-Caveat Lector-

 Investor's Business Daily
 Letters To The Editor
 12655 Beatrice St.
 Los Angeles, CA

 Ladies and Gentlemen:

 Congratulations on your op-ed piece, "If U.S. Wins War On Terror, Why Not
 War On Drugs, Too?" by Betsy McCaughey, Hudson Institute.

 The War on Drugs has been tremendously successful in helping to grow the US
 market share of worldwide drug imports and exports to a leadership position.
 It has been the critical polity behind growing US money laundering from
 organized crime to an all time high of $500 billion - $1 trillion (Source:
 US Department of Justice). This figure is just annual flows --- the
 accumulated "narco dollars" growing at significant compound investment rates
 since WWII are far more significant. Accumulated "narco capital" is now a
 dominant presence in the international capital markets.

 With the US banks, securities firms, insurance and investment companies
 leadership in the reinvestment of annual and accumulated "narco dollars",
 our leadership's ability to "control and concentrate" capital to build their
 empire has never been stronger. The War on Drugs model ---working through
 the UN and such efforts as Plan Colombia --- is critical to the
 internationalization of the laws that support the growth of the
 financial ---and hence political--empire of these private interests.

 Obviously, investors want our stock multiples to be high. Therefore, it is
 essential that we keep attracting as much of the accumulated "narco dollars"
 as possible. What better way than more enforcement geared towards helping
 the federal enforcement establishment "control and concentrate cash flows"
 down to the block level throughout 63,000 neighborhoods in America. Three
 teenagers selling $300 of cocaine or ecstasy a day, laundered through a
 nearby fast food restaurant or motel chain, can generate $2-5 million on a
 corporate stock market value at PE's of 20-30X. What would happen to the
 values of my mutual funds if all those kids got a legit job? Terrible.
 Perhaps this is why the CIA Inspector General has admitted to intentional
 support by the US intelligence and enforcement bureaucracy of supporting
 narcotics trafficking in the service of global power plays.

 Large financial instituions and corporations whose cheap cost of capital is
 essential to their global leadership will be pleased with Ms. McCaughey's
 hard hitting and beautifully crafted defense of our War on Drugs policy.
 Surely, the head of fundraising and Hudson Institute should be quite pleased
 as well. Those who control and enjoy the reinvestment of successfully
 laundered "narco dollars" and their private foundations are large supporters
 of the top American think tanks and universities.

 The taxpayers? The more we spend on the War on Drugs, the more neighborhoods
 deteriorate and the more drug trafficking and money laundering grow. The War
 on Drugs has an almost perfect performance. The combined corporate and
 government return is negative. However, it is relatively easy to continue to
 obfuscate the negative return on investment to federal state and local
 taxpayers, homeowners and families and promote the positive return on
 investment to corporate shareholders. As a Philadelphia mafia chieftain once
 said, "when the government pays your expenses, than your gross is your net."

 Recent reports from Afghanistan now confirm with the Taliban defeated and
 our 1st world syndicate and allies in country, Afghan farmers have started
 to plant opium in volume once again. That's good news for the dominant
 global financial players, especially now that they are in position to
 control the cash flows for growing Afganistan opium harvests.

 I am pleased to see that Ms. McCaughey understands the meaning of precisely
 how the war on terrorism is really "winning" in Afghanistan and that
 Investor's Business Daily and the Hudson Institute are working hard to make
 sure the stock market multiples on the NYSE stay as high as possible by
 dancing to the tune of those who control the on/off switch for trillons of
 accumulated "narco dollars".

 Very Truly Yours,

 Catherine Austin Fitts
 President
 Solari, Inc.
 Former Managing Director, and member, Board of Directors, Dillon Read & Co.
 Inc.
 Former Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, First Bush
 Administration
 Author, Narco Dollars for Dummies:
 http://www.narconews.com/narcodollars1.html
 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 phone: 731.764.2515


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

 If U.S. Wins War On Terror, Why Not War On Drugs, Too?
 By Betsy McCaughey
 FOR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY-PRINT EDITION ONLY

 As American forces hunt down Osama bin Laden and pound the remains of
 al-Qaida, the U.S. is showing it can fight terrorism. The Bush
 administration should use this proven ability to defeat the worst type of
 bioterrorism to date: illegal drug trafficking.
 The cocaine and heroin flooding into the U.S. are addicting our children,
 wrecking families, spawning crime on our streets and costing billions of
 dollars a year.
 The similarities between al-Qaida and drug terrorists are striking. Like
 al-Qaida, drug traffickers swear allegiance to no nation and wear no
 uniform.
 Just as al-Qaida occupied Afghanistan, drug traffickers occupy vast areas of
 Latin America and use automatic weapons and airplanes to subdue the
 populace.
 And, like al-Qaida, drug terrorists fund their operations with laundered
 money.

 Drugs = Terror?
 The difference is that the U.S. has shown the will to defeat al-Qaida. A
 passion to defeat drug traffickers has been sadly lacking.
 The same all-out commitment of air power, special forces, intelligence
 gathering, border and immigration controls and financial restraints that the
 Bush administration and Congress are expending to rout out al-Qaida should
 be turned against an even deadlier enemy.
 The terrorists who struck on Sept 11 took more than 3,000 lives, a tragic
 loss. But every single year, at least 16,000 Americans are killed by illegal
 drugs.
 In addition, 5 million chronic users are so crippled by addiction they can't
 make it through high school, show up for a job or feed and nurture their
 kids.
 The families struck on Sept11 posted pictures of their missing loved ones
 outside the Family Assistance Center in New York. It was a sight no one
 could ever forget. But it's still true you couldn't build a wall big enough
 for all the pictures of children who've died or had their minds and bodies
 destroyed by drugs.

 Lack of will
 Despite such death and suffering, American political leaders have not
 mustered the bipartisan cooperation and public support to wage and all-out
 war against drug terrorists.  In 1998,  Rep. Bill McCollum ,R-FL, announced
 a new Speaker's Task Force for a Drug-Free America, which he would co-chair.
 The goal, he said, was to cut off 80% of the supply of illegal drugs by
 2002. Now, one month before that deadline, Task Force Staff Director Char1es
 Diaz concedes that the supply of illegal drugs coming into the country is
 increasing.
 Among the tragic results: a steady increase in the number of victims treated
 for drug-related problems in emergency rooms. For children ages 12-17, the
 drug-related emergencies soared 20% last year (data from the Department of
 Health and Human Services).
 Who's to blame? Washington politicians, as much as anyone. The Bush
 administration asked Congress for an impressive $1.3 billion for drug
 control in Latin America.
 At the same time, the administration and its predecessors have sent a mixed
 message to the international community by granting foreign aid to virtually
 every major drug-producing, drug-smuggling and money laundering country in
 the world.
 Under a long-standing policy, nations heavily involved in the drug trade are
 not eligible for foreign aid unless specially "certified" that they're
 cooperating with American drug enforcement efforts.
 In March, the Bush administration certified 20 of the 24 leading drug
 trafficking nations and granted special aid-eligible status to two others.
 That's despite the refusal  of many of these nations to report possible
 money laundering, criminalize drugs and work with American investigators.
 Foreign policy is always complex, with competing goals.  It's clear that in
 these cases, the US considered other things more important than stopping
 drug traffickers.

 Foreign Policy Angle
 That's far from the message President Bush delivered to the world after Sept
 II, when he warned nations harboring terrorists or laundering their money
 that "You are either with us or you're against us." That should also be the
 warning to nations tolerating drug terrorists.
 Here at home, immigration and border patrol officials should have the same
 powerful mandate to nab drug traffickers as they do al-Qaida terrorists, and
 the same investigative tools at their disposal.  Unfortunately, public
 support for an all-out effort against drug traffickers is lacking. Leading
 figures on the left and right insist that treatment is the answer, not
 curbing drug supply.
 Conservative thinker Milton Friedman warns that drug war tactics will turn
 the US into a police state. Democrats and some Republicans are urging states
 to roll back lengthy, mandatory minimum sentences against drug dealers.
 Clinton's drug czar Brian McCaffrey, on leaving office last January, urged
 the nation to drop the phrase "war on drugs."  Latin America drug lords must
 smile to hear us say suppliers aren't the problem.
 Almost all the cocaine and heroin coming into the US originates in Columbia,
 including 85% of the heroin seized by federal authorities in northeastern
 American cities. To rescue these cities from the drug scourge, the Colombian
 cartels must be broken.

 Colombia's role
 Colombia is a key battlefield. But the war has to be worldwide. Like
 al-Qaida, drug traffickers operate globally, and if they are driven out of
 one country they quickly appear in another.
 One of the key challenges is Afghanistan. Some 70% of the world's heroin and
 other opiates come from that country, says the Drug Enforcement
 Administration, and most of it goes to Europe. Almost none goes to US, but
 that could change over-night if Latin American supplies were cut off or
 became too costly.
 Afghanistan drug trafficking is dangerous to American lives in another way:
 It funds terrorism.
 The Taliban government that host-ad al-Qaida claimed to oppose opiate
 production. But as Asa Hutchinson head of the Drug Enforcement
 Administration, testified to Congress recently, the Taliban had a formal and
 lucrative system for taxing the drug industry.
 "Sadly," said Hutchinson, "the profits of the drug trade" probably helped
 pay for the Sept11 attack.

 What About Afghanistan?
 The coming days will be critical. Representatives of the warring factions in
 Afghanistan have already met in Bonn, Germany, with US assistance to devise
 a temporary government for that nation.
 What will the U.S. demand of them? Shutting down the drug trade should be
 one goal.
 It's not easy. Afghanistan has no other industries, and in a country
 impoverished by drought and war, desperate farmers can make 100 times as
 much growing poppies for the opium trade as other crops.
 But al-Qaida terrorism and drug bioterrorism  are  inextricably linked, and
 equally dangerous.
 Al-Qaida would kill all Americans if it could. And drug traffickers would
 addict all Americans if they could. What Bush said about bin Laden and his
 lieutenants, he should now say about drug traffickers: "It's time to smoke
 'em out"

 Betsy McCaughey is an adjunct senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. She can
 be reached at
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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