US drug czar calls for end to ‘war on drugs’

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The Obama administration’s  top drug cop plans to spend more money on treating addiction  and scale down the “war on drugs” rhetoric as part of an  overhaul of U.S. counternarcotics strategy.

But don’t expect the White House to consider legalizing  marijuana, drug czar Gil Kerlikowske said yesterday.
“The discussion about legalization is not a part of the  president’s vocabulary under any circumstances and it’s not a  part of mine,” Kerlikowske said in a telephone interview.
As head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy,  Kerlikowske coordinates the efforts of 32 government agencies  to limit illicit drug use.

He has been in office less than a month, but the Obama  administration has already taken a less confrontational  approach to the nation’s 35 million illegal drug users.

The FBI is no longer raiding state-approved facilities that  distribute marijuana for medical purposes, and the White House  has told Congress to eliminate the sentencing disparity between  powder and crack cocaine.
Kerlikowske said he hopes to ditch the chest-thumping  military rhetoric at the center of U.S. policy since President  Nixon first declared a “war on drugs” 40 years ago.

“We should stop using the metaphor about the war on drugs,”  said Kerlikowske, a career police officer who headed the  Justice Department’s community-policing initiative under  President Clinton. “People look at it as a war on them, and  frankly we’re not at war with the people of this country.”

Nevertheless, Kerlikowske also plans to disrupt trafficking  across the Mexican border through a new focus on the guns and  cash that travel south, as well as the drugs coming north.

U.S. drug policy has been criticized for focusing too much  on fighting supplies from Colombia and other countries in South  America and not enough on curbing demand at home, the world’s  largest drug market.

Kerlikowske said a more balanced approach was needed, with  greater emphasis on treatment programs, especially in prisons.
“It’s clear that if they go to prison and they have a drug  problem and you don’t treat it and they return … to the same  neighborhood from whence they came that you are going to have  the same problem,” he said. “Quite frankly people in  neighborhoods, police officers, et cetera, are tired of  recycling the problem. Let’s try and fix it.”

Obama, who described youthful marijuana and cocaine use in  his autobiography, has proposed a budget for the fiscal yearstarting in October that boosts funding for substance abuse  programs by 4 percent to $3.6 billion.

Needle exchanges for intravenous drug users, now banned at  the federal level, will be considered a healthcare issue, he  said.
As Seattle police chief, Kerlikowske worked in a city that  ran a needle-exchange program, celebrates an annual “Hempfest”  that draws tens of thousands of marijuana smokers, and passed a  referendum that made enforcing marijuana laws the department’s  lowest priority.

Other state and local governments have loosened their  marijuana laws as well. Medical marijuana is now legal in 13  states, and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger last month  welcomed a public debate about proposals to legalize and tax  the drug.
While that’s not going to happen on the federal level,  Kerlikowske suggested the government should devote less effort  to prosecuting nonviolent drug users.

“We have finite resources,” he said. “We need to devote  those finite resources toward those people who are the most  dangerous to the community.”