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Views from the Inside Out by Robert Taliaferro
News & Letters, June 2001


War on drugs

The war on drugs in this country expands well beyond its borders, and Americans are not the only people paying the price of community militarization.

In Colombia, government-backed "illegal" paramilitary forces often lead the strikes against rebel forces who are said to expedite the drug trade. The operation is funded-in part-by over a billion dollars of mainly military aid from the U.S.

Some of that aid is in the form of Vietnam-era Huey helicopters, and defoliant that brings to mind the Agent Orange used in Vietnam. The defoliant is dumped on the fields of coca leaf in Colombia, but is indiscriminate in its destruction, killing "legal" crops as well.

Prior to spraying, however, the paramilitary forces are charged with the task of "relocating" the population of the area, and this relocation has resulted in reports of massacres of suspected sympathizers of guerrilla units in the target areas.

According to human rights groups, at least 100 people are massacred each year in one province in Colombia that is said to be the stronghold of FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrillas. This province is also, reportedly, responsible for over half of Colombia's annual cocaine production.

The military has a quaint phrase called "collateral damage" that is often used when describing the destruction of property-or people-that is not part of the main objective.

The war on drugs in Colombia also has its collateral damage, not only with legal crops being destroyed by defoliant, but in people being illegally arrested, and often killed, simply for being at the wrong place, at the wrong time.

AID OF PARAMILITARIES

Though it is said that the U.S. has been placing pressure on Colombia to distance itself from paramilitary groups, it was only after repeated UN complaints about human rights abuses that Colombia-at least on the surface-made efforts to curb its affiliation with such groups, yet military leaders on the ground often use such groups as the spearhead of other military actions. In fact, many members of the paramilitary groups are former soldiers of such units as Colombia's 24th Brigade.

The brigade is under investigation in Colombia for human rights abuses, and though it is restricted from receiving U.S. aid because of those abuses, its former commander is currently up for promotion.

In the United States, the war on drugs has led to the incarceration or judicial sanctions of millions of people, affecting the lives-with its collateral damage-of millions more. It has spawned an industry that has become self-perpetuating, a feeding frenzy of fear that has strangled this country in razor wire, steel doors, and concrete walls.

In the United States, the war on drugs has become synonymous with cultural genocide, especially as it relates to African Americans. Though we do not see the massacres of whole villages such as one might see in Colombia, the loss of a person killed in a hail of bullets because they were driving while Black or Brown, can seem like a massacre to a family that depended on that person for financial or emotional support.

One of the ironies of the war on drugs is that 100 years ago cocaine was a popular drug in this country, used in everything from everyday remedies to a popular soft drink that is now sold in a bright red can.

White Southerners, in particular, were at the forefront of outlawing cocaine-not because of its addictive properties but because of stories of how the drug made Blacks almost impervious to bullets, and how they became aggressive and unruly when confronted with traditional law enforcement techniques of white police at the time.

Equally ironic is that the largest population of abusers at the time were white middle class men and women.

WAR ALONG RACIAL LINES

One hundred years later, the war on drugs is still fought on racial lines, even though the largest percentage of drug abusers in the country are still white, while the largest population of incarcerated and abused people are those of color. And in Colombia, the coca plants are resilient, while "legal" cr ops may never recover from the defoliants that were sprayed to destroy their horticultural relatives. Even if the war on drugs could be won on the ground through militarization of communities both here and abroad, one wonders what the effect will be on such places like remote provinces in Colombia that were battlefields for that war.

What future is there for a country's growth potential if their land is spoiled by airborne poisons sprayed over fertile land, lending the cultivation of "legal" crops as a relatively impossible task in an impoverished area. And most of all, what good are legal crops, if all the farmers that can grow them are dead?


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