open Buffalo since 2016 to support the launch and incorporation of their Fruit Belt Community Land Trust (FBCLT). Understanding the role that the City has played in facilitating the conditions that lead to housing insecurity for low-income people and people of color, the Buffalo Common Council voted to seed the FBCLT with 20 city-owned properties that will be rehabilitated into housing units with long-term affordability provisions. Similarly, Portland has established a preference policy, or Right to Return, that prioritizes housing resources such as down payment assistance for first-time homebuyers who were displaced, or are at risk of displacement, because of urban renewal.

In both instances, each city has taken a reparative approach to leverage the resources available to them in order to support those low-income households, disproportionately people of color, who have been disadvantaged far too often when historically low-income neighborhoods are revitalized.

Tragically, it took the eight minute forty-six second video of the last moments of George Floyds life to force a national reckoning 400 years in the making. I personally havent seen the video and will not be watching it. For me, Amadou Diallo, Sean Bell, Michael Brown, Freddie Grey, Tamir Rice, Philando Castille, Sandra Bland, and Eric Garner have taught me everything that I need to know over the years about whose lives matter in this country. So, while I am appreciative of the cosmetic achievements in social justice of late with regard to monuments and flags, Breonna Taylor reminds me that this country still has a long, long way to go.

Similarly, while it is refreshing to learn that Philly policymakers have proposed a Black Stimulus package to address the legacy of institutional racism faced by Black people in this city, the lack of a reparative approach makes the effort fall flat.

James Crowder Jr. is a senior associate at PolicyLink and an adjunct faculty member in the Planning and Community Development program at Temple University.

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Essay: Reparations would help cities. Now is the time for urbanists to advocate for them. - WHYY

Police have criminals on the back foot in war on drugs – The Christian Institute

UK drug lords believe the police are winning the war on drugs, according to secret messages hacked by detectives.

It comes in sharp contrast to calls from politicians and police chiefs in favour of decriminalising illegal drugs, claiming the war has already been lost.

In an encrypted messaging system used by over 60,000 criminals worldwide, UK criminals complained the police are winning the war and that theyre getting everyone.

Efforts by the police to crack down on drug dealers and traffickers are having an effect with one crime boss secretly admitting he was considering leaving the UK because of his fear of the National Crime Agency (NCA).

Following the decryption of messages in April by French and Dutch law enforcement, the NCA monitored the live chats of 10,000 organised criminals in the UK between then and June, leading to significant progress.

Around 750 arrests have been made, two tonnes of drugs have been seized, along with 77 firearms and more than 54 million in cash.

During the same period the police also foiled more than 200 gangland murder plots or serious attacks.

The NCA has released unedited messages, including one criminal who said the serious crime agency was like M15 for our business.

Others described the NCA as scary and one said officers were getting too smart and that it was time to leave the UK.

Last year Parliaments Health and Social Care Committee said the UKs approach to drugs was clearly failing and called for a radical approach, saying possession of drugs for personal use should be made a civil matter rather than a criminal offence.

They also called for the expansion of so-called shooting galleries, where addicts can inject themselves without fear of arrest, but the Government said it has no plans to decriminalise drug possession.

Cannabis users told by police: Just say sorry and watch a video

Pro-cannabis prof: Ive changed my mind on legalisation

Myth buster: My doctor will be prescribing me cannabis joints

Going soft on cannabis

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Police have criminals on the back foot in war on drugs - The Christian Institute

The war on drugs does more harm than drugs – Effingham Daily News

Protesters say Americas criminal justice system is unfair.

It is.

Courts are so jammed that innocent people plead guilty to avoid waiting years for a trial. Lawyers help rich people get special treatment. A jail stay is just as likely to teach you crime as it is to help you get a new start. Overcrowded prisons cost a fortune and increase suffering for both prisoners and guards.

Theres one simple solution to most of these problems: End the war on drugs.

Our government has spent trillions of dollars trying to stop drug use.

It hasnt worked. More people now use more drugs than before the war began.

What drug prohibition did do is exactly what alcohol prohibition did a hundred years ago: increase conflict between police and citizens.

It pitted police against the communities that they serve, says neuroscientist Dr. Carl Hart in my new video. Hart, former chair of Columbia Universitys Psychology department, grew up in a tough Miami neighborhood where he watched crack cocaine wreck lives. When he started researching drugs, he assumed that research would confirm the damage drugs did.

But one problem kept cropping up, he says in his soon-to-be-released book, Drug Use For Grown-Ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear, the evidence did not support the hypothesis. No one elses evidence did either.

After 20 years of research, he concluded, I was wrong. Now, he says, our drug laws do more harm than drugs.

Because drug sales are illegal, profits from selling drugs are huge. Since sellers cant rely on law enforcement to protect their property, they buy guns and form gangs.

Cigarettes harm people, too, but there are no violent cigarette gangs no cigarette shootings even though nicotine is more addictive than heroin, says our government. Thats because tobacco is legal. Likewise, there are no longer violent liquor gangs. They vanished when prohibition ended.

But what about the opioid epidemic? Lots of Americans die from overdoses!

Hart blames the drug war for that, too. Yes, opioids are legal, but their sale is tightly restricted.

If drugs were over the counter, there would be fewer deaths? I asked.

Of course, he responds. People die from opioids because they get tainted opioids. ... That would go away if we didnt have this war on drugs. Imagine if the only subject of any conversation about driving automobiles was fatal car crashes. ... So it is with the opioid epidemic.

Drugs do harm many people, but in real life, replies Hart, I know tons of people who do drugs; they are public officials, captains of industry, and theyre doing well. Drugs, including nicotine and heroin, make people feel better. Thats why they are used.

President Eisenhower warned about the military-industrial complex. Americas drug war funds a prison-industrial complex. Hart says his years inside the well-funded research side of that complex showed him that any research not in support of the tough-on-drugs ideology is routinely dismissed to keep outrage stoked and funds coming in.

America locks up more than 2 million Americans. Thats a higher percentage of our citizens, disproportionately black citizens, than any other country in the world.

In every country with a more permissive drug regime, all outcomes are better, says Hart. Countries like Switzerland and Portugal, where drugs are decriminalized, dont have these problems that we have with drug overdoses.

In 2001, Portugal decriminalized all drug use. Instead of punishing drug users, they offer medical help. Deaths from overdoses dropped sharply. In 2017, Portugal had only 4 deaths per million people. The United States had 217 per million.

In a society, you will have people who misbehave, says Hart. But that doesnt mean you should punish all of us because someone cant handle this activity.

Hes right. Its time to end the drug war.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

John Stossel is author of Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.

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The war on drugs does more harm than drugs - Effingham Daily News

Q&A: Preaching Harm Reduction – Open Society Foundations

Tell us about the origin of the Naloxone Saves tours. Why did you start them, and what have they accomplished?

In 2004 I lost someone I love to an accidental overdose. It was the first in a long string of deaths. Unfortunately, the churches my loved ones were connected to were sources of shame instead of care, leaving people to feel separate from their community and separate from God.

Ten years later I decided to go to seminary to learn how to bury my dead with dignity, because nobody else ever had. But while I was there, I realized I didnt want to just bury my friends, I wanted to support them in living and living well. Naloxone Saves was born out of this desire. It started as an assignment for a worship class in seminary but has become an opportunity to lift up the sacred lives of people who use drugs and honor their leadership in resurrecting communities.

Through the service, and in partnership with grassroots harm reduction groups, we have distributed thousands of naloxone kits, allowing people to take what they need, no questions asked. But more than that we have corrected the place of people who use drugs in congregations, moving them from the shadows to the altar.

As Christians we are called to cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers of our own making, and cast out the demons of shame and stigma. This is harm reduction work. This is the gospel.

For me, they share an obvious connection: unconditional love and a commitment to justice. Harm reduction is not contrary to the Christian faith. Harm reduction calls us to deepen our faith. People who use drugs matter to God. And people who use drugs are doing Gods work. They deserve our respect and support, not our judgement.

Where I live, in Ohio, we have seen overdose spikes almost every weekend for the first two months of quarantine. Isolation, financial instability, and racist practices in policing and health care continue to drive up our death rates.

This pandemic has also clearly shown us that naloxone is not enough to save our communities. We need housing, living wages, competent health care, and freedom from policing in order to survive both the pandemic and the drug war.

People are struggling to get what they need to live, and we must be comprehensively concerned about that. This includes naloxone, yes; but it also includes freedom from prisons, where COVID is rapidly spreading and many people are being held on immoral and racialized drug charges.

Faith In Public Life has been working with faith communities and harm reduction leaders to ensure that people have access to naloxone during this time of increased isolation.

We have also joined a coalition focused on statewide de-carceration efforts.We know that the racist war on drugs has fueled the racist policing that fills racist prisons.It is white supremacy that has fueled an increase of both overdose deaths and deaths from COVID-19 in Black communities. These issues are deeply connected.

As harm reductionists, we have watched millions of dollars pour into police departments in the name of overdose preventionall while grassroots programs, which are far more effective, have been left to scrape things together, just as they always have. This has left communities vulnerable to the devastating impacts of COVID-19 and increased policing.

When the most effective harm reduction programs rely on an individual paying for supplies out of pocket, it leaves entire communities at risk. What happens when that person loses their job? Or falls ill? Or cant do outreach because they have a compromised immune system?

Part of how we are responding to the pandemic is by supporting the Movement for Black Lives and by lifting up the demands of local Black leaders. We know that Black lives matter to God and that defunding the police will result in fewer overdose deaths.

This is a time when we must deepen our moral imagination and dream up new possibilities. We must meet people where they are, but we cannot leave them there. We cannot leave our loved ones in prison, we cannot leave our loved ones without housing, we cannot leave our loved ones in isolation.

As harm reductionists we must first meet people where they are and offer the supplies and solidarity that are needed. But we must also join a broader movement to fight for the sanctity and protection of all life by defunding the police and reallocating funds to communities that are desperately in need.

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Q&A: Preaching Harm Reduction - Open Society Foundations

Don’t Blame the Wave of Overdose Deaths on Coronavirus LockdownBlame Them On the War On Drugs – Yahoo News

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White House drug czar Jim Carroll toldPoliticoearlier this week that an Office of National Drug Control Policy analysis findsan 11.4 percent yearoveryear increase in opioidrelated overdose deaths during the first four months of 2020. Kentucky has seen a25 percent increase in overdose deaths during the first four months of this year, and West Virginia saw a50 percent increase in deaths since the beginning of the year. The data are incomplete at this point, and not all states have reported in.

Mr. Carroll attributed much of the increase in the overdose rate to anxiety, social isolation, and depression resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. But he also noted that, after aoneyear pause in 2017, the overdose death rate resumed its climb inlate 2018 and 2019. And methamphetaminerelated deaths have been surging for the past few years.

Researchhas shown that overdose deaths from the nonmedical use of licit or illicit drugs have been on asteady exponential increase since at least the late 1970swith different drugs predominating at different periods. And there is no evidence the trend is slowing.

While it remains popular to attribute the opioidrelated overdose crisis to doctors prescribing pain relievers to patients, the evidenceshowsthere is no correlation between prescription volume and the nonmedical opioid use or opioid use disorder.

To be sure, the COVID-19 pandemic is exacerbating the situation. People with substance use disorder need to feel connectedness with others as well as themselves to overcome the problem.Isolation, loneliness, and the anxiety and depressionassociated with quarantines, lockdowns, and the resultant economic dislocations are the opposite of what people suffering from addiction require.

Add to that the fact that the pandemic response hashampered the smooth operation of harm reduction programs, despite efforts to mitigate the disruption with the temporaryrelaxationof many federal regulations. And the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administrationreportsthe sobering fact that many first responders are reluctant to respond to overdose calls with the antidote naloxone, fearing they may contract COVID-19 during the resuscitative process. Of course, this is yet another argument for having the Food and Drug Administration reclassify naloxone asover the counter.

Story continues

But it should not go without notice that many chronic pain patients have been unable to follow up with their physicians, whose offices have been closed (or office hours restricted) in order to reduce the spread of COVID-19. And many elective procedures to treat or eliminate these painful conditions have been postponed or cancelled because of blanket bans on elective procedures. This was discussed at aCato onlineeventin May. In desperation, many patients might be seeking relief in the dangerous black market fueled by drug prohibition.

Speaking of prohibition, the drug czar told Politico that the pandemic response has caused Customs and Border Patrol agents to reduce screening for drugs smuggled across the border.

The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on substance use, substance use disorder, and overdose deaths must not be ignored or underemphasized. But, at the end of the day, thedriving forcebehind overdose deaths has always beendrug prohibition. Andso it will remain, until it is repealed.

This article by Jeffrey A. Singer firstappearedinCATOon July 1, 2020.

Image: Reuters.

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Don't Blame the Wave of Overdose Deaths on Coronavirus LockdownBlame Them On the War On Drugs - Yahoo News

Cato and the ACLU Join Forces to Protect Philadelphia’s Supervised Injection Site – Cato Institute

The first major federal drug law, the Harrison Narcotics Act, went into effect in 1915. As the federal drug war moves into its second century, we are still faced with an unprecedented opioid crisis that is getting worse during the current pandemic. Yet while other countries such as Portugal and Switzerland are approaching the problem with new, more humane ideas, the federal government is stuck in the prohibitionist mindset of the past, which not only doesnt work but makes the problem worse.

Safehouse is anonprofit publichealth organization that seeks to mitigate the harms of the opioid crisis in many ways. First and foremost, Safehouse wants to provide asupervised injection site (SIS) for compulsive opioid users. SISs do not provide any drugs to users but offer aplace where the drugs can be tested and medical professionals are available in the event of an overdose. In addition, Safehouse will offer counseling and recovery treatment.

SIS model has been used with great success elsewhere, especially in Vancouvers Downtown Eastside, which was an epicenter of overdoses before Insite opened in 2003. Despite those successes, the federal government is trying to block Safehouse by invoking a1980s crackhouse law that makes it acrime to provide aplace to take illicit drugs, even without compensation. Safehouse won the first round when afederal district court ruled that the Department of Justice couldnt stretch the crackhouse statute to cover Safehouses lifesaving SIS.

Now on appeal to the Third Circuit, Cato, joined bythe ACLU and the ACLU of Pennsylvania, hasfiledabrief supporting Safehouse. We argue that the Constitutions federal structure was designed to allow for states to experiment with different policies, especially when it comes to protecting the health and welfare of citizens. No one knows how to solve the opioid crisis, and it is bad form, at the very least, for the federal government to try to block SISs with a30yearold law that was passed during the height of the War on Drugs. The idea that prohibition and arrests is the best way to solve the opioid crisis should be left in the past.

Moreover, the federal government is largely responsible for the current overdose crisis. Over the past decade, the synthetic opioid fentanyl has become the biggest source of overdoses, with over 31,000 dying in 2018. Fentanyl is 50 to 100 times stronger than heroin, and the lethal dose is 2or 3milligrams, which is equivalent to about 4grains of salt. Compulsive heroin users are increasingly finding fentanyl in their heroin, often unknowingly. They shoot up the same amount as usual, and they die.

Why is such adeadly drug polluting the drug supply? Because of the iron law of prohibition. When college kids sneak alcohol into afootball game, they dont sneak beer, they prefer the more compact and potent stuff. Similarly, during alcohol Prohibition, beer and wine essentially disappeared and were replaced by hard spirits. For the same reasons, drug traffickers prefer highpotency opioids like fentanyl even when the users are not demanding it.

Finally, we argue that the DOJs attempt to apply the crackhouse law to Safehouses SIS is an unconstitutional extension of the Commerce and Necessary and Proper Clauses. Under the governments argument, parents that let their son shoot up in the bathroom so they can monitor him would be violating the same statute. Yet the Commerce and Necessary and Proper Clauses do not let Congress regulate intrastate, noneconomic activity such as this. While Congress has broad power under current precedents, it doesnt have the power to control everything that happens around illicit drugs.

The Third Circuit should stop the federal governments cruel and counterproductive attempt to block an institution that will undoubtedly save lives.

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Cato and the ACLU Join Forces to Protect Philadelphia's Supervised Injection Site - Cato Institute

War on drugs – Wikipedia

Led by the U.S. federal government

The war on drugs is a global campaign,[6] led by the U.S. federal government, of drug prohibition, military aid, and military intervention, with the aim being the reduction of the illegal drug trade in the United States.[7][8][9][10] The initiative includes a set of drug policies that are intended to discourage the production, distribution, and consumption of psychoactive drugs that the participating governments and the UN have made illegal. The term was popularized by the media shortly after a press conference given on June 18, 1971, by President Richard Nixonthe day after publication of a special message from President Nixon to the Congress on Drug Abuse Prevention and Controlduring which he declared drug abuse "public enemy number one". That message to the Congress included text about devoting more federal resources to the "prevention of new addicts, and the rehabilitation of those who are addicted", but that part did not receive the same public attention as the term "war on drugs".[11][12][13] However, two years prior to this, Nixon had formally declared a "war on drugs" that would be directed toward eradication, interdiction, and incarceration.[14] Today, the Drug Policy Alliance, which advocates for an end to the War on Drugs, estimates that the United States spends $51 billion annually on these initiatives.[15]

On May 13, 2009, Gil Kerlikowskethe Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)signaled that the Obama administration did not plan to significantly alter drug enforcement policy, but also that the administration would not use the term "War on Drugs", because Kerlikowske considers the term to be "counter-productive".[16] ONDCP's view is that "drug addiction is a disease that can be successfully prevented and treated... making drugs more available will make it harder to keep our communities healthy and safe".[17]

In June 2011, the Global Commission on Drug Policy released a critical report on the War on Drugs, declaring: "The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world. Fifty years after the initiation of the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and years after President Nixon launched the US government's war on drugs, fundamental reforms in national and global drug control policies are urgently needed."[18] The report was criticized by organizations that oppose a general legalization of drugs.[17]

Morphine was first isolated[specify] in 1805, and hypodermic syringes were first constructed in 1851. This was particularly significant during the American Civil War, when wounded soldiers were treated with morphine. This led to widespread morphine addiction among veterans of the war.[19]

Until 1912, products such as heroin were sold over-the-counter in a form of cough syrup. Doctors also prescribed heroin for irritable babies, bronchitis, insomnia, "nervous conditions," hysteria, menstrual cramps, and "vapors", leading to mass addiction. In addition, laudanum, an opioid, was a common part of the home medicine cabinet.[20][21]

In fiction, Conan Doyle portrayed the hero, Sherlock Holmes, as a cocaine addict.[22]

Citizens[specify] did not reach a consensus on dealing with the long-term effects of hard drug usage until towards the end of the 19th century.[citation needed]

The first U.S. law that restricted the distribution and use of certain drugs was the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914. The first local laws came as early as 1860.[23] In 1919, the United States passed the 18th Amendment, prohibiting the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol, with exceptions for religious and medical use. In 1920, the United States passed the National Prohibition Act (Volstead Act), enacted to carry out the provisions in law of the 18th Amendment.

During World War I many soldiers were treated with morphine and became addicts.[19]

The Federal Bureau of Narcotics was established in the United States Department of the Treasury by an act of June 14, 1930 (46 Stat. 585).[24] In 1933, the federal prohibition for alcohol was repealed by passage of the 21st Amendment. In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt publicly supported the adoption of the Uniform State Narcotic Drug Act. The New York Times used the headline "Roosevelt Asks Narcotic War Aid".[25][26]

In 1937, the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 was passed. Several scholars have claimed that the goal was to destroy the hemp industry,[27][28][29] largely as an effort of businessmen Andrew Mellon, Randolph Hearst, and the Du Pont family.[27][29] These scholars argue that with the invention of the decorticator, hemp became a very cheap substitute for the paper pulp that was used in the newspaper industry.[27][30] These scholars believe that Hearst felt[dubious discuss] that this was a threat to his extensive timber holdings. Mellon, United States Secretary of the Treasury and the wealthiest man in America, had invested heavily in the DuPont's new synthetic fiber, nylon, and considered[dubious discuss] its success to depend on its replacement of the traditional resource, hemp.[27][31][32][33][34][35][36][37] However, there were circumstances that contradict these claims. One reason for doubts about those claims is that the new decorticators did not perform fully satisfactorily in commercial production.[38] Production of fiber from hemp, requiring harvest, transport and processing, was a labor-intensive process. Technological developments decreased the labor required but not sufficiently to eliminate this disadvantage.[39][40]

On October 27, 1970, Congress passed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, which, among other things, categorized controlled substances based on their medicinal use and potential for addiction.[41] In 1971, two congressmen released a report on the growing heroin epidemic among U.S. servicemen in Vietnam; ten to fifteen percent of the servicemen were addicted to heroin, and President Nixon declared drug abuse to be "public enemy number one".[41][42]

Although Nixon declared "drug abuse" to be public enemy number one in 1971,[43] the policies that his administration implemented as part of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 were a continuation of drug prohibition policies in the U.S., which started in 1914.[41][44]

The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I'm saying? We knew we couldn't make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.

In 1973, the Drug Enforcement Administration was created to replace the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.[41]

The Nixon Administration also repealed the federal 210-year mandatory minimum sentences for possession of marijuana and started federal demand reduction programs and drug-treatment programs. Robert DuPont, the "Drug czar" in the Nixon Administration, stated it would be more accurate to say that Nixon ended, rather than launched, the "war on drugs". DuPont also argued that it was the proponents of drug legalization that popularized the term "war on drugs".[17][unreliable source?]

