The global war on drugs launched during U.S. President Richard Nixon’s 1969-1974 administration has been an abysmal failure, and all nations should immediately de-criminalize currently illegal drugs. Of course, I\u2019m not holding my breath. But at least I\u2019m in good company. For the past six months, Mexico\u2019s ex-president Vincente Fox<\/a> has called for the same. He knows a thing or two about the destructive nature of the U.S. war on drugs because it has made life a living hell for his country. Nearly 50,000 people have died from Mexico\u2019s drug war<\/a> alone since current President Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown on drug cartels in 2006. In June 2011, the\u00a0Global Commission on Drug Policy<\/a>\u00a0released its report on the War on Drugs. It concluded that “The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world.”<\/p>\n The economics<\/strong><\/p>\n President Nixon\u2019s first drug fighting budget was a modest $100 million.<\/a> President Obama\u2019s budget for the war on drugs for fiscal year 2011 is projected to be $15.6 billion. Over the last 40 years, the United States has spent over $1 trillion to eradicate drugs and drug use, yet the United States remains the world\u2019s largest consumer of cocaine, Columbian heroin, Mexican heroin and marijuana.<\/p>\n According to the website Visual Economics<\/a>, some uses of that trillion were as follows:<\/p>\n 121 billion<\/strong> to arrest non-violent drug offenders<\/p>\n 450 billion<\/strong> to lock people up in federal prison, where half of all prisoners are serving sentences for drug offences.<\/p>\n 49 billion<\/strong> for securing our borders from drug trafficking<\/p>\n 33 billion<\/strong> for the \u201cjust say no\u201d marketing campaign for America\u2019s youth and other prevention programs<\/p>\n 20 billion<\/strong> to fight gangs in their own countries such as Columbia and Mexico<\/p>\n 215 billion<\/strong> for an overburdened justice system, a strained health care system and lost productivity because of drug abuse.<\/p>\n The social costs of prohibition<\/strong><\/p>\n During the era of alcohol prohibition (1920 to 1933) the ban resulted in the growth of vast criminal organizations, including the American Mafia. It generated rampant corruption among politicians and the police force, and it made criminals out of otherwise normal, law-abiding citizens. The war on drugs has had similar effects. So far, it has cost taxpayers a trillion dollars, made drugs more dangerous, created powerful criminal syndicates, increased violent crime, and corrupted law enforcement at all levels. Like the prohibition of alcohol in the 1920s, anti-drug laws have had a pernicious effect on everyday life, both here and in other countries.<\/p>\n American drug policies have failed to stem the tide of drugs coming into this country, or slow the use of drugs by American consumers. That\u2019s because many people\u2014criminals, bankers, advertisers, politicians and law enforcement\u2014are being enriched by the ineffective war on drugs and have no desire to see it end.<\/p>\n Who is getting rich from the war on drugs?<\/strong><\/p>\n First, drug dealers get very wealthy shipping and selling illegal drugs. Second, local law enforcement agencies receive billions of dollars per year in federal grants to fight the war on drugs. Law enforcement also subsidizes its budget with a portion of the cash, and other goods found during raids, that they can, in any way, link to narcotics trafficking. Because of the war on drugs, they can seize private property at will. Asset forfeitures\u2014houses, cars, guns, computers\u2014and federal grants are used for payroll, and the purchase of surveillance equipment, high-powered weapons and paramilitary gear. Local police departments are becoming militarized both through the federal war on drugs and Homeland Security grants to fight terrorism.<\/p>\n The growing legal-industrial-imprisonment complex<\/a> feeds on the war on drugs, employing thousands of judges, prosecutors, criminal-defense attorneys, bail bondsmen, and prison guards who make their living from the prosecution of drug cases. For corporations operating privatized correctional facilities, the drug war is a cash cow providing a steady supply of non-violent drug users to fill prison cells. Half of all prisoners are drug offenders.<\/p>\n Banks, including Bank of America, Citibank, and other big players, take in hundreds of billions of dollars annually from narcotics traffickers. In effect, they money launder for drug cartels. Drug money not only provides banks with large commissions, but also provides much needed liquidity. According to a 2009 article in the Guardian,<\/a><\/p>\n Antonio Maria Costa, head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, said he has seen evidence that the proceeds of organized crime were “the only liquid investment capital” available to some banks on the brink of collapse last year. He said that a majority of the $352bn (\u00a3216bn) of drug profits was absorbed into the economic system as a result. . . .<\/p>\n “In many instances, the money from drugs was the only liquid investment capital. In the second half of 2008, liquidity was the banking system’s main problem and hence liquid capital became an important factor,” he said.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Credible journalists and scholars, such as Alfred C. McCoy and Peter Dale Scott have written extensively about the long involvement of the CIA in drug trafficking. And some of us may remember the now proven assertion (by an inspector general\u2019s investigation of the CIA<\/a>) that the CIA engaged in cocaine smuggling as part of its covert operations supporting the Nicaraguan Contras.<\/p>\n The war on drugs involves the world\u2019s largest banks, drug cartels, and the U.S. intelligence community. Despite spending a trillion dollars, the drug trade continues to prosper because it is protected by powerful interests. The drug war is not about ending narcotics trafficking or protecting Americans from drug use. The truth is that it is one of America’s most lucrative industries.<\/a>\u00a0According to UNODC (The\u00a0UN Office on Drugs and Crime<\/a>), the\u00a0global\u00a0market\u00a0<\/span>for illicit drugs is worth more than $300 billion annually.<\/a><\/p>\n