Pubdate: Mon, 15 Feb 2010
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2010 The Washington Times, LLC.
Contact:  http://www.washingtontimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492
Author: Sara A. Carter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Afghanistan

AFGHAN ASSAULT TARGETS TALIBAN DRUG TRADE

The U.S. military assault under way in southern Afghanistan seeks to 
oust Taliban forces but has the secondary mission of disrupting 
insurgent drug trafficking in a region notorious for large-scale 
opium production, U.S. and Afghan officials said Sunday.

A main goal of the military operation involving about 15,000 Marines, 
British troops and some Afghan soldiers that began Friday in Helmand 
province is to try to win support of local Afghans.

The secondary mission of the operation, in what is seen as a shift in 
the military's strategy, is disrupting the Taliban's drug trade -- 
the key source of funding for weapons and explosives used in the insurgency.

Troops, transported by helicopters and ground vehicles, advanced 
toward the farming town of Marjah. They encountered tough resistance, 
mainly from insurgents, Taliban-placed mines and snipers. The 
operation is the largest military drive in the country since 2001.

NATO rockets on Sunday hit a residence, mistakenly killing 12 Afghan 
civilians. Afghan President Hamid Karzai issued a statement 
expressing sadness and saying the collateral damage would be investigated.

Two NATO forces also have been killed, one by an improvised explosive 
device and the other by small-arms fire, according to reports from the region.

The military had long separated itself from fighting the drug trade 
in Afghanistan. In recent years, however, U.S. and NATO military 
officials have concluded that breaking up the Taliban insurgency 
would have to include cutting off their source of funding, said a 
U.S. official with knowledge of drug operations in the region.

"We can't do one without the other," the official said. "It's vital 
to break up their ability to fund themselves. The military has become 
more aware of that and works closely with the drug enforcement 
operations in the region."

U.S. military officials estimate that the Taliban and al Qaeda 
receive up to 40 percent of their funding from the drug trade. The 
United Nations estimates that it is closer to 60 percent of all money 
garnered by the insurgents and terrorists.

"The farming region of Marjah used to grow wheat, other types of 
legal agriculture," said an Afghan official with knowledge of the 
NATO operation and the region around Marjah.

"When the Taliban gained control of the area, the farmers shifted to 
poppy crops, and the Taliban used the region to fill their pockets. 
They use the money to purchase training [and] weapons and [to] 
recruit," the official said.

"Taking Marjah will be a huge blow to the Taliban -- [but] only if 
the U.S. and Afghan forces can hold it," the Afghan official said.

In the past 24 hours since U.S., Afghan and NATO forces entered 
Marjah under Operation Mohawk -- meaning "Together" in Dari -- as 
much as 70 percent of the region's main city has been seized, 
according to statements by the Afghan army and the International 
Security Assistance Force (ISAF).

The region, which used to be known for wheat and fruit cultivation, 
is now known for large poppy crops that "get refined in the northern 
regions into heroin, where few U.S. or NATO forces have a presence," 
a military official with knowledge of the operation said. The 
officials spoke on the condition that they not be named because of 
the nature of their work.

"It doesn't make sense not to break down the drug trade when we know 
the Taliban is supplying their fighters with the money they make from 
their opium sales," the military official said. "It's only one of 
several reasons we're in Marjah."

The nexus between the Taliban insurgency and the Afghan drug trade 
has made drug eradication central to the war in Afghanistan, 
especially to the strategy of curtailing the Taliban's ability to 
raise funding. The joint forces operations against poppy cultivation 
involve the Drug Enforcement Administration, the FBI and the CIA, in 
addition to the military.

A U.S. counternarcotics official, whose agency works closely with the 
military, told The Washington Times in an earlier interview that 
"traffickers are responsible for the movement of millions of dollars 
of drugs, much of which goes right into the Taliban's coffers," and 
ongoing operations show direct links to other terrorist organizations 
in the region.

Marjah, with a population of about 75,000, is thought to be the 
stronghold of 400 to 1,000 Taliban fighters, ISAF officials said.

Approximately 15,000 Afghan and foreign forces are part of the Marjah 
operation. The Marine Corps is leading the offensive along with the 
Army. British and Canadian troops are also involved in the operation.

Success, however, has been met with problems for ISAF commanders, who 
after weeks of announcing the offensive still had to contend with a 
number of civilian casualties Sunday, when a rocket used in the 
offensive went astray and killed 12 people.

Ten of the victims were from the same family, according to news 
reports from the region. The missiles missed an insurgent compound 
discovered by U.S. forces.

Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, ISAF commander, ordered the withdrawal of 
the rocket launcher, a high-mobility artillery rocket system, from 
operations "until a thorough review of this incident has been 
conducted," a statement from ISAF headquarters in Kabul said.

Gen. McChrystal apologized to Mr. Karzai for the deaths, according to 
a statement and reports from the region.

"We deeply regret this tragic loss of life," Gen. McChrystal said.

Meanwhile, in Israel, Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs 
of Staff, told reporters that the assault on Marjah had gotten "off 
to a good start."
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake