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  Afghan Drug Trade: Terror in the Wings
Posted by FoM on April 21, 2002 at 19:14:59 PT
By Martha Brill Olcott 
Source: Christian Science Monitor 

justice The United States is scoring a major victory against terrorism in the war in Afghanistan, but until the US successfully tackles that country's drug-trafficking problem it cannot call the victory permanent.

Drug dealers and arms traders are natural allies; their presence in Afghanistan and throughout Central Asia undermines already-weak states and gives militant Islamic groups the means for self-financing.

Afghanistan has been the world's largest grower of poppies for opium and heroin, largely destined for sale in Europe. Though cultivation was banned briefly by the Taliban, Afghan drug dealers are back in business.

US bombing raids never directly targeted Afghanistan's drug-storage or heroin-producing facilities, and Afghanistan's drug dealers were fast off the mark, distributing seed or cash to purchase it in the fall. They are now primed to buy up the crop, and are inciting local farmers to oppose violently the government's efforts to seize it.

Meanwhile, there is still no US strategy to deal with Afghanistan's return to narco-trafficking and only a trickle of assistance money in the pipeline to counter it. The US timetable for rebuilding Afghanistan must coincide with the way in which risks are generated and not merely be fashioned after Washington's annual budget cycle.

Unless the growing opium and heroin trade from Afghanistan through Central Asia is curbed, anti-state groups will continue to have a ready source of funding, including groups in Russia and Kazakhstan.

Afghan interim leader Hamid Karzai has banned opium-growing, but lacks the money and capacity to enforce his policy successfully. Most local warlords still profit from narco-trafficking by taxing the crop or its transit. Until a national military and police force is trained, Afghanistan must rely on outsiders to enforce the ban, or see it largely ignored.

Current US policy ensures that the latter will be the case, or worse, that the ban will help destabilize the Karzai government, since the Bush administration opposes the creation of a large international security force, whose mandate spans all of Afghanistan.

Tolerating the rebirth of the drug trade transforms the tragedy of Afghanistan's poverty into a problem of regional and eventually global security. One should not minimize how difficult it would be to cut drug protection sharply in Afghanistan. The network of drug dealers is fully intertwined with the traditional local elite. No crop will produce the same income, nor allow a rapacious elite the same easy riches.

Working with the provisional government, the US should work aggressively to halt poppy cultivation in Afghanistan. Crop-substitution projects must gain priority; Afghan farmers should be offered reasonable cash subsidies for destroying the harvest in the field, or for turning it over for destruction. Those who comply should qualify for agricultural reform programs, while those who refuse should lose priority for receiving all forms of development assistance.

Alongside the provisional government, the US should also destroy current stores of opium and then close down heroin factories. Warlords allied with the US's Afghan military effort must pledge to remain "drug free," the US must devote the intelligence resources to monitoring this.

Otherwise, the US may wind up being the inadvertent regulator of the very drug trade that it should be stamping out, as US forces could have to adjudicate between feuding warlords.

Although some funds were recently allocated for eradicating the current crop, the US approach emphasizes interdiction on Central Asia's borders, since more than half of Afghan drugs exit into those states. But current allocations and their promised supplements meet a fraction of these countries' training needs. Tajikistan and Turkmenistan already qualify as "narco-states," as their governments have credibly been accused of sifting profits from the drug trade. And although Tajikistan's new national drug-control agency has sharply improved interdiction rates, funds for this UN-sponsored project run out this year.

Afghanistan's drug trade feeds on Central Asia's poverty. Without concerted action, these fragile states' problems could fester just when the West is planning to tap Caspian oil and gas reserves – reserves whose delivery could be compromised by instability in this land-locked region.

The fight against terrorism cannot hope to succeed unless the US remains as alert to preventing tomorrow's terrorists from consolidating as it is to defeating the current threat. As in the other battlefields of the war on terror, the US must be prepared to deal a blow to the Afghan drug trade, even if Washington must assume a disproportionate share of the financial burden.

• Martha Brill Olcott is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and author of 'Kazakhstan: Unfulfilled Promise' (Carnegie, 2002).

Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Author: Martha Brill Olcott
Published: April 22, 2002 Edition
Copyright: 2002 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact: oped@csps.com
Website: http://www.csmonitor.com/

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http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread12538.shtml

Eradicating Opium Proves a Tough Row
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Comment #1 posted by dddd on April 22, 2002 at 03:31:35 PT
...ya know,,,,things are not so good...
.......I've started thinking about patching together a bunch of the abstract rambling items that I write,,and try to make some kind of cheap book that would never sell.....I've been considering several titles for this unique book, which would be severely esoteric.....It would be about like a book by Hilary Clinton,,that was all about the history of Lynard Skynard.,,,(except it would not sell as well..I'd gladly buy a book about Lynard Skynard ,by Hilary Clinton.).....or,,maybe a book by John Ashcroft,that profiles the life and times of Jack Kerouac,,, or,, Bill Bennett reviews of Fellini films..............how bout;."The Hank Kimball Story",,by Lou Reed....or,;"Ginger was A Slut, and Maryanne was a Whore",,by Mrs. Thurston Howell III....................................anyway,,I could go on,, but I think maybe I'll call my book,,,"Are You Shitting Your Pants Yet?",,,and it will be a hardhitting collection of actual reality............Things aint gonna be gettin much better very soon...I know,,that's a negative,depressing way to look at things,,but that's just too bad for the wuss,or optomistic airhead,that actually thinks things are improving!. .. ..For those sensitive,people,,I will write a second book...it will be titled,,;"Happy Bright Day Of Nice and Good Hopeful Times That Will Soon Be Here!"...In this book ,I will paint a wonderful picture of hope for the future of all people! I will explain about how the unexpected happened,,and the war on terror was won in 2006,,,after the Chinese government made Tibets out of Iraq,and Iran,,,and the West Bank was now governed by Fred Arafat,,Yassurs' younger brother.AOL Verizon Time-Warner SBC,,all merged and bought the Internet,,and people could finally travel about the globe,,free from worries about terrorist attacks..American tourists flock to Bagdad,and Tehran!,,the new Mid-East Disney World is scheduled to open in Kabul in 2008,,The Chinese government will officially switch to the wonderful two party democratic system that the US has!...,,The Chinese leadership will start out being all Republican,,and attempt to instill the great morals and values that the Republican party is famous for!,,but by gum!,,,them spunky ol' Democrats get popular amongst the Chinese workers because of the honest,'down-home' integrity,that the Democratic party is known for,,...And then golf courses would start popping up all over China,,,the Bejing Senior 'Skins' Game,,,and then they'd get their own NBA teams,,,"The Kowloon Oppressors"......................oh well,,I'm kinda hungry,,guess I go cut me off another peice of that Blackbird pie I made on Saturday... ............................ ..........I discovered that Blackbird pie tastes best with alot of Ranch Dressing on it.......... ..........
............dddd


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