Tuesday, May 12, 2009

40-fold drug surge in Afghanistan: report

http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id...onid=351020403

Sometimes you just have to have a good reason to laugh, and this is one of them

While Afghanistan produced only 185 tons of opium under the Taliban, following the US invasion drug production, according to UN statistics, surged to 3,400 tons and by 2007, opium trade reached all-time high of 8,200 tons.

Afghan and Western officials blame Washington and its NATO allies for the sudden surge, saying they overlooked the drug problem for more than seven years after invasion of the country.

“[The US and its allies] didn't want anything to do with either interdiction or eradication," said Thomas Schweich, a former Bush administration ambassador for counternarcotics. "We warned them over and over again: Look at Colombia."

The Bush administration waged "Operation Enduring Freedom" on Afghanistan in 2001, to allegedly capture Osama bin Laden, destroy al-Qaeda and Taliban and bring stability to the volatile region.

The invasion of Afghanistan was also justified as part of the West's "war on drugs."

"The al-Qaeda network and the Taliban regime are funded in large part [by] the drugs trade," ex-British Prime Minister Tony Blair said in 2001 when confirming London's participation in the US attack on Afghanistan.

Iran lies on a transit corridor between opium producers in Afghanistan and drug dealers in Europe.

As a lead donor nation to Afghanistan, Iran has annually contributed more than $50 million to Afghan counternarcotics efforts in the past five years.

The United Nations credited Iran for the seizure of 80 per cent of the opium netted around the world in 2007.