Just follow the money. The opium fields in Afghanistan supply 93% of the world’s production of heroin and is the single largest revenue producer for that impoverished country’s gross national product, according to United Nations and U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency reports. After the Soviets gave up and left Afghanistan, the Taliban destroyed the crops under the guise of religious purity and received millions of dollars from the United States and other countries for their efforts on the War On Drugs. Within a year after the U.S. invaded Afghanistan as a result of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the Taliban returned to encourage growing opium to finance their operations from the proceeds of selling the illicit drug. The U.S. countered by eradicating some fields but did not have enough Round-Up to do the job.
It finally dawned on Richard Holbrooke, the U.S. envoy to Afghanistan, that eradication programs weren’t working and were only driving farmers into the hands of the Taliban. “Eradication is a waste of money,” Holbrooke said.
As a result, the U.S. has a new policy on opium production in Afghanistan. It has the support of the United Nations, Holbrooke said outside a G-8 ministers meeting on Afghanistan in Trieste, Italy. The money used for eradication will be shifted to drug interdiction and alternate crop programs.
That’s an interesting concept. As we reported in April, the Afghan president’s brother is the alleged kingpin of the country’s drug trafficking trade. The World Bank, we also reported, loaned the country at least $65 million to improve its irrigation infrastructure with marginal success, primarily because of incompetency and fraud within the government’s interior ministry.
The United Nations has estimated the Taliban and other Afghan militants made an estimated $50 million to $70 million off the opium and heroin trade last year.
In a report released earlier this week, the U.N. drug office said opium cultivation had dropped by 19 percent last year, but was still concentrated in three southern provinces where the Taliban insurgency is strongest.
Holbrooke said the previous U.S. policy hadn’t reduced “by one dollar” the amount of money the Taliban earned off opium cultivation and production. “It might destroy some acreage,” Holbrooke said. “But it just helped the Taliban.”
Agriculture was among the issues taken up by the delegates at the G-8 meeting in their Saturday session on Afghanistan, with participants saying in a draft version of the final statement that agricultural development was seen as “key to the future of Afghanistan and Pakistan as well as other countries in the region.”
The statement called for “expanded agricultural cooperation that could lead to rural development, food security, employment growth, higher income levels, alternatives to poppy cultivation and ultimately lower tensions in the region.”
It is the same direction and purpose of the World Bank loans which were issued in 2002 with little success.
“The farmers are not our enemy, they’re just growing a crop to make a living,” Holbrooke said. “It’s the drug system.”
Nor are other crops cash cows.
Cross posted on The Remmers Report
Jerry Remmers worked 26 years in the newspaper business. His last 23 years was with the Evening Tribune in San Diego where assignments included reporter, assistant city editor, county and politics editor.