World Watch
September 2, 2009 4:42 AM

Afghanistan Now Has Drug Cartels

By
Pamela Falk
Topics
Afghanistan
This story was filed by CBS News foreign affairs analyst Pamela Falk, reporting from the United Nations.

(AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)
As President Obama heads to Camp David for the Labor Day weekend, his vacation reading is the sobering Afghanistan war report by U.S. and NATO General Stanley A. McChrystal, but he would be well-advised to add to his bedside literature the United Nation's new report on the increase of drug cartels in Afghanistan.

"Afghan Opium Survey 2009," was released Wednesday in Kabul by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

The report reads like a John Le Carr? spy novel. The headline is that opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan is down, but UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa (pictured above) also concludes the war-torn country now has its very own drug cartels; that insurgents are moving up the "value chain" in the drug trafficking business, not merely taxing supply (which they have done for years), but now working with criminal gangs and corrupt officials to produce, process, stock, and export opium.

Costa's findings are ominous: More must be done to control drugs in Afghanistan, not just because it is a major source of income for poor farmers, but because it is the financing "in the killing fields of suicide bombers."

The UNODC report says that, although interdiction is increasing, eradication continues to be a failure. He speaks of a "marriage of convenience" between anti-government insurgents (the same ones who have killed 734 American troops in Afghanistan and neighboring nations since the 2001 U.S. invasion) and criminal groups which has spawned narcotics cartels (similar to the ones in Colombia, South America) in Afghanistan with direct links to the Taliban.

Collusion with corrupt Afghan government officials is creating a crisis of security and law enforcement, and promoting widespread money laundering, the report concludes.

The only good news, if you can call it that, is that prices for opium are at a 10-year low and production is down because of oversupply in Afghanistan.

The report recommends a regional approach to tackle the problem, which should include Iran and Central Asia — a tough sell in Washington given what has happened in post-election Iran.

"Afghan Opium Survey 2009" is a quick read, at 42 pages, with some positive notes on what has been done thus far, but the rise of cartels is something President Obama must seriously consider as he assesses U.S. policy in Afghanistan.


  • Pamela Falk

    Pamela Falk is CBS News Foreign Affairs Analyst and an international lawyer, based at the United Nations.

Add a Comment See all 29 Comments
by ericposs September 25, 2009 2:51 PM EDT
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=ABBEB4300F062C93 presents some official stuff on afghanistan
Reply to this comment
by Jimmy_The_Kid September 2, 2009 4:54 PM EDT
The oil and heroin trades are the most lucrative in the world. But these wars are about spreading freedom and democracy, right? Sure they are.
Reply to this comment
by signseeker1717 September 2, 2009 3:01 PM EDT
The drug angle on the Afghan story really isn't "new", it's just new to the US media; BBC has been reporting on this UN report coming out for weeks. The report has been anticipated by all governments involved, as it will provide recommendations on new eradication strategies. Regardless - we CANNOT just walk away from Afghanistan. The Taliban-al Q connection is a real and serious threat to WORLD security. They MUST be destroyed, and the drugs are funding their operations. NATO troops would not be there if we weren't. And if ALL those troops suddenly leave, don't forget, Pakistan is right next door and nuclear-armed. The Taliban chief Mehsud (who was killed recently), ordered the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, and the Taliban has made it clear they intend to expand their presence in that country (they've only recently been driven out of most of the Swat province, near the Pakistani border, by UK troops). We aren't just talking about a few crazy tribesmen who will stay within their own borders. They haven't and they WON'T stay there (9/11, the bombings in London, Madrid, etc. - it's not just about US). This is an INTERNATIONAL problem. It's terrible so much time, treasure and lives were wasted in Iraq, when we could have used those resources where they belonged; we LOST ground in Afghanistan while all that was going on. We cannot leave Afghanistan yet. Expect US involvement to continue and even ramp up for at least another 18-24 months. It doesn't do any good to blame former or current presidents. The fact is: the mission is NOT complete, and we cannot leave until it is.
Reply to this comment
by nomealaska September 2, 2009 1:11 PM EDT
The CIA + Afghanistan = Lots of opium! Thanks, CIA! Who didn't see that one coming? What next? Maybe they will trade drugs for weapons or something silly like that. As far as the torturing goes, I believe in the shadowy Hollywood-style CIA that has always tortured people it wants answers from. Rush's liberal media actually had them pegged correctly. Makes me wonder whether they were "liberal" or just right. Americans are not better or different than anybody else, but we sure like to think we are.
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by bradkt1 September 2, 2009 12:20 PM EDT
This might be an area where the U.S. and Iran can work together because their interests would coincide...or at least closely parallel each other. Iran has no use for drug smugglers and has dealt with them harshly in the past. Successful ccoperation between the two countries on this issue could build confidence for the two countries to work together on other issues.
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by jxknowles September 2, 2009 12:19 PM EDT
Afghanistan Now Has Drug Cartels?

I see they're finally making progress. Once they have prostitution, gambling, liquor distributers, football and baseball, and infomercials we'll know the war is finally won.
Reply to this comment
by miami_don September 2, 2009 2:13 PM EDT
I think your on to something jxknows. We'll start calling Kabul the Vegas of the East. Showgirls in burkas and camel drivers dressed like chauffeurs. An opum den on every corner and slots in the hotel rooms. I think your on to something. Gives a whole new meaning into "turn that desert into glass".
by gunownerdan September 2, 2009 9:26 AM EDT
Prohibition(as opposed to regulation) is what makes cartels possible!
Reply to this comment
by azure13 September 2, 2009 9:23 AM EDT
Excuse me, I thought that is was the Taliban always was. Of course they pretend to be a religious group as well.
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by wyodutch September 2, 2009 9:10 AM EDT
Another consequence.. unintended or otherwise... of our occupation of Afghanistan.
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by christopherrussell September 2, 2009 9:09 AM EDT
Hi,Afgan drug cartels,they must be wiped out now for the sake of our children,whatever it takes and whoever it may upset.Im British live in England,Heroin is Destroying our kids!!Our goverment do not seem to be doing much about the problem!surely it needs one big force of crack troops to hit these vermin where it hurts The Pocket and the Feilds!! Heroin is a curse and that curse Must be Broken fast!
Reply to this comment
by gopparrotslie September 2, 2009 11:08 AM EDT
Sorry Prohibition doesn't work-
Demand fuels supply
The only thing Alcohol Prohibition created was Mafias
The Only thing narcotic Prohibition does
Is create Cartels and higher prices

You cannot legislate Morality
The only thing you can do is Provide better education
And better treatment

The drug war in the USA is and has been an abject failure
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