Pubdate: Mon, 15 Oct 2007 Source: Daily, The (U of WA, Edu) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Contact: http://www.thedaily.washington.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1254 Author: Chris Kaasa Cited: http://www.senliscouncil.org/modules/Opium_licensing Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Senlis (Senlis Council) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Afghanistan Bookmark: http://drugnews.org/topic/poppy (Poppy) LEARN TO LOVE AFGHAN POPPIES The "War on Drugs" is a cheap, race-baiting, election-year talking point for tough-on-crime demagogues, and everybody knows it. The money and talent we waste on this vapid struggle is bad enough. But it's now threatening to waste a lot of lives as well and doom our fight against theocracy and terrorism in Afghanistan to a humiliating defeat. Yes, it took five years of relentless lobbying, but the Bush administration has very nearly persuaded the reluctant President Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan's embattled leader, to spray the country's illicit poppy fields with massive quantities of herbicides, The New York Times reported last week. I honestly can't think of a better way to sabotage the Afghan war effort. The Times credulously described the country's "drug problem" as "out of control," noting that 93 percent of the world's illegal opiate supply is now exported from Afghanistan. And worse yet, the article intones, the poppy yield grew by 17 percent in the past year alone. Considered without context, these statistics miss the point -- the problem is not that Afghans are forging an economic niche for themselves. The problem is that, for no good reason, 100 percent of the revenues generated by this thriving trade fall into criminal hands. The resurgent Taliban, which nearly eradicated poppy production during its reign, has collected billions of dollars in "taxes" from international drug traffickers operating in the territory it now controls. They're using this income base to revamp their militias and build a power center of public support to challenge Karzai's tenuous hold on power. They aim to retake the country bit by bit. And with Washington's help, they may very well succeed. The U.S. political class is notoriously handcuffed by the "War on Drugs." The endless repetition of the vacuous (but eminently tough-sounding) rhetoric of the drug war has squished and contorted the realm of mainstream debate -- only "enforcement," at varying degrees of severity, may be discussed by anyone who wants to survive the next election. Dissenters to the administration's herbicide spraying policy, therefore, have confined themselves to one of the weakest criticisms imaginable: Isn't the proposed chemical a bit too toxic? (It's not.) The reality is that eradication just isn't an acceptable option. The widescale use of any herbicide will enrage the local population and spell disaster for Karzai, NATO and the United States. In an excellent article for last June's New Yorker, Jon Lee Anderson, who was embedded with armed contractors hired to destroy family poppy plots, spelled out the driving force behind the exponential growth of Afghanistan's opiate trade: Where an acre of wheat earns a farmer $33, an acre of poppies brings in more than $500. You can't argue with economics like that. Opiate production accounts for one-third of the Afghan GDP. Rather than trying to destroy what remains of the country's economy and losing a war in the process, why not try to rebuild it? It requires two steps: First, legalize poppy harvests. Stop pressuring Karzai to make war on his own impoverished country. Doing so would bring the trade into the open and help clean up the country's corrupt bureaucracy. Second, buy it all up. We can outspend Islamist drug traffickers, and providing a steady source of income will win the loyalty of the Afghan people. Selling poppy products will not only create a sizable pool of cash to invest in Afghanistan's development but also bring down prices on opiate-based pharmaceuticals worldwide. According to the Senlis Council, a drug policy think tank with a permanent office in Kabul, a nearly identical program in Turkey in the 1970s was extremely successful. Today, the group is fiercely lobbying the State Department to implement such a program in Afghanistan. But will it be successful? U.S. politicians have an infamous habit of inventing "wars" that, by definition, cannot be won -- on poverty, on crime, etc. However, winning the war against theocratic tyranny and terrorism deserves to be taken seriously. The "War on Drugs" is a futile, paranoid vendetta against the fact that human beings like to get high, and it's undermining our real war against real enemies. Is it worth abandoning an entire country to religious gangsters to keep "fighting" it? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake