Pubdate: Wed, 3 Oct 2001 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Author: Ken Guggenheim U.S. OFFICIAL: TALIBAN IN OPIUM TRADE WASHINGTON (AP) - Though Afghanistan's Taliban rulers remain deeply involved in the opium trade, there is little evidence that drugs are a major source of funding for Osama bin Laden's terrorist network, top drug officials told lawmakers Wednesday. But the officials said the al-Qaida network, based in Afghanistan, benefits indirectly from the Taliban's involvement in trafficking and they are concerned that it could develop closer links with traffickers as it comes under pressure from the United States following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. ``Whenever you have a terrorist organization that has to have sources of money and they are geographically alongside drug organizations that produce money, then there's obviously the potential for a stronger connection between the two,'' Asa Hutchinson, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, told the House Government Reform subcommittee on criminal justice, drug policy and human resources. U.S. officials say that opium trafficking has been a major source of financing for the Taliban, the hardline Islamic militia that governs most of the country. Hutchinson and William Bach, a State Department counter-narcotics official, said the Taliban tax traffickers, sometimes accepting opium instead of cash. In anticipation of U.S. military reprisals for the terrorist attacks, the Taliban appears to be dumping its stockpiles. Opium prices in the region dropped suddenly from $746 a kilogram to $95 immediately after the attacks. It has since bounced back to $429. In the late 1990s, Afghanistan was the world's leading producer of opium, the raw material for heroin. At its peak, it supplied more than 70 percent of the world market. Last year, the Taliban ordered a halt to opium cultivation, citing religious principles. International observers confirmed production had been almost wiped out in Taliban-held areas, with the little remaining opium being cultivated on land held by the opposition northern alliance. But U.S. officials say the ban has had little effect on trafficking because the Taliban hasn't eliminated massive opium stockpiles from previous years or stop traffickers. Subcommittee chairman Mark Souder, R-Ind., called the ban ``a coldly calculated ploy to control the world market price for their opium and heroin.'' U.S. officials have estimated that opium could provide the Taliban with up to $50 million a year. Hutchinson and Bach said al-Qaida benefits indirectly because it has been protected by the Taliban. But Bach said that drug trafficking ``just doesn't seem to be the major resource for al-Qaida.'' Souder noted that U.S. officials have paid little attention to the Afghan opium trade because little of it entered the United States. ``We now must confront the new reality that the Afghan drug trade, largely without crossing our borders, has harmed our country just as much as the drugs from half a world away that reached American streets,'' he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh