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Latin American Panel Calls U.S. Drug War a Failure

Feb 13, 2009

drug warriors, law enforcement, Prohibition


A commission led by three former Latin American heads of state blasted the U.S.-led drug war as an utter failure in a report released Wednesday.

The report, by the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy, called for the U.S. to re-examine its punitive, enforcement-based drug policies and consider decriminalizing the use of marijuana.

What’s really startling about this report is not its findings – we’ve long known the war on drugs was a failure – but rather our government’s response.  As reported by the Wall Street Journal, a senior U.S. official said Wednesday: “If the drug effort were failing there would be no violence … We're taking these guys out. The worst thing you could do is stop now."

Not only does this statement ignore the plethora of evidence showing that U.S. drug policy has failed to curb marijuana use, it clearly admits that drug-trade violence is a symptom of marijuana prohibition and not marijuana use – something MPP has been saying, and drug warriors have been denying, for years.

Please take this opportunity to visit www.house.gov and tell your member of Congress about the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy’s report entitled Drugs and Democracy: Toward A Paradigm Shift.