Pubdate: Wed, 2 Sep 2009
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2009 The New York Times Company
Page: A11
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Richard A. Oppel Jr.
Referenced: The UNODC report "Afghanistan Opium Survey 2009" 
http://drugsense.org/url/q7bXK1uu
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Afghanistan
Bookmark: http://drugnews.org/topic/poppy
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Taliban

U.N. SEES AFGHAN DRUG CARTELS EMERGING

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Though the Afghan opium harvest has declined 
for the second consecutive year, a new United Nations report says, 
there is growing evidence that some Afghan insurgent forces are 
becoming "narco-cartels" -- similar to anti-government guerrilla 
groups in Colombia -- that view drug profits as more important than ideology.

Afghanistan's multibillion-dollar illicit narcotics industry finances 
much of the country's insurgency, and the influence of drug money is 
a major reason the Afghan government is considered among the most 
corrupt in the world.

Afghanistan's production of opium, the raw material for heroin, 
declined by 10 percent this year, and the amount of land used to 
cultivate opium fell by 22 percent, according to a report from the 
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime that is to be formally 
released Wednesday.

The smaller harvest, largely attributed to market forces and 
heightened interdiction efforts, is a rare bit of good news for the 
United States and the coalition of Western governments whose troops 
and taxpayers are supporting what even American commanders describe 
as a deteriorating situation as the war approaches its ninth year.

But while United Nations officials suggested that some 
opium-trafficking guerrillas were now less focused on Taliban 
ideology, they also reported that perhaps more than 10,000 tons of 
illegal opium -- worth billions of dollars and enough to satisfy at 
least two years of world demand -- is now secretly stockpiled. They 
said they were concerned that part of this stockpile could be a 
"ticking bomb" in the hands of people who could use it to pay for 
"sinister scenarios."

Opium is easily smuggled and stored and "is an ideal form of 
terrorist financing," Antonio Maria Costa, the executive director of 
the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, said in an interview. 
"It's a huge amount of money to have in the wrong hands." He called 
on intelligence agencies to investigate the stockpiles.

American officials are also concerned that large stockpiles could 
bolster guerrilla war chests, despite recent military operations to 
curb the flow of drug money to the Taliban and other insurgent 
groups, a senior United States official said. The official, who did 
not wish to speak on the record, said that the stockpiles were 
believed to be in Afghanistan and that they were probably under the 
control of gangs that were principally involved in narcotics 
trafficking rather than directly controlled by "terror groups."

But assuming the opium can be smuggled out of the country, the 
official added, "the real issue is that regardless of what impact we 
have in the near term on production, distribution and other aspects 
of the narco network, this level of stockpiles means that funding 
resources will remain fairly even."

American troops and Afghan officials in some southern regions where 
opium proliferates say that the insurgency there appears to be 
increasingly influenced by financial loyalties rather than 
ideological or jihadist allegiances, as guerrillas move from taxing 
and extracting protection money from traffickers to smuggling and 
refining opium themselves. Estimates of the insurgency's annual 
revenue from drugs across Afghanistan vary widely, from $70 million 
to $500 million, according to a recent Congressional report.

"A marriage of convenience between insurgents and criminal groups is 
spawning narco-cartels in Afghanistan linked to the Taliban," Mr. Costa said.

As in some nations, including Colombia and Myanmar, the agency said 
in a statement, "the drug trade in Afghanistan has gone from being a 
funding source for insurgency to becoming an end in itself."

Afghanistan in recent years has produced 90 percent of the world's opium.

United Nations officials said this year's decline stemmed largely 
from a steep drop in the value of opium amid a huge supply glut; high 
prices last year for some other crops that caused farmers to switch; 
and more aggressive counternarcotics actions by Western and Afghan forces.

They said it was not clear whether the decline would continue, 
especially if the difference between prices for opium and other crops 
were to widen to previous levels. Just two years ago, for example, an 
acre of opium fetched 10 times as much as an acre of wheat, but that 
ratio has diminished to three to one.

"A market correction is going on while law enforcement has increased 
the pressure," Mr. Costa said. "Now, military and economic forces are 
playing in the same direction."

Actual production of opium declined to 6,900 metric tons this year 
from 7,700 metric tons last year.

The most striking decline was in Helmand Province, the dominant 
producer, where cultivation fell by one-third. In addition to market 
forces and more robust counternarcotics efforts, the United Nations 
cited efforts by Helmand's governor, Gulab Mangal, and an American- 
and British-backed anti-poppy program in the province.

Mr. Costa said efforts by the United States and other NATO forces to 
take a more direct role were becoming a powerful deterrent. But he 
also appeared to be critical of the recently disclosed decision by 
the Pentagon to place 50 Afghan traffickers on a target list to be 
captured or killed. American officials have said the 50 are also tied 
to the Taliban.

"Drug lords should be brought to justice," he said in a statement. 
"Not executed in violation of international law or pardoned for 
political expediency." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake