Yes, the US administration has your very best interest at heart...
fill your teenages veins with the very best from Afghanistan, film any
time you want it.

Those poor farmers... they have to grow SOMETHING to support AQ.

where are the spray arms to irradicate this crop??? it is in your
hands but you'd rather piss and moan about politics instead of simply
holding your representatives feet to the fire on all things IMPORTANT.

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=c95_1207936522

Bush Will Not Stop Afghan Opium Trade
Charles R. Smith
Thursday, March 28, 2002
The Bush administration has decided not to destroy the opium crop in
Afghanistan. President Bush, who previously linked the Afghan drug
trade directly to terrorism, has now decided not to destroy the Afghan
opium crop.

"The war in Afghanistan will be decided within the next six weeks
based on whether or not the poppy crops go to market," stated a U.S.
intelligence official who recently returned from Afghanistan.

The source, who requested that he not be identified, noted that the
opium poppy fields are blooming and ready for harvest. U.S. forces
could destroy the crops using aerial spraying techniques, but no such
actions are planned.

"If the estimated 3,000 tons of opium reaches market, it will lead to
a new upsurge in international terrorism and a great loss in
international credibility for the Bush administration and the United
States' ability to conduct war in the 21st century. America's enemies
throughout the world from China to North Korea to Iran will be
emboldened by this lack of strategic vision and political will," said
the source.

U.N. Ban on Opium Trade

The U.S. and all its allies signed onto a worldwide ban on opium
sales. In January 2002, the U.N. issued a report on the Afghan opium
production, noting that allied forces needed to act quickly to destroy
the 2002 opium poppy crops before the end of spring.

"The global importance of the ban on opium poppy cultivation and
trafficking in Afghanistan is enormous," states the January 2002 U.N.
report on drug trafficking.

"Afghanistan has been the main source of illicit opium: 70 percent of
global illicit opium production in 2000 and up to 90 percent of heroin
in European drug markets originated from Afghanistan," states the U.N.
report.

"There are reliable indications that opium poppy cultivation has
resumed since October 2001 in some areas (such as the southern
provinces Uruzgan, Helmand, Nangarhar and Kandahar), following the
effective implementation of the Taliban ban on cultivation in 2001,
not only because of the breakdown in law and order, but also because
the farmers are desperate to find a means of survival following the
prolonged drought," states the U.N. report.

This Is Your CIA

Several sources inside Capitol Hill noted that the CIA opposes the
destruction of the Afghan opium supply because to do so might
destabilize the Pakistani government of Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
According to these sources, Pakistani intelligence had threatened to
overthrow President Musharraf if the crops were destroyed.

The threat to overthrow Musharraf is motivated in part by Islamic
radical groups linked to the Pakistani intelligence service, Inter-
Services Intelligence (ISI). The radical groups reportedly obtain
their primary funding through opium production and trade.

"Pakistan's intelligence service is corrupt, unreliable, and we don't
owe them a damn thing. The CIA has a very checkered past as far as who
they choose to get in the sack with. Maybe it's time to stop being
clever and do the right thing," stated another source close to the
Bush administration.

"If they [the CIA] are in fact opposing the destruction of the Afghan
opium trade, it'll only serve to perpetuate the belief that the CIA is
an agency devoid of morals; off on their own program rather than that
of our constitutionally elected government," stated the source.

"If we don't take this opportunity to destroy the opium production in
Afghanistan, we are no better than the Taliban, who did nothing to
stop it despite claims to the contrary," he concluded.

This Is Your CIA on Drugs

The CIA decision not to stop the Afghan opium production has been
greeted silently by U.S. allies. According to intelligence sources,
both the U.K. and French governments have quietly given their approval
of the American policy by not acting in accordance with the U.N.
global ban on opium traffic.

However, one foreign intelligence official was quick to point out that
the CIA has a history of supporting international drug trafficking.

"The CIA did almost the identical thing during the Vietnam War, which
had catastrophic consequences – the increase in the heroin trade in
the USA beginning in the 1970s is directly attributable to the CIA.
The CIA has been complicit in the global drug trade for years, so I
guess they just want to carry on their favorite business," noted an
allied intelligence official who works closely with U.S. law
enforcement.

"The sole reason why organized crime groups and terrorists have the
power that they do is all because of drug trafficking. Like the old
saying, 'those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it,'"
stated the official.

TV War on Terror

According to intelligence sources, a simple grant of $200 a year, no
more than $20 million in total, sent to each poorly paid Afghan farmer
could stop all opium production. The U.S. war in Afghanistan has
already consumed an estimated $40 billion.

After spending millions of dollars on a U.S. advertising campaign that
linked illegal drug sales to terrorism, the Bush administration has
opted not to destroy Afghanistan's opium production over fears that
such an act may destabilize Pakistan.

Clearly, ending opium production inside Afghanistan could be more
effective than spending millions on TV advertising. The lack of action
in Afghanistan against the drug trade shows that the Bush
administration has adopted a hypocritical and flawed policy in its war
on terror.

The current U.S. law enforcement tactics aimed at slick TV ads and
seizing terrorist money will not stop the flow of illegal drug money
flowing into the hands of Osama bin Laden. If the Bush administration
is truly interested in ending terrorism, then it must start in the
poppy fields of Afghanistan.


Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Bush Administration
War on Terrorism

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