Pubdate: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2006 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/439 Author: Michael Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Afghanistan DOUBTS GROW AS SPRAYERS TARGET AFGHAN POPPIES A CAMPAIGN of enforced crop-spraying to destroy the opium poppy fields will get under way in southern Afghanistan in the next few weeks, despite fears that it will undermine attempts to win the battle for hearts and minds with the Taliban. British defence and diplomatic sources claim the campaign is the result of "US political interference" and is throwing Nato plans into turmoil. Coupled with the imminent replacement of the British general commanding Nato troops with an American, the sources predict a breakdown in security. The spraying is likely to damage legitimate crops that farmers grow to feed their families. It could increase support for the Taliban at a time when Nato and the Afghan government are trying hard to persuade the population that they should back international reconstruction efforts. General David Richards, the Nato commander who will be replaced at the end of February by a US general, has said that the period before a widely expected Taliban spring offensive is vital to win over Afghan public opinion. American determination to deal with the drugs issue is putting that effort at serious risk, the sources claimed. The Taliban are paid by poppy farmers to protect their crops and would be ideally placed to capitalise on the widespread anger among farmers that is likely if drugs eradication is not handled carefully. "I think it is fair to say that we are at a turning point," a British source said. "We need to get the people on side. Eradication has to take place. But doing it the wrong way, as some Americans seem determined to do, will only cause havoc." The push for enforced spraying, opposed by both the British and the former Helmand governor, Engineer Daud, was a key reason for his removal this month, the sources said. The US Congress is angered that drugs production has increased by 49% to 6,700 tonnes this year - more than 92% of the world's supply - and there have been a spate of US media reports highlighting the trafficking of Afghan heroin to America. The differences between the UK, which has taken the lead in efforts to curb the poppy crop, and influential US politicians have been apparent for some time. One congressional inquiry into the issue was entitled "Are the British Counter-narcotics Efforts Going Wobbly?", an allusion to Margaret Thatcher's entreaty to President George Bush Sr not to "go wobbly" ahead of the 1991 Gulf war. The disagreement came into the open when British officials openly expressed their concern over the removal of Daud, who was sceptical of the wisdom of enforced eradication because so many of the key players in Helmand are heavily involved in the poppy industry. He believed that some of these would be bound to escape while farmers would make an easy target. Ordinary people would therefore see the whole reconstruction process as corrupt and would not buy into it. Nevertheless, Daud recognised there was a need to do something, so he backed targeted eradication very strongly, telling tribal elders that it must go ahead. He and the British both wanted to see the drugs barons moved against first so that the small farmer would see it was a genuine enforcement of the law. While the Americans believed widespread spraying to be the only solution, Daud and the British wanted to see the crops ploughed up. The Americans do not believe this will be as effective and spraying will now start next month. The reasons for Daud's removal were complex. The Americans on the ground in Afghanistan were primarily anxious to get rid of his deputy, who was one of the leading drugs barons. In the intricate political realities of Afghanistan, the two had to go together. Daud's predecessor was Sher Mohammed Akhundzada, who is one of the province' s main drugs growers and was sacked at British insistence along with his police chief, another drugs baron. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek