Pubdate: Wed, 28 Nov 2001 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://www.sunone.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 THAT OTHER WAR It is a bitter twist of irony that America's victory in Afghanistan - the opening salvo in what promises to be a larger global war on terrorism - may also foretell a setback in another, ongoing war; the war against drugs. Afghanistan is one of the poorest nations on earth. It is also one of the world's leading producer of opium poppies. For all of its faults, the Taliban regime at least kept the lid on opium production; according to the United Nations Drug Control Program, the production of raw opium fell from more than a million pounds in 1999 to about 40,600 pounds this year. But now the Taliban is in retreat. An uneasy alliance of warlords and rival tribes will make governing the mountainous nation all the more difficult. And already reeling from years of war, the people of Afghanistan are facing starvation and unrelenting poverty. Against that backdrop, the temptation to grow poppies to help feed the habits of millions of addicts around the world, America included, is nearly irresistable. Last week, the New York Times cited the example of one poor Afghan farmer who earned $13,000 by growing 2.5 acres of poppies. Growing wheat or vegetables might have earned that same farmer $100, the Times said. "This is my message to the world," Abdul Wakil, the Afghan farmer told the Times. "Help us establish industries in Afghanistan. We are a tough people, hard workers, and we would happily quit the cultivation of poppy. But here there are no industries, no factories, nothing, and we need to take the money from the one remaining source." The case for rebuilding Afghanistan's ruined economy on sheer humanitarian grounds is compelling. But beyond that, pragmatism and national self-interest dictate that the Bush Administration pay heed to Wakil's "message to the world." If Afghanistan ceases to be a leading exporter of terrorism and resumes it former status as the world's exporter of a deadly addictive drug, it would be a hollow American victory indeed. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake