CBS/AP/ April 1, 2010, 7:32 AM

Afghanistan Opium Seizures Jump 924%

Opium seizures in Afghanistan soared 924 percent last year because of better cooperation between Afghan and international forces, the top U.S. drug enforcement official said Thursday.

The Taliban largely funds its insurgency by profits from the opium trade, making it a growing target of U.S. and Afghan anti-insurgency operations. Afghanistan produces the raw opium used to make 90 percent of the world's heroin.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration now has 96 agents in the country who joined with Afghan counterparts and NATO forces in more than 80 combined operations last year, acting DEA administrator Michelle Leonhart said at a news conference in Kabul.

"That is the success of bringing the elements, civil, military Afghan partners together," Leonhart said.

Leonhart did not give figures for total amounts of drugs seized but said the increase was 924 percent between 2008 and 2009. International groups estimate that only about 2 percent of Afghanistan's drug production was blocked from leaving the country in 2008 for markets in Central Asia and Europe.

Separately, Afghanistan is not only the world's largest supplier of opium, it also is the global leader in hashish production, the United Nations
said Wednesday.

It estimates that 24,700 to 59,300 acres of cannabis are grown in Afghanistan every year and that this is used to make an estimated 1,500 to 3,500 tons of hashish annually.

"While other countries have even larger cannabis cultivation, the astonishing yield of the Afghan cannabis crop ... makes Afghanistan the world's biggest producer of hashish," UNODC chief Antonio Maria Costa said in a statement.

Afghanistan supplies 90 percent of the world's opium, the main ingredient in heroin, and the highly lucrative crop has helped finance insurgents and fuel corruption.

The booming drugs trade has compounded Afghanistan's many problems and deepened Western concern about the war-battered country's future and hopes it can emerge as a peaceful democracy.

In a sign of President Hamid Karzai's increasingly tetchy relations with key international allies, the Afghan leader on Thursday accused U.N. and European Union officials of interfering in last year's flawed presidential elections.

A day after the parliament rejected his revised election law, Karzai accused the officials of committing "vast fraud" in the disputed Aug. 20 ballot to push the election into a runoff.

Karzai singled out former U.N. deputy chief Peter Galbraith, who was fired in a dispute with his boss about how to deal with fraud allegations, and the head of the E.U. observers, retired French general Philippe Morillon.

Karzai was forced into a runoff after a U.N.-backed commission threw out nearly a third of his ballots, but it was scrapped when Karzai's main opponent dropped out. He then issued a decree giving him greater control over the official election fraud watchdog body which was turned down by parliament's lower house.

Karzai was installed for a second five-year term but his government remains weak as it faces a challenge from a resurgent Taliban.

Since the fall of the former Taliban regime in 2001 until 2007, the illegal cultivation of opium poppies skyrocketed. It has since started to decline, and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has forecast that opium production could drop again in 2010.

Opium exports dropped from an estimated $3.4 billion in 2008, to $2.8 billion in 2009, the UNODC said. That represented a fall in opium's share of Afghanistan's gross domestic product from about one third to one quarter.

Leonhart said eradication efforts had already scored some success in the south, with opium cultivation down more than 30 percent in Helmand province that is responsible for half of Afghanistan's total production.

She said the DEA was working with U.S. forces moving into the Taliban heartland, including "significant operations" in Helmand, where the poppy harvest season is in full-swing.

"There is a very good plan put together to have very robust interdiction operations going forward there, eventually moving that to other provinces in the south," Leonhart said.

Such operations place the Afghan government and its foreign allies in a bind because eradicating poppy fields risks driving angry farmers, for whom opium poppy is a cheap, hardy, low-risk crop, into the arms of the insurgents because they fear loss of their livelihood.

Efforts to replace opium with other crops such as wheat and vegetables haven't scored wide success because profits for the farmers are much lower than for poppies.

Leonhart gave no details of the strategy for the south, but stressed that the focus was not on farmers but on seizing drugs and weapons, arresting traffickers, and tracing the profits of the trade.

"Because the money is what fuels the insurgency," Leonhart said.

In a sign that traffickers are striking back against such efforts, 13 people were killed Wednesday when a bomb concealed on a bicycle exploded near a crowd gathered to receive free vegetable seeds provided by the British government as part of a program to encourage them not to plant opium poppy.

No one claimed responsibility for the attack, although the acting provincial head of agriculture, Ghulam Sahki, said the blast could have been the work of drug dealers trying to stop the alternative crop program.

A recent NATO operation that drove militants from the Helmand town of Marjah struck at the heart of the Taliban opium business. While troops discovered acres (hectares) of poppy fields and numerous opium packing operations, farmers were left alone.

Also Thursday, India announced it was suspending teaching and aid operations in Kabul for two or three months following a February bomb attack that killed six Indian staff. Similar Indian aid efforts in four other Afghan cities remained up and running, said Indian Embassy spokesman J.P. Singh.

The Taliban have long opposed India's involvement in Afghanistan because of its ties to the Afghan group that helped the U.S. oust the Islamist regime in late 2001.

A mine blast Thursday morning in Shajoy district in the eastern province of Zabul killed two civilians and injured three, the Interior Ministry said. It blamed the attack on the Taliban.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
5 Comments Add a Comment
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nopatriot says:
I recommend some other nice products to produce in afghan.
Poppy is such a lovely flower but not really good for people.
The world peace is not only by politics like wars and battles.
why not communicate and have project to produce nice crops to supply for afghan people and
people worldwide.

USA want to communicate by only army, but many communication is possible , like farmer communications.
Joe the plumber does not plumb in afghan but farmers can teach how to make crops to afghan people.

I think I am so sweet.

How about corns?
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strangeworld says:
Soon after the invasion of Afghanistan, the opium supplied by the nation jumped up to 98% of the world's supply. There's been a lot of speculation that both the United Kingdom and the US were guarding the poppy fields during this time. I'd like to know what was going on with the Afghan opium production during the Bush administration. Something just doesn't add up.
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nomealaska says:
The military or CIA will again make sure that these drugs end up in America. Remember Iran-Contra? The profits are irresistable.
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tsigili says:
So.....what is the US or even NATO, doing about it? Obviously, not much.
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malcolmkyle says:
Prohibition is a sickening horror and the ocean of incompetence, corruption and human wreckage it has left in its wake is almost endless.

Prohibition has decimated generations and criminalized millions for a behavior which is entwined in human existence, and for what other purpose than to uphold the defunct and corrupt thinking of a minority of misguided, self-righteous Neo-Puritans and degenerate demagogues who wish nothing but unadulterated destruction on the rest of us.

Based on the unalterable proviso that drug use is essentially an unstoppable and ongoing human behavior which has been with us since the dawn of time, any serious reading on the subject of past attempts at any form of drug prohibition would point most normal thinking people in the direction of sensible regulation.

By its very nature prohibition cannot fail but create a vast increase in criminal activity, and rather than preventing society from descending into anarchy, it actually fosters an anarchic business model - the international Drug Trade. Any decisions concerning quality, quantity, distribution and availability are then left in the hands of unregulated, anonymous, ruthless drug dealers, who are interested only in the huge profits involved.

Many of us have now finally wised up to the fact that the best avenue towards realistically dealing with drug use and addiction is through proper regulation, which is what we already do with alcohol & tobacco --two of our most dangerous mood altering substances. But for those of you whose ignorant and irrational minds traverse a fantasy plane of existence, you will no doubt remain sorely upset with any type of solution that does not seem to lead to the absurd and unattainable utopia of a drug free society.

There is an irrefutable connection between drug prohibition and the crime, corruption, disease and death it causes. If you are not capable of understanding this connection, then maybe you're using something far stronger than the rest of us. Anybody 'halfway bright' and who's not psychologically challenged, should be capable of understanding, that it is not simply the demand for drugs that creates the mayhem; it is our refusal to allow legal businesses to meet that demand.

No amount of money, police powers, weaponry, diminution of rights and liberties, wishful thinking or pseudo-science will make our streets safer; only an end to prohibition can do that. How much longer are you willing to foolishly risk your own survival by continuing to ignore the obvious, historically confirmed solution?

If you still support the kool aid mass suicide cult of prohibition, and erroneously believe that you can win a war without logic and practical solutions, then prepare yourself for even more death, corruption, terrorism, sickness, imprisonment, unemployment, foreclosed homes, and the complete loss of the rule of law and the Bill of Rights.

"A prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our government was founded."
Abraham Lincoln

The only thing prohibition successfully does is prohibit regulation & taxation while turning even our schools and prisons into black markets for drugs. Regulation would mean the opposite!
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