Pubdate: Sun, 11 Feb 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Barbara Crossette Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) CAUTIOUS U.S. HOPE ON REPORT OF LOWER AFGHAN OPIUM CROP UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 9 -- A top narcotics expert in the United States Drug Enforcement Administration said this week that American agencies were receiving reports similar to those received by United Nations agencies of a sharply reduced opium crop in Taliban-controlled areas of Afghanistan, but he cautioned that it was too soon to confirm the trend or to explain the cause. United Nations narcotics officials in the region began a survey last week that appeared to show large areas of the country taken out of poppy cultivation. Last year, Afghanistan had the world's largest opium poppy crop, accounting for nearly three-quarters of all production. Opium is the base for making heroin. In Washington, Steven Casteel, chief of intelligence for the Drug Enforcement Administration, said in an interview that drawing the conclusion that the ruling Taliban have definitely begun to cut back significantly "is a bit premature." Using electronic surveillance and informers on the ground, Mr. Casteel said, the United States expects to have a firmer measurement of this year's Afghan opium crop by the end of March or early April. "From a law enforcement perspective, we're just extremely cautious about this -- cautiously optimistic but cautious," Mr. Casteel said. "To see a sudden turnaround in this, I am more interested almost not in what is happening but why." Mr. Casteel said a severe drought might be a factor in the reduction, an explanation United Nations drug experts also mention. Whatever the cause, a substantial drop in opium poppy production could help the Taliban ease its diplomatic isolation. The militant Islamic government, which controls most of the country, has been under Security Council sanctions for not turning over to the United States Osama bin Laden, who is believed to finance terrorism, and has been criticized widely for its human rights record. In the longer term, Mr. Casteel said, narcotics experts will be looking for evidence that a sudden reduction in poppy growing in Afghanistan could be linked to financial decisions by international drug dealers. "These organizations are getting more sophisticated," he said. "They make multinational business decisions. This could be simply a price issue." Opium, he added, can be stockpiled indefinitely and released later for maximum profit. "If you are making widgets, and you stockpile your widgets for a period of time and get the price to double or treble, that's a business decision you probably want to do," he said. "So we're seeing the price of heroin that a few months ago -- before the Taliban's ban on opium poppies -- was probably between $600 and $700 is now going for as much as $2,500." American experts agree with United Nations officials that there are stockpiles of heroin along the northern border of Afghanistan, but there is no clear sense of who is in charge of it. Mr. Casteel said individuals connected to both the Taliban and their opponents fighting for about 5 percent of the country's northeast had been linked to drug traders. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager