http://www.antiwar.com/bock/b051601.html



International Aspects of Drug Wars Undercovered
By Alan Bock


The big news in drug reform circles this week is the Supreme Court’s decision
that there is no "medical necessity" exception to federal prohibition of
marijuana distribution or manufacture that can be claimed by the Oakland
Cannabis Buyers Cooperative. The court did not overturn California’s law
allowing patients with a recommendation from a licensed physician to use,
possess and cultivate cannabis, or the similar laws passed by initiative (and
by legislative action in Hawaii) in other states, but it does highlight the
complex relationships of various levels of government.


It is important for those seeking reform to be aware that interrelationships
among various governmental bodies can make reform efforts more complicated
than they might otherwise be. And it is not quite enough for the people of a
state to pass a medical-marijuana law to get a system to serve patients in
place – indeed, as my new book, Waiting to Inhale: The Politics of Medical
Marijuana
(available here) details, getting enough political support for a
reform to have it passed can be only the beginning of a complex and confusing
process that is still far from over. And then there’s the federal government
with its own attitude and agenda.


In a similar fashion, countries that want to diverge from the chosen path of
prohibitionism when it comes to dealing with certain drugs can find that
international organizations, international treaties, international
conventions and international pressure can have a powerful impact on their
desire to explore options other than punishment and imprisonment. It’s
becoming a growing problem as an increasing number of countries try to find
alternatives to the strict prohibitionism many view as a twisted spawn of
American puritanism.


CONVENTIONAL WISDOM

The main international treaty governing drugs policy is the UN Single
Convention, ratified in 1961, which binds signatories to have an essentially
prohibitory policy toward certain drugs, especially marijuana and heroin.
When it was ratified, then-head of the US Bureau of Narcotics Harry
Anslinger, the duplicitous father of marijuana prohibition policies, crowed
that it meant marijuana could never be legalized, because any country that
even thought about doing so would be in violation of a solemn treaty
obligation. And, indeed, at various times during the ongoing debate over drug
policy, American prohibitionists have cited the treaty as one of the many
reasons the United States can’t even think about anything other than strict
prohibitionism as an approach to supposedly dangerous drugs.


During those debates there was seldom a realistic likelihood that the United
States would actually revise its drug laws in a way that might run afoul of
the Single Convention. But of late various governments, especially in Europe,
have pursued slightly different policies toward drugs and the harms they can
cause in a society.


Most people are aware that cannabis and the refined form called hashish can
be purchased openly in Amsterdam, through "coffee shops" that sell small
amounts to almost any comer. While the trade is open and openly tolerated,
however, the Dutch government has not actually changed its marijuana laws, it
has simply chosen to ignore them in certain ways. The results are generally
beneficent: marijuana use by teenagers in Holland is lower than it is in the
United States, and while the "coffee shops" are associated with certain
low-level enforcement and disturbance problems, they are generally operated
so as to minimize disturbances and problems for neighbors.


While Dutch government officials are generally pleased with their policies
and willing to defend them against falsehoods from such as former U.S. "drug
czar" Barry McCaffrey, however, the laws haven’t actually been changed, in
large part due to the Single Convention. So Holland is left pursuing a policy
its leaders believe to be beneficial, but which is to some extent a lie in
that it isn’t formalized in the laws of the country. It’s more that a little
Alice-in-Wonderlandish.


DE FACTO BUT NOT DE JURE

Meanwhile other countries are working out different approaches to potentially
dangerous, addictive or demonized drugs, but operating under similar legal
constraints. Thus Great Britain has at various times operated heroin
maintenance or methadone clinics. Switzerland in recent years has virtually
legalized marijuana, allowing not just use and sales but also cultivation.
Belgium is on the verge of decriminalizing possession and cultivation for
personal use. Germany, led by resolutions from various cities, has more
tolerant policies in practice, though not in law, than the United States.
Italy and Spain have flirted with de facto legalization of marijuana.


All of these countries have been held back from open legalization or full
decriminalization by the Single Convention – which means in practice they
have been held back by the United States, which turns out to be the only
country that cares enough about prohibition to issue veiled threats and
subtle reminders whenever some other country threatens to stray from the
prohibition reservation.


Until the collapse of the Soviet Union most European countries placed too
much value on their relationship with the United States to make a big deal
out of something so peripheral as drug policy – or Vietnam, to cite an
earlier war most European countries opposed but went along with. But the
collapse of the Soviet Union has coincided with economic growth and an
increasing sense if independence on the part of European Union countries.


THE CANADIAN CASE

In a fascinating story that has hardly been reported at all in the US press,
Canada is on the verge of developing a comprehensive plan to allow and
perhaps even to distribute marijuana to patients whose doctors recommend that
they use it. This came about because last July the Canadian Supreme Court,
hearing a case brought by a medical marijuana patient, looked beyond the
words of the laws to the scientific evidence and the many anecdotes about
unique relief offered to some patients by cannabis.


The Canadian high court then ruled that by denying Canadian patients the
ability to try a medicine that just might relieve some of their pain or
suffering with minimal side effects, the Canadian government was denying them
fundamental rights guaranteed by the Canadian constitution. It told the
government, in effect, that it had a year to come up with a system to
authorize the medicinal use of cannabis, or it would invalidate all the
anti-marijuana-user laws.


