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            <div dir="ltr"><big><big><big><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/10/24/the-new-surge-in-afghanistan-drug-production/"
                      target="_blank">http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/10/24/the-new-surge-in-afghanistan-drug-production/</a></big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                      style="font-size: 16pt;" size="4"><big><big><big>Will
                            Any One Be Held Accountable?</big></big></big></font></big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                      style="font-size: 20pt;" size="5"><big><big><big><b>The
                              New Surge in Afghanistan: Drug Production</b></big></big></big></font></big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                    by BRIAN CLOUGHLEY</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                    Voutenay sur Cure, France.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                    All news coming out of Afghanistan is depressing,
                    and it seems the country is collapsing more deeply
                    into chaos day by day.  The new President, Ashraf
                    Ghani, is a good man with progressive ideas for his
                    people — but he’s taken over a country that has been
                    wrecked by over a decade of war and Olympic-style
                    corruption.  One of the worst  developments has been
                    the enormous surge in production of opium poppies
                    which, according to the UN and John Sopko, the US
                    Special Inspector General for Afghanistan
                    Reconstruction, has hit "unprecedented" heights.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                    Mr Sopko, arguably the least popular person in
                    official Washington (and therefore, by definition of
                    that accolade, an honest man), told secretary of
                    state John Kerry and defense secretary Chuck Hagel
                    that "the recent record-high level of poppy
                    cultivation calls into question the long-term
                    effectiveness and sustainability of those prior
                    efforts [to control and reduce production]."  But
                    the "prior efforts" by the US and other foreign
                    forces in Afghanistan have been so flawed as to be
                    absurd.  If the catastrophe wasn’t so serious it
                    would be hilarious.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                    The State Department came back at Sopko saying
                    "Essentially, poppy cultivation has shifted from
                    areas where government presence is broadly supported
                    and security has improved, toward more remote and
                    isolated areas where governance is weak and security
                    is inadequate," which is misleading to the verge of
                    mendacity.   Then the Defense Department went
                    further down the track of shameless blame-ducking by
                    declaring that  "In our opinion, the failure to
                    reduce poppy cultivation and increase eradication is
                    due to the lack of Afghan government support for the
                    effort."</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                    Mr Sopko records that in 2001-2014 the US spent over
                    seven billion dollars on counter-narcotics programs
                    in a country that now produces 80 percent of the
                    world’s opium.  During the thirteen years of frantic
                    money-chucking there were indeed various US efforts
                    to control drug production, and exactly seven years
                    ago I recounted how and why these exertions were
                    doomed to failure.  Here is a shortened (not
                    "redacted") version of the piece with some
                    explanatory figures given in square brackets:</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                        The Flat Drug World.   October 13, 2007</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        Ever heard of Mr Loren Stoddard?  I’m tempted to
                    advise you to Stay That Way, but to give an
                    illustration of how absurd and disastrous are
                    Washington’s policies in Afghanistan it is of
                    interest to consider his performance.  Bush of
                    Washington sets an example by being ignorant of many
                    things, and Stoddard of Kabul follows him by being
                    magnificently uninformed about Afghanistan.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
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                        In spite of his lack of knowledge of the country
                    and its customs and culture Mr Stoddard has been
                    made Director of USAID’s Afghanistan program. Before
                    this he "helped Wal-Mart move into Central America"
                    when he was USAID Supremo in that unfortunate
                    region. So of course he is superbly qualified to
                    direct American aid projects in a country of which
                    he is profoundly ignorant.  Stand by, Wal-Mart, for
                    a leg-up from your devoted admirer.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                        With tongue firmly in cheek, David Rohde of the
                    New York Times reported that "On Wednesday [August
                    21, 2007], Mr. Stoddard and Rory Donohoe, the
                    director of the American development agency’s
                    Alternative Livelihoods program in southern
                    Afghanistan, attended the first ‘Helmand
                    Agricultural Festival.’ The $300,000
                    American-financed gathering in Lashkar Gah
                    [population 45,000] was an odd cross between a
                    Midwestern county fair and a Central Asian bazaar,
                    devised to show Afghans an alternative to [growing]
                    poppies."</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        The head of the UN’s anti-drugs office, Mr
                    Antonio Maria Costa, said recently [May 31, 2007]
                    that "Helmand province is on the verge of becoming
                    the world’s biggest drug supplier, with the dubious
                    distinction of cultivating more drugs than entire
                    countries such as Myanmar, Morocco or even
                    Colombia."  But never fear, Mr Antonio Maria Costa
                    :  the USAID Batman has arrived, cape flying, eyes
                    agleam, with Robin Donohoe in tow, to bring
                    Washington’s anti-poppy culture to the admiring
                    citizens of Lashkar Gah.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                        The fatuous duo of Stoddard and Donohoe "arrived
                    [and] walked through the festival surrounded by a
                    three-man British and Australian security team armed
                    with assault rifles. ‘Who won the cow? Who won the
                    cow?’ shouted Mr. Stoddard, 38, a burly former food
                    broker from Provo, Utah.  ‘Was it a girl or a guy?’ 
                    After Afghans began dancing to traditional drum and
                    flute music, Mr. Donohoe, 29, from San Francisco,
                    briefly joined them."  (Knowing a little bit about
                    the tribes in the region I can imagine their
                    reaction to that little bit of cross-cultural
                    activity.)</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        The phrase "was it a girl or a guy" used by the
                    sophisticated Mr Stoddard is only one indication of
                    his profound ignorance of the country in which he
                    heads an agency responsible for billions of dollars
                    of US taxpayers’ money, of which he wasted 300,000
                    on a futile jamboree.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                        If Mr Stoddard imagines for one second that
                    women in Lashkar Gah in Helmand Province (or
                    anywhere else in Afghanistan) can own cows, he is a
                    fool.  If he thinks that a woman could enter a
                    raffle to win a cow ("a generator, cow and goat were
                    raffled off") he is demonstrating a staggering lack
                    of knowledge of regional custom for which he can be
                    offered only deep sympathy. There were no women at
                    Mr Stoddard’s absurd ‘Festival’. Women don’t go to
                    social gatherings in Afghanistan.  Mr Stoddard
                    obviously doesn’t know that even the wife of the
                    President of Afghanistan, a medical doctor, does not
                    appear in public.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        And it isn’t just Mr Stoddard’s ignorance of
                    national customs that is so laughable.  He "cited
                    American-financed agricultural fairs, the
                    introduction of high-paying legal crops and the
                    planned construction of a new industrial park and
                    airport as evidence that alternatives [to poppy
                    growing] were being created."</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        The man is in cloud-cuckoo land.  An industrial
                    park?  —  in a province where electricity is a
                    rarity and there is no commercial infrastructure of
                    any description?  One could be forgiven for
                    imagining that Mr Stoddard might have been inhaling
                    products inducing a high credibility threshold.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        There are no "high-paying" legal crops in
                    Helmand province. Some nuts are exported to the
                    Gulf, but generally people grow enough plants
                    (wheat, barley, fruit, vegetables) for their own
                    sustenance and to sell a bit to their neighbors and
                    use most of their fields to grow poppy because the
                    warlords and the criminals (many of both being
                    government ministers) ­ pay reasonably well.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        Sure, some cash ends up in the hands of the evil
                    and disgusting Taliban religious fanatics who move
                    between Pakistan and Afghanistan, killing at whim
                    the while and blowing themselves up in murderous
                    futility; but drug money isn’t nearly the
                    insurrectionist problem the would-be mind-benders
                    would have us believe. The billions of dollars (not
                    just millions; we’re talking real money here) [2
                    billion dollars in 2012;  3 billion in 2013] created
                    from Afghanistan’s poppies go to thuggish Afghan
                    warlords and Afghan army generals; to many members
                    of President Karzai’s own government (some of whom
                    are thuggish warlords and generals) ; to Uzbek,
                    Pakistani, Iranian, Tajik, Turkmen and,
                    increasingly, Han Chinese middle-men in the west of
                    the PRC (big problem on the rise there for China);
                    to Pakistani tribals who have been smuggling drugs
                    since time was invented; to freelance ruffians of
                    all descriptions, and, above all and most
                    lucratively, to Western criminals who appear immune
                    to the efforts of US and British law-enforcement
                    agencies to put them behind bars.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        Within Afghanistan the stink of drug corruption
                    is as obvious and calamitous as it is in London or
                    New York.  But nobody is going to rock the sleaze
                    boat in Afghanistan.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        The anti-drug effort in Afghanistan is a farce.
                    There is talk at the moment [October 2007] of aerial
                    spraying to eradicate the crop in Spring next year.
                    Of course that would play right into the hands of
                    the insurgents who have already convinced much of
                    Afghanistan’s population that occupation by foreign
                    forces is simply a rerun of the years when troops of
                    the former Soviet Union went round blitzing
                    villages.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                        If the nations with troops in Afghanistan are
                    serious about eradicating the drug trade they would
                    combine their best brains (which automatically
                    excludes Mr Stoddard) and produce a workable plan
                    (not a fatuous "seamless package" [the USAID phrase
                    of the time]) to wipe out poppy, jail the drug thugs
                    and introduce controlled compensation. Mind you,
                    it’s all very well to blame the Afghans for
                    producing poppies, opium and heroin. What they are
                    doing is meeting market demand. After all, there
                    would be no drug production in Afghanistan if there
                    wasn’t a welcoming market in the drug-loving
                    prosperous West. The drug world is very flat indeed.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                    * * * </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
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                    That was the state of Afghan drug production in
                    2007.  And as we hear in 2014 from the UN and the
                    admirable Mr Sopko it has since surged to staggering
                    proportions.  But is anyone going to be held
                    accountable for the waste of 7.6 billion dollars of
                    US taxpayers’ money?  Or — of much more importance —
                    for the lives of all the thousands of soldiers who
                    have died or been maimed for nothing in the horrible
                    useless Afghan War?</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                    Don’t hold your breath on that one.</big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big><br>
                  </big></big></big><big><big><big>
                    Brian Cloughley lives in Voutenay sur Cure, France.</big></big></big><br>
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