(excerpted from)
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NEWS FROM THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY
2600 Virginia Avenue, NW, Suite 100
Washington DC 20037
World Wide Web: http://www.LP.org
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For release: May 26, 2000
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For additional information:
George Getz, Press Secretary
Phone: (202) 333-0008 Ext. 222
E-Mail: 76214.3676@Compuserve.com
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On Memorial Day, let's remember
the War on Drugs' 140,000 victims

        WASHINGTON, DC -- As America prepares to honor its military 
dead on Memorial Day 2000, perhaps it's time to remember the 140,000 
tragic victims of another war: The War on Drugs.

        That's the very serious suggestion offered by the Libertarian 
Party today, as the nation gets ready to commemorate with parades and 
ceremonies the men and women who died fighting for freedom.

        "The 140,000 men, women, and children who died because of the 
War on Drugs are just as deserving of remembrance as the military 
personnel who died fighting America's other wars," said Steve Dasbach, 
the party's national director.

        "Keep in mind, the War on Drugs has been one of the longest, 
costliest, and deadliest wars in U.S. history. The only difference is 
that our fallen veterans were killed by the guns and bombs of a foreign 
power -- while the victims of the War on Drugs were killed by the 
policies of their own government."

        But Memorial Day traditionally honors only war dead. Rhetoric 
aside, does the "War on Drugs" really qualify as a war?

        Absolutely, said Dasbach: The War on Drugs has lasted longer 
than any other war in U.S. history, has been more deadly than most 
conventional wars, has cost billions of dollars, and involves tens of 
thousands of military personnel. The numbers:

        * Duration: President Richard Nixon first officially declared a 
War on Drugs in 1972 -- so the conflict has been raging for 28 years.

        "The War on Drugs has lasted longer than World War I, World War 
II, and the Vietnam War combined," noted Dasbach. "And since the enemy 
- -- the 36% of Americans who have used drugs, or 94.7 million people -- 
just gets stronger every year, there's no end in sight."

        * Victims: Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman estimated that 
drug prohibition causes 5,000 homicides a year -- children killed in 
drive-by shootings, adults killed in drug-related robberies and 
murders, and so on.

        "If that number is accurate, the 28-year-long War on Drugs has 
resulted in 140,000 American casualties -- far more than the 
battlefield deaths of the Vietnam and Korean wars combined," said 
Dasbach.

        * Cost: Since 1989, the armed forces have spent in excess of $7 
billion on anti-drug operations. In fiscal 1997 alone, the Pentagon 
appropriated $947 million for military anti-drug efforts.

        Where does that money go? To pay for the military personnel who 
inspect cargo for the U.S. Customs Agency, translate wiretaps for the 
DEA, analyze military intelligence files on foreign drug gangs, fly 
helicopters to transport police officers, track money-laundering 
operations for the Treasury Department, scan the Gulf of Mexico with 
radar, and disrupt drug sales on the streets of Washington, DC.

        * Troops: More than 8,000 military personnel and thousands of 
National Guard troops are currently participating in anti-drug missions 
on U.S. soil, according to government figures.

        "And those numbers don't include the 19,000 state and local law 
enforcement officials who are assigned full-time to the War on Drugs, 
and who are increasingly being armed with military-style weapons and 
tanks," said Dasbach. "The fact is, a massive army has been recruited 
for this war."

        In addition, high-tech military equipment has been thrown into 
the anti-drug battle, including AWAC reconnaissance planes and 
Relocatable-Over-the-Horizon Radar (ROTHER) installations.

        But despite all that money, equipment, and personnel, the DEA 
admits that only about 10% of illegal drugs entering the U.S. are 
seized by law enforcement officials, according to the Los Angeles Times 
- -- which means that the War on Drugs has been a 90% defeat for the U.S. 
government.

        And that's why, said Dasbach, it's time to end the Drug War, 
declare a Drug Peace, and commemorate on Memorial Day the victims of 
this tragic war.

        "We honor the men and women of our armed forces because they 
were willing to sacrifice their lives to protect our nation," he said. 
"We should honor the 140,000 victims of the War on Drugs because they 
were sacrificed by politicians in an unwinnable war that has ravaged 
our nation for 28 years.

        "Our only hope is that by remembering them -- and the misguided 
war that killed them -- they will not have died in vain."


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