The presidency of Ronald Reagan saw an expansion in the federal focus of preventing drug abuse and for prosecuting offenders. In the first term of the presidency Ronald Reagan signed the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, which expanded penalties towards possession of cannabis, established a federal system of mandatory minimum sentences, and established procedures for civil asset forfeiture.[50] From 1980 to 1984 the federal annual budget of the FBI's drug enforcement units went from 8 million to 95 million.[51][52]

In 1982, Vice President George H. W. Bush and his aides began pushing for the involvement of the CIA and U.S. military in drug interdiction efforts.[53]

The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) was originally established by the National Narcotics Leadership Act of 1988,[54][55] which mandated a national anti-drug media campaign for youth, which would later become the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign.[56] The director of ONDCP is commonly known as the Drug czar,[41] and it was first implemented in 1989 under President George H. W. Bush,[57] and raised to cabinet-level status by Bill Clinton in 1993.[58] These activities were subsequently funded by the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act of 1998.[59][60] The Drug-Free Media Campaign Act of 1998 codified the campaign at 21U.S.C.1708.[61]

An international group called the Global Commission on Drug Policy released a report on June 2, 2011, stating that "The war on drugs has failed."[citation needed] The commissioned was made up of 22 self-appointed members including a number of prominent international politicians and writers. U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin also released the first ever National Prevention Strategy.[62]

On May 21, 2012, the U.S. Government published an updated version of its drug policy.[63] The director of ONDCP stated simultaneously that this policy is somewhat different from the "War on Drugs":

At the same meeting was a declaration signed by the representatives of Italy, the Russian Federation, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States in line with this:"Our approach must be a balanced one, combining effective enforcement to restrict the supply of drugs, with efforts to reduce demand and build recovery; supporting people to live a life free of addiction."[65]

In March 2016 the International Narcotics Control Board stated that the International Drug Control treaties do not mandate a "war on drugs".[66]

According to Human Rights Watch, the War on Drugs caused soaring arrest rates that disproportionately targeted African Americans due to various factors.[68] John Ehrlichman, an aide to Nixon, said that Nixon used the war on drugs to criminalize and disrupt black and hippie communities and their leaders.[69]

The present state of incarceration in the U.S. as a result of the war on drugs arrived in several stages. By 1971, different steps on drugs had been implemented for more than 50 years (since 1914, 1937 etc.) with only a very small increase of inmates per 100,000 citizens. During the first 9 years after Nixon coined the expression "War on Drugs", statistics showed only a minor increase in the total number of imprisoned.[citation needed]

After 1980, the situation began to change. In the 1980s, while the number of arrests for all crimes had risen by 28%, the number of arrests for drug offenses rose 126%.[70] The result of increased demand was the development of privatization and the for-profit prison industry.[71] The US Department of Justice, reporting on the effects of state initiatives, has stated that, from 1990 through 2000, "the increasing number of drug offenses accounted for 27% of the total growth among black inmates, 7% of the total growth among Hispanic inmates, and 15% of the growth among white inmates." In addition to prison or jail, the United States provides for the deportation of many non-citizens convicted of drug offenses.[72]

In 1994, the New England Journal of Medicine reported that the "War on Drugs" resulted in the incarceration of one million Americans each year.[73] In 2008, the Washington Post reported that of 1.5 million Americans arrested each year for drug offenses, half a million would be incarcerated.[74] In addition, one in five black Americans would spend time behind bars due to drug laws.[74]

Federal and state policies also impose collateral consequences on those convicted of drug offenses, such as denial of public benefits or licenses, that are not applicable to those convicted of other types of crime.[75] In particular, the passage of the 1990 SolomonLautenberg amendment led many states to impose mandatory driver's license suspensions (of at least 6 months) for persons committing any type of drug offense including offenses that were unrelated to driving.[76][77] Approximately 191,000 licenses were suspended in this manner in 2016 according to a Prison Policy Initiative report.[78]

In 1986, the U.S. Congress passed laws that created a 100 to 1 sentencing disparity for the trafficking or possession of crack when compared to penalties for trafficking of powder cocaine,[79][80][81][82] which had been widely criticized as discriminatory against minorities, mostly blacks, who were more likely to use crack than powder cocaine.[83] This 100:1 ratio had been required under federal law since 1986.[84] Persons convicted in federal court of possession of 5grams of crack cocaine received a minimum mandatory sentence of 5 years in federal prison. On the other hand, possession of 500grams of powder cocaine carries the same sentence.[80][81] In 2010, the Fair Sentencing Act cut the sentencing disparity to 18:1.[83]

According to Human Rights Watch, crime statistics show thatin the United States in 1999compared to non-minorities, African Americans were far more likely to be arrested for drug crimes, and received much stiffer penalties and sentences.[85]

Statistics from 1998 show that there were wide racial disparities in arrests, prosecutions, sentencing and deaths. African-American drug users made up for 35% of drug arrests, 55% of convictions, and 74% of people sent to prison for drug possession crimes.[80] Nationwide African-Americans were sent to state prisons for drug offenses 13 times more often than other races,[86] even though they only supposedly comprised 13% of regular drug users.[80]

Anti-drug legislation over time has also displayed an apparent racial bias. University of Minnesota Professor and social justice author Michael Tonry writes, "The War on Drugs foreseeably and unnecessarily blighted the lives of hundreds and thousands of young disadvantaged black Americans and undermined decades of effort to improve the life chances of members of the urban black underclass."[87]

In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson decided that the government needed to make an effort to curtail the social unrest that blanketed the country at the time. He decided to focus his efforts on illegal drug use, an approach which was in line with expert opinion on the subject at the time. In the 1960s, it was believed that at least half of the crime in the U.S. was drug related, and this number grew as high as 90 percent in the next decade.[88] He created the Reorganization Plan of 1968 which merged the Bureau of Narcotics and the Bureau of Drug Abuse to form the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs within the Department of Justice.[89] The belief during this time about drug use was summarized by journalist Max Lerner in his work America as a Civilization (1957):

As a case in point we may take the known fact of the prevalence of reefer and dope addiction in Negro areas. This is essentially explained in terms of poverty, slum living, and broken families, yet it would be easy to show the lack of drug addiction among other ethnic groups where the same conditions apply.[90]

Richard Nixon became president in 1969, and did not back away from the anti-drug precedent set by Johnson. Nixon began orchestrating drug raids nationwide to improve his "watchdog" reputation. Lois B. Defleur, a social historian who studied drug arrests during this period in Chicago, stated that, "police administrators indicated they were making the kind of arrests the public wanted". Additionally, some of Nixon's newly created drug enforcement agencies would resort to illegal practices to make arrests as they tried to meet public demand for arrest numbers. From 1972 to 1973, the Office of Drug Abuse and Law Enforcement performed 6,000 drug arrests in 18 months, the majority of the arrested black.[91]

The next two presidents, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, responded with programs that were essentially a continuation of their predecessors. Shortly after Ronald Reagan became president in 1981, he delivered a speech on the topic. Reagan announced, "We're taking down the surrender flag that has flown over so many drug efforts; we're running up a battle flag."[92]

Then, driven by the 1986 cocaine overdose of black basketball star Len Bias,[dubious discuss] Reagan was able to pass the Anti-Drug Abuse Act through Congress. This legislation appropriated an additional $1.7 billion to fund the War on Drugs. More importantly, it established 29 new, mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses. In the entire history of the country up until that point, the legal system had only seen 55 minimum sentences in total.[93] A major stipulation of the new sentencing rules included different mandatory minimums for powder and crack cocaine. At the time of the bill, there was public debate as to the difference in potency and effect of powder cocaine, generally used by whites, and crack cocaine, generally used by blacks, with many believing that "crack" was substantially more powerful and addictive. Crack and powder cocaine are closely related chemicals, crack being a smokeable, freebase form of powdered cocaine hydrochloride which produces a shorter, more intense high while using less of the drug. This method is more cost effective, and therefore more prevalent on the inner-city streets, while powder cocaine remains more popular in white suburbia. The Reagan administration began shoring public opinion against "crack", encouraging DEA official Robert Putnam to play up the harmful effects of the drug. Stories of "crack whores" and "crack babies" became commonplace; by 1986, Time had declared "crack" the issue of the year.[94] Riding the wave of public fervor, Reagan established much harsher sentencing for crack cocaine, handing down stiffer felony penalties for much smaller amounts of the drug.[95]

Reagan protg and former Vice-President George H. W. Bush was next to occupy the oval office, and the drug policy under his watch held true to his political background. Bush maintained the hard line drawn by his predecessor and former boss, increasing narcotics regulation when the first National Drug Control Strategy was issued by the Office of National Drug Control in 1989.[96]

The next three presidents Clinton, Bush and Obama continued this trend, maintaining the War on Drugs as they inherited it upon taking office.[97] During this time of passivity by the federal government, it was the states that initiated controversial legislation in the War on Drugs. Racial bias manifested itself in the states through such controversial policies as the "stop and frisk" police practices in New York city and the "three strikes" felony laws began in California in 1994.[98]

In August 2010, President Obama signed the Fair Sentencing Act into law that dramatically reduced the 100-to-1 sentencing disparity between powder and crack cocaine, which disproportionately affected minorities.[99]

Commonly used illegal drugs include heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, and, marijuana.

Heroin is an opiate that is highly addictive. If caught selling or possessing heroin, a perpetrator can be charged with a felony and face twofour years in prison and could be fined to a maximum of $20,000.[100]

Crystal meth is composed of methamphetamine hydrochloride. It is marketed as either a white powder or in a solid (rock) form. The possession of crystal meth can result in a punishment varying from a fine to a jail sentence. As with other drug crimes, sentencing length may increase depending on the amount of the drug found in the possession of the defendant.[101][102]

Cocaine possession is illegal across the U.S. The penalties for possession vary by state, or if charges are federal.[101][102]

Marijuana is the most popular illegal drug worldwide. The punishment for possession of it is less than for the possession of cocaine or heroin. In some U.S. states, the drug is legal. Approximately half of all adult Americans have tried marijuana.[103]

Some scholars have claimed that the phrase "War on Drugs" is propaganda cloaking an extension of earlier military or paramilitary operations.[10] Others have argued that large amounts of "drug war" foreign aid money, training, and equipment actually goes to fighting leftist insurgencies and is often provided to groups who themselves are involved in large-scale narco-trafficking, such as corrupt members of the Colombian military.[9]

From 1963 to the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, marijuana usage became common among U.S. soldiers in non-combat situations. Some servicemen also used heroin. Many of the servicemen ended the heroin use after returning to the United States but came home addicted. In 1971, the U.S. military conducted a study of drug use among American servicemen and women. It found that daily usage rates for drugs on a worldwide basis were as low as two percent.[104] However, in the spring of 1971, two congressmen released an alarming report alleging that 15% of the servicemen in Vietnam were addicted to heroin. Marijuana use was also common in Vietnam. Soldiers who used drugs had more disciplinary problems. The frequent drug use had become an issue for the commanders in Vietnam; in 1971 it was estimated that 30,000 servicemen were addicted to drugs, most of them to heroin.[12]

From 1971 on, therefore, returning servicemen were required to take a mandatory heroin test. Servicemen who tested positive upon returning from Vietnam were not allowed to return home until they had passed the test with a negative result. The program also offered a treatment for heroin addicts.[105]

Elliot Borin's article "The U.S. Military Needs its Speed"published in Wired on February 10, 2003reports:

But the Defense Department, which distributed millions of amphetamine tablets to troops during World War II, Vietnam and the Gulf War, soldiers on, insisting that they are not only harmless but beneficial.

In a news conference held in connection with Schmidt and Umbach's Article 32 hearing, Dr. Pete Demitry, an Air Force physician and a pilot, claimed that the "Air Force has used (Dexedrine) safely for 60 years" with "no known speed-related mishaps."