Even so, Canadian officials have expressed concern about whether they might
find themselves in violation of international conventions on drug policy. But
conditions around the world are changing in ways that might make this
argument not only less compelling, but downright irrelevant.


PLAN COLOMBIA MISFIRES

Consider a few developments. The Europeans are talking about a continental
defense force independent of NATO, though one wonders if it will ever be much
more than just talk. While most Eurocrats supported the Kosovo bombing
campaign, some had and expressed reservations, especially the French.


Except for Plan Colombia, which most Europeans find ill-advised or foolish.


During the 1990s differences between the United States and its European
"allies" were muted because of the general level of comfort on the part of
most Europeans with the Clinton administration. But Bush the Younger is
viewed with less tolerance than his old man or even Clinton. Despite some
early hopes that his administration might be less intensively globally
engaged than previous American administrations, he shows every evidence not
only of supporting Plan Colombia but of being prepared to escalate American
involvement beyond anything the Clinton administration had in mind.


This is not simply an unfortunate development in some faraway part of the
world that the European and Canadian governments can effectively ignore even
as they tut-tut about its unwisdom. They are being asked to contribute money
and materiel. And for the most part they have much less confidence in the
Bush administration to keep matters from surging out of control than they had
in Clinton – if only because Clinton was so thoroughly cynical that he would
not allow US involvement to expand to the point that a lot of embarrassing
body bags started coming home.


KYOTO AND ABM

Meanwhile, the United States under the new administration has changed the
climate regarding treaties. It has all but declared the Kyoto treaty on
global warming a dead letter, a convention the United States does not feel
obligated to honor. And in its eagerness to build an anti-missile defense
system it has spoken openly of abrogating or invalidating the 1972
Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty, which seems to forbid the US from building
such a system.


For the purposes of this argument, it doesn’t matter whether these decisions
are good, bad or indifferent (I happen to think both are eminently
defensible, though in the case of Kyoto not necessary since anyone in touch
with reality knows it is never going to take full effect and probably was
never intended as much more than a symbolic gesture). The important thing is
that the United States is publicly criticizing and threatening to abrogate
unilaterally a couple of solemn treaties.


The United States is saying that treaties are not necessarily forever, that
conditions and circumstances may change in ways that make new arrangements –
or the abrogation of old commitments – at least desirable if not absolutely
necessary. This isn’t an indefensible position by any means, and in some ways
it is a thoroughly healthy attitude.


But with Kyoto and ABM in the background, the United States is not going to
have a lot of credibility when it tries to tell Europe and Canada that they
can’t change their domestic drug policies because they have solemn treaty
obligations to keep waging the Holy War on Drugs.


FED UP WITH UNILATERALISM?

With all this as background, perhaps it is not surprising to find further
evidence of exasperation with the US sanctimony surfacing more quickly than
some of us had expected. Last week the United States was not voted onto the
UN Human Rights Commission. This was hardly a mark of dishonor, given that
the seat went to Sudan, one of the world’s more brutal tyrannies.


It was hardly reported at all, however, that during the same UN session the
US lost its seat on the 13-member International Narcotics Control Board, the
body that supposedly monitors compliance with UN "drug conventions." In
practice it has largely been a prohibitionist propaganda outfit largely
controlled by the US Drug Enforcement Administration.


Of the seven countries elected to the board, Iran, Brazil, India, Peru,
France, the Netherlands and Austria, at least four are openly moving away
from strict marijuana prohibition. Their presence and the US absence from
this board could actually have the impact of slowing down the US push to
create a global police state, ostensibly to fight the war on drugs.


Former Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey called the development "a great loss to the
international community to not have us in a leadership position … The
assistance that we are able to provide the United Nations, the Europeans and
former Soviet Union states could be adversely affected."


Translation? McCaffrey knows this is a major blow to the U.S.-led
international war on drugs, but can think of nothing more effective than
blustering threats to cut off aid to counter it.


A NEW DAWN?

It would hardly be accurate to contend that because of these developments
international treaties that support international prohibitionism are likely
to be repealed or abrogated. Many of the countries still on the INCB are
ardently prohibitionist. The bureaucracies that made their spurs promoting
prohibitionist propaganda and resisting or denouncing any hint of reform.


But with the United States, the Vatican of Prohibitionism, no longer on the
board, the agency will no longer be a slavish servant of the DEA. Countries
that support various reforms might even make their impact felt on the
international body.


Richard Cowan, proprietor of the useful Web site marijuananews.com, has
written that "prohibitionism is a global ideology, like Communism, and
deviation from the party line is a moral threat. Second, if another country
develops successful drugs policies that deviate from prohibitionism the
prohibitionist paradigm could be shattered. After all, pragmatism is an
American philosophy. Prohibitionism is not just morally superior; it is the
only possible policy. Anything else would have to be a disaster. That is why
the DEA and Drug czar has to lie about the success of Dutch cannabis
policies."


Mr. Cowan might be a tad too optimistic. But attitudes toward drug policy are
changing, not just in the United States, where the people are years ahead of
the politicians, but around the world.



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