Is the Military Ignoring Its Heroin Problem in the Ranks?

phr

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Is the Military Ignoring Its Heroin Problem in the Ranks?
Megan Carpentier
AlterNet
10.22.09



The U.S. military has known about the problem of drug use in its ranks since the Vietnam War, when contemporaneous accounts suggested up to 15 percent of enlisted men tried or became addicted to opiates. But, for the first time since then, the military has soldiers in combat in a producer-country: Afghanistan, which produces more than 90 percent of the world's heroin despite decades of eradication efforts.

For many soldiers bored or traumatized, the access to cheap, strong heroin is likely to be a powerful lure and, in fact, reports going back to 2006 show that heroin can be easily--and cheaply--obtained mere steps off Bagram Air Base. Shaun McCanna, reporting for Salon in 2007, was able to arrange to receive heroin worth hundreds of dollars in the U.S. for $30 in the Bagram Bazaar multiple times.

My driver translates, "He wants to know how much you want? Twenty, 30, 50 dollars' worth?" From past experience, for I have arranged this same transaction a dozen times in a dozen different Bagram Bazaar shops, I know that the $30 bag will contain enough pure to bring hundreds of dollars on the streets of any American city. Afghanistan, after all, is the source of 90 percent of the world's heroin. I say 30 and the teen jogs off.

McCanna was initially turned on to the heroin problem at Bagram by the death of a soldier, John Torres, who told his family about the heroin problems at Bagram before his death under mysterious circumstances. McCanna bought heroin more than a dozen times in Bagram while filming a documentary about Torres' death and saw ample evidence that soldiers were trading military equipment for drugs as well.

In 2007, the military denied that there was a heroin problem among soldiers in Afghanistan.

At Bagram, according to a written statement provided by a spokesperson for the base, Army Maj. Chris Belcher, the "Military Police receive few reports of alcohol or drug issues."

However, when McCanna made arrangements to speak with three veterans receiving treatment for heroin addiction on the record, his efforts were stymied by the military and the VA. The only publicly available data available to McCanna showed the number of soldiers who fail random drug screenings, which all indicated low or non-existent levels of heroin abuse, despite reports from soldiers and rehabilitation facilities of soldiers using the drug.

McCanna's piece was published more than two years ago, but a recent filing by Gerald Posner in The Daily Beast indicates that little has changed with either the military's attentiveness to the problem or the market for heroin among military personnel. Recently, a former general-turned-drug-czar Barry McCaffrey admitted, to the military's chagrin, that a problem likely exists.

Barry McCaffrey, a retired four-star general who was the U.S. drug czar under Bill Clinton, told a conference of addiction-treatment providers that serious drug use among U.S. troops in Afghanistan has doubled in the last four years, and that as the Obama administration moves more soldiers from Iraq to Afghanistan, more will fall prey. “[Soldiers] are going to stick it up their nose and like it," he told the National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers this past May.=

And while the military likes to trumpet its testing results as evidence that there's no problem with addiction among the troops, they quietly admitted to Posner that testing troops in Afghanistan has proven problematic.

Rhonda K. Paige, the chief of the public affairs and strategic communications office of the Army’s deputy chief of staff, told The Daily Beast, “We apply the same testing requirements to soldiers in theater as we do to soldiers at home station; but not at the risk of the mission and or our soldiers' personal safety.”

George Wright, a Pentagon-based Army spokesman told me, “In Iraq, a majority of units inspected at the brigade, battalion, and company levels were meeting the intent of current Army policy, but compliance in Afghanistan is problematic due to operational tempo and unit dispersion.”

In other words, they aren't really testing the troops in Afghanistan regularly. In fact, Wright was unable to find any data later than 2006--the data the military provided McCanna in 2007. However, the VA reported 22,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans seeking substance abuse treatment in 2008, a significant increase from the 9,000 they saw in 2006, and the numbers are only expected the grow.

Despite the well-documented access to heroin in Afghanistan, anecdotal evidence of widespread drug abuse and private concerns about soldiers trafficking cheap heroin stateside, Posner reports that the DEA doesn't have a single case officer serving in Afghanistan or Iraq looking into drug trafficking.

In the end, no one knows exactly how many U.S. troops are using heroin, though it is unlikely that the military's acknowledged "none" is any reflection of reality. But with the military's outright refusal to acknowledge the reality of drug abuse and addiction among troops in the field, it's equally unlikely that military or VA health services are prepared for any onslaught of addiction patients requiring counseling and rehabilitation.

Posner notes that methadone clinics are already overpacked despite the military's denials, and VA counselors suggest that it will take years from some patients to seek the help they likely already need.

Link!
 
as long as its not a problem (ie interfering with duty or mission), and there's nobody narcing, they arent going to waste the time or resources to do regular drug testing while in theatre. there's more important things to worry about, really.
 
^

exactly, from personal exp. Its way to expensive and time consuming to kick members out and recruit and train a replacement. Your better off keeping your men so long as they're combat effective, and ignore whatever the fuck they do if it doesnt affect performance...cause who cares about anything beyond the mission. I sure don't, as long as my order is carried out, the means are irrelevant to me.
 
