April 03, 2005-- Safar 23, 1426 A.H. ISSN 1563-9479
Capital Suggestion: Are US allies growing poppy?
Dr Farrukh Saleem, The News International,
Pakistan
Taliban-ruled Afghanistan had 4,163 acres
planted with poppies. Under General John Abizaid, 510,766 acres in Afghanistan
are being used for poppy cultivation (both figures from the White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy). The Taliban produced
40 metric tons of opium, or the equivalent of five metric tons of heroin.
Under the Commander-in-Chief of U.S. Central Command, Afghanistan produces
5,000 metric tons of opium, or the equivalent of 600 metric tons of heroin.
In 2001, Afghanistan's entire heroin
stock was worth $600 million on the streets of Frankfurt and Rotterdam.
Last year's crop could fetch upwards of $50 billion on the same streets
(roughly two-third of Pakistan's annual GDP).
Afghanistan has six neighbours; Pakistan,
Tajikistan, Iran, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and China. Of the six, the Pak-Afghan
border -- at 2,430 km -- is the longest and the most porous. According
to Major-General Nadeem Ahmed, DG Pakistan's Anti-Narcotics Force
(ANF), some "70 percent of the narcotics manufactured in Afghanistan
[are] either smuggled to, or transited through Pakistan."
Poppy is cultivated across the border in
Afghanistan but most labs are at the border on Pakistani territory.
The `Opium Expressway' has three corridors: The Southern Corridor
of the `Golden Crescent' is through Islamabad, Sialkot, Sukkur, Karachi
and into the Arabian Sea (there is a fork that goes into India).
The Western Corridor takes a route between Tehran and Esfahan and
further West or through Turkey and into Europe. The Northern Corridor
is into Turkmenistan and through the Caspian Sea.
In 1979, Pakistan had a near zero heroin-addict
population. Our current annual consumption is estimated at 100 metric
tons with a million chronic heroin addicts (some estimates have up to three
million drug addicts). The price at Rs50 a gram is cheap; our rate of addiction
is double that of the U.S. and most Pakistani addicts are between the ages
of 20 and 35.
General Tommy Franks, General Abizaid's
predecessor, recruited every Afghan warlord he could rent, bigger ones
at up to a million dollars a month. The warlords took Tommy's dollars,
bought more guns, increased the size of their militia and brought
more territory under their control. They took the dollars, fought the Taliban
and then went for even more dollars by growing tons of poppies on
territory under their control. Most CIA human assets in Afghanistan also
went into the business of sowing seeds. America's `war on drugs'
became subordinated to her `war on terrorism' and what we have is a record
high opium production (America's budget for the `war on drugs' is $19
billion while Congressional Budget Office's estimate for the `war on
terrorism' falls in the neighbourhood of $200 billion).
Afghanistan's heroin is the purest there
is and it remains Afghanistan's alternative currency. Warlords, farmers
and traders all store heroin as others around the globe stash money
in the bank. If the world produces a thousand metric tons of pure heroin
at least 600 metric tons of that is produced in Afghanistan and some 400
metric tons of that passes through Pakistan. That's the equivalent
of Euro 30 billion (European retail price) worth of product passing through
Pakistan (our annual GDP is roughly Euro 60 billion).
Not too long ago, two tons of heroin hidden
in footballs was seized in Sialkot. And residential land in Islamabad
is now more expensive than Beverley Hills. Is there a connection between
the record high opium production across the border and Islamabad prices
going through the roof?
Hamid Karzai may be the president of Kabul
but drug barons closely allied to American forces are the real rulers of
Afghanistan. Is Afghanistan about to become a narco-state? Why should
General John Abizaid worry? The White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy (a component of the Executive Office of the President) says,
"little Afghan heroin has ended up on U.S. streets, with most Afghan
heroin marketed to neighbouring countries and Europe." Once again, as was
the case during the war against the Soviets, CIA assets in Afghanistan
now control the Golden Crescent's heroin trade.
The writer is an Islamabad-based freelance columnist.
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