Afghanistan Now Has Drug Cartels

phr

Bluelighter
Joined
May 25, 2004
Messages
36,649
Location
St. Charles, IL
Afghanistan Now Has Drug Cartels
Pamela Falk
CBS News
9.2.09



As President Obama heads to Camp David for the Labor Day weekend, his vacation reading is the sobering Afghanistan war report by U.S. and NATO General Stanley A. McChrystal, but he would be well-advised to add to his bedside literature the United Nation's new report on the increase of drug cartels in Afghanistan.

"Afghan Opium Survey 2009," was released Wednesday in Kabul by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

The report reads like a John Le Carré spy novel. The headline is that opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan is down, but UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa (pictured above) also concludes the war-torn country now has its very own drug cartels; that insurgents are moving up the "value chain" in the drug trafficking business, not merely taxing supply (which they have done for years), but now working with criminal gangs and corrupt officials to produce, process, stock, and export opium.

Costa's findings are ominous: More must be done to control drugs in Afghanistan, not just because it is a major source of income for poor farmers, but because it is the financing "in the killing fields of suicide bombers."

The UNODC report says that, although interdiction is increasing, eradication continues to be a failure. He speaks of a "marriage of convenience" between anti-government insurgents (the same ones who have killed 734 American troops in Afghanistan and neighboring nations since the 2001 U.S. invasion) and criminal groups which has spawned narcotics cartels (similar to the ones in Colombia, South America) in Afghanistan with direct links to the Taliban.

Collusion with corrupt Afghan government officials is creating a crisis of security and law enforcement, and promoting widespread money laundering, the report concludes.

The only good news, if you can call it that, is that prices for opium are at a 10-year low and production is down because of oversupply in Afghanistan.

The report recommends a regional approach to tackle the problem, which should include Iran and Central Asia — a tough sell in Washington given what has happened in post-election Iran.

"Afghan Opium Survey 2009" is a quick read, at 42 pages, with some positive notes on what has been done thus far, but the rise of cartels is something President Obama must seriously consider as he assesses U.S. policy in Afghanistan.

Link!
 
The report recommends a regional approach to tackle the problem, which should include Iran and Central Asia

The United states does not care about the harm drugs do to central asian countries(especialy Iran). It also does not have the contacts/connections and diplomecy needed to have covert drug operations that span central asia. Especialy now that its streched for resourses from fighting two unpopular wars in the middle east.
 
Well it was bound to happen wasn't it. I laugh that the so called good news is that price is down because of oversupply. Don't they usually try and claim an increase in prices as a win for authorities and not vice versa?
 
Afghanistan has always had drug cartels. Anyone who has ever read Mr. Nice will remember the 'Freedom Hash' he imported into America, advertising the fact that the profits were going to the mujihadeen's campaign against the big, bad Soviet Empire. Drugs, guns and war have always been interconnected.
 
The only good news, if you can call it that, is that prices for opium are at a 10-year low and production is down because of oversupply in Afghanistan.

Haha, what a positive phrase to read from a usually biased news source lmao.
 
The United states does not care about the harm drugs do to central asian countries(especialy Iran). It also does not have the contacts/connections and diplomecy needed to have covert drug operations that span central asia. Especialy now that its streched for resourses from fighting two unpopular wars in the middle east.
I believe you're probably right. I wouldn't doubt that if the end users of Afghani heroin were US citizens, we'd be taking a completely different approach there. Not that we should care...
 
Top