But doesnt being addicted to heroin detract from your ability to wage warfare. It would be hard to fight a battle when you're nodding out.
 
dosage moderation. dont fucking nod, just light buzz that gets rid of the aches and pains.

its the heirarchy as to lack of concern. the comd and 2/ic of any given unit are suppose to discipline its troops. However, they're more concerned with the tasking at hand usually.

I'm a sect comd. I care that my fire teams perform well, I dont care what their vices are.
the platoon comd doesnt care about much, except that his rifle sections did a good job.
the company commander doesnt care what the platoon does besides its tasking.
the battalion looks at the company in the same way.
then so does the brigade
and the division
and the corps
and the service as a whole. "git r dun and don't mention any little secrets you have, and we wont poke into very much as long as things work"
 
I think rangrz has hit the nail on the head, given the cheap and readily available heroin and the shit conditions it is a given many soldiers will be using some atleast occassionally. It doesn't mean its worth the militarys time or effort to weed out these users, the reality is probably quite the opposite.

If I was in Afghanistan and forced to engage in combat and/or spend hours sitting around an army base doing sweet fuck all, I would realistically expect to be hooked on smack in less than 3 months. What the fuck else is there to do?
 
What the fuck else is there to do?

quite a lot, actually. depending, of course, on where you are and what your mission is. as long as you're not out in BFE on a newly established FOB, you can have all the comforts that you have at home in your quarters or not too far away (tv, internet, video games, movies, books/magazines, etc). having ways to unwind and relax is key

really the biggest drug of abuse overseas is steroids.
 
I wouldn't anyone who's job entails the risk of death(either to themselves or others) to be using recreationally while on the job.
 
See if your on a nice base, its less tempting, but I was at first infantry that spent more time in the desert then on a base, and then SOF operator that pretty much lived outside the wire. The heroin was often a way to remove the pain of 100lb ruck you've humped everyday for 25km for the last 3 weeks.
 
Fuck our soliders are ment to be the best our counties have and you think its ok for them to be junkies?

When your serving your country you should be doing it to the best of your ability. What one does when their at home is one thing, but what one does when they are on tour with heavy weapons at their fingers. Well fuck me.

Rangrz im most intrested in your view since your on the ground so I believe your view means alot. Your quite happy for your men to go on mission addicted to H?
 
Fuck our soliders are ment to be the best our counties have and you think its ok for them to be junkies?

When your serving your country you should be doing it to the best of your ability. What one does when their at home is one thing, but what one does when they are on tour with heavy weapons at their fingers. Well fuck me.

are you suggesting that people cant do drugs and be quality members of society, functioning at their best? painkillers are especially good for allowing people to function for prolonged periods of time, ignoring everything else, and allowing them to focus on things more important than how much your back and legs hurt. opioids are also good for allowing people to kill their emotions, so they can take the life of another when necessary without a second thought. also good for calming your nerves, to take better aim, and deal with the pain of losing friends.

etcetc
 
That is the best reason for joining the armed services I have ever heard of.

I still am not going to though ;)
 
But doesnt being addicted to heroin detract from your ability to wage warfare. It would be hard to fight a battle when you're nodding out.
uhhh if you're addicted to heroin

that means you have to take a certain amount in order to feel sober

and take a LOT to feel high

(tolerance/dependence is a bitch)

so, as would make sense, they are nodding during down time when they desperately need such a nod (war is a bitch), and maintaining a normal dose during combat and other times
What one does when their at home is one thing, but what one does when they are on tour with heavy weapons at their fingers. Well fuck me.
your perspective leaves those who use at home, then get shipped to a warzone, in a bit of a pickle
 
I wouldn't anyone who's job entails the risk of death(either to themselves or others) to be using recreationally while on the job.
if a soldier was using "recreationally" on the job, it would show up in his performance

speaking of this thread, i'm going to go catch a buzz, and do advanced physics/maths at the same time

hard to believe some bluelighters still have the attitude that just because you're on drugs you can't do things like advanced physics, aim a gun, teach a class, drive a car, and brush your teeth.

these are opiates we are talking about, remember; dosing maintenance doses allows feeling sober, and there is nill motor impairment
 
not always, if he catches a nod during downtime, thats okay. and if he just uses a bit for pain control, it doesnt affect performance too much. Good judgement is required by the person, however combat soldiers lacking such, tend to wind up in pine box's regardless.
 
The 'judgement' is up to the leaders, you act as if the 2nd lt sgt. maj. and company commanders are doing H and then runnning the show.
The armed forces run well because of the structure of leadership and the standards leaders set for their grunts. Nothing else matters as long as they keep everything up to par.

plus, you act as if the infantry divisions nod off all the time. Results prove that the rangers and marine recon are doing their job very well so far ;)
 
these are opiates we are talking about, remember; dosing maintenance doses allows feeling sober, and there is nill motor impairment
I agree with you, but I wasn't talking about maintenance use.
 
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