Real Reason US In Afghanistan - Record Heroin Crop
When the United States is almost bankrupt, why are we EXPANDING a
crazy war in Afghanistan instead of getting out of there along with
Iraq? Under the Taliban the heroin production had become virtually
nonexistent. Now with the US and Britain running the country there's
one record opium crop after another. Coincidence or is the real reason
we're there to support the international Mafia's lucrative drug
trafficking? Let's have a national referendum to see if our people
think we should still be there. Demand that your congressmen and women
get us out of that crazy war too!
Britain is protecting the biggest heroin crop of all time By CRAIG
MURRAY
Last updated at 20:45 21 July 2007

This week the 64th British soldier to die in Afghanistan, Corporal
Mike Gilyeat, was buried. All the right things were said about this
brave soldier, just as, on current trends, they will be said about one
or more of his colleagues who follow him next week.
The alarming escalation of the casualty rate among British soldiers in
Afghanistan ? up to ten per cent ? led to discussion this week on
whether it could be fairly compared to casualty rates in the Second
World War.

But the key question is this: what are our servicemen dying for? There
are glib answers to that: bringing democracy and development to
Afghanistan, supporting the government of President Hamid Karzai in
its attempt to establish order in the country, fighting the Taliban
and preventing the further spread of radical Islam into Pakistan.
But do these answers stand up to close analysis?
There has been too easy an acceptance of the lazy notion that the war
in Afghanistan is the 'good' war, while the war in Iraq is the 'bad'
war, the blunder. The origins of this view are not irrational. There
was a logic to attacking Afghanistan after 9/11.
Afghanistan was indeed the headquarters of Osama Bin Laden and his
organisation, who had been installed and financed there by the CIA to
fight the Soviets from 1979 until 1989. By comparison, the attack on
Iraq ? which was an enemy of Al Qaeda and no threat to us ? was
plainly irrational in terms of the official justification.
So the attack on Afghanistan has enjoyed a much greater sense of
public legitimacy. But the operation to remove Bin Laden was one
thing. Six years of occupation are clearly another.

Few seem to turn a hair at the officially expressed view that our
occupation of Iraq may last for decades.
Lib Dem leader Menzies Campbell has declared, fatuously, that the
Afghan war is 'winnable'.
Afghanistan was not militarily winnable by the British Empire at the
height of its supremacy. It was not winnable by Darius or Alexander,
by Shah, Tsar or Great Moghul. It could not be subdued by 240,000
Soviet troops. But what, precisely, are we trying to win?
In six years, the occupation has wrought one massive transformation in
Afghanistan, a development so huge that it has increased Afghan GDP by
66 per cent and constitutes 40 per cent of the entire economy. That is
a startling achievement, by any standards. Yet we are not trumpeting
it. Why not?
The answer is this. The achievement is the highest harvests of opium
the world has ever seen.
The Taliban had reduced the opium crop to precisely nil. I would not
advocate their methods for doing this, which involved lopping bits,
often vital bits, off people. The Taliban were a bunch of mad and
deeply unpleasant religious fanatics. But one of the things they were
vehemently against was opium.
That is an inconvenient truth that our spin has managed to obscure.
Nobody has denied the sincerity of the Taliban's crazy religious zeal,
and they were as unlikely to sell you heroin as a bottle of Johnnie
Walker.
They stamped out the opium trade, and impoverished and drove out the
drug warlords whose warring and rapacity had ruined what was left of
the country after the Soviet war.
That is about the only good thing you can say about the Taliban; there
are plenty of very bad things to say about them. But their suppression
of the opium trade and the drug barons is undeniable fact.
Now we are occupying the country, that has changed. According to the
United Nations, 2006 was the biggest opium harvest in history,
smashing the previous record by 60 per cent. This year will be even
bigger.
Our economic achievement in Afghanistan goes well beyond the simple
production of raw opium. In fact Afghanistan no longer exports much
raw opium at all. It has succeeded in what our international aid
efforts urge every developing country to do. Afghanistan has gone into
manufacturing and 'value-added' operations.
It now exports not opium, but heroin. Opium is converted into heroin
on an industrial scale, not in kitchens but in factories. Millions of
gallons of the chemicals needed for this process are shipped into
Afghanistan by tanker. The tankers and bulk opium lorries on the way
to the factories share the roads, improved by American aid, with Nato
troops.
How can this have happened, and on this scale? The answer is simple.
The four largest players in the heroin business are all senior members
of the Afghan government ? the government that our soldiers are
fighting and dying to protect.
When we attacked Afghanistan, America bombed from the air while the
CIA paid, armed and equipped the dispirited warlord drug barons ?
especially those grouped in the Northern Alliance ? to do the ground
occupation. We bombed the Taliban and their allies into submission,
while the warlords moved in to claim the spoils. Then we made them
ministers.
President Karzai is a good man. He has never had an opponent killed,
which may not sound like much but is highly unusual in this region and
possibly unique in an Afghan leader. But nobody really believes he is
running the country. He asked America to stop its recent bombing
campaign in the south because it was leading to an increase in support
for the Taliban. The United States simply ignored him. Above all, he
has no control at all over the warlords among his ministers and
governors, each of whom runs his own kingdom and whose primary concern
is self-enrichment through heroin.
My knowledge of all this comes from my time as British Ambassador in
neighbouring Uzbekistan from 2002 until 2004. I stood at the
Friendship Bridge at Termez in 2003 and watched the Jeeps with blacked-
out windows bringing the heroin through from Afghanistan, en route to
Europe.
I watched the tankers of chemicals roaring into Afghanistan.
Yet I could not persuade my country to do anything about it. Alexander
Litvinenko ? the former agent of the KGB, now the FSB, who died in
London last November after being poisoned with polonium 210 ? had
suffered the same frustration over the same topic.
There are a number of theories as to why Litvinenko had to flee
Russia. The most popular blames his support for the theory that FSB
agents planted bombs in Russian apartment blocks to stir up anti-
Chechen feeling.
But the truth is that his discoveries about the heroin trade were what
put his life in danger. Litvinenko was working for the KGB in St
Petersburg in 2001 and 2002. He became concerned at the vast amounts
of heroin coming from Afghanistan, in particular from the fiefdom of
the (now) Head of the Afghan armed forces, General Abdul Rashid
Dostum, in north and east Afghanistan.
Dostum is an Uzbek, and the heroin passes over the Friendship Bridge
from Afghanistan to Uzbekistan, where it is taken over by President
Islam Karimov's people. It is then shipped up the railway line, in
bales of cotton, to St Petersburg and Riga.
The heroin Jeeps run from General Dostum to President Karimov. The UK,
United States and Germany have all invested large sums in donating the
most sophisticated detection and screening equipment to the Uzbek
customs centre at Termez to stop the heroin coming through.
But the convoys of Jeeps running between Dostum and Karimov are simply
waved around the side of the facility.
Litvinenko uncovered the St Petersburg end and was stunned by the
involvement of the city authorities, local police and security
services at the most senior levels. He reported in detail to President
Vladimir Putin. Putin is, of course, from St Petersburg, and the
people Litvinenko named were among Putin's closest political allies.
That is why Litvinenko, having miscalculated badly, had to flee
Russia.
I had as little luck as Litvinenko in trying to get official action
against this heroin trade. At the St Petersburg end he found those
involved had the top protection. In Afghanistan, General Dostum is
vital to Karzai's coalition, and to the West's pretence of a stable,
democratic government.
Opium is produced all over Afghanistan, but especially in the north
and north-east ? Dostum's territory. Again, our Government's spin
doctors have tried hard to obscure this fact and make out that the
bulk of the heroin is produced in the tiny areas of the south under
Taliban control. But these are the most desolate, infertile rocky
areas. It is a physical impossibility to produce the bulk of the vast
opium harvest there.
That General Dostum is head of the Afghan armed forces and Deputy
Minister of Defence is in itself a symbol of the bankruptcy of our
policy. Dostum is known for tying opponents to tank tracks and running
them over. He crammed prisoners into metal containers in the searing
sun, causing scores to die of heat and thirst.
Since we brought 'democracy' to Afghanistan, Dostum ordered an MP who
annoyed him to be pinned down while he attacked him. The sad thing is
that Dostum is probably not the worst of those comprising the Karzai
government, or the biggest drug smuggler among them.
Our Afghan policy is still victim to Tony Blair's simplistic world
view and his childish division of all conflicts into 'good guys' and
'bad guys'. The truth is that there are seldom any good guys among
those vying for power in a country such as Afghanistan. To
characterise the Karzai government as good guys is sheer nonsense.
Why then do we continue to send our soldiers to die in Afghanistan?
Our presence in Afghanistan and Iraq is the greatest recruiting
sergeant for Islamic militants. As the great diplomat, soldier and
adventurer Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Alexander Burnes pointed out before
his death in the First Afghan War in 1841, there is no point in a
military campaign in Afghanistan as every time you beat them, you just
swell their numbers. Our only real achievement to date is falling
street prices for heroin in London.
Remember this article next time you hear a politician calling for more
troops to go into Afghanistan. And when you hear of another brave
British life wasted there, remember you can add to the casualty
figures all the young lives ruined, made miserable or ended by heroin
in the UK.
They, too, are casualties of our Afghan policy. 
http://www.squidoo.com/tithes-and-offerings

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