-Caveat Lector-
What hypocrisy! The following press release from the DOD saying the military must be drug free at the same time as our Air Force pilots in Afghanistan are being dosed with amphetamines (speed) to "enhance" their performance.
 
Also, Special Operations troops are being asked to (temporarily) resign from the military and join the CIA. Why? To guard the heroin route?
 
JR
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2002 10:47 AM
Subject: Hollis: Drug-Free Troops Key to All Military Success

By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17, 2002 -- It's paramount to mission
success that service members remain drug-free –- especially
as America continues the war against global terrorism,
DoD's senior anti-drug official said here.

André D. Hollis, deputy assistant secretary of defense for
counternarcotics, said drug use continues to decline across
the military, but that's not good enough. "Any drug use is
incompatible with military service," he emphasized,
especially since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

"Each and every member of our community must do their job
in helping to prosecute the anti-terror war," Hollis noted.
"When you use drugs, you put everyone else that you work
with in danger. It's even more important, during this war,
that everyone remain drug-free."

He said the U.S. military will not rest on its anti-drug
laurels and referred to the Defense Department's annual Red
Ribbon Week activities Oct. 21-23 at the Pentagon. The
observance will feature award ceremonies, and celebrity
appearances by Miss USA Shauntay Hinton, U.S. Navy-
sponsored auto racer Jon Wood, the country group Ricochet,
and others.

Since 1990, Hollis pointed out, DoD has annually recognized
units or installations within each service, the National
Guard and defense agencies that have outstanding anti-drug
programs and activities. This year's Secretary of Defense
Community Drug Awareness Award honorees are:

III Corps and Fort Hood, Texas -- Army Substance Abuse
Program.

Camp Pendleton (Calif.) Drug Demand Reduction Campaign.

Patrol Squadron 30, Naval Air Station Jacksonville,
Fla.

Drug Demand Reduction Program, Edwards Air Force Base,
Calif.

 "Knight Vision," Florida National Guard Drug Demand
Reduction Program.

Columbus Employee Assistance Program, Defense Logistics
Agency's Defense Supply Center, Columbus, Ohio.

Since 2001, DoD has presented the Fulcrum Shield Award for
Excellence in Youth Anti-Drug Programs to military-
affiliated youth organizations. This year's winner is the
"Dover Youth to Youth" program in Dover, N.H.

All the winners will receive their awards Oct. 21 at the
Pentagon. Such successful drug awareness programs make a
difference, Hollis noted.

"Service members are role models for the nation's youth.
Anti-drug venues like Red Ribbon Week make a difference for
service members and American youth alike," he noted. "Each
child who hears our message and sees our role models and
decides, 'I'm not going to use drugs,' well, that's
important. That's an American life that we potentially
saved.

"That's something we all swore to uphold when we joined the
service: to protect Americans from enemies, foreign and
domestic," he added.

Drug use is not tolerated at anytime or anywhere within the
military, whether a service member flies a jet, drives a
tank or wields "a rifle or a pen," Hollis emphasized.

He made special reference to the "club drug" ecstasy,
noting it can injure and kill users. Anyone in uniform
using ecstasy -- or any other illegal drug -- will be
caught, he said.

"Using drugs is not worth the risk of a dishonorable
discharge," he said.

Hollis said DoD since 1988 has supported national anti-drug
efforts by providing command, control, communications and
intelligence support to U.S. law enforcement agencies.
Additionally, he said DoD is the lead government agency for
the detection and monitoring of drug flow into the United
States.

For example, Hollis noted, many National Guard members play
vital roles in community anti-drug education efforts and
also provide aerial and ground reconnaissance assets to law
enforcement officials.

Hollis said he relishes sharing his anti-drug message with
service members stationed worldwide. It's important for
service members to realize that buying and using drugs most
likely may aid America's enemies, he said.

"There is a group of terrorists that generates revenue
through drug trafficking," Hollis said. "We believe that
group will increase its trafficking, especially as law
enforcement officials identify and freeze its bank accounts
and other assets."

Additionally, he noted, "there's lots of drug activity in
the Middle East, in Central Asia and Southwest Asia that
may support folks who have evil intentions toward the
United States."

Red Ribbon Week began as a local tribute to Drug
Enforcement Administration Special Agent Enrique "Kiki" S.
Camarena, who was kidnapped and killed by drug traffickers
in Guadalajara, Mexico, in 1985. The National Family
Partnership adopted the Red Ribbon campaign in 1988,
expanding it nationwide to advocate youth drug abstinence.

DoD joined national Red Ribbon Week observances in 1990 and
established its Secretary of Defense Community Drug
Awareness Awards.

_______________________________________________________
NOTE:  This is a plain text version of a web page.  If your e-mail program
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http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Oct2002/n10172002_200210172.html
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be viewed at this web page.


====================================================

Visit the Defense Department's Web site for the latest news
and information about America's response to the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks and the war against terrorism: "Defend America"
at http://www.DefendAmerica.mil.

====================================================
Visit the "Department of Defense Homeland Security" Web site
at http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/homeland/ to learn more
about the Department of Defense role in homeland security.

====================================================

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