Pubdate: Wed, 5 Dec 2001 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2001 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Ken Guggenheim, AP IN AFGHANISTAN: DEA HELPS CIA IN HUNT FOR OPIUM CACHES Small Stores Are Found; Huge Stockpiles Elusive WASHINGTON -- The Drug Enforcement Administration is providing the CIA with field drug-test kits to track down what are believed to be huge opium stockpiles in Afghanistan. The DEA also is passing information to the CIA and U.S. military about possible locations of the stockpiles, once considered an important source of finances for the Taliban and Al Qaeda, said Steven Casteel, the DEA's assistant administrator for intelligence. Casteel said Tuesday that drug seizures so far have been in the range of 40 pounds to 100 pounds, "none of the monstrous stockpiles we expected." Afghanistan, under Taliban rule, was the world's leading producer of opium in 2000, with more than two-thirds of the market. Most of that opium and the heroin derived from it were sold in Europe and Asia. U.S. drug dealers get most of their heroin from Latin America, mainly Colombia. Afghan opium production was virtually wiped out after the Taliban, citing Islamic principals, banned production in July 2000. Despite the ban, U.S. officials say the Taliban continued to profit from the opium trade. They say the Taliban had stockpiled enough opium to meet market demand for two years, and they contend the ban was merely an attempt to raise prices and boost the Taliban's international prestige. Now that the Taliban have been driven from power, drug officials hope to find the stockpiles and discourage new opium production. The United Front, which now controls much of Afghanistan, has done little in the past to fight opium production and trade. The DEA hopes some of the opium stockpiles will be discovered when top leaders of the Taliban and the Al Qaeda terrorist group are captured, Casteel said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk