Pubdate: Tue, 02 Mar 2004 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2004 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Marc Champion, Staff Reporter of the Wall Street Journal BRITAIN TO BOOST AID TO AFGHANISTAN Move Comes Amid Worries About Poppy Production And Need for More Troops LONDON -- Britain said it will more than double its aid to Afghanistan amid growing international concern that the war-torn country needs more money and troops quickly if it is to keep reconstruction on track and counter renewed poppy production. The increase, to UKP 500 million ($934 million or €750 million) from UKP 200 million over five years, comes as many farmers in Afghanistan once again are turning to opium poppy production and are expected this year to reap a bumper crop. That threatens to entrench regional warlords and fund insurgency by militants from the former Taliban regime. The Central Intelligence Agency says Afghan poppies provide the raw materials for as much as 90% of Europe's heroin supply and about a third of Afghanistan's gross domestic product. Security concerns also threaten to delay crucial Afghan elections, scheduled for June, although President Hamid Karzai has said he still aims to hold the elections on time. Only about 1.8 million of 10.5 million eligible Afghans have registered to vote, in part because it is too dangerous for registration volunteers to go out in southern regions. Part of the increase in British aid will be targeted at eradicating poppy production, providing programs for farmers to grow other crops and conflict prevention. The announcement also was designed to encourage other nations to provide money before a donors' conference at the end of March in Berlin, which is expected to raise money for Afghanistan. "We are demonstrating a level of increased commitment, and clearly we'd like to encourage others to see what they can do," said Hilary Benn, the United Kingdom's secretary of state for international development. A U.S. official said the U.S. was likely to increase its aid offer at the Berlin conference, but declined to say by how much. French and German officials declined to comment. Afghan Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai welcomed Britain's move in a telephone interview from Kabul, saying "both the amount of the increase and the [2002-2007] period of the pledge are very important to us." The expected increase in aid, though, is likely to fall short of what Afghanistan's fledgling government claims to need. The international community promised to give Afghanistan $4.5 billion (€3.6 billion) for reconstruction efforts over five years at a January 2002 donor conference in Tokyo. Since then, further pledges have raised the total to $5.2 billion. Still, the Afghan government plans to submit an investment plan at the Berlin conference that will require $28.5 billion in aid over seven years -- a number European officials call unrealistic. The Berlin conference is part of a two-step effort in the next few months to refocus attention on Afghanistan even as the reconstruction of Iraq dominates the international aid agenda. The second step comes in June at a North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit in Istanbul, Turkey. NATO has about 6,000 peacekeeping troops in Afghanistan, nearly all of them in Kabul. The 19-member military alliance has agreed in principle to extend its coverage beyond the capital, using so-called provincial reconstruction teams of 200 to 300 personnel each, plus support troops. Contributor nations are expected to decide in Istanbul by how much to expand and to offer the troops needed -- though again hopes aren't high that Afghanistan will get what it needs. "We aren't very optimistic, just out of realism," said a French government official. The official said many of the allies that supply troops in Kabul are overstretched, citing French commitments in Ivory Coast and Haiti. Bathsheba Crocker, co-director of the post-conflict resolution project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, says she is concerned that the poppy money landing in the pockets of regional warlords -- including Taliban militants -- could fund a downward spiral of armed violence. "So far, the international community's commitment to Afghanistan has been woefully inadequate, both on the money and the troops side," she said. According to an October 2002 report by U.K. charity Care International, Afghanistan was promised $75 per capita in international aid for 2002, far below annual amounts given to four other recent post-conflict states. Rwanda received $193 per capita per year, Bosnia $326, Kosovo $288 and East Timor $195, according to Care. All of those pale in comparison to the $32 billion in grants and loans pledged to Iraq. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake