Pubdate: Sat, 27 Mar 2010 Source: New York Times (NY) Page: WK9 Copyright: 2010 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n000/a007.html Author: Peter B. Bensinger AFGHAN POPPIES, AMERICAN DILEMMA To the Editor: "Fearful of Alienating Afghans, U.S. Turns Blind Eye to Opium" (front page, March 21) highlights the dilemma: should Afghan farmers grow poppies or should poppy fields be eradicated, jeopardizing livelihoods but eliminating the opium that destroys lives? The United States faced a similar dilemma in the 1970s when Turkey was the principal source of imported heroin via laboratories in Marseille - -- the "French connection." Turkey limited cultivation and built a factory to convert opium poppy heads into "poppy straw," convertible into the legal medicines morphine and codeine. The Turkish government outlawed growing of opium poppies in all but seven provinces that were traditional growing areas. The Turkish program worked. The poppy crop was bought not by the traffickers, but by the government. The Afghan and American governments should consider doing the same thing in Afghanistan -- a factory to convert poppies into "poppy straw," limiting cultivation to traditional growing areas and prohibiting cultivation elsewhere using aerial eradication. This would create a new industry serving medical needs and not the Taliban. Heroin overdose deaths in the United States totaled about 2,000 in 1976; imports exceeded 6 tons. By 1980, heroin overdose deaths fell to about 800 annually; imports were less than 2 tons. The Turkish poppy straw program followed by comprehensive aerial poppy eradication in Mexico by the Mexican government helped make this possible. This approach could be tried in Afghanistan, but it will require government stability, enforcement so poppies are grown only in the approved areas, eradication of poppies in unlicensed areas and United Nations support. Peter B. Bensinger Chicago The writer was administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration from 1976 to 1981. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake