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Published 2008-05-15 16:20:00
 


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Drug Czar Lies Again About the Dutch, Who Respond With The Facts;
Czar’s Aid Says,"forces at work to legalize drugs are trying to bring
these wonderfully allied governments into conflict."

(Ed. note: It is difficult to write about something as outrageously goofy as this. I find myself staring at the computer screen.

The first item is a Fox news report based on a Reuters story. This followed by brief excerpts from another Reuters story and a Dallas Morning News interview. Will anyone else report this?

This is not an isolated incident, but a sustained offensive by a cabinet level US official. This is followed by data from Dutch sources. It would appear that the Dutch are finally fed up with McCaffrey, and are not going to take this anymore. The facts are devastating. Now if anyone in the media just cared...)

See
Go Dutch! for numerous links.


DUTCH, U.S. TRADE STATISTICS ON DRUGS, CRIME

August 6, 1998

AMSTERDAM — The Dutch health ministry Thursday rejected allegations by the U.S. drugs policy adviser, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, that prisons in the Netherlands were bursting at the seams because of its liberal drugs policy.

Speaking to Reuters in Los Angeles on Wednesday, McCaffrey said that Dutch

tolerance of soft drugs such as marijuana had contributed to an explosion in the jail population and a sharp rise in the number of drug users. "The Dutch have consistently followed a harm-reduction policy...In their country, drug-abuse rates among their youngsters have gone way up under this policy and their prison population has gone way up," McCaffrey said.

The United States’ preventive approach, in contrast, was a roaring success, the White House adviser added.

"Our model has resulted in lowering the rates of drug abuse in America by 50 percent. Cocaine use is down by 70 percent; drug-related murders are down by a third," he said.

At the Dutch health ministry, McCaffrey’s latest statistics were greeted with as much disbelief as his extravagant statement last month that the Dutch murder rate dwarfed that of the United States.

The Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics produced figures then that put the Dutch murder rate at less than a quarter of the U.S. level. On Thursday, the health ministry produced another set of data to contradict McCaffrey.

According to the Dutch figures, hastily produced by a health ministry spokesman, there were roughly 160 heroin addicts for every 100,000 inhabitants in the Netherlands.

In the United States, by comparison, there were around 430 addicts per 100,000 people, the spokesman said.

Dutch prison statistics tell a similar story. According to the ministry, 73 people out of every 100,000 are serving a jail sentence in the Netherlands, far below the 645 recorded in the United States. Cannabis consumption among 18-year-olds is also much lower in the Netherlands, according to the health ministry.

"We know Mr McCaffrey’s views. We know he is against our coffee shops. We know he is against our heroin program," the health ministry spokesman said, referring to two of the most controversial aspects of Dutch drugs policy.

So-called coffee shops that peddle marijuana with impunity and a pilot scheme to supply heroin to people who are deemed to be incurable addicts have raised eyebrows in the United States.

Robert Housman, chief policy adviser to McCaffrey, said he accepted the Dutch prison population was small compared with the U.S, but noted that it had doubled in recent years.
(Ed. note: It is easy to double a low number. US prison population has more than tripled since 1980 from a number that was much higher than the Dutch.)

He also said there was no doubt the Netherlands was a major production and distribution center for Ecstasy and amphetamines.

"But the irony is we have a tremendously good cooperation with the Dutch," he told Reuters by telephone from Washington.

"They are doing a tremendous job in terms of interdiction in the Caribbean, in terms of stopping the manufacture of Ecstasy and amphetamines. There is a high degree of coordination."

Housman minimized the differences between the Netherlands and the United States. The real battle, he said, was against the traffickers and manufacturers.

"There is a lot of congruence and there are also differences. We have our approach and the Dutch have theirs.

But what is happening is that there are forces at work to legalize drugs and they are trying to bring these wonderfully allied governments into conflict," he said.

(Ed. note: He is saying that the Dutch dislike being lied about by the Drug Czar, because of something that anti-prohibitionists are doing. This is not the first time that he has tried to tie "legalizers" to the Dutch reaction to being lied about.)
See
"These legalizers put American children at risk.  The Dutch government should be renouncing them, not siding with them."  What? Oh, Never mind!
McCaffrey visited the Netherlands last month as part of a European fact-finding tour, and described his trip as "useful." The Dutch said it had also yielded some progress.

"Before he came he called our policy a ‘total disaster’. By the time he had left he had scaled it down to a ‘small disaster,"" the health ministry spokesman said.

© 1998, News America Digital Publishing, Inc. d/b/a Fox News Online. All rights reserved. Fox News is a registered trademark of 20th Century Fox Film Corp.  comments@foxnews.com

© Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved

The following is an excerpt from another Reuters story from the same day:

"An unbowed McCaffrey said on Wednesday: "There was a huge uproar over murder rates and crime stats, and was I right or wrong?...

For an American to suggest that their crime rates were higher than the U.S. absolutely blew their mind."

Excerpt from an Interview:
"McCaffrey Defends The Priorities In U.S. Battle Against Drugs" in the Dallas Morning News.

letterstoeditor@dallasnews.com

http://www.dallasnews.com

August 2, 1998

Q: Many press reports focused on your trip to the Netherlands, which

allows the sale of small amounts of marijuana and distributes heroin to addicts. What did you learn there?

A: I learned about the ferociously aggressive law enforcement that both Switzerland and the Netherlands started in about 1996. They’ve had it - bam! They went after drug abuse and its public consequences, particularly the Swiss police, who have incredible authority . . .

Many would argue they’re asking law enforcement to sustain flawed drug policy. . .

The other thing we did during the visit was we started laying down other people’s comparative data. God, did it annoy them. I said drug abuse is tied to societal problems . It’s hard to determine causality. But if you have high levels of crack cocaine use, there’s high levels of crime.
(Ed. note: The Dutch never had the sort of crack cocaine epidemic that DEAland experienced, so this is not relevant to the Dutch.)

We told the Dutch the comparative crime rates are higher than the United States’ -almost double in some cases. In some cases there is much as four times higher than Germany, France, Belgium. Comparative data, I know, is a flaky. But in everyone of them, their crime rates are higher than ours.

(Ed. note: As noted, the US murder rate is almost five times the Dutch rate.  In the US a total of 97,464 forcible rapes were reported to law enforcement during 1995. In the Uniform Crime Reporting Program, the victims of forcible rape are always female, and in 1995 an estimated 72 of every 100,000 females in the US  were reported rape victims. In 1990 there were 1321 rapes in the Netherlands. This is approximately one fourth the US rate.)

That’s1995 data. I don’t know what it is today with their aggressive policing. In the United States drug use is coming down and crime rates plummeting.
See
Is Crime In DEAland Really Down? Or Is It Just That Police Fraud In Reporting Crime Is Increasing?

From the Dutch Embassy web site August 6, 1998 http://www.netherlands-embassy.org/drug-inf.htm

Press, Public and Cultural Affairs

Drug Policy and Crime Statistics

Recent accounts in the U.S. press about the Netherlands drug policy have included incorrect and misleading statistics about drug use and drug-related crimes in the Netherlands. What follows is a short list of facts and comparisons to refute those accounts and sources are given to permit and encourage third party verification of facts.

Last month use of cannabis (marijuana) by high school seniors:
18.1% in the Netherlands (1996);
23.7% in the U.S. (1997).
(Sources: The Trimbos Institute, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Monitoring the Future Survey, University of Michigan and White House Office of National Drug Control Policy)

Any lifetime use (prevalence) of cannabis by older teens (1994):
30% in the Netherlands;
38% in the U.S.
(Sources: Center for Drug Research, University of Amsterdam; Monitoring the Future Survey, University of Michigan and White House Office of National Drug Control Policy)

Recent (last month) use of cannabis by 15 year olds (in 1995):
15% in the Netherlands;
16% in the U.S.;
24% in the U.K.
(Sources: Trimbos Institute, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Monitoring the Future Survey, University of Michigan and White House Office of National Drug Control Policy; Council of Europe, ESPAD Report)

Any lifetime use of cannabis by 15 year olds (in 1995):
29% in the Netherlands;
34% in the U.S.;
41% in the U.K.
(Sources: Netherlands Institute of Health and Addiction, U.S. National Institute for Drug Abuse; Council of Europe, ESPAD Report)

Heroine addicts as a percentage of population (in 1995):
160 per 100,000 in the Netherlands;
430 per 100,000 in the U.S.
(Sources: Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport;
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy)

Murder rate as a percentage of population (in 1996):
1.8 per 100,000 in the Netherlands;
8.22 in the U.S.
(Sources: Netherlands Bureau of Statistics; White House Office of National Drug Control Policy)

Incarceration rate as a percentage of population (1997):
73 per 100,000 in the Netherlands;
645 per 100,000 in the U.S.
(Sources: Netherlands Ministry of Justice; White House Office of National Drug Control Strategy)

Crime-related deaths as a percentage of population:
1.2 per 100,000 in the Netherlands (1994);
8.2 per 100,000 in the U.S. (1995).
(Sources: World Health Organization; Uniform Crime Reports, U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation)

Per capita spending on drug-related law enforcement:
$27 per capita in the Netherlands;
$81 per capita in the U.S.
(Sources: Netherlands Ministry of Justice; White House Office of National Drug Control Strategy)

More Dutch Data

Results of public health policy

There were 2.4 drug-related deaths per million inhabitants in the Netherlands in 1995. In France this figure was 9.5, in Germany 20, in Sweden 23.5 and in Spain 27.1. According to the 1995 report of the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction in Lisbon, the Dutch figures are the lowest in Europe.

The Dutch AIDS prevention-program was equally successful. Europe-wide, an average of 39.2% of AIDS victims are intravenous drug-users. In the Netherlands, this percentage is as low as 10.5%. The number of addicts in the Netherlands has been stable at 25,000 for many years. Expressed as a percentage of the population, this number is approximately the same as in Germany, Sweden and Belgium. There are very few young heroin addicts in the Netherlands, largely thanks to the policy of separating the users markets for hard and soft drugs. The average age of heroin addicts is now 36.

In most EU countries, such as the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Sweden and the Netherlands, the use of cannabis has increased in the past few years. A similar trend is, unfortunately, discernible with regard to synthetic drugs. Evidently, international youth culture has more influence on the use of these substances than government policies. International cooperation is therefore vital in tackling this problem.

(Ed. note: If Dutch crime rates actually were higher -- rather than lower -- than in DEAland, it could not be because of Dutch drugs policy, since there are fewer "drug users" per capita in Holland than in the US.

In fact, there is far less crime major crime in Holland and probably less crime of all sorts. US crime data substantially understates the level of almost all crime.)

 
 

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