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Afghan Progress Undermined by drug
Dennis Kux and Harpinder Athwal
Christian Science
Monitor
January 13, 2004
Washington
- After three weeks of vigorous debates in the
loya jirga, Afghans have succeeded in approving a new Constitution
for their country. But whether Afghanistan has a presidential or parliamentary
system, the focus of controversy is in many respects overshadowed by the
burgeoning narcotics trade. Unless checked, the drug trade has the potential to
undermine Afghanistan's entire political and economic reconstruction process.
A recent trip to
Afghanistan convinced us that along with growing insecurity, the drug trade is
the single biggest obstacle to a stable Afghanistan.
This year
narcotics accounted for more than 40 percent of the Afghan economy; the UN
estimates that Afghanistan's current annual production of 3,600 tons of opium is
75 percent of the world's output.
The struggle to
produce a democratic constitution to underpin a stable, unified Afghanistan will
bear little or no fruit if the narcotics trade continues to flourish. The Afghan
drug lords, tied to terrorists and warlords for support and assistance, have a
vested interest in a weak government in Kabul. And these "narcolords" will use
all their power to keep the already fractured and volatile Karzai government
unstable.
Afghan drug money
provides a steady source of finance for groups like Al Qaeda and the Taliban.
These groups view the Karzai government as a pawn of the US and its allies and
they want to drive the international assistance community from Afghanistan. The
terrorists target foreign aid workers and contractors, who are essentially
undefended, in an effort to push out all international groups working to
reconstruct Afghanistan and secure its future. The peace cannot be won while a
reliable source of funding from narcotics continues to put weapons and resources
into the hands of warlords and the Taliban. The war on terror in Afghanistan has
to include an assault on the drug trade.
So far, the
international effort to tackle narcotics has failed badly - and, as one Afghan
official in Kabul told us, the nation is at a crossroads, at risk of falling
into the hands of "drug cartels or 'narcoterrorists.'"
The British,
who've had the lead role in dealing with drugs, have achieved little. Their
program to pay farmers to eradicate poppy fields has, unfortunately, led to
increased poppy production. And the US military and coalition forces have
maintained a hands-off policy, studiously avoiding involvement in battling
narcotics.
Lacking an
effective national police force and functioning legal system, the Afghan central
government is powerless to deal with the problem alone. Arrests can be made but,
given the legal void, those taken into custody can't be tried. Yet Afghan
government ministers, international aid officials, and diplomats we met with all
agree that failure to send a forceful, unified message to the drug traffickers
that they cannot operate with impunity risks undermining any effort to create
stability and security in Afghanistan.
The weak policy
requires drastic overhaul. Drug traffickers and poppy cultivators need to know
that the current permissive attitude has changed. There is no time to wait for
"crop alternatives" before tackling the problem. The growth of poppies has
already been declared illegal, and Kabul should start enforcing the policy with
a vigorous eradication program. Karzai government officials told us they believe
fears of a backlash among farmers and drug middlemen are exaggerated.
Certainly more
vigorous antidrug enforcement - under the difficult circumstances of a
struggling democracy - will be imperfect. But it would send a badly needed
signal to traffickers that the government is serious about containing the drug
trade. For the program to be more than mere rhetoric, it is essential that the
US military become more actively involved.
By sending Zalmay
Khalilzad as the new ambassador in Kabul, the US has made a good start with
strategy adjustments. The first step has been to accelerate the training of the
new Afghan National Army and national police force, and the second was to expand
the Provincial Reconstruction Teams with the aim of increasing security across
the country. These welcome changes will mean little in curbing the growth of the
Taliban and cutting the roots of Al Qaeda - in short, winning the first battle
in the war on terror - without a far more vigorous US participation in an
antidrug program.
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Dennis Kux,
a former State Department South Asia specialist, is a senior policy scholar at
the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Harpinder Athwal is
communications manager for Citizens for Global Solutions. They traveled to
Afghanistan last month as part of a Council on Foreign Relations and Asia
Society Task Force mission.
From the
January 13, 2004 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0113/p09s02-coop.html
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