Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2000 Source: Tribune Review (PA) Copyright: 2000 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://triblive.com/ Author: Tom O'Connell STOPPED SHORT The George Will column your newspaper carried Sept. 10 ("U.S.'s Colombia policy `barren of historical sense'") is one of the most interesting exercises in political journalism I have ever seen. Will's primary target is Bill Clinton's dissembling on behalf of "Plan Colombia." The plan itself, Will tells us, is patently absurd: "peace through herbicides." He derides Clinton for having us believe that American military helicopters will be used "as farm implements." Although Will goes into detail to develop his premise, he stops short of stating that U.S. drug policy - which Clinton insists is the major reason for our intervention - is equally absurd. Although that idea is strongly implied, Will carefully avoids saying so directly, perhaps because so many of the most ardent supporters of that policy - and advocates for Plan Colombia - are themselves staunch Republicans. Will ends by relating an early '70s exchange in which George Schultz (long a critic of drug prohibition) twitted Patrick Moynihan for assuming heroin supply could be "controlled" by governmental agreements and repeating Sir Lewis Namier's admonition that the study of history should provide us with a sense of "how things do not work." The most obvious conclusion from these examples is not simply that U.S. policy in Colombia is wrong; it's that American drug prohibition is also wrong. It's too bad Will just couldn't bring himself to say so. Tom O'Connell San Mateo, Calif. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk