The new drug warriors
As one side of the world softens its line against illegal drugs, another is getting tougher—and more vocal

THE war on drugs, it seems, is edging towards a truce. Half of Americans want to lift the ban on cannabis, the world’s favourite illicit drug. Four states have legalised it, as has Washington, DC. Latin American presidents whose countries once battled narcos with helicopter gunships now openly wonder if prohibition was a mistake; Uruguay has legalised weed. Much of Europe has decriminalised it; Portugal has decriminalised all drug-use (though not drug-dealing). Heroin addicts in Western countries usually have access to clean needles, substitutes such as methadone and, in parts of Europe, heroin prescriptions. Many governments are starting to believe that managing drug use causes less harm than trying to stamp it out.
This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “The new drug warriors”

From the May 2nd 2015 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
The UN could run out of cash within months
America and China are pushing it to the brink of financial collapse

Donald Trump picks the wrong trade fight with China
America will lose an economic-pain war

A Trump executive order will unleash a global deep-sea mining boom
It will galvanise international co-operation over writing rules for the ocean bed
Why some countries are once again embracing cluster bombs
The once-banned weapons are making a comeback to deter Russia
The ugly task of Putin-proofing your border
Russia’s European neighbours hate landmines. They are installing them anyway
Trump’s red-hot war on terror
The number of strikes against jihadists is rising. Is it 2001 all over again?