Pubdate: Sun, 18 Feb 2001 Source: Chapel Hill News (NC) Copyright: 2001 Chapel Hill News Contact: P.O. Box 870, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Fax: (919) 968-4953 Website: http://www.chapelhillnews.com/ Author: Noreen Ordronneau SEEK OTHER SOLUTIONS IN WAR AGAINST DRUGS Helicopters and guns supplied by the U.S. taxpayers under "Plan Colombia" will not solve the problems of poverty in the Andes nor drug addiction in the United States. In recent confirmation hearings, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld observed that the U.S. has a drug-demand problem on its hands, not a supply problem. If the effort to eradicate the cultivation and production of coca in Colombia is successful, production will simply move to another country -- Ecuador, Venezuela, Brazil -- the potential list is endless. As long as demand persists, a supply will be found. Money would be better spent on drug treatment on demand here in the United States instead of incarceration. "We jail about 450,000 people every year in the United States for non-violent drug offenses," says ex-drug czar Barry McCaffrey. Aerial herbicide spraying in Colombia destroys small farmers' edible crops along with the coca. Without food crops such as corn, yucca, bananas and fish ponds, small farmers face starvation. Secretary of State Colin Powell and the Bush administration face a quagmire in Colombia. Fighting a war isn't the solution. As long as Americans crave cocaine, farmers in Colombia --and elsewhere --- will continue to cultivate the lucrative leaves. Colombia poses a major challenge for the Bush administration. Secretary Powell could help lead the United States back from an ill-conceived, expensive military intervention that threatens to spill into other Andean countries. In the end, only a negotiated peace settlement that addresses land reform and economic inequality will end the 36-year-old civil war that has devastated Colombia. Noreen Ordronneau, Carrboro - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk