The Taliban did in one year what Washington couldn’t in 20, sparking new panic
By: Rachel Marsden
The ban on Afghan poppy cultivation is set to hit Europe’s heroin supplies
It’s been nearly a year since the Taliban banned Afghan poppy farming used
for the production of opioids. The impact of the move is set to hit global
markets sometime soon, given the delay from farm to customer.
You’d think that would bring a welcome sigh of relief. Apparently not. Reports
are now suggesting that a lack of Afghan heroin on the global market and a
reduction of available natural opioids like heroin could lead to increased use
of synthetic opioids like fentanyl. If that’s the case, then it’s only because
Washington and the West are about as competent at curtailing skyrocketing drug
overdose deaths as they were at tackling the cultivation of Afghan opioids back
when they had control of the country. Synthetic opioids from China and Mexico
are increasingly being used, as are those procured through prescriptions within
America’s own healthcare system.
Over the course of the US-led Global War on Terror that kicked off in
Afghanistan in 2001, heroin overdoses in the US and elsewhere spiked. Despite
having control over the country and its government for two decades, Washington
not only failed to curtail farming and exports of Afghan opium, but oversaw an
increase.
In February 2004, then US Assistant Secretary for International Narcotics and
Law Enforcement Affairs, Robert Charles, outlined a new policy for countering
“narcoterrorism” in Afghanistan before Congress. He cited a desire to assist the
US-backed Afghan government with its objective “to eliminate opium poppy
cultivation and trade in 10 years.” The project would involve deploying
CIA-linked USAID to poppy-growing areas to help find alternative farming
solutions. But there have always been strong doubts over the sincerity of such
efforts. A US Department of Justice policy paper from 1991 accused the CIA of
“complicity in the narcotics trade” in Afghanistan, underscoring that “covert
CIA operations in Afghanistan, for example, have transformed South Asia from a
self-contained opium zone into a major supplier of heroin for the world market.”
The CIA would certainly be in a position to know, having backed Mujahideen
jihadist fighters against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan during the Cold War
while the trafficking occurred right under its nose. Apparently old habits die
hard.
In 2010, Former Director of the Federal Drug Control Service of Russia, Viktor
Ivanov, met with NATO officials to request a mandate for destroying the poppy
fields, citing 30,000 opium-related deaths in Russia. “We cannot be in a
situation where we remove the only source of income of people who live in the
second poorest country in the world without being able to provide them with an
alternative,” NATO spokesman James Appathurai replied, according to Reuters.
Clearly, they just weren’t that interested. It now seems that the US and NATO
counter insurgency mission served in part as cover for safeguarding and
protecting the opium fields from destruction – which the Taliban had already
gone about doing before the 2001 US invasion. Propping up Western proxies
doesn’t come cheap, and some things simply aren’t fit for the accounting books
back home. It’s no secret that the CIA has a history of using narcotic
trafficking to support US interests abroad while simultaneously accusing the
local opposition of doing just that – from Nicaragua and Haiti to Southeast
Asia, Indochina, and even France.
According to a State Department fact sheet from the pre-2001 archives,
Taliban poppy cultivation bans “lacked credibility.” Yet it was Washington’s
public proclamations of eradication that never came to fruition. Similarly,
Washington laughably charged Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro with
“narco-terrorism partnership with the FARC for the past 20 years,” in March
2020. This was despite Washington’s unconditional backing of South American
ally, Colombia – an actual narco-state whose cocaine production exploded under
the leadership of former President Ivan Duque even as President Joe Biden
introduced him at the White House in 2022 as “my friend.” Biden added: “We’ve
known each other for a long while, and we were reminiscing about how far back we
go…I’ve been deeply engaged with the relationship with Colombia for a long time,
going back more than 20 years to that old Plan Colombia.”
Funny that Biden should mention Plan Colombia – a US-backed multi-billion dollar
program to fight drugs and insurgency in the country, which is largely
considered to be a counter narcotics failure. It didn’t even really provide
lasting counterinsurgency results, according to members of former President
Barack Obama’s own administration, concluding that “our collective failure to
control either drug abuse or drug trafficking has exacted an enormous human
toll.”
Washington has historically been both disingenuous and incompetent when it comes
to fighting illicit drug use. The fact that the Taliban finally has an
opportunity to do what Washington was never able or willing to do – despite
claims to the contrary – closes one spigot. However, it won’t save Washington
from its own failures on the drug front.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN