Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jun 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Robert Weiner and Emma Dick Note: Robert Weiner is a former spokesman for the White House National Drug Policy Office. Emma Dick is research analyst for Robert Weiner Associates. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mccaffrey.htm (McCaffrey, Barry) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/plan+colombia U.S. ALLY BECOMES TOP OPIUM SUPPLIER Both during and since the recent meeting of President Bush and Afghani President Hamid Karzai, the administration has danced around the critical issue of Afghanistan's growing drug crisis and its impact on the terror threat. The late April arrest of Hajji Bashir Noorzai, whom the Drug Enforcement Administration called the ''Pablo Escobar of heroin trafficking in Asia'' for providing heroin money financing Osama bin Laden, proved once again the connection between Afghan drugs and terrorism. Noorzai even used al Qaeda operatives to transport the heroin out of Afghanistan. Yet with Afghanistan now returned -- on our watch -- to the world's No. 1 opium and heroin supplier, Bush chose not to bring up the drugs issue in the joint news conference with the president of Afghanistan. Until a reporter questioned him, Bush didn't mention the issue at all. Neither the April 23 press release announcing Karzai's visit, nor Bush's opening statement at the May 23 news conference following the meeting, mentioned drugs, opium or heroin. The quiet arrest of Noorzai in New York City provided the latest concrete link between the opium producers and terrorism. DEA agents in Afghanistan knew that Noorzai funneled drug money, weapons and explosives to bin Laden and the Taliban. Yet we may have arrested him by sheer dumb luck or for fear of embarrassment for lack of action. He was stupid enough to travel to New York. We cannot hope that terrorists will waltz into the country so we can (or have to) arrest them. Luck is not a strategy. The dirty little secret is that nothing is happening because military leaders on the ground fear that fighting drugs will destabilize Afghanistan. Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who oversaw the U.S. contribution to Plan Colombia, points out that our generals in Afghanistan believe fighting will be a little more difficult if we fight the drug suppliers, but McCaffrey emphasizes that there will never be stability there with drugs as the country's financial basis. We cannot allow poppies and the world's heroin addiction to be the stabilizing force in Afghanistan, especially when they are funding bin Laden -- we are defeating our own purpose. On questioning at the May 23 news conference, Bush and Karzai said that they are largely relying on economic incentives for crop substitution, but that is not going to be enough -- it hasn't been in the past, and it won't be now. While helpful, it's more just a grant to the host country than anything. We need a Plan Colombia in Afghanistan, as when Gen. McCaffrey collaborated with the Colombian government successfully to reduce that country's coca crop by 50 percent. Like the Colombian success story (which originally had its detractors), we need a serious Afghanistan plan of aerial spraying, burning and chopping, and trained troops supporting the government's eradication and enforcement. The first step is for Bush to formally recognize our role in solving this core problem. A State Department memo leaked just prior to the Bush-Karzai meeting (no coincidence) blamed Karzai for unwillingness ''to assert strong leadership'' and Britain as ''substantially responsible'' for Afghanistan's opium production, since we had delegated that effort. There you have it. It's the British! It's Karzai! It's anyone but us! Yet the problem worsens. The amount of land now cultivating poppies has multiplied 123 times from 2001 to 2004 -- the Taliban had actually cracked down before we came in. These fields now yield an estimated 90 percent of the world's heroin according to federal reports, all while 20,000 of our own troops are there. Karzai promises a reduction in opium cultivation, but our tolerance of a small dent in the world's dominant producer will make little difference. That's not how McCaffrey handled Colombia. He went there several times, negotiated, obtained Colombian cooperation and leadership, proposed a billion-dollar plan to President Clinton and got it approved. Our inactions effectively leave us as silent partners with the Afghan opium warlords who funnel money to the terrorist groups we invaded to eradicate. We are, in essence, holding hands with our worst enemy. Afghanistan will never be stable as long as drug lords are running the country. If we want to fight terrorism effectively, we must confront Afghanistan's drug problem. We can't keep making excuses; we can't keep shifting blame. We must face the problem ourselves. Robert Weiner is a former spokesman for the White House National Drug Policy Office. Emma Dick is research analyst for Robert Weiner Associates. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin