Pubdate: Sun, 18 Dec 2005 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2005 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Declan Walsh, Globe Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/opium IN AFGHANISTAN, TALIBAN TURNING TO THE DRUG TRADE Farmers Report Threats From Group KHANISHIN, Afghanistan -- The threatening tracts were pinned on mosque doors and shop windows, the village elder said. Signed ''The Taliban," their message was simple. ''They said, 'Cultivate the poppy or we will come and kill you,' " said Haji Nazarullah, an elder in Khanishin, a village on the fringe of Afghanistan's lawless southern desert. ''A lot of people are very scared." According to farmers, elders, and senior police officials, the Taliban, which condemned the opium trade as ''un-Islamic" while in power, has allied with drug smugglers in the southwestern province of Helmand. The threats are part of a worrying slide in security just months before US forces are due to hand control of the southern region to a 6,000-strong, British-led NATO force. The villagers and police say militants have distributed ominous ''night letters" ordering increased poppy cultivation in remote villages that are far beyond the fragile authority of the Kabul government. Poppy is the plant from which opium and, eventually, heroin are produced. The apparent move into the drug business marks a dramatic turnaround by the Taliban, which almost entirely eradicated production in Afghanistan just before their ouster by US forces in 2001. According to Haji Ismael, assistant police commissioner in Khanishin, the Taliban has turned to drugs for two reasons. ''They want to make money. And they want to weaken this government," he said. American and Afghan aid officials in the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, said they had also heard reports of new links between the Taliban and drug smugglers. A senior Western diplomat in Kabul, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there was ''some intelligence" of the linkage but was as yet unable to confirm the origin of the night letters. ''We don't know if it's Taliban or traffickers purporting to be Taliban. But someone out there is trying to stimulate farmers into growing poppy," he said. The intimidation tactics follow a sharp increase in violence across southern Afghanistan over the past six months, including a spate of suicide attacks, roadside bombings, and assassinations of police officials and pro-government religious leaders. In total 1,100 people have died in combat violence this year, making it Afghanistan's bloodiest period since 2001. There are growing fears of a foreign hand in the bloodshed. Suicide bombings were rare in Afghanistan until recently, stoking suspicions that the resurgent Taliban is being trained, financed, or led by foreign militants. Last Sunday, Al Qaeda's number two man, Ayman al-Zawahri, issued a videotaped message praising Taliban leader Mullah Omar for his victories against ''crusaders and apostates." Mullah Abdul Salam Rocketi, a Taliban commander turned parliamentarian for restive Zabul Province, said he suspected Pakistani intelligence and Arab financiers -- possibly linked to Al Qaeda -- were behind the surging unrest. Earlier this month, NATO ministers approved plans to send 6,000 troops into southern Afghanistan, allowing the United States to scale back its 18,000-strong force. The Pentagon has not specified how many troops will withdraw, but commanders have suggested up to 4,000. But the rising bloodshed has rattled nerves among NATO allies and exposed political sensitivities about giving the military alliance, until now a purely peacekeeping force in Afghanistan, a more aggressive role. The Netherlands, which is due to deploy 1,100 troops to Uruzgan Province, east of Helmand, has stalled in making a final commitment over fears of incurring troop casualties. So has Britain, which is due to take control of Helmand. The BBC, quoting unnamed military sources, said Tuesday that British generals were considering scaling back the troop deployment and sending fewer attack helicopters. Only Canada has finalized its deployment plans -- half its 2,000-strong force has already deployed to the southern capital, Kandahar, with the remainder due to arrive in the spring. A military source in Kabul said Australia had been approached to step in should the Netherlands pull out of the plan. The British deployment is certainly daunting. Helmand is Afghanistan's largest province and also the epicenter of a $2.7 billion drug trade that, according to a recent UN survey, accounts for 34 percent of the national economy. While the amount of land growing poppy dropped 21 percent this year, the UN reported, the value of the trade was virtually unchanged at $2.7 billion because of good weather and low rates of plant disease. The head of the UN drug council in Afghanistan predicted last week that opium growth rates will rebound next year. Helmand farmers grow one-quarter of the opium crop, says the UN. Its southern desert is crisscrossed with smuggling trails running toward the unpatrolled border with Pakistan. In such areas, President Hamid Karzai's government has virtually no authority. In many areas only a handful of undertrained and often corrupt police hint at the presence of a central authority. The challenge is evident in Khanishin, a town on the fringe of the lawless badlands. An ancient fort of towering walls and crumbling ramparts stands in the town center, pinned between the Helmand River and a sprawling desert. The fields along the riverbank are freshly planted with poppy. ''We planted last month. It's grown about this much," said farmer Tor Jan, indicating his little finger. A group of tribal elders gathered recently inside the fort at Khanishin to meet the US military commander in Helmand, Lieutenant Colonel Jim Hogberg. The elders said they would happily grow legal crops such as wheat. But the central government had not delivered on promises to help them. ''Opium is a problem; nobody wants to grow it," said Haji Nazarullah, who had spoken of the Taliban night letters. ''But if you want us to stop them, give us something first." The irrigation canals were broken, fuel to run water pumps was expensive, and fertilizer was less effective than before, he added. And meanwhile the Taliban was growing in strength in the area, he said, ''because most people don't have jobs, so the Taliban pays them to plant bombs." Hogberg, addressing the elders, said many ''good things" had happened in Afghanistan, such as last September's parliamentary elections. Moreover, he said, about 3,000 soldiers from the US-trained Afghan National Army would be posted to Helmand next year. But the American commander also admitted that the Kabul government was almost invisible in this remote village, which was the farthest south his troops had ever ventured in Helmand. ''From here south to Pakistan is all desert. So you really are the guardians of the southern border of Afghanistan." Helmand was the center of a concentrated US development aid drive in the 1960s, so much so that it was nicknamed ''little America." American specialists laid wide, tree-lined streets in Lashkar Gah, built a network of irrigation canals, and constructed a large hydroelectric dam. But since 2001 the province has been a low priority for the US-led coalition. Just 110 US troops are stationed in the province, a mix of special forces and about 110 soldiers guarding the Provincial Reconstruction Team base in Lashkar Gah. Still, they have come under fire as part of the wider Taliban resurgence. Three weeks ago, a suicide bomber exploded his vehicle at the gates of the governor's office, minutes before a weekly security meeting with Hogberg. Nobody was injured except the bomber, who died hours later in a hospital. Days earlier a US convoy was ambushed as it passed through a small village in northern Helmand. Militants raked the armored Humvee vehicles with machine-gun fire and, after they sped away, attacked again 2 miles down the road with rocket-propelled grenades. ''We've never faced such an ambush around here. Before this the Taliban would just take potshots at us," said Captain T.R. Crellin of the First Marine Division, who survived the attack. The new link between militancy and drugs further complicates the security headache. Until now US troops have avoided confronting Afghanistan's drug lords -- many of whom have strong ties to local officials in several provinces -- in order to avoid undermining the fight against Taliban and Al Qaeda militants. Now the British military is considering employing more forceful tactics. The outgoing governor of Helmand, Sher Muhammed Akhundzada, who has also been accused of involvement in drugs, said he had petitioned the British ambassador, Rosalind Marsden, to help seal the lawless southern border. He said the ambassador replied ''she would think about it." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin