by Benjamin Marks, Economics.org.au editor-in-chief

We know where they are being held
Our intelligence is so strong that our Foreign Minister and even our Prime Minister have personally reconnoitred the area and the media agree with their findings.

We know they are being held for a non-crime
Drug consumption is not a crime, because harming your body, or doing to your body what others might not want you to do, is simply an expression of self-ownership. We are not government property. If I take off my shirt quickly, the government does not sue me for sexual assault. The only crimes in the drugs business are if you: steal drugs; sell drugs that are not what you advertise them to be; imprison or kill drug dealers and consumers for using drugs in a consensual transaction; or ban other people from dealing their products where you deal yours when you do not rightfully own the land where you do business.

We know the more we delay, the worse the problem gets
Two reasons are:

  1. Banning drugs drives their quality control underground, making transparency difficult for products, brands, dealers and consumers.
  2. Government banning of drugs fails to eliminate them. Whenever drugs are confiscated, their price goes up, not down. This means there is even more money to be made from dealing drugs. Even government prisons, where freedoms are severely limited, fail to eliminate drugs. This continually spirals into more money for government drug squads, and more money to be made for dealers.

Conclusion
Our military must immediately leave areas where we are attempting to assist foreigners suffering under the difficulties of unreliable and insufficient intelligence, and redirect our efforts to saving innocent Australians citizens from enemies of freedom where we have perfect intelligence.