Opium intervention: Government policy
Afghanistan
Database of Participants, Central And South Asia States Counter Narcotics Security Working Group, (as of December 19, 2006), CCJ3-JIACG, Counter Narcotics
Provides listing of names and organisational affiliation by member country and organisation, which include:
- Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
- Republic of Kazakhstan
- Kyrgyz Republic
- Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Republic of Tajikistan
- Turkmenistan
- Republic of Uzbekistan
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
- Russian Federation
- Federal Republic of Germany
- Republic of Turkey
- United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime / Other U.N. Organizations
- European Union / Other Civilian Organizations
- NATO/ISAF
- United States of America
- The George C. Marshall Center
Australia
Australian Federal Police Annual Report, 2005-06, Chapter Two.
"Approximately 80 per cent of heroin seized in Australia continues to originate from the Golden Triangle region of South-East Asia, predominantly Myanmar. Statistics collated by the Australian Illicit Drug Intelligence Program indicate South-West Asian heroin (produced primarily in Afghanistan and Pakistan) has a potential market in Australia, however seizure levels in Australia remain comparatively low (approximately 20 percent). In the past y ear low-grade brown heroin likely to be sourced from Afghanistan was detected in parcel-post importations and at street level. Afghanistan is the world’s primary opium producing region, accounting for more than 85 per cent of global production. Even though the Australian drug market has shifted to amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS), heroin will remain a danger to the Australian community as long as large-scale global cultivation of opium poppies continues."
Australian help sought for drug fight, Mark Dodd, The Australian, 20 February 2007
“Afghanistan has warned it could unravel into a terrorist-backed narco-state unless Australia and the rest of the international community send specialist police to combat the heroin trafficking which is funding the Taliban insurgency. The war-battered nation's ambassador to Canberra, Mohammed Anwar Anwarzai, said yesterday Australia's military deployment had helped build local trust, but a dangerous vacuum existed in the wake of their withdrawal last year. ‘Unfortunately, we are now on the verge of becoming a narco-state. I can confess to that,’ Mr Anwarzai told The Australian. In its first acknowledgement of the extent of the problem, Canberra is planning to send four AFP [Australian Federal Police] agents to Afghanistan to help with police training and monitoring of illicit opium exports. Two armed AFP agents will be based in the opium heartland of Jalalabad to gather intelligence on opium smuggling.
United Kingdom
The UK role in counter-narcotics, UK Operations in Afghanistan, Thirteenth Report, Defence Committee, House of Commons, United Kingdom, 3 July 2007.
"146. The MoD's position is that it will not take part in the eradication of poppy until alternative livelihood schemes are available. We call on the Government to ensure that this message is communicated clearly to farmers in Helmand. We are deeply concerned that uncertainty has arisen among Afghans about ISAF's policy towards, and role in, poppy eradication and that UK Forces, under ISAF command, may consequently have been put at risk. This uncertainty undermines the effectiveness of the entire ISAF mission.
ARGUMENTS FOR LICENSED PRODUCTION OF OPIUM
"147. The Senlis Council argues that until alternative livelihoods are made available for poppy farmers, the threat of eradication of their crop will result in them becoming increasingly involved with the Taliban. In places where alternatives to growing poppy do not exist, the Senlis Council advocates a pilot scheme in which farmers in designated areas are licensed to grow poppy in return for a guarantee that the State would buy their harvest.[165] The Senlis Council asserts that the legal production of opium in Afghanistan would help address a world-wide shortage of morphine and that similar trials had taken place successfully in India.
"148. During our visit to Afghanistan we met with much scepticism about the Senlis Council proposals. We were told that Southern Afghanistan, where much of Afghanistan's poppy crop grows, currently lacks the necessary security in which trial schemes could take place without being taken over by those involved in the illegal narcotics industry. When we asked the Secretary of State to comment on the Senlis Council's proposals, he expressed concern that the introduction of licensed opium trials would encourage farmers to start growing poppy crops and have the unintended consequence of increasing supply:If I thought that buying the crop would solve the problem I would be first in the queue to persuade people to do that. My view is…that proposing to buy the crop currently would double the crop.
"149. During our visit to Afghanistan in April 2007, we were told by officials involved in counter-narcotics policy that the world market price for illegally produced opium was up to three times that of legally produced opium. With that being the case, there would be little incentive for opium farmers to join any legal scheme.
"150. Ending opium production in Helmand will require a long-term commitment by the international community to create a secure environment in which farmers can be encouraged to pursue alternative livelihoods. We recommend that the Government continue to pursue imaginative ways to policies to address narcotics production in Afghanistan but we are not persuaded that licensed production is a viable alternative strategy at this time.
"151. Success in combating the narcotics trade will be crucial to the future stability of Afghanistan. We remain concerned that the coalition's counter-narcotics policy lacks clarity and coherence. We recommend that, in its response to this report, the Government set out in detail the international counter-narcotics strategy for Afghanistan, including its assessment of progress to date and targets for the years ahead."
United States
Ambassador: Washington Will Change Its Afghan Counternarcotics Programs, Richard Weitz, EurasiaNet, 30 July 2007.
"US Ambassador Thomas A. Schweich, Acting Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs acknowledged that US programs had only achieved mixed results in curbing the narcotics trade in Afghanistan. US government experts estimate that opium production currently amounts to almost a third of Afghanistan’s total Gross Domestic Product, or slightly over $3 billion. Schweich concluded that it could take a minimum of five years to get the problem "under control." In his view, success will not involve completely ending local opium production, which he termed impossible."
Status of Security and Stability in Afghanistan, Statement of Karen P. Tandy, Administrator, Drug Enforcement Administration [DEA] before the Committee on Armed Services, U.S. House of Representatives, June 28, 2006
"The large scale production of opium in Afghanistan is not only a significant threat to Afghanistan’s future and the region’s stability, but also has worldwide implications. In response to this threat, the DEA has undertaken an aggressive approach to combat the production of opium in Afghanistan. The DEA has opened and staffed our Kabul Country Office, initiated our Foreigndeployed Advisory and Support Team [FAST] program, and has begun to establish an aviation presence in Afghanistan and expand our regional presence.
"Working with the CNP-A [Counter Narcotics Police of Afghanistan] and the Department of Defense (DoD), the DEA has established the National Interdiction Unit (NIU), which is comprised of CNP-A officers who have been selected to work on major narcotic enforcement operations with the Kabul Country Office. Through assistance, training, and mentoring, DEA’s goal is to make the NIU capable of conducting independent operations. Five classes of the NIU have graduated from a six-week training program that was sponsored by the U.S. Government. All NIU graduates are operationally deployed and work bi-laterally with DEA’s FAST teams. Presently, there are approximately 100 NIU officers with a total force of 125 expected this summer.
"To help achieve our goals in Afghanistan, DEA has established specially trained, Foreigndeployed Advisory Support Teams (FAST). FAST is a key tool by which DEA advances its enforcement and training operations. FAST consists of five teams of six specially trained agents and analysts who deploy to Afghanistan for 120 days at a time to assist the Kabul Country Office and CNP-A in the development of their investigations. They advise, mentor and train our Afghan counterpart.
"The Department of Defense is funding and constructing a FAST and NIU base camp in Afghanistan which is expected to be completed in the first quarter of FY 2007. This facility will be capable of housing and providing mission support for our deployed FAST teams and their NIU counterparts. FAST personnel currently are being housed at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul and at the Bagram Air Field until this base camp is completed."
CCJ3-JIACG, Counter Narcotics, US Central Command
10 January 2008