Pubdate: Fri, 15 Sep 2006 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2006 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114 Author: Damien McElroy and Tom Coghlan, in Kabul AFGHAN FIGHTING BLAMED FOR OPIUM BONANZA The Government was accused of self-delusion last night over the Army's mission in Afghanistan after a Foreign Office minister admitted that the campaign against the Taliban was responsible for a bumper opium crop. Kim Howells said instability in Helmand province, where 4,500 British troops are trying to eliminate Taliban forces, had hindered efforts to purge poppy fields. An emboldened coalition of "drug-runners" and "gangsters" was thriving as programmes to discourage cultivation ground to a halt. He said: "The operation to establish stability has set us back a good deal and it's going to be hard work to establish the stability the Afghans need. "That's why the reserve force that Nato has requested to provide the flexibility to cope and stabilise the province is so important. "I am very disappointed in the latest [opium] figures. Clearly, we face a very difficult task to ensure this year that the crop next year is not the same or even bigger." Nato forces were deployed in Afghanistan's southern provinces in the summer to back up Afghan police and army units that Kabul charged with eradicating opium crops. But attempts to establish an official presence in areas beyond state control since the fall of the Taliban fell victim to counter-attacks by re-energised Taliban units. Mr Howells has a reputation for speaking frankly about the consequences of Government policy but his latest remarks will cast a further cloud on an operation which has cost the lives of 26 British troops. Nato forces in Helmand and other southern provinces replaced American units which had focused on hunting down Taliban and al-Qa'eda leaders. With a mandate to bring schools, police posts and medical clinics to the villages of southern Afghanistan, Nato quickly fell foul of local rumours that foreign forces were out to destroy the poppy crop. To farmers with no other means of gaining cash, such claims became a rallying cry for the insurgency. Liam Fox, the Conservative defence spokesman, said the Government should abandon any pretence of prosecuting a counter-narcotics policy in Afghanistan. "This Government was living in cloud cuckoo land on this," he said. "To tell Parliament and the Labour Party that this deployment was part of the war on drugs was self-delusion. "This is the Government belatedly catching up with reality. It was not going to happen. The military didn't believe it. "Stability and military victory should come first to extend the writ of the Afghan, so that it can run its own counter-narcotics policy." When John Reid, as Defence Secretary, announced the commitment to Helmand, he declared a hope that they would return "without a shot being fired." The phrase has come to symbolise the Government's failure to appreciate the extent of the threat. A United Nations survey this week reported that the planted area of the Afghan opium crop rose by 59 per cent this year. Helmand was a particular blackspot with a tripling of planting. The drug lords' revenue from opium sales is expected to exceed $3 billion (UKP 1.7 billion) this year. The record Afghan harvest means that the supply of heroin will exceed last year's global demand for the drug by 30 per cent, which is likely to lead to narcotics of very high purity flooding Europe. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine