News (Media Awareness Project) - US: USA Today: DEA Chief: Drug Fight Lacks Desire |
Title: | US: USA Today: DEA Chief: Drug Fight Lacks Desire |
Published On: | 1999-02-19 |
Source: | USA Today (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 13:02:14 |
DEA CHIEF: DRUG FIGHT LACKS DESIRE
WASHINGTON -- The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration says the
nation has neither the will nor the resources to win the drug war.
DEA Administrator Thomas Constantine, in an interview Thursday, said that
curbing drug use is not a high enough priority with the American people. He
also said the nation has not made the financial commitment to curb the flow
of illegal drugs into the USA.
"The use of drugs is really a prevention issue, and the long-term solution
for this nation is when our own citizens, families, teachers and employers
take this as seriously as they do the Y2K (Year 2000 computer) problem," he
said.
Constantine said he has faith that one day the nation will focus on the
issue, but at this point "I just don't think that we've paid enough
attention to it."
Despite having an army of 8,000 employees and a $ 1.4 billion budget,
Constantine said the DEA has fewer resources than international drug rings.
"I know one drug mafia in Mexico alone that makes $ 2 billion every single
year selling cocaine and methamphetamine in the United States, and it has
better technical equipment and countersurveillance equipment and armored
cars than we do."
Despite the confiscation of record amounts of drugs at the borders,
Constantine said interdiction will not solve the problem. "The key is not
in the source countries," he said. "The key is in the United States, within
those things we can control."
Many of Constantine's comments echo those of White House drug czar Barry
McCaffrey, who recently released a plan focusing on drug awareness
education and the treatment of addicts.
Constantine thinks "vigorous law enforcement is part and parcel of the
treatment," McCaffrey said Thursday. "But he, like I, think it is the
parents and coalitions of folks who talk prevention who at the end of the
day will make the difference."
Constantine's views on interdiction, however, are not shared by members of
Congress, who last year approved nearly $ 3 billion for drug interdiction
in Peru, Bolivia and Colombia. The author of the bill that provided the
funding, Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla., has criticized the Clinton
administration for not doing enough to slow the flow of drugs.
McCollum was not available Thursday for comment.
In 1998, DEA arrests and seizures of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and
marijuana set records for the 25-year-old agency. The DEA arrested 36,835
people last year, an 11% increase from 1997, when the agency made 33,160
arrests.
WASHINGTON -- The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration says the
nation has neither the will nor the resources to win the drug war.
DEA Administrator Thomas Constantine, in an interview Thursday, said that
curbing drug use is not a high enough priority with the American people. He
also said the nation has not made the financial commitment to curb the flow
of illegal drugs into the USA.
"The use of drugs is really a prevention issue, and the long-term solution
for this nation is when our own citizens, families, teachers and employers
take this as seriously as they do the Y2K (Year 2000 computer) problem," he
said.
Constantine said he has faith that one day the nation will focus on the
issue, but at this point "I just don't think that we've paid enough
attention to it."
Despite having an army of 8,000 employees and a $ 1.4 billion budget,
Constantine said the DEA has fewer resources than international drug rings.
"I know one drug mafia in Mexico alone that makes $ 2 billion every single
year selling cocaine and methamphetamine in the United States, and it has
better technical equipment and countersurveillance equipment and armored
cars than we do."
Despite the confiscation of record amounts of drugs at the borders,
Constantine said interdiction will not solve the problem. "The key is not
in the source countries," he said. "The key is in the United States, within
those things we can control."
Many of Constantine's comments echo those of White House drug czar Barry
McCaffrey, who recently released a plan focusing on drug awareness
education and the treatment of addicts.
Constantine thinks "vigorous law enforcement is part and parcel of the
treatment," McCaffrey said Thursday. "But he, like I, think it is the
parents and coalitions of folks who talk prevention who at the end of the
day will make the difference."
Constantine's views on interdiction, however, are not shared by members of
Congress, who last year approved nearly $ 3 billion for drug interdiction
in Peru, Bolivia and Colombia. The author of the bill that provided the
funding, Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla., has criticized the Clinton
administration for not doing enough to slow the flow of drugs.
McCollum was not available Thursday for comment.
In 1998, DEA arrests and seizures of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and
marijuana set records for the 25-year-old agency. The DEA arrested 36,835
people last year, an 11% increase from 1997, when the agency made 33,160
arrests.
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