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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Column: Patriots Don't Use Heroin
Title:US: Column: Patriots Don't Use Heroin
Published On:2001-09-28
Source:Cincinnati Post (OH)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 07:41:23
PATRIOTS DON'T USE HEROIN

Calling all patriotic Americans: Now is the time to rise up in defense of
your country.

Translation: Real Americans don't do drugs. It's no secret that terrorist
groups around the world are often linked to illegal drugs. Government
leaders believe Osama bin Laden, the main suspect in the recent deadly
assault on New York and Washington, may have used drug money to finance
some of his terrorist acts.

With that in mind, government leaders are trying to tap into the patriotic
fervor sweeping the country and convince Americans that illegal drug use is
not only dangerous behavior. It's un-American.

"By stopping these drug traffickers, we are stopping the flow of cash used
to fuel these terrorist cells," said Ohio Congressman Rob Portman, the
Terrace Park Republican.

Portman was named last week as one of three co-chairmen of an anti-drug
task force appointed by House Speaker Dennis Hastert. The 48-member panel
will meet regularly and advise the speaker on issues such as reducing the
demand for illegal drugs and stemming their flow into the United States.

The timing is merely coincidence: The task force had been in the works
before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

But Portman and other government leaders see an advantage to linking
America's ongoing war on drugs to America's new war on terrorism.

"By going after the illegal drug trade, we reduce the ability of these
terrorists to launch attacks against the United States," Hastert said.

Recent events underscore the connection.

Just this week, leaders of the Taliban government in Afghanistan threatened
to inundate Western markets with heroin if the United States launches a
military strike on their country. The Taliban reportedly told farmers they
again will be allowed to grow opiate poppies used in the production of heroin.

Roughly 70 percent of the world's opium comes from Afghanistan, where
farmers as poor as the dirt they tend cultivate and sell poppies to feed
their families. Last year, Taliban leaders banned the farming of poppies,
and anti-drug warriors reported a sharp decline in opium produced in areas
under the Taliban's control.

Before the ban, the Taliban taxed the sale and production of poppies and
used the proceeds to buy arms. Some of the money apparently ended up in the
hands of bin Laden, who has been hiding out in Afghanistan. The U.S.
government believes bin Laden hired out his followers to guard drug
laboratories and transport the drugs, then used the proceeds to finance
terrorist activities.

"By Americans spending money on their drug habits, we are helping to
support the Taliban government, which protects terrorism," Portman said.

Portman has been actively fighting illegal drugs on the domestic front for
several years. He authored the Drug-Free Communities Act, which provides
grassroots anti-drug groups with federal matching funds. He also helped
found and currently serves as president of the Coalition for a Drug-Free
Greater Cincinnati, which brings together parents, teachers, religious
leaders, the media and other community leaders to educate children about
the dangers of drug abuse.

Portman will focus mainly on domestic drug abuse as a member of the
speaker's task force. He wants to examine how anti-drug programs can reach
deeper into poor and rural communities, look for more effective treatment
programs in prisons and conduct more outreach through the Internet.

But the task force also plans to take a long hard look at the international
drug trade, particularly in light of the terrorist attacks in America.

The long-term goal is to develop policies that get to the root of the
problem. On the international front, that could mean figuring out ways to
stop the heroin trade in Afghanistan or pressuring Turkey or Pakistan to
cut off the flow of illegal drugs into the United States.

"This is not going to solve the problem we face," Portman said, "but it's
one small piece of it."
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