Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jun 2006 Source: Arizona Daily Star (AZ) Copyright: 2006 Pulitzer Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/star/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/23 Author: Philip Dine, St. Louis Post-Dispatch Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) IRAN HELPING CUT HEROIN TRAFFIC FROM AFGHANISTAN WASHINGTON -- The critical fight against the illicit drug trade in Afghanistan is getting help from an unlikely source: Iran. Though rarely discussed in this country, Iran's role in combating Afghan trafficking has been by all accounts highly positive and has come at great cost, reflected most dramatically in the deaths of thousands of Iranian border police. Iran also has helped build security border posts inside Afghanistan to catch or deter narcotics smugglers, a program described to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch by the former Afghan interior minister who worked with Iranians to develop it. "Very constructive role" "Iran has played a very constructive role in combating the drug trade, especially along the border it shares with Afghani-stan," said Antonio Costa, executive director of the Vienna-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Iran's Afghan aid, he said, includes "providing economic support to help opium farmers switch to alternative crops." Iran's effort is occurring against a backdrop of volatile developments: ● The mounting opium poppy cultivation and heroin production in Afghanistan fuels a fierce insurgency that aims to overthrow the Afghan government. U.S.-led forces are conducting their largest offensive since 2001 against insurgents in the drug-ridden provinces in the south. ● Three straight years of bumper crops have flooded Iran and Western Europe with Afghan heroin, a trail now leading to the United States as well, with Chicago the chief distribution center. Missouri and Illinois officials say the highly pure heroin is attracting younger, affluent users and causing a spike in overdoses. ● U.S. talk about Iran in recent months has been sharply negative amid concerns over the Middle East nation's pursuit of a nuclear program. "You never hear about it" As founder of the Afghani-stan-America Foundation, former Republican Rep. Don Ritter of Pennsylvania has led efforts to build an Afghan market economy. He returned Monday from his 16th trip to Afghanistan since 2001. "In terms of collaboration between the Iranians and the Afghanis on the drug problem," Ritter said, "you never hear anything about it, you don't read about it." Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., chairman of a key House panel dealing with Afghanistan, learned recently of Iran's activities. "The fact that the Iranians are as anti-American as they are, and yet they're playing a positive role in the opium trade, is somewhat surprising," he said. Iran shares a 600-mile border with Afghanistan. Officials at Iran's permanent mission to the United Nations in Vienna say that in seizing tons of Afghan heroin, they've lost 3,500 security troops over the past decade. That is a reliable figure, according to a variety of experts on the region. Indeed, Iran has tackled the drug problem far more rigorously than Afghanistan's other major neighbor, Pakistan, a top U.S. ally in the war on terror, said Ashraf Haidari, first secretary for security and development at the Afghan Embassy in Washington. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman