Heroin Kills
The Taliban is financed in large measure by Afghanistan’s poppy crops. Afghanistan is almost the world’s sole supplier of heroin. With Hamid Karzai’s brother on the Drug Lords’ payroll, just what is going on in Afghanistan?
WASHINGTON (AP) - Afghanistan will produce another record poppy harvest this year that cements its status as the world’s near-sole supplier of the heroin source, yet a furious debate over … how to reverse the trend is stalling proposals to cut the crop, U.S. officials say.
As President Bush prepares for weekend talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, divisions within the U.S. administration and among NATO allies have delayed release of a $475 million counternarcotics program for Afghanistan, where intelligence officials see growing links between drugs and the Taliban, the officials said.
U.N. figures to be released in September are expected to show that Afghanistan’s poppy production has risen up to 15 percent since 2006 and that the country now accounts for 95 percent of the world’s crop, 3 percentage points more than last year, officials familiar with preliminary statistics told The Associated Press.
But counterdrug proposals by some U.S. officials have met fierce resistance, including boosting the amount of forcible poppy field destruction in provinces that grow the most, officials said. The approach also would link millions of dollars in development aid to benchmarks on eradication; arrests and prosecutions of narcotraders, corrupt officials; and on alternative crop production.
Those ideas represent what proponents call an “enhanced carrot-and- stick approach” to supplement existing anti-drug efforts. They are the focus of the new $475 million program outlined in a 995-page report, the release of which has been postponed twice and may be again delayed due to disagreements, officials said.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because parts of the report remain classified.
Counternarcotics agents at the State Department had wanted to release a 123-page summary of the strategy last month and then again last week, but were forced to hold off because of concerns it may not be feasible, the officials said.
Now, even as Bush sees Karzai on Sunday and Monday at the presidential retreat in Camp David, Md., a tentative release date of Aug. 9, timed to follow the meetings, appears in jeopardy. Some in the administration, along with NATO allies Britain and Canada, seek revisions that could delay it until at least Aug. 13, the officials said.
The program represents a 13 percent increase over the $420 million in U.S. counternarcotics aid to Afghanistan last year. It would adopt a bold new approach to “coercive eradication” and set out criteria for local officials to receive development assistance based on their cooperation, the officials said.
Although the existing aid, supplemented mainly by Britain and Canada and supported by the NATO force in Afghanistan, has achieved some results—notably an expected rise in the number of “poppy-free” provinces from six to at least 12 and possibly 16, mainly in the north—production elsewhere has soared, they said.
“Afghanistan is providing close to 95 percent of the world’s heroin,” the State Department’s top counternarcotics official, Tom Schweich, said at a recent conference. “That makes it almost a sole-source supplier” and presents a situation “unique in world history.”
Almost all the heroin from Afghanistan makes its way to Europe; most of the heroin in the U.S. comes from Latin America.
Afghanistan last year accounted for 92 percent of global opium production, compared with 70 percent in 2000 and 52 percent a decade earlier. The higher yields in Afghanistan brought world production to a record high of 7,286 tons in 2006, 43 percent more than in 2005.
A State Department inspector general’s report released Friday noted that the counternarcotics assistance is dwarfed by the estimated $38 billion “street value” of Afghanistan’s poppy crop, if all is converted to heroin, and said eradication goals were “not realistic.”
Schweich, an advocate of the now-stalled plan, has argued for more vigorous eradication efforts, particularly in southern Helmand province, responsible for some 80 percent of Afghanistan’s poppy production. It is where, he says, growers must be punished for ignoring good-faith appeals to switch to alternative, but less lucrative, crops.
“They need to be dealt with in a more severe way,” he said at the conference sponsored by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “There needs to be a coercive element, that’s something we’re not going to back away from or shy away from.”
But, in fact, many question whether this is the right approach with Afghanistan mired in poverty and in the throes of an insurgency run by the Taliban and residual al-Qaida forces.
Along with Britain, whose troops patrol Helmand, elements in the State Department, U.S. Agency for International Development, the Defense Department and White House Office of National Drug Control Policy have expressed concern, saying that more raids will drive farmers with no other income to join extremists.
There is also skepticism about the incentives in the new strategy from those who believe development assistance should not be denied to local communities because of poppy growth, officials said.
Opponents argue that the benefits of such aid, new roads and other infrastructure, schools and hospitals, will themselves be powerful tools to combat the narcotrade once constructed.
One U.S. official said the plan was a good one but might take another year or two before it can be effectively introduced.
Just more proof that heroine fund terrorism..who knows maybe funded 9/11 and other attacks around the world..I say burn the shit and deal with the consequences later
August 4th, 2007 at 1:33 pm[…] Read More — […]
August 4th, 2007 at 2:25 pmWhere’s Sharia law when you need it?
August 4th, 2007 at 5:43 pmSalt the Earth. We’ve given them a chance, now it’s over.
August 4th, 2007 at 6:09 pmOur ability to genetically engineer plants can come into use here. We replace these fields with a genetically similar plant that is useless for opium and will outgrow and replace the old crop. I’d love to see a new kind of poppy and see the other extinct. I doubt any of the old antinarcotics program will work, look at our southern border. DEA agents and Mexican Federales on the take counter everything we do. So, it’s time to go to the root of the problem.
The drug trade in Afghanistan is pretty unreal. Heroin is only one part of it. As some may know, there are fields upon fields of marijuana. I don’t see things changing anytime soon unfortunately.
August 4th, 2007 at 6:43 pmShit, just buy it and burn it. Cutting off 95% of the world’s heroin for the wholesale price is a true bargain. Look at how much dough we’d save in enforcement, lost time, crime and medical attention to addicts by depriving the underworld of it’s biggest cash cow. Then wean the growers by lowering the price after the pushers get out of the business, while teaching Afganis to grow something useful and healthy.
August 4th, 2007 at 7:01 pmThough the heroin here in the US comes from down south I’ve heard Hezbully is trying to muscle in on the poppy and cocaine business down there. Drugs addicts need to be constantly reminded that their choice of poison finances their eventual death one way or another. You’re going to get yourself or the islamofacists will get you. I hope to not see a repeat of heroin use by today’s military that we had in RVN. My first year, ‘67, never heard of heroin. My second year, ‘70, it had become so rampant that before people got onto helicoptors to go to the field their equipment was checked to be sure no one was concealing those little plastic paint by number paint type containers. A highly potent amount of heroin can be carried in one of those plastic containers no bigger than the diameter of a dime. A cartoon appeared in the Stars and Stripes. It showed a caricture of Uncle Sam standing in front of a house that was on fire. Uncle Sam was in the front of the house stomping out a grass fire. The house was labeled heroin, the grass fire was labeled marijuania. Things had gotten bad enough that everyone going back to the States had to do a drug test. You people over there, watch your step. Don’t do it.
August 5th, 2007 at 5:56 amRoundUp sprayed from helicopters.
August 6th, 2007 at 6:45 amThey would rather poison America than eat. Destroy the crop and let them do neither.
August 7th, 2007 at 8:19 pm