Pubdate: Thu, 13 May 2004 Source: Journal Gazette, The (IN) Copyright: 2004 The Journal Gazette Contact: http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/908 Author: Sylvia A. Smith, Washington editor OPIUM TRADE IMPERILS AFGHANISTAN, SENATE TOLD WASHINGTON - Interrupting the opium poppy-based economy of Afghanistan should be part of the Pentagon's military mission, an expert on the country told the Senate on Wednesday. The U.S. policy has recently shifted from ignoring the existence of poppy fields and opium warehouses to destroying them when military operations happen to come across them. Mark Schneider, senior vice president of International Crisis Group, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee the Pentagon policy should go further. "Actively destroying the opium network should be within their mandate," he said. "Afghanistan is in clear and present danger of descending from a narco-economy to a narco-state." Afghanistan is the world's largest producer of opium; it accounts for half the country's economy. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., didn't comment specifically on the advice, but he agreed that Afghanistan is in peril, in large part because of the resurgence of the opium production. The Taliban, which the United States drove out of power in 2001, was largely financed by opium poppies and the heroin made from them. "The prospect we could fail in Afghanistan is very real," Lugar said at a hearing he conducted. "The same sources of conflict and instability that allowed the Taliban to seize power and fueled the growth of al-Qaida's terrorist network continue to threaten the future of Afghanistan." Lugar, other senators and the witnesses - academics and members of think tanks, but no representatives of the Bush administration - said the United States and NATO should send more troops, more money and more leadership to Afghanistan. Robert Perito, a senior fellow at the Institute of Peace, said the international effort to rebuild Afghanistan's roads, security and social systems is failing. For instance, he said, Italy is in charge of helping Afghanistan remake its judicial system and prisons, but "there is no master strategy or even consensus on priorities," and Italy has not been able to prevent Afghanistan from "squander(ing) time and resources in bitter turn battles." He agreed with Schneider that the illegal drug trade is the most serious problem that must be dealt with before other concerns can be resolved. The U.S.-led coalition and NATO "forces must begin proactively performing at least a limited number of counter-narcotics enforcement functions," Perito said. "This would help correct the misimpression of Afghans that the U.S. military condones participation of warlords in the drug trade." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake