Pubdate: Sun, 23 Apr 2000 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2000 Globe Newspaper Company. Contact: P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378 Feedback: http://extranet.globe.com/LettersEditor/default.asp Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Author: John Daniszewski, Los Angeles Times IRAN'S DEADLY WAR AGAINST DRUGS Forces try to check smugglers at the border ORKHE KALAT, Iran - A war is being waged on the wastelands of eastern Iran, but few outside this country are aware of it. On one side are the forces of the Islamic Republic, in their kelly green uniforms, baseball caps, and military boots, flying old US-made Huey helicopters or hunkered down in newly built versions of medieval fortresses. Marshaled against them is a criminal enemy - clever, ruthless, and formidably armed - made up of Afghan and Pakistani drug smugglers and their Iranian accomplices. The criminals are intent on getting hundreds of tons of opium and heroin that are produced each year in Afghanistan safely to the desert interior of Iran, to be sold for local consumption or shipped to Turkey and Western Europe. The Iranian forces are trying to stanch the flow of drugs across their border, as a matter of religious duty and self-interest for the Islamic government, which is troubled by signs that many bored, underemployed young people are falling into the grips of a drug epidemic. But closing the border to traffickers is a daunting task; there are more than 1,100 miles of unpopulated, unforgiving frontier with Afghanistan and Pakistan to defend. The region is among the most brutal terrain on Earth, a mix of craggy mountains and parched desert, where temperatures can range from below freezing in the winter to over 120 degrees in summer. On this harsh tableau, on any given day the smugglers may kill the Iranians or the Iranians may kill the smugglers. This nation has lost more than 2,500 police officers and soldiers in the war against drug traffickers during the last 15 years, from police privates to army generals whose helicopters were shot down with Stinger missiles. More than 100 died in 1999, including 36 police officers captured in November by traffickers and executed after being tortured. No one knows how many smugglers have died. But Iran's prisons are crowded with the 9,000 or so apprehended since the early 1980s. To give a picture of the scale of the struggle, according to United Nations statistics: Each year the Iranians seize 90 percent of all opium confiscated worldwide by law enforcement agencies, and 10 percent of all heroin. The drugs seized by the Islamic Republic represent vast potential wealth. The Iranians say they have stopped 3 million pounds over the last two decades. The 77,000 pounds of seized uncut heroin alone, at more than $90,000 a pound, would sell on the street for about $7 billion. The Iranians routinely destroy it in bonfires. In an effort to stop the flow of drugs, Iran has deployed 30,000 police officers along its border and mounted a massive construction effort, including earthen barriers, concrete walls, barbed-wire fences, and deep trenches. The works have included 80 miles of embankments, 22 walls sealing valleys, hundreds of miles of trenches 15 feet deep and 14 feet across, 12 miles of barbed wire, 100 military outposts, and 16 border stations. The problem is so acute for Iran because its neighbor, Afghanistan, accounts for three-quarters of the world's annual production of opium, a crop that last year was estimated at a record 4,600 tons. Drug-control experts say the Taliban, the extremist Sunni Muslim movement that has conquered most of Afghanistan, uses the drug trade as a funding source. As much as 90 percent of the heroin consumed in Europe comes from Afghanistan, and US officials fear that more of it is coming to North America. Iran sits astride the most direct route for those drugs to reach Western consumers, either directly from Afghanistan or through Pakistan. Officials say that over the last 20 years, Iran has expended billions of dollars and many lives in a war on drugs that benefits Europe. The estimate for 1999 expenditures alone was $800 million. Yet, Iran's struggle has not garnered much attention because, for most of the last 20 years, since the Islamic Revolution, the country has been isolated diplomatically from the West. ''We do feel alone,'' said Mohammed Fallah, head of Iran's antinarcotics effort. ''Although most of the drugs trafficked through our country are aimed at Europe or other countries, most of the load is shouldered by us alone.'' Only now have relations with the West started to improve as reformers have aligned themselves with moderate president Mohammad Khatami. With the exception of US efforts to interdict drugs coming from Latin America, there is arguably no country that has waged such a determined and costly war against drug smuggling. A UN official suggests that the effort is one area in which the West and Iran have the opportunity and mutual interest to cooperate. ''If Iran seizes more, less is going to Europe,'' said Antonio Mazzitelli, transferred from Colombia last year to open an office of the UN International Drug Control Program in Tehran. ''The two sides have discovered this issue offers benefits to all.'' General Ali Shafiee, head of the Iranian national police antinarcotic division, recently escorted a delegation of European diplomats and journalists to the front lines of the conflict in Sistan-Baluchistan province in southeastern Iran, where the bulk of the smuggling occurs. >From a helicopter flying over the eastern frontier, the nearby mountains of Afghanistan look like jagged black teeth, forbidding and wild as they rise out of the desert. When rain falls in the mountains in winter, the water washes down in a torrent, carving the land into stark valleys and rivulets. In the heat of the desert, the water quickly vanishes. But the gashes left behind become the pathways for smugglers. Antidrug police and soldiers from Tehran assigned to the narcotics war keep lonely vigils in this land, watching the passageways from mountaintop towers and walled fortresses that Iran has constructed along the frontier, redoubts that look like castles from the Middle Ages. Through the use of undercover agents and informers, the police try to anticipate when a shipment is due. But Shafiee has no illusions: He doubts that his officers get even half the contraband flowing across the border. Meanwhile, smugglers are developing other ruses. One is to addict camels to opium and then train them to know where in Iran they can go to get their next fix, Shafiee said. In this way, the camels will cross the frontier unescorted by smugglers and deliver their cargo to accomplices. According to the UN's Mazzitelli, Iran was one of the major producers of opium in the region before the Islamic Revolution in 1979. But within four years, the clerical government had managed to virtually stamp out its production. However, with the influx of drugs from Afghanistan, officials admit that they are facing a serious abuse problem, with about 1.2 million Iranians using drugs. ''We are part of the world, and in the whole world this problem is on the rise and increasing every day,'' parliament member Marzieh Seddighi said. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck