Russia and NATO divided over Afghan opium

More on this topic <http://en.rian.ru/trend/drugs/> 

21:0425/03/2010

On March 24, Russia and NATO discussed efforts to combat drug trafficking in 
Afghanistan at an extended meeting of the NATO-Russia Council in Brussels.

Predictably, Moscow failed to persuade NATO to step up its campaign against the 
drug trade in Afghanistan.

Viktor Ivanov, Head of Russia's Federal Service for Drug Control, tried to 
persuade NATO representatives to start destroying poppy plantations. The 
response was that NATO forces already tried to eradicate poppy fields, but it 
only antagonized Afghan farmers and drove them into the arms of the Taliban.

NATO has now decided to leave the farmers alone and to crack down on drug 
lords, laboratories and smugglers instead.

Previously, Russia failed to add a similar clause in a UN Security Council 
resolution on extending the mandate of the NATO-led International Security 
Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. Other efforts have also proved futile.

A rather vicious and sinister opium circle is emerging. The United States and 
NATO are saying that Afghan farmers need to grow opium to survive and that 
depriving them of their livelihood will only turn them against NATO and toward 
the Taliban, which buys most of its weapons with money from the opium trade.

No one disagrees with this assessment. NATO spokesman James Appathurai says the 
primary objective of the 120,000 NATO troops in Afghanistan is to destroy the 
Taliban, which would, in turn, solve the opium problem.

However, the numbers do not support Appathurai's claims. Afghanistan currently 
produces 93% of the world's heroin. The UN estimates that the Afghan opium 
trade is a $65 billion a year business. Only 3-4% ($150-300 million) of this 
amount goes to Taliban insurgents. Farmers and plantation owners get $500 
million, while the powerful drug mafia pockets the rest.

It turns out that combating illicit drug trafficking is a more important and 
difficult task than defeating the Taliban, although the two tasks are 
interconnected.

NATO's position is not without merit. It would be too costly to have troops 
spray poppy fields with chemicals. The army is supposed to be in the business 
of fighting, not agriculture. Besides, large units would be required to protect 
these "crop-dusters", turning the campaign into a military operation, and an 
expensive one at that.

It would be no less expensive to hire civilian contractors or drug-enforcement 
agents, who would also require the protection of troops to prevent casualties. 
This is not a viable option.

NATO claims that it has already tried various ways of destroying plantations 
with little success. General Stanley McChrystal, the current ISAF Commander and 
Commander of U.S. Forces Afghanistan (USFOR-A), says destroying plantations 
does not fit the new strategy of winning the "hearts and minds" of the Afghan 
people.

NATO claims it is pointless to destroy these plantations because the Taliban 
has stockpiled tremendous amounts of opium, which they could sell uninterrupted 
for the next few years without growing new crops. And still new opium is being 
grown.

U.S. President Barack Obama has announced a "new course" on opium, which 
targets smugglers and processors rather than farmers. Under this policy, Afghan 
farmers receive compensation for switching to different crops.

This policy is yielding results. The area of opium plantations fell 22% last 
year, though it still exceeds 2006 levels. According to the most optimistic 
estimates, the production of unprocessed opium has declined by 10%. British 
experts point out that recently Afghan farmers have been figuring out ways to 
extract more of the milky juice from poppies. Each hectare of poppies now 
yields 56 kg of opium (a 15% increase from a year ago).

Since coalition forces invaded Afghanistan almost nine years ago, they have 
made little progress in eradicating opium plantations, which supply the bulk of 
the world's heroin. It's not a case of "one step forward, two steps back". Some 
results have been achieved, after all. It's more like one step forward, one 
step back, and two to the side.

In February 2010, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) 
published a report predicting that opium cultivation will not decline in 2010 
but that the reductions achieved in 2008 and 2009 will be maintained. Even 
then, Afghanistan produced twice as much heroin than the world consumed. Let me 
emphasize that this is an estimate, as precise figures are unavailable.

The most striking feature of the debate over Afghan heroin is that virtually 
all the concerned parties are right in their own way. Russia is right to 
advocate a massive opium-eradication program, as are the United States and NATO 
for choosing to crack down on drug smugglers and producers instead.

It's as if everyone is moving in one direction down parallel streets, which 
will never merge into a single, wide avenue. Moscow, Washington and Brussels 
would accomplish much more if they joined forces.

True, some serious, albeit idealistic, analysts claim that the best way forward 
is to try to eliminate the global demand for drugs, as this would undermine 
supply. While this just proposal deserves to be immortalized in platinum or 
granite, it is a task of Biblical proportions, tantamount to fighting sin 
itself.

Not to mention that preventive measures, alternatives, the destruction of drugs 
and the financing of new agencies would cost the equivalent of several Afghan 
wars and take many years to accomplish.

Afghan drugs take an especially heavy toll on Russia's population. According to 
Russian analysts, 75-80 metric tons, or 21%, of Afghan heroin, makes its way to 
Russia, resulting in the deaths of 30,000 to 40,000 young Russians.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily 
represent those of RIA Novosti.

 

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Andrei Fedyashin)

http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20100325/158312107.html



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