Pubdate: Thu, 12 Aug 2004
Source: Daily Star, The (Lebanon)
Contact:  http://www.dailystar.com.lb/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/547
Author: Jim Mannion, Agence France Presse
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

RUMSFELD IN AFGHANISTAN FOR TALKS BEFORE ELECTION

US Defense Secretary Says Drug Trade Hurts Democracy Efforts

KABUL: US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld held talks with US commanders 
and Afghan leaders in Kabul Wednesday to review strategy as insurgents step 
up attacks to disrupt historic October presidential elections.

Rumsfeld traveled to the Afghan capital from Oman where he warned that the 
drug trade from massive opium poppy crops was hampering US efforts to 
foster democracy in the war-torn central Asian state.

Shortly after landing in Kabul he flew to the eastern city Jalalabad to 
meet a US military-run team of soldiers and civilians helping to provide 
security and with reconstruction projects. Jalalabad lies in the center of 
one of Afghanistan's biggest poppy farming regions.

Rumsfeld met the US commander of the team, known as a Provincial 
Reconstruction Team, before meeting local dignitaries.

Back in Kabul he was due to meet Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who is 
running for re-election on Oct. 9 against 17 other candidates, and Defense 
Minister Mohammed Qasim Fahim.

Rumsfeld and other defense officials traveling with him said they expected 
more attacks by Taleban supporters in the run-up to the presidential vote, 
Afghanistan's first ever, but Rumsfeld said they would fail.

"Is the Taleban still active in the neighboring areas? Sure. That's just a 
fact. Are they going to end up being successful? No. They are going to end 
up losing," he said Tuesday in Muscat.

"The larger the groups of Taleban that come together, the better the 
target, and the faster they'll be killed or captured."

Senior defense officials traveling with Rumsfeld said the secretary would 
use his unannounced visit to hold strategy sessions with commanders, US 
Embassy officials and Afghan leaders. The US Army heads a 20,000-strong 
coalition of troops hunting Al-Qaeda insurgents and their allies.

"We're doing another complete strategy review. It's under way right now," 
the official said, while speaking on condition of anonymity.

Although the Taleban posed no strategic threat to the government or to the 
elections, "there are tactical level threats - assassinations, bombings, 
the unfortunate killings of NGOs and the like," he said.

"There is a debate over whether we are seeing a spike or whether it is a 
steady state."

The defense official said the United States wanted to accelerate training 
and equipping of Afghan army and police units.

Rumsfeld expressed concern in Muscat that drug money raised by insurgents 
and warlords from bumper poppy crops posed a threat to US efforts to 
establish democratic rule in Afghanistan, which spent a quarter century 
under conflict including five years of harsh Taleban rule until late 2001.

Opium from the poppies is the key ingredient for heroin.

Rumsfeld said "the enormous wealth that comes from dealing drugs can be put 
to uses that are adverse to our interests or the interests of the Afghan 
government."

Drug production generated $2.3 billion in 2003, up 6 percent on the 
previous year, according to UN figures. The 3,600 tons of heroin produced 
in Afghanistan last year accounted for 90 percent of the heroin on Europe's 
streets.

"You need a broad effort in Afghanistan to make sure the hundreds and 
hundreds of millions of dollars, and undoubtedly billions of dollars over 
time ... will not go into the hands of people who want to also destroy 
democracy, or reinstitute a Taleban government or provide funds to Al-Qaeda 
or whatever," Rumsfeld said.

"To the extent that millions of dollars are available to criminals and to 
people who are not democratic, it puts at risk the entire system. So it's 
something the government and the coalition are determined to address."

The UN says the drug trade threatens to turn Afghanistan into a failed 
narco-state.
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