The need for speed, Demitry added "is a life-and-death issue for our military."[106]

One of the first anti-drug efforts in the realm of foreign policy was President Nixon's Operation Intercept, announced in September 1969, targeted at reducing the amount of cannabis entering the United States from Mexico. The effort began with an intense inspection crackdown that resulted in an almost shutdown of cross-border traffic.[107] Because the burden on border crossings was controversial in border states, the effort only lasted twenty days.[108]

On December 20, 1989, the United States invaded Panama as part of Operation Just Cause, which involved 25,000 American troops. Gen. Manuel Noriega, head of the government of Panama, had been giving military assistance to Contra groups in Nicaragua at the request of the U.S. which, in exchange, tolerated his drug trafficking activities, which they had known about since the 1960s.[109][110] When the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) tried to indict Noriega in 1971, the CIA prevented them from doing so.[109] The CIA, which was then directed by future president George H. W. Bush, provided Noriega with hundreds of thousands of dollars per year as payment for his work in Latin America.[109] When CIA pilot Eugene Hasenfus was shot down over Nicaragua by the Sandinistas, documents aboard the plane revealed many of the CIA's activities in Latin America, and the CIA's connections with Noriega became a public relations "liability" for the U.S. government, which finally allowed the DEA to indict him for drug trafficking, after decades of tolerating his drug operations.[109] Operation Just Cause, whose purpose was to capture Noriega and overthrow his government; Noriega found temporary asylum in the Papal Nuncio, and surrendered to U.S. soldiers on January 3, 1990.[111] He was sentenced by a court in Miami to 45 years in prison.[109]

As part of its Plan Colombia program, the United States government currently provides hundreds of millions of dollars per year of military aid, training, and equipment to Colombia,[112] to fight left-wing guerrillas such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC-EP), which has been accused of being involved in drug trafficking.[113]

Private U.S. corporations have signed contracts to carry out anti-drug activities as part of Plan Colombia. DynCorp, the largest private company involved, was among those contracted by the State Department, while others signed contracts with the Defense Department.[114]

Colombian military personnel have received extensive counterinsurgency training from U.S. military and law enforcement agencies, including the School of Americas (SOA). Author Grace Livingstone has stated that more Colombian SOA graduates have been implicated in human rights abuses than currently known SOA graduates from any other country. All of the commanders of the brigades highlighted in a 2001 Human Rights Watch report on Colombia were graduates of the SOA, including the III brigade in Valle del Cauca, where the 2001 Alto Naya Massacre occurred. US-trained officers have been accused of being directly or indirectly involved in many atrocities during the 1990s, including the Massacre of Trujillo and the 1997 Mapiripn Massacre.

In 2000, the Clinton administration initially waived all but one of the human rights conditions attached to Plan Colombia, considering such aid as crucial to national security at the time.[115]

The efforts of U.S. and Colombian governments have been criticized for focusing on fighting leftist guerrillas in southern regions without applying enough pressure on right-wing paramilitaries and continuing drug smuggling operations in the north of the country.[116][117] Human Rights Watch, congressional committees and other entities have documented the existence of connections between members of the Colombian military and the AUC, which the U.S. government has listed as a terrorist group, and that Colombian military personnel have committed human rights abuses which would make them ineligible for U.S. aid under current laws.[citation needed]

In 2010, the Washington Office on Latin America concluded that both Plan Colombia and the Colombian government's security strategy "came at a high cost in lives and resources, only did part of the job, are yielding diminishing returns and have left important institutions weaker."[118]

A 2014 report by the RAND Corporation, which was issued to analyze viable strategies for the Mexican drug war considering successes experienced in Colombia, noted:

Between 1999 and 2002, the United States gave Colombia $2.04 billion in aid, 81 percent of which was for military purposes, placing Colombia just below Israel and Egypt among the largest recipients of U.S. military assistance. Colombia increased its defense spending from 3.2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2000 to 4.19 percent in 2005. Overall, the results were extremely positive. Greater spending on infrastructure and social programs helped the Colombian government increase its political legitimacy, while improved security forces were better able to consolidate control over large swaths of the country previously overrun by insurgents and drug cartels.

It also notes that, "Plan Colombia has been widely hailed as a success, and some analysts believe that, by 2010, Colombian security forces had finally gained the upper hand once and for all."[119]

The Mrida Initiative is a security cooperation between the United States and the government of Mexico and the countries of Central America. It was approved on June 30, 2008, and its stated aim is combating the threats of drug trafficking and transnational crime. The Mrida Initiative appropriated $1.4 billion in a three-year commitment (20082010) to the Mexican government for military and law enforcement training and equipment, as well as technical advice and training to strengthen the national justice systems. The Mrida Initiative targeted many very important government officials, but it failed to address the thousands of Central Americans who had to flee their countries due to the danger they faced everyday because of the war on drugs. There is still not any type of plan that addresses these people. No weapons are included in the plan.[120][121]

The United States regularly sponsors the spraying of large amounts of herbicides such as glyphosate over the jungles of Central and South America as part of its drug eradication programs. Environmental consequences resulting from aerial fumigation have been criticized as detrimental to some of the world's most fragile ecosystems;[122] the same aerial fumigation practices are further credited with causing health problems in local populations.[123]

In 2012, the U.S. sent DEA agents to Honduras to assist security forces in counternarcotics operations. Honduras has been a major stop for drug traffickers, who use small planes and landing strips hidden throughout the country to transport drugs. The U.S. government made agreements with several Latin American countries to share intelligence and resources to counter the drug trade. DEA agents, working with other U.S. agencies such as the State Department, the CBP, and Joint Task Force-Bravo, assisted Honduras troops in conducting raids on traffickers' sites of operation.[124]

The War on Drugs has been a highly contentious issue since its inception. A poll on October 2, 2008, found that three in four Americans believed that the War On Drugs was failing.[125]

In 2014, a Pew Research Center poll found more than six in ten Americans state that state governments moving away from mandatory prison terms for drug law violations is a good thing, while three out of ten Americans say these policy changes are a bad thing. This a substantial shift from the same poll questions since 2001.[126] In 2014 a Pew Research Center poll found that 67 percent of Americans feel that a movement towards treatment for drugs like cocaine and heroin is better versus the 26 percent who feel that prosecution is the better route.[127]

In 2018, a Rasmussen Report poll found that less than 10 percent of Americans think that the War on Drugs is being won and that 75 percent found that Americans believe that America is not winning the War on Drugs.[128]

Mexican citizens, unlike American citizens, support the current measures their government were taking against drug cartels in the War on Drugs. A Pew Research Center poll in 2010 found that 80 percent supported the current use of the army in the War on Drugs to combat drug traffickers with about 55 percent saying that they have been making progress in the war.[129] A year later in 2011 a Pew Research Center poll uncovered that 71 percent of Mexicans find that "illegal drugs are a very big problem in their country". 77 percent of Mexicans also found that drug cartels and the violence associated with them are as well a big challenge for Mexico. The poll also found that the percentages believing that illegal drugs and violence related to the cartel were higher in the North with 87 percent for illegal drug use and 94 percent cartel related violence being a problem. This compared to the other locations: South, Mexico City and the greater area of Mexico City, and Central Mexico which are all about 18 percent or lower than the North on Illegal drug use being a problem for the country. These perspective areas are also lower than the North by 19 percent or more on the issue of drug cartel related violence being an issue for the country.[130]

In 2013 a Pew Research Center poll found that 74 percent of Mexican citizens would support the training of their police and military, the poll also found that another 55 percent would support the supplying of weapons and financial aid. Though the poll indicates a support of U.S. aid, 59 percent were against troops on the ground by the U.S. military.[131] Also in 2013 Pew Research Center found in a poll that 56 percent of Mexican citizens believe that the United States and Mexico are both to blame for drug violence in Mexico. In that same poll 20 percent believe that the United States is solely to blame and 17 percent believe that Mexico is solely to blame.[132]

At a meeting in Guatemala in 2012, three former presidents from Guatemala, Mexico and Colombia said that the war on drugs had failed and that they would propose a discussion on alternatives, including decriminalization, at the Summit of the Americas in April of that year.[133] Guatemalan President Otto Prez Molina said that the war on drugs was exacting too high a price on the lives of Central Americans and that it was time to "end the taboo on discussing decriminalization".[134] At the summit, the government of Colombia pushed for the most far-reaching change to drugs policy since the war on narcotics was declared by Nixon four decades prior, citing the catastrophic effects it had had in Colombia.[135]

Several critics have compared the wholesale incarceration of the dissenting minority of drug users to the wholesale incarceration of other minorities in history. Psychiatrist Thomas Szasz, for example, wrote in 1997 "Over the past thirty years, we have replaced the medical-political persecution of illegal sex users ('perverts' and 'psychopaths') with the even more ferocious medical-political persecution of illegal drug users."[136]

Penalties for drug crimes among American youth almost always involve permanent or semi-permanent removal from opportunities for education, strip them of voting rights, and later involve creation of criminal records which make employment more difficult.[137] Thus, some authors maintain that the War on Drugs has resulted in the creation of a permanent underclass of people who have few educational or job opportunities, often as a result of being punished for drug offenses which in turn have resulted from attempts to earn a living in spite of having no education or job opportunities.[137]

According to a 2008 study published by Harvard economist Jeffrey A. Miron, the annual savings on enforcement and incarceration costs from the legalization of drugs would amount to roughly $41.3 billion, with $25.7 billion being saved among the states and over $15.6 billion accrued for the federal government. Miron further estimated at least $46.7 billion in tax revenue based on rates comparable to those on tobacco and alcohol ($8.7 billion from marijuana, $32.6 billion from cocaine and heroin, remainder from other drugs).[138]

Low taxation in Central American countries has been credited with weakening the region's response in dealing with drug traffickers. Many cartels, especially Los Zetas have taken advantage of the limited resources of these nations. 2010 tax revenue in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras, composed just 13.53% of GDP. As a comparison, in Chile and the U.S., taxes were 18.6% and 26.9% of GDP respectively. However, direct taxes on income are very hard to enforce and in some cases tax evasion is seen as a national pastime.[139]

The status of coca and coca growers has become an intense political issue in several countries, including Colombia and particularly Bolivia, where the president, Evo Morales, a former coca growers' union leader, has promised to legalise the traditional cultivation and use of coca.[140] Indeed, legalization efforts have yielded some successes under the Morales administration when combined with aggressive and targeted eradication efforts. The country saw a 1213% decline in coca cultivation[140] in 2011 under Morales, who has used coca growers' federations to ensure compliance with the law rather than providing a primary role for security forces.[140]

The coca eradication policy has been criticised for its negative impact on the livelihood of coca growers in South America. In many areas of South America the coca leaf has traditionally been chewed and used in tea and for religious, medicinal and nutritional purposes by locals.[141] For this reason many insist that the illegality of traditional coca cultivation is unjust. In many areas the U.S. government and military has forced the eradication of coca without providing for any meaningful alternative crop for farmers, and has additionally destroyed many of their food or market crops, leaving them starving and destitute.[141]

The CIA, DEA, State Department, and several other U.S. government agencies have been alleged to have relations with various groups which are involved in drug trafficking.

Senator John Kerry's 1988 U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations report on Contra drug links concludes that members of the U.S. State Department "who provided support for the Contras are involved in drug trafficking... and elements of the Contras themselves knowingly receive financial and material assistance from drug traffickers."[142] The report further states that "the Contra drug links include... payments to drug traffickers by the U.S. State Department of funds authorized by the Congress for humanitarian assistance to the Contras, in some cases after the traffickers had been indicted by federal law enforcement agencies on drug charges, in others while traffickers were under active investigation by these same agencies."

In 1996, journalist Gary Webb published reports in the San Jose Mercury News, and later in his book Dark Alliance, claiming that: "For the better part of a decade, a San Francisco Bay Area drug ring sold tons of cocaine to the Crips and Bloods street gangs of Los Angeles and funneled millions in drug profits to a Latin American guerrilla army run by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency." This drug ring "opened the first pipeline between Colombia's cocaine cartels and the black neighborhoods of Los Angeles" and, as a result, "The cocaine that flooded in helped spark a crack explosion in urban America."[143]

Webb's premise regarding the U.S. Government connection was initially attacked at the time by the media. The series remains controversial. The series resulted in three federal investigations (i.e. by the CIA, Department of Justice, and the House Intelligence Committee) into the claims of "Dark Alliance". The reports rejected the series' main claims but were critical of some CIA and law enforcement actions. The CIA report found no evidence that "any past or present employee of CIA, or anyone acting on behalf of CIA, had any direct or indirect dealing" with Ross, Blandn, or Meneses or that any of the other figures mentioned in "Dark Alliance" were ever employed by or associated with or contacted by the agency.[144] The Department of Justice report stated that "We did not find that he [Blandn] had any ties to the CIA, that the CIA intervened in his case in any way, or that any connections to the Contras affected his treatment."[145] The House Committee report examined the support that Meneses and Blandn gave to the local Contra organization in San Francisco and the Contras in general, the report concluded that it was "not sufficient to finance the organization" and did not consist of "millions," contrary to the claims of the "Dark Alliance" series. This support "was not directed by anyone within the Contra movement who had an association with the CIA," and the Committee found "no evidence that the CIA or the Intelligence Community was aware of these individuals support."[146]

According to Rodney Campbell, an editorial assistant to Nelson Rockefeller, during World War II, the United States Navy, concerned that strikes and labor disputes in U.S. eastern shipping ports would disrupt wartime logistics, released the mobster Lucky Luciano from prison, and collaborated with him to help the mafia take control of those ports. Labor union members were terrorized and murdered by mafia members as a means of preventing labor unrest and ensuring smooth shipping of supplies to Europe.[147]

According to Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair, in order to prevent Communist party members from being elected in Italy following World War II, the CIA worked closely with the Sicilian Mafia, protecting them and assisting in their worldwide heroin smuggling operations. The mafia was in conflict with leftist groups and was involved in assassinating, torturing, and beating leftist political organizers.[148]

In 1986, the US Defense Department funded a two-year study by the RAND Corporation, which found that the use of the armed forces to interdict drugs coming into the United States would have little or no effect on cocaine traffic and might, in fact, raise the profits of cocaine cartels and manufacturers. The 175-page study, "Sealing the Borders: The Effects of Increased Military Participation in Drug Interdiction", was prepared by seven researchers, mathematicians and economists at the National Defense Research Institute, a branch of the RAND, and was released in 1988. The study noted that seven prior studies in the past nine years, including one by the Center for Naval Research and the Office of Technology Assessment, had come to similar conclusions. Interdiction efforts, using current armed forces resources, would have almost no effect on cocaine importation into the United States, the report concluded.[150]

During the early-to-mid-1990s, the Clinton administration ordered and funded a major cocaine policy study, again by RAND. The Rand Drug Policy Research Center study concluded that $3 billion should be switched from federal and local law enforcement to treatment. The report said that treatment is the cheapest way to cut drug use, stating that drug treatment is twenty-three times more effective than the supply-side "war on drugs".[151]

The National Research Council Committee on Data and Research for Policy on Illegal Drugs published its findings in 2001 on the efficacy of the drug war. The NRC Committee found that existing studies on efforts to address drug usage and smuggling, from U.S. military operations to eradicate coca fields in Colombia, to domestic drug treatment centers, have all been inconclusive, if the programs have been evaluated at all: "The existing drug-use monitoring systems are strikingly inadequate to support the full range of policy decisions that the nation must make.... It is unconscionable for this country to continue to carry out a public policy of this magnitude and cost without any way of knowing whether and to what extent it is having the desired effect."[152] The study, though not ignored by the press, was ignored by top-level policymakers, leading Committee Chair Charles Manski to conclude, as one observer notes, that "the drug war has no interest in its own results".[153]

In mid-1995, the US government tried to reduce the supply of methamphetamine precursors to disrupt the market of this drug. According to a 2009 study, this effort was successful, but its effects were largely temporary.[154]

During alcohol prohibition, the period from 1920 to 1933, alcohol use initially fell but began to increase as early as 1922. It has been extrapolated that even if prohibition had not been repealed in 1933, alcohol consumption would have quickly surpassed pre-prohibition levels.[155] One argument against the War on Drugs is that it uses similar measures as Prohibition and is no more effective.

In the six years from 2000 to 2006, the U.S. spent $4.7 billion on Plan Colombia, an effort to eradicate coca production in Colombia. The main result of this effort was to shift coca production into more remote areas and force other forms of adaptation. The overall acreage cultivated for coca in Colombia at the end of the six years was found to be the same, after the U.S. Drug Czar's office announced a change in measuring methodology in 2005 and included new areas in its surveys.[156] Cultivation in the neighboring countries of Peru and Bolivia increased, some would describe this effect like squeezing a balloon.[157]

Richard Davenport-Hines, in his book The Pursuit of Oblivion,[158] criticized the efficacy of the War on Drugs by pointing out that

1015% of illicit heroin and 30% of illicit cocaine is intercepted. Drug traffickers have gross profit margins of up to 300%. At least 75% of illicit drug shipments would have to be intercepted before the traffickers' profits were hurt.

Alberto Fujimori, president of Peru from 1990 to 2000, described U.S. foreign drug policy as "failed" on grounds that

for 10 years, there has been a considerable sum invested by the Peruvian government and another sum on the part of the American government, and this has not led to a reduction in the supply of coca leaf offered for sale. Rather, in the 10 years from 1980 to 1990, it grew 10-fold.[159]

At least 500 economists, including Nobel Laureates Milton Friedman,[160] George Akerlof and Vernon L. Smith, have noted that reducing the supply of marijuana without reducing the demand causes the price, and hence the profits of marijuana sellers, to go up, according to the laws of supply and demand.[161] The increased profits encourage the producers to produce more drugs despite the risks, providing a theoretical explanation for why attacks on drug supply have failed to have any lasting effect. The aforementioned economists published an open letter to President George W. Bush stating "We urge...the country to commence an open and honest debate about marijuana prohibition... At a minimum, this debate will force advocates of current policy to show that prohibition has benefits sufficient to justify the cost to taxpayers, foregone tax revenues and numerous ancillary consequences that result from marijuana prohibition."

The declaration from the World Forum Against Drugs, 2008 state that a balanced policy of drug abuse prevention, education,treatment, law enforcement, research, and supply reduction provides the most effective platform to reduce drug abuse and its associated harms and call on governments to consider demand reduction as one of their first priorities in the fight against drug abuse.[162]

Despite over $7 billion spent annually towards arresting[163] and prosecuting nearly 800,000 people across the country for marijuana offenses in 2005[citation needed] (FBI Uniform Crime Reports), the federally funded Monitoring the Future Survey reports about 85% of high school seniors find marijuana "easy to obtain". That figure has remained virtually unchanged since 1975, never dropping below 82.7% in three decades of national surveys.[164] The Drug Enforcement Administration states that the number of users of marijuana in the U.S. declined between 2000 and 2005 even with many states passing new medical marijuana laws making access easier,[165] though usage rates remain higher than they were in the 1990s according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.[166]

ONDCP stated in April 2011 that there has been a 46 percent drop in cocaine use among young adults over the past five years, and a 65 percent drop in the rate of people testing positive for cocaine in the workplace since 2006.[167] At the same time, a 2007 study found that up to 35% of college undergraduates used stimulants not prescribed to them.[168]

A 2013 study found that prices of heroin, cocaine and cannabis had decreased from 1990 to 2007, but the purity of these drugs had increased during the same time.[169]

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War on drugs - Wikipedia

War on Drugs | History & Mass Incarceration | Britannica

War on Drugs, the effort in the United States since the 1970s to combat illegal drug use by greatly increasing penalties, enforcement, and incarceration for drug offenders.

The War on Drugs began in June 1971 when U.S. Pres. Richard Nixon declared drug abuse to be public enemy number one and increased federal funding for drug-control agencies and drug-treatment efforts. In 1973 the Drug Enforcement Administration was created out of the merger of the Office for Drug Abuse Law Enforcement, the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, and the Office of Narcotics Intelligence to consolidate federal efforts to control drug abuse.

The War on Drugs was a relatively small component of federal law-enforcement efforts until the presidency of Ronald Reagan, which began in 1981. Reagan greatly expanded the reach of the drug war and his focus on criminal punishment over treatment led to a massive increase in incarcerations for nonviolent drug offenses, from 50,000 in 1980 to 400,000 in 1997. In 1984 his wife, Nancy, spearheaded another facet of the War on Drugs with her Just Say No campaign, which was a privately funded effort to educate schoolchildren on the dangers of drug use. The expansion of the War on Drugs was in many ways driven by increased media coverage ofand resulting public nervousness overthe crack epidemic that arose in the early 1980s. This heightened concern over illicit drug use helped drive political support for Reagans hard-line stance on drugs. The U.S. Congress passed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, which allocated $1.7 billion to the War on Drugs and established a series of mandatory minimum prison sentences for various drug offenses. A notable feature of mandatory minimums was the massive gap between the amounts of crack and of powder cocaine that resulted in the same minimum sentence: possession of five grams of crack led to an automatic five-year sentence while it took the possession of 500 grams of powder cocaine to trigger that sentence. Since approximately 80% of crack users were African American, mandatory minimums led to an unequal increase of incarceration rates for nonviolent black drug offenders, as well as claims that the War on Drugs was a racist institution.

Concerns over the effectiveness of the War on Drugs and increased awareness of the racial disparity of the punishments meted out by it led to decreased public support of the most draconian aspects of the drug war during the early 21st century. Consequently, reforms were enacted during that time, such as the legalization of recreational marijuana in an increasing number of states and the passage of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 that reduced the discrepancy of crack-to-powder possession thresholds for minimum sentences from 100-to-1 to 18-to-1. Prison reform legislation enacted in 2018 further reduced the sentences for some crack cocainerelated convictions. While the War on Drugs is still technically being waged, it is done at a much less intense level than it was during its peak in the 1980s.

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War on Drugs | History & Mass Incarceration | Britannica

War on Drugs – Timeline in America, Definition & Facts …

Contents

The War on Drugs is a phrase used to refer to a government-led initiative that aims to stop illegal drug use, distribution and trade by dramatically increasing prison sentences for both drug dealers and users. The movement started in the 1970s and is still evolving today. Over the years, people have had mixed reactions to the campaign, ranging from full-on support to claims that it has racist and political objectives.

Drug use for medicinal and recreational purposes has been happening in the United States since the countrys inception. In the 1890s, the popular Sears and Roebuck catalogue included an offer for a syringe and small amount of cocaine for $1.50. (At that time, cocaine use had not yet been outlawed.)

In some states, laws to ban or regulate drugs were passed in the 1800s, and the first congressional act to levy taxes on morphine and opium took place in 1890.

The Smoking Opium Exclusion Act in 1909 banned the possession, importation and use of opium for smoking. However, opium could still be used as a medication. This was the first federal law to ban the non-medical use of a substance, although many states and counties had banned alcohol sales previously.

In 1914, Congress passed the Harrison Act, which regulated and taxed the production, importation, and distribution of opiates and cocaine.

Alcohol prohibition laws quickly followed. In 1919, the 18th Amendment was ratified, banning the manufacture, transportation or sale of intoxicating liquors, ushering in the Prohibition Era. The same year, Congress passed the National Prohibition Act (also known as the Volstead Act), which provided guidelines on how to federally enforce Prohibition.

Prohibition lasted until December, 1933, when the 21st Amendment was ratified, overturning the 18th.

In 1937, the MarihuanaTax Act was passed. This federal law placed a tax on the sale of cannabis, hemp, or marijuana.

The Act was introduced by Rep. Robert L. Doughton of North Carolina and was drafted by Harry Anslinger. While the law didnt criminalize the possession or use of marijuana, it included hefty penalties if taxes werent paid, including a fine of up to $2000 and five years in prison.

President Richard M. Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) into law in 1970. This statute calls for the regulation of certain drugs and substances.

The CSA outlines five schedules used to classify drugs based on their medical application and potential for abuse.

Schedule 1 drugs are considered the most dangerous, as they pose a very high risk for addiction with little evidence of medical benefits. Marijuana, LSD, heroin, MDMA (ecstasy) and other drugs are included on the list of Schedule 1 drugs.

The substances considered least likely to be addictive, such as cough medications with small amounts of codeine, fall into the Schedule 5 category.

In June 1971, Nixon officially declared a War on Drugs, stating that drug abuse was public enemy number one.

A rise in recreational drug use in the 1960s likely led to President Nixons focus on targeting some types of substance abuse.As part of the War on Drugs initiative, Nixon increased federal funding for drug-control agencies and proposed strict measures, such as mandatory prison sentencing, for drug crimes. He also announced the creation of the Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention (SAODAP), which was headed by Dr. Jerome Jaffe.

Nixon went on to create the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in 1973. This agency is a special police force committed to targeting illegal drug use and smuggling in the United States.

At the start, the DEA was given 1,470 special agents and a budget of less than $75 million. Today, the agency has nearly 5,000 agents and a budget of $2.03 billion.

During a 1994 interview, President Nixons domestic policy chief, John Ehrlichman, provided inside information suggesting that the War on Drugs campaign had ulterior motives, which mainly involved helping Nixon keep his job.

In the interview, conducted by journalist Dan Baum and published in Harper magazine, Ehrlichman explained that the Nixon campaign had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. His comments led many to question Nixons intentions in advocating for drug reform and whether racism played a role.

Ehrlichman was quoted as saying: We knew we couldnt make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course, we did.

In the mid-1970s, the War on Drugs took a slight hiatus. Between 1973 and 1977, eleven states decriminalized marijuana possession.

Jimmy Carter became president in 1977 after running on a political campaign to decriminalize marijuana. During his first year in office, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to decriminalize up to one ounce of marijuana.

In the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan reinforced and expanded many of Nixons War on Drugs policies. In 1984, his wife Nancy Reagan launched the Just Say No campaign, which was intended to highlight the dangers of drug use.

President Reagans refocus on drugs and the passing of severe penalties for drug-related crimes in Congress and state legislatures led to a massive increase in incarcerations for nonviolent drug crimes.

In 1986, Congress passed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which established mandatory minimum prison sentences for certain drug offenses. This law was later heavily criticized as having racist ramifications because it allocated longer prison sentences for offenses involving the same amount of crack cocaine (used more often by black Americans) as powder cocaine (used more often by white Americans).Five grams of crack triggered an automatic five-year sentence, while it took 500 grams of powder cocaine to merit the same sentence.

Critics also pointed to data showing that people of color were targeted and arrested on suspicion of drug use at higher rates than whites. Overall, the policies led to a rapid rise in incarcerations for nonviolent drug offenses, from 50,000 in 1980 to 400,000 in 1997. In 2014,nearly half of the 186,000 people serving time in federal prisons in the United States had been incarcerated on drug-related charges, according to theFederal Bureau of Prisons.

Public support for the war on drugs has waned in recent decades. Some Americans and policymakers feel the campaign has been ineffective or has led to racial divide. Between 2009 and 2013, some 40 states took steps to soften their drug laws, lowering penalties and shortening mandatory minimum sentences, according to the Pew Research Center.

In 2010, Congress passed the Fair Sentencing Act (FSA), which reduced the discrepancy between crack and powder cocaine offenses from 100:1 to 18:1.

The recent legalization of marijuana in several states and the District of Columbia has also led to a more tolerant political view on recreational drug use.

Technically, the War on Drugs is still being fought, but with less intensity and publicity than in its early years.

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War on Drugs - Timeline in America, Definition & Facts ...

Key Facts About the War on Drugs – ThoughtCo

What Is the "War on Drugs?"

The "War on Drugs" is a general term used to refer to the federal government's attempts to end the import, manufacture, sale, and use of illegal drugs. It's a colloquial term that does not refer in any meaningful way to a specific policy or objective, but rather to a series of anti-drug initiatives that are vaguely directed towards the common goal of ending drug abuse.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower began what The New York Times then called "a new war on narcotic addiction at the local, national, and international level" with the establishment of an Interdepartmental Committee on Narcotics on November 27, 1954, which was responsible for coordinating executive branch anti-drug efforts. The phrase "War on Drugs" first came into common use after President Richard Nixon used it at a press conference on June 17, 1971, during which he described illegal drugs as "public enemy number one in the United States."

1914: The Harrison Narcotics Tax Act regulates the distribution of narcotics (heroin and other opiates). Federal law enforcement will later incorrectly classify cocaine, a central nervous system stimulant, as a "narcotic" and regulate it under the same legislation.1937: The Marijuana Tax Act extends federal restrictions to cover marijuana.1954: The Eisenhower administration takes a significant, albeit largely symbolic, step in establishing a U.S. Interdepartmental Committee on Narcotics.1970: The Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 establishes federal anti-drug policy as we know it.

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, 55% of federal prisoners and 21% of state-level prisoners are incarcerated on the basis of drug-related offenses. This means that over a half million people are presently incarcerated as a result of anti-drug lawsmore than the population of Wyoming. The illegal drug trade also sustains gang activity, and is indirectly responsible for an unknown number of homicides. (The FBI's Uniform Crime Reports describe 4% of homicides as being directly attributable to the illegal drug trade, but it plays an indirect role in a much larger percentage of homicides.)

According to the White House's National Drug Control Strategy Budgets, as cited in Action America's Drug War Cost Clock, the federal government alone is projected to spend over $22 billion on the War on Drugs in 2009. State spending totals are harder to isolate, but Action America cites a 1998 Columbia University study which found that states spent over $30 billion on drug law enforcement during that year.

The federal government's authority to prosecute drug-related offenses theoretically stems from Article I's Commerce Clause, which grants Congress the authority to "regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian tribes"but federal law enforcement targets drug offenders even when the illegal substance is manufactured and distributed only within state lines.

According to an October 2008 Zogby poll of likely voters, 76% describe the War on Drugs as a failure. In 2009, the Obama administration announced that it would no longer use the phrase "War on Drugs" to refer to federal anti-drug efforts, the first administration in 40 years not to do so.

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Key Facts About the War on Drugs - ThoughtCo

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Gov. Murphy: New Jersey Will Phase Out Freeholder Title In Local GovernmentThe governor tweeted the state would phase out the word, which was coined when only white male landowners could hold office.

Exclusive: Driver In Fatal New Rochelle Police Shooting Speaks OutThe driver involved in a fatal New Rochelle police shooting last month is breaking his silence. CBS2's Tony Aiello reports.

Questions Surface Over Coronavirus Aid Money Received By Catholic ChurchThe Archdiocese Of New York received 15 loans totaling at least $28 million from the Paycheck Protection Program.

Mayor de Blasio Responds To Anti-Police Graffiti Near City Hall; 'Graffiti Is Never Acceptable'Some say it's freedom of expression. To others, it's a blight reminiscent of 1980's New York, with the added element of death threats against police. CBS2's Andrea Grymes reports.

Bad Weather Means Bad News For New York City Restaurants Limited To Outdoor DiningRestaurant owners say the last thing they need is another setback, but theyre getting one in the form of Tropical Storm Fay. CBS2's Dave Carlin reports.

Long Island Authorities Urging Residents To Prepare For Flash Floods From Tropical Storm FayFreeport Mayor Robert Kennedy sent a robocall Monday morning, urging residents to take precautions. CBS2s Natalie Duddridge reports.

Tropical Storm Fay Slams Jersey ShoreFrom Wildwood to Avalon, Tropical Storm Fay left streets and even cars partially submerged. CBS2's Christina Fan reports.

Roads Flood In Newark As Tropical Storm Fay Causes Major ProblemsTropical Storm Fay is bringing heavy downpours. Drivers in Newark were stranded in their cars on flooded roads. CBS2's Jessica Layton reports.

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The Hard Conversation: 'The Wire' Creator David Simon Discusses Policing, The 'War On Drugs' - CBS New York

VOICES: Criminalization too often our response to womens and girls trauma – Dayton Daily News

Note from Dayton Daily News Community Impact Editor Amelia Robinson: The piece below appeared on the Ideas and Voices page Friday, July 10.

Tyra Patterson is community outreach director for Ohio Justice and Policy Center, and an ambassador for Represent Justice and Art For Justice Grantee.

The Dayton native was convicted and sentenced to life in prison at age 19 for the murder and robbery of 15-year-old Michelle Lai on Sept. 20, 1994. She was paroled on Christmas Day after Lais sister Holly Lai Holbrook wrote a letter to Ohio Gov. John Kasich in 2016 vouching for her innocence.

In opposition of the Defund The Police Movement, elected officials defend their stance by pointing to the decrease in the number of arrests in the last 40 years.

What that statistic wont tell you is that while overall arrests are down, the number of arrests for women has increased by 750 percent since 1985.

Since 1970, the number of women in U.S. jails has increased 14-fold, according to the Vera Institute of Justice.

Ohio is on course with the national trend.

There are 4,500 women in Ohios prisons today with many factors contributing to the spike in incarcerated women. They all stem from the criminalization of womens and girls responses to abuse and trauma.

To understand the landscape of the criminal justice system and women, we need to have a bit of cultural and historical context.

We have far to go to get beyond performative actions, but we cant ignore collective enlightenment in recent years.

Black Lives Matter, Pride and MeToo Movements have all been critical in our duty to ensure a world where justice and privilege arent inextricably linked.

RELATED:Tyra Patterson: Life after two decades in prison

However, these revelations havent translated into widespread criminal justice reform.

Starting in the juvenile justice system, incarcerated girls are most often locked up for truancy and running away from home, according to a report by Prison Policy Initiative. These are common responses to abuse.

When we look closer, we see that Black girls are more likely to be incarcerated than white girls.

This is largely attributed to the adultification of Black girls.

Black girls are seen as older and more responsible than white girls.

This stems from years of enslavement in America when white children were allowed to be kids, while Black children particularly Black girls were already in caretaker roles and bearing children, often against their will.

A staggering 80 percent of women in prisons in the United States today have endured abuse of one or multiple forms.

Coping mechanisms include violence against an abuser, substance abuse, depression, rage, and self-harm, among so many others.

These behaviors dip into the territory of criminal activity in small, incremental, tragic, or life-changing ways. But instead of mental health services that prioritize healing, women and girls are met with punitive measures.

According to the Sentencing Project, more than 40 percent of women experiencing incarceration in this country is due to drug charges. The war on drugs has ravaged the Black community for my entire lifetime. Today, it is also being used as a tool of mass incarceration to target women, many of whom are also the victims of crime themselves.

While the value of women is so often unfairly couched in her proximity to a man, it is impossible to ignore that 70 percent of incarcerated women are mothers.

For that reason and many others, the war on drugs and the abuse to prison pipeline are also a war on the well-being of our nations families, children, and the future.

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VOICES: Criminalization too often our response to womens and girls trauma - Dayton Daily News

Militarised Criminal Networks in Mexico and the Challenges They Present to the Military and Police – smallwarsjournal

Militarised Criminal Networks in Mexico and the Challenges They Present to theMilitary and Police

Lieutenant Alexander Elfes,Platoon Commander, 1st Military Police Battalion

The Background

Last year, in discussing Australian Armys contribution to Defence Strategy as a part of Accelerated Warfare, the Chief of Army Lieutenant General Rick Burr stated, Army must contribute to managing or resolving contests before conflict starts. This includes understanding that everything Army does and who Army is people, culture, training, regional partnerships, and joint and interagency contributions all contribute to success in competition. Military Police, as the expeditionary provider of land based policing effects in support of Australian Defence Force (ADF) operations, are uniquely placed to provide a strategic effect through regional partnerships and interagency capacity building to support the types of resolutions Lieutenant General Burr speaks to above.

The 1st Military Police Battalions May edition of the Warrant Officer Class One Ken Bullman OAM lectureseries discussed militarised criminal networks, presented by Dr John P Sullivan. Dr Sullivan, a career Police Officer and former Lieutenant in the Los Angeles Sheriffs Department also specialises in emergency operations, counter-terrorism and intelligence. He is an instructor at the Safe Communities Institute as a part of the Sol Price School of Public Policy at the University of Southern California, a Senior El Centro Fellow at the Small Wars Journal and a Member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Global Observatory of Transnational Criminal Networks. Dr Sullivan discussed the criminal threat in the context of the ongoing Mexican drug wars, and the challenges presented to both the military and civilian police.

The history, intricacies and specifics of the Mexican drug war are complex; much study and writing has been devoted to this topic. The reader should acknowledge that this topic cannot be summarised entirely into a single paper or one hour talk, but note that a multitude of further readings are provided at the end of this document for those interested in this dynamic situation.

The What

Mexico is a contemporary depiction of what is being defined as a criminal insurgency which has plagued the country since late 2005. Authorities in the region estimate that upwards of 40% of the country suffer chronic insecurity, characterised by homicidal violence, kidnappings, a significant death rate and high levels of population displacement. While Mexico is not widely considered a failed state, there are clear examples of sub-state failure with a multitude of non-permissive areas that are not under control of the legitimate state and have been contested for many years. The evolution of organised criminal networks, otherwise known as the cartels in this context, in Mexico can be described in a three generational model focusing on three metrics: the degree of political activity undertaken, the internationalisation or level of global reach, and level of sophistication in the establishment of alliances, conduct and the use of high-end technology. The motivation for criminal activity, regardless of its complexity, still remains as profit and power.

Cartels have evolved over time through three phases of evolution. The first-phase cartels, exemplified by the Medelln cartel, began in Colombia during the 1980s and arose as an outcome of increasing demand for cocaine. The first in Mexico however was the Guadalajara cartel, founded by Miguel ngel Flix Gallardo, a former federal police officer who worked for drug traffickers brokering the corruption of state officials. The Cali group, a second-phase cartel that emerged in the late 1980s, is a more subtle group with a distributed network organisation and decentralised leadership. The lack of a distinct figurehead or chain of command creates organisational clusters that are difficult to identify and target, similar to non-state actors observed in counter insurgency operations. These types of criminal groups are sophisticated in their illicit activities as they rely on corruption, rather than violence, to achieve their end state. A third-phase cartel type exemplified by global connections and criminal enclaves is confronting the state in Mexico. These cartels interact with a range of gangs and criminal enterprises, including street gangs, global mafias, and prison-street gang complexes. Like cartels, gangs can evolve over time from local turf gangs in the first generation to market gangs in the second. The third generation gangs, which rose to prominence in the 1990s, are cross-border or transnational mercenary gangs with the power and financial acquisition aspirations to act as a shadow criminal state. A third-generation gang has evolved political aims to secure its position and operates at the global end of the spectrum, using its sophistication and network to garner power and financial resources, and engage in military-type activities.

Ultimately, these cartels and gangs will always have a relationship with the state that will vary with time, place and severity. In the first instance, cartels will seek to avoid the state for a variety of reasons, including to avoid imprisonment; however they will use the prison system to recruit and train members. When avoidance tactics do not work, they attempt to co-opt or corrupt the state. One such example is Flix Gallardo, who, as a former federal police officer, was known to bribe and extort government officials. When these avenues fail, cartels will challenge and confront the state with military-like force, as is the case in Mexico now. Such brazen challenges to order have created failed communities by straining government capacity, overwhelming both police and the legal systems and perhaps most critically, challenged the legitimacy of the state in the eyes of the local population.

As the country has increased its efforts to combat the war on drugs since 2006, conflict between the Mexican police, military, cartels and various criminal elements has resulted in the deaths of 200,000 people and have challenged the states authority and legitimacy. This situation shows no signs of slowing down. The month of April 2020 has been the deadliest yet, despite the ongoing pandemic, with 105 homicides recorded on 19 April 2020 alone.

When the state cannot provide goods and services to the community due to the actions of the gangs and cartels, the cartels act as surrogate governments. They will extract resources, charge street taxes and dominate the economic sector. They achieve this by establishing small businesses and using violence and corruption to compete with legitimate businesses, thus achieving their goal of dominating the region both economically and eventually politically.

So What?

Clashes between the cartels and the state leads to insecurity in the country and the region. Corruption fuels the insecurity and is exacerbated by the violence. In many areas, the cartels operate with multifaceted violence that creates such a drain on state resources that the legitimacy of the state is threatened. The cartels employ conventional and unconventional military tactics including: armed assaults; targeted assassinations; ambushes; raids; blockades; combined arms assaults; and the use of crude car bombs. These actions are amplified with brutal messaging techniques including hangings from bridges, beheadings and dismemberment. Messaging is often affixed to corpses left in public places as a way of shaping the population towards their political goal. The cartels show adaptation and drive their own innovation in tactics, techniques, and procedures. Thus, criminal insurgent behaviour poses major strategic challenges for those attempting to bring stability to the region. The biggest difference between what military forces train to defeat and the criminal insurgency is a strategic one: the criminal insurgents sole political motive is to gain autonomy and economic control over their territory in what becomes a Narco State.

Policing in such situations is complex. As counterinsurgency teachings illustrate, the military establishes the conditions for stability and order to then transition social control to civil police or transitional gendarmerie or police forces. The level of corruption and militarisation in Mexico makes this impossible as the country is in a state of on-going, high intensity criminal violence: police and the military are equally challenged by criminals and gangsters who operate with near impunity. This is compounded by the challenge of operating within a failed and compromised community, led by corrupt officials and a multitude of security leaks. To effectively operate in this environment, both police and military forces need to rapidly evolve and employ new skills across the tactical, operational, and strategic levels.

Now What?

The requirement to conduct Law Enforcement operations to counter criminal activity is present in all theatres of operations; however if a criminal insurgency presents itself, the ADF needs to be able to pivot to take a greater role in Law Enforcement and adjust between permissive community patrols and non-permissive combat. The ability for soldiers on the ground to operate at opposite ends of the force continuum and transition immediately as the situation presents itself is vital in order to be truly effective. Supplemental investigations would prove effective in feeding the intelligence cycle in a full-spectrum policing effect. This skill set is largely absent among civil police in Mexico, but is essential for countering the level and intricate threat presented in the region.

As the ADFs expeditionary policing capability, the 1st Military Police Battalion is uniquely positioned to contribute to such a mission. At the tactical level, due to the inherent combat survivability, the 1st Military Police Battalion has the capacity and the capability to integrate with combat force elements to provide law enforcement effects and to contribute to host nation police capacity building. The 1st Military Police Battalion also has an existing and developing network with organisations such as the Australian Federal Police, thus enabling the ability to contribute to a Whole of Government approach at the national strategic level. Military Police are able to support the political legitimacy of the host nation in the context of the three generational models metrics as discussed above through the existing legal framework; however should be empowered through other legal instruments such as Memorandums of Understanding and Status of Force Agreements.

Mexico as a case study is an excellent opportunity to explore criminality in the battlespace and how criminal activities, when not addressed effectively, can become strategic wicked problems. It also provides the opportunity, as Military Police, to explore the potential to adapt, modernise, and prepare for an often underestimated consequence of warfare, the security vacuum.

Dr Sullivans lecture Criminal Insurgency in Mexico is available at the Warrant Officer Class 1 Ken Bullman OAM lecture series (KBLS) onThe Cove, May 2020, https://cove.army.gov.au/article/ken-bullman-oam-lecture-series.

Further Readings

For readers interested in further readings on this issue there is a multitude of resources written by Dr Sullivan:

John P. Sullivan, The Missing Mission: Expeditionary Police for Peacekeeping and Transnational Stability, Small Wars Journal, 9 May 2007, https://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/the-missing-mission-expeditionary-police-for-peacekeeping-and-transnational-stability.

John P. Sullivan and Adam Elkus, Red Teaming Criminal Insurgency, Red Team Journal,30 Jan, 2009, https://www.academia.edu/1339071/Red_Teaming_Criminal_Insurgency.

John P. Sullivan, From Drug Wars to Criminal Insurgency: Mexican Cartels, Criminal Enclaves and Criminal Insurgency in Mexico and Central America. Implications for Global Security, Working Paper No9, FMSH, 2011/2012, https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/FMSH-WP/halshs-00694083.

Robert Muggah and John P. Sullivan, The Coming Crime Wars, Foreign Policy, 21 Sep. 2018, https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/09/21/the-coming-crime-wars/.

John P. Sullivan, The Challenges of Territorial Gangs: Civil Strife, Criminal Insurgencies and Crime Wars, Revista Do Ministrio Pblico Militar, Nov. 2019,https://revista.mpm.mp.br/artigo/the-challenges-of-territorial-gangs-civil-strife-criminal-insurgencies-and-crime-wars/

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Militarised Criminal Networks in Mexico and the Challenges They Present to the Military and Police - smallwarsjournal

Don’t Blame the Wave of Overdose Deaths on Coronavirus LockdownBlame Them On the War On Drugs – The National Interest

White House drug czar Jim Carroll toldPoliticoearlier this week that an Office of National Drug Control Policy analysis findsan 11.4 percent yearoveryear increase in opioidrelated overdose deaths during the first four months of 2020. Kentucky has seen a25 percent increase in overdose deaths during the first four months of this year, and West Virginia saw a50 percent increase in deaths since the beginning of the year. The data are incomplete at this point, and not all states have reported in.

Mr. Carroll attributed much of the increase in the overdose rate to anxiety, social isolation, and depression resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. But he also noted that, after aoneyear pause in 2017, the overdose death rate resumed its climb inlate 2018 and 2019. And methamphetaminerelated deaths have been surging for the past few years.

Researchhas shown that overdose deaths from the nonmedical use of licit or illicit drugs have been on asteady exponential increase since at least the late 1970swith different drugs predominating at different periods. And there is no evidence the trend is slowing.

While it remains popular to attribute the opioidrelated overdose crisis to doctors prescribing pain relievers to patients, the evidenceshowsthere is no correlation between prescription volume and the nonmedical opioid use or opioid use disorder.

To be sure, the COVID-19 pandemic is exacerbating the situation. People with substance use disorder need to feel connectedness with others as well as themselves to overcome the problem.Isolation, loneliness, and the anxiety and depressionassociated with quarantines, lockdowns, and the resultant economic dislocations are the opposite of what people suffering from addiction require.

Add to that the fact that the pandemic response hashampered the smooth operation of harm reduction programs, despite efforts to mitigate the disruption with the temporaryrelaxationof many federal regulations. And the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administrationreportsthe sobering fact that many first responders are reluctant to respond to overdose calls with the antidote naloxone, fearing they may contract COVID-19 during the resuscitative process. Of course, this is yet another argument for having the Food and Drug Administration reclassify naloxone asover the counter.

But it should not go without notice that many chronic pain patients have been unable to follow up with their physicians, whose offices have been closed (or office hours restricted) in order to reduce the spread of COVID-19. And many elective procedures to treat or eliminate these painful conditions have been postponed or cancelled because of blanket bans on elective procedures. This was discussed at aCato onlineeventin May. In desperation, many patients might be seeking relief in the dangerous black market fueled by drug prohibition.

Speaking of prohibition, the drug czar told Politico that the pandemic response has caused Customs and Border Patrol agents to reduce screening for drugs smuggled across the border.

The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on substance use, substance use disorder, and overdose deaths must not be ignored or underemphasized. But, at the end of the day, thedriving forcebehind overdose deaths has always beendrug prohibition. Andso it will remain, until it is repealed.

This article by Jeffrey A. Singer firstappearedinCATOon July 1, 2020.

Image: Reuters.

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Don't Blame the Wave of Overdose Deaths on Coronavirus LockdownBlame Them On the War On Drugs - The National Interest

My Turn: Dean M. Esserman: Time to rethink what we ask of police – The Providence Journal

Blue is my favorite color. It has always been, since I was a child.

For 25 years, I have proudly worn the blue uniform as the police chief in four police departments: New York State MTA, Stamford, Providence and New Haven. I now serve as the senior counselor of the National Police Foundation.

I am also the father of a daughter and two sons, one of whom is white and the other is Black. They are treated the same when they are inside my home, but not once they walk out the door.

Use of excessive force by police officers, only some of which is captured on video, is unforgivable.

Almost always, its a blue uniform using force and a Black man receiving it. And now a call has risen in communities across our nation to limit the police, to protest the police and to defund the police.

We cannot be deaf to these cries, nor dismissive of them. They are the voices of people demanding to be heard. We would do well to remember the word of James Baldwin many years ago when he cautioned: "Not everything that is faced can be changed, but I know that nothing can be changed until it is faced." The issue of the legitimacy of American policing is being questioned. This must be faced.

Recent events beg us to pause and reflect on why we have police.

American police departments trace their history back to the founding of the London Metropolitan Police. In 1829, all members of the Metropolitan Police received a manual authored by Sir Robert Peel in which he identified the nine principles of policing. The principles opened with the following two: 1) To prevent crime and disorder, as an alternative to their repression by military force and by severity of legal punishment. 2) To recognize always that the power of the police to fulfill their functions and duties is dependent on public approval of their existence, actions and behavior, and on their ability to secure and maintain public respect.

American policing was founded on Peels guiding principles. Policing in our country was never a national effort; rather it took root in every town and county, established by local ordinance.

We are at risk of losing the consent of the people and, in particular, people of color in our country.

The badge and the blue uniform no longer automatically confer trust and legitimacy to many Americans.

The responsibility for this mistrust falls on many of us over many generations. Some of it goes back to years of enforced segregation in all of our institutions and some of it goes back to what America asked of its police. The police were asked to lead the fight in the War on Crime and then later in the War on Drugs and willingly accepted. Asked to regulate the speed of cars and traffic laws, asked to break up fights and disturbances on the streets and inside of citizens private homes and monitor and control demonstrations. And primarily in Southern states, asked to be slave patrols and preside over lynchings. They were asked to enforce the segregation laws. And they willingly accepted that as well.

Today, the police are being asked to address homelessness and a mentally ill person in crisis. All willingly accepted. The police in every community have become the agency of last resort. America can call 911 for any problem. The police can legally use force and the threat of force to gain compliance. They can arrest.

We must rethink what we have asked. As Peel warned in 1829, "to recognize always that the power of the police is dependent on public approval of their existence, actions and behavior and to maintain public respect." We would do well to remember his words.

The road ahead is still long, but in Providence, I can see blue sky ahead.

Dean M. Esserman is a former chief of the Providence Police Department.

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My Turn: Dean M. Esserman: Time to rethink what we ask of police - The Providence Journal

Public Enemy Number One: New Doc Takes on the War on Drugs – Westword

Denver film producer Chris Chiari says it was serendipitous that Public Enemy Number One, his documentary about the War on Drugs and its consequences, became available at roughly the same time media has been flush with images of over-equipped cops beating Black Lives Matter protesters on American streets.

Although the War on Drugs has been going on for fifty years, some of its fallout has been prominently on display for several weeks.

Theres a clear relationship, says Chiari. The correlation between drugs as a political tool for enhanced funding, and then what they use the enhanced funding for.

Police departments, he says, have long used, under the pretense of fighting the War on Drugs, tools like civil forfeiture to pay for toys they wouldnt otherwise have. The rise of the global war on terror has continued that tradition, with police departments given the military hardware of their dreams, everything from tanks to the sound weapons used to disperse protestors.

The documentary, directed by Robert Rippberger, also shows how politicians, led by President Richard Nixon, started the War on Drugs in the late 1960s as a way to consolidate more law enforcement power, traditionally a state and local matter, into the hands of the federal government.

Its starting to feel a lot like 1968 again. Trump is even using the language again, Chiari says. 'The 'law and order' president?' Hes using Nixons script.

Politicians also lumped marijuana in with much more harmful drugs like heroin as a way to marginalize Nixons perceived enemies namely black folks and people on the left politically. A person who is convicted of a felony can no longer vote,in many cases. Marijuana has been legalized or at least decriminalized across much of America now, but for decades, thousands of people have received insanely long prison sentences for selling and sometimes just possessing the drug.

They couldnt restrict what people said, their freedom of speech, Chiari says. So they take something that people commonly put in their mouth and make the act of putting that in their mouth a felony. It restricts someones political voice from that point on.

The result was a country with the highest number of people locked up per capita in the world, most of them black or brown, and cops that look more like they are ready to storm Fallujah rather than hand out parking tickets. Rising NBA star Len Biass death of a cocaine overdose in 1986 helped drag the Democratic Party into the fray, so overfunding the police is an issue on both the left and right sides of the political spectrum.

We're looking at it now through a lens [from] fifty years later, and looking at what's happening with crime at least our definition of crime, he says. We look at what's happened with incarceration, and to say that there is not a racial bias to incarceration, I will not make that statement.

Chiari is a long time marijuana user he owns a piece of a Denver dispensary and is unabashedly pro-cannabis and says he strived to present a balanced view of the War on Drugs and its consequences on American society fifty years out. The documentary includes interviews with addiction specialists; Keith Stroup, founder of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws; three former drug czars and several people from the anti-marijuana movement, among others. Rapper and actor Ice-T, who has an executive-producer credit on the film, also sits for an interview. (For the record, Ice-T doesnt smoke marijuana, as he finds it interferes with his hustle.)

Chiari says the documentary was somewhat inspired by the Netflix documentary 13th, which explores the intersection of race, justice and mass incarceration in the United States. The documentary was named after the Thirteenth Amendment, which ended slavery and involuntary servitude except for punishment for a crime.

I hope in any meaningful way we can contribute at least a part to this overall dialogue, he says. Films like 13th are becoming required viewing to grasp where we are and the types of discussions we need to have to move toward. Im hopeful we fit into that, and I think we do. It couldnt be any more timely.

Public Enemy Number One is available to rent or buy online.

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Public Enemy Number One: New Doc Takes on the War on Drugs - Westword

Devin Reaves: We can’t have black liberation without ending War on Drugs – TribLIVE

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As a black man in America, I live in constant fear, and as a leader of an organization that aims to end the war on drugs in Pennsylvania, I also have tremendous fear for people who use drugs especially those of us who are black and brown. What we all want is liberation.

Liberation is an ideal this nations founders valued so much that it was enshrined in the Declaration of Independence. Yet it took longer for some of us to get to it than others, and some of us today are still not free.

Today, June 19, we celebrate Juneteenth, the day the last slaves in America were freed. The reality is, however, none of us are free while racist drug policies commonly known as the War on Drugs continues to enslave and oppress our communities.

The past few weeks have been filled with protests, unrest and pain. Police violence, the very issue we are protesting, has been on full display; the countys longstanding war against black and brown people is finally in plain sight, and hopefully now more than ever, racial injustice is something none of us can ignore. I dare to hope that things will change. My real hope is that black people may finally find the freedom that was promised in the Emancipation Proclamation.

Racist drug policies date back to the early 1900s, and the War on Drugs was formalized in 1971 by President Nixon. The policies that followed represented a new and disguised evolution of one of Americas greatest sins slavery.

And it worked. Slowly and methodically, while using the War on Drugs as a tool for racist oppression, people were criminalized for their existence, brought into a cyclical system of control and excluded from actively participating in society.

Black Americans are incarcerated at 5.1 times the rate of white Americans, not due to differences in rates of drug use, drug sales or crimes committed but rather due to racist stereotypes, prejudices, policies and practices that reach all parts of both the criminal injustice system and our entire society.

Our land is governed by laws, so now lets dismantle the bad ones. We hear politicians recognize the devastating failures of the War on Drugs and methodically repeat we cant arrest our way out of the overdose epidemic. These words mean little when our current laws are designed to do exactly that: arrest, incarcerate and oppress.

There are thousands of laws today that codify and perpetuate a system that inflicts violence against black people. These laws are oppression by design. They started during slavery and continued through the Jim Crow era until today, where they continue to oppress and harm black folks. White America was blind to these laws until the misnamed opioid epidemic landed on their doorstep. Only then did we hear louder cries for more compassionate responses to drug use and addiction. Truth be told, the only reason we are taking a more compassionate response to drug use today is that suburban white kids are dying of overdose.

This more recent phenomenon of white overdose deaths is only new because of the racist design and enforcement of War on Drugs policies which were historically directed at black and brown people. The War on Drugs has fueled mass incarceration, and destroyed black and brown communities across our state and our nation. These policies have also destroyed American life on both sides of the color line.

Tearing down statues, painting over murals, posting on social media, making statements of solidarity and acknowledging the voices of us black people means little. The days of platitudes, half measures and talk without change are over. Only direct action including speaking with legislators and decision-makers in your community and supporting black-led organizations that are working to change policy and deconstruct the War on Drugs will liberate the black community and start the healing process.

I call on all people, especially white people who stand with us in the Keystone State to educate themselves, to use their privilege to think about the intersectionality of the issues at hand and declare through action that now is the time for change. We as black people need to hold the power that has never been held by us. We need to live in a society that sees our humanity, honors us, respects us and treats us with equality that belongs to every being who walks this earth. It is time for black liberation.

Devin Reaves is co-founder and executive director of PA Harm Reduction Coalition.

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