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 You are in: Under Secretary for Democracy and Global Affairs > From the Under Secretary > Remarks, Testimony, and Releases from the Under Secretary > 2003 Remarks, Testimony, and Releases from the Under Secretary  

Commission on Narcotic Drugs Ministerial

Paula J. Dobriansky, Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs
Remarks to the Commission on Narcotic Drugs Ministerial segment
Vienna, Austria
April 17, 2003

Mr. Chairman. On behalf of the United States Government, President Bush, and Secretary of State Colin Powell, I am honored to be here in Vienna at the Commission on Narcotic Drugs Ministerial Session.

I’d like to recognize several members of my delegation, including Ambassador Kenneth Brill, Deputy Director for Supply Reduction at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy; Dr. Barry Crane; and our senior drug law enforcement official, Drug Enforcement Administration Acting Director John Brown.

The United Nations General Assembly Special Session on Drugs was a landmark event at which the world community made major commitments in the area of counternarcotics. Those attending the Special Session realized the difficulty they would face, but they firmly resolved to take practical action toward combating the world drug problem.

The high level of participation at this ministerial session, organized to examine the progress we have made over the past 5 years, underscores that illicit narcotics pose a truly global problem, affecting rich and poor countries alike, and particularly our young people.

Confronting this scourge requires a global effort. It requires recognizing the link between financing terrorism and narcotics trafficking, between drug abuse and economic and social decline, between drug cultivation and damage to the environment, and between drug abuse and health problems, including HIV/AIDS. It also requires recognizing that integrative measures -- combining alternative development with law enforcement with eradication -- are essential. This scourge, quite simply, demands action by each and every one of us.

Two months ago, the United States unveiled President Bush’s new National Drug Control Strategy for 2003. Made up of three core priorities directly supportive of the United Nations General Assembly Special Session commitments, the strategy calls for:

  • Stopping drug use before it starts
  • Healing America’s drug users, and
  • Dismantling the business of the drug trade
I am pleased to report progress in our demand reduction efforts. Specifically, we have already seen encouraging declines of drug use among our young people. We understand that prevention efforts must also be complemented with drug treatment. In that light, President Bush recently announced a 3-year, $600 million commitment to treating the addicted. This initiative will allow treatment providers, religious and other community organizations, workplaces, and schools to help drug users receive the treatment and support services that are best suited to their individual needs. We should not, indeed we must not, abandon addicts to a lifetime of addiction to dangerous and debilitating drugs.

The General Assembly Special Session also placed special emphasis on alternative development and illicit crop reduction. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime reports positive achievements in crop reduction in Bolivia, Peru, and Laos since 1998, as well as Thailand’s success in sustaining prior gains. The United States is a strong supporter of such programs, and is also deeply committed to working with Colombia to uphold the rule of law and support its democratic institutions. Colombia achieved unprecedented, dramatic success by eradicating more than a third of the coca crop over the last 2 years, according to UN estimates. We also strongly support Afghanistan’s courageous fight against opium cultivation that threatens that country’s future. I want to underscore the importance of mainstreaming counternarcotics issues in development projects in that country and elsewhere. By mainstreaming, I mean ensuring that all development assistance -- bilateral and multilateral -- integrates counternarcotics into development strategies.

Despite our successes, we still have a long way to go. We must work domestically, and more importantly, cooperate internationally to achieve our urgent objectives. We must resist calls for lenient drug consumption policies. We know that these policies fail to sustain our important efforts as represented by the international narcotics conventions.

The world has made progress toward the goals established in 1998 -- such as the achievements in reducing global cocaine and heroin markets. By working together, we will reach our common 10-year goals with a rededicated commitment toward a healthier and more stable society.

 


Released on April 17, 2003

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