U.S. Envoy Meets Taliban Defector
Tells Ex-Militant, Now District Leader Of Musa Qala, To Urge Afghans To Stop Growing Opium
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William Wood right, U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan speaks to Mullah Abdul Salaam, former militant commander now the district leader of Musa Qala during a meeting in Musa Qala in the northern Helmand province of Afghanistan, Sunday, Jan. 13, 2008. (AP Photo/Jason Straziuso)
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Ambassador William Wood on Sunday drank tea and talked with Mullah Abdul Salaam, a former Taliban commander who defected to the government last month and is now the district leader of Musa Qala in the southern province of Helmand.
Wood urged Salaam to tell his people to leave behind "the practice of producing poison," and said poppy production, the key element in the opium and heroin trade, was against the law and Islam.
"In Musa Qala the price of bread has risen dramatically. I won't say why - you know why," Wood said, alluding to farmers' practice of growing poppies instead of needed food.
Southern Afghanistan was the scene of the heaviest fighting in the country in 2007, the bloodiest year since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001 toppled the Taliban militant movement. More than 6,500 people - mostly militants - were killed in violence last year, according to an Associated Press count based on official figures.
Islamist insurgents held sway in Musa Qala for most of last year, until U.S., British and Afghan forces retook it in early December. Wood said he thought the chances were good Musa Qala would remain under government control and said Afghan forces were drawing up a "comprehensive stabilization program" to help ensure it does.
U.S. soldiers from the 82nd Airborne now ring the town, but those troops will pull out of the region within days.
Officials say poppy production and the resulting drug trade help finance the insurgents, and that many Afghan farmers turn to poppies because they are a lucrative source of income. As a result, Afghanistan last year produced 93 percent of the world's opium, the main ingredient in heroin. Its export value was estimated at $4 billion.
Wood has said officials discovered $500 million worth of heroin in dozens of labs around Musa Qala. He said U.N. and Afghan officials have told him that farmers in Helmand have again been planting a lot of poppies for this season's harvest.
"There is a solution, but it depends on the people of Afghanistan. The people of Afghanistan have to decide what kind of Afghanistan they want, and we will support them if they choose an Afghanistan of peace, of Islam and of law," Wood told Salaam.
Salaam offered Wood a list of things he said needed to happen immediately for Musa Qala to remain peacefully under government control. Topping the list, he said, was a request to the Ministry of Interior for 200 more police.
"We still have a problem with the police. We need more to come here," Salaam said. "We want the police to be honest and strong, because in the past they have stolen from the people, and because of that the people still don't trust them."
A former Taliban commander has now not only agreed to support the constitution and respect the authority of the national government, but as a district governor will defend the constitution and represent the national government.
Ambassador William Wood"The other reason was that they were calling everyone Taliban who were not real Taliban. They should make a difference between real Taliban and drug users and smugglers," Salaam said. "This place (Musa Qala) was under the control of smugglers, drug dealers, and Islamic law was not implemented here."
The original meaning of the word "Taliban" in Afghanistan means "religious student or scholar" and does not necessarily have the negative connotation of its Western meaning, which is an armed member of the radical militia.
Showing the era he comes from, Salaam told Wood he wanted to thank the United States and Britain for helping Afghans "do jihad" against the Soviets - a reference to the Afghan resistance to the Soviet occupation in the 1980s.
Reflecting the dangers of traveling in the area, the two Black Hawk helicopters carrying Wood's team flew extremely close to the sandy ground, barely skimming over rooftops. The two aircraft, escorted by two Apache helicopter gunships, banked sharply from side to side over populated areas as a defensive measure against any possible incoming fire.
Wood said the situation in Musa Qala is "filled with hope."
"One of the elements of that hope is that a former Taliban commander has now not only agreed to support the constitution and respect the authority of the national government, but as a district governor will defend the constitution and represent the national government," Wood said.
In other developments:
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- Posted by FeelFree1 at 05:17 AM : Jan 14, 2008
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you earn every penny you get - Reply to this comment
- Headline: ''''Taleban meets with US defector: Tells Him to Urge Euro-Trash and Americans to Stop Using Opium''''
He''ll be dead in a month. Islam cannot have a western Government share credit for anything. - Reply to this comment
- Headline: ''Taleban meets with US defector: Tells Him to Urge Euro-Trash and Americans to Stop Using Opium''
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The Taleban had virtually won their war against Opium production. They had the remnants of the Drug Lords and their forces on the ropes and had been given $43 million by the US State Department for their work at suppressing opium production...The war against Afghanistan, planned with troops pre-deployed prior to 9-11, with the Indian press saying that the US would invade in the fall, allowed Opium production to flourish....MISSION ACCOMPLISHED. - Reply to this comment
- Wood said the situation in Musa Qala is "filled with hope."
"One of the elements of that hope is that a former Taliban commander has now not only agreed to support the constitution and respect the authority of the national government, but as a district governor will defend the constitution and represent the national government," Wood said.
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And in another story - Gates is sending in 3000 more Marines ! - Reply to this comment
- Another Talibban Defecator. What fairy tales will he tell us now? We need to feed the SickRicks'' bigoted minds of this beautiful, free and democratic country! LOL!
- Reply to this comment
Under the Taliban regime, opium harvest was negligable.
Under the Bush regime, Afghanistan now produces some 93% of the world''s opium supply.
Bush, losing militarily in Afghanistan, while simulaneously scoring an astounding "own-goal" in the War on Drugs.
Outside of their small circle of friends, the Bush cabal seems to have a great deal of disdain for the remaining population of the world.- Reply to this comment




