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News (Media Awareness Project) - Afghanistan: NATO Mulls Expanding Its Drug Role in Afghanistan
Title:Afghanistan: NATO Mulls Expanding Its Drug Role in Afghanistan
Published On:2008-10-09
Source:Anchorage Daily News (AK)
Fetched On:2008-10-11 02:55:58
NATO MULLS EXPANDING ITS DRUG ROLE IN AFGHANISTAN

The United States on Thursday pushed NATO allies to order their
troops to target Afghanistan's thriving heroin trade in a bid to stem
the flow of drug money to the widening insurgency against the
troubled international military mission.

A two-day meeting of NATO defense ministers comes amid an increase in
violence that has created doubts about whether Western forces can win
the war against the resurgent Taliban militants.

"If we have the opportunity to go after drug lords and drug
laboratories and try and interrupt this flow of cash to the Taliban,
that seems to me like a legitimate security endeavor," said U.S.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates at the meeting.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates will seek more troops, equipment,
funding and other contributions to the Afghan war from the allies.

The U.S. plans to beef up its own troop strength with an extra Army
brigade early next year and as many as three additional brigades in
the following months. The increases reflect concerns that Afghanistan
is becoming the key battlefield in the fight against international terrorism.

NATO's top commander believes cutting the estimated $100 million that
the Taliban and their al-Qaida allies receive each year from
Afghanistan's heroin industry is one way to hit back.

"The money from the narcotics trade is feeding the insurgency, it buy
weapons and it pays fighters," U.S. Gen. John Craddock. "It is a
cancer that fuels the insurgency."

The Afghan police are too weak to tackle the problem and it's time
for the 50,000-strong alliance force to take on the drug runners, he said.

"NATO must step up to this task," Craddock told defense experts in
Brussels this week. "I've asked for expanded authority from NATO ...
to target laboratories and trafficking facilities."

The U.S. and several European allies support him, but others have
doubts. Although Craddock said he won't target poor farmers who
depend on opium poppies for a living, Germany, Italy and Spain worry
a counter-narcotics campaign could lead to a backlash against
international troops.

Those countries also fear widening the mission could overstretch the
hard-pressed troops. They believe that taking the task away from the
Afghans is a step backward in the goal to hand over security to local forces.

Craddock's supporters hope talks between the NATO ministers and their
Afghan counterpart Gen. Abdul Rahim Wardak in Budapest could overcome
doubts. Arriving for the meeting, Wardak said he would "like NATO to
support our efforts in counter-drug campaign" as well as stepping up
training for Afghan forces.

NATO's mission in Afghanistan is in bad need of a boost following a
spate of Taliban attacks, the acknowledgment that U.S. air strikes
killed 30 civilians in August and the reported assertion by senior
British commander Brig. Mark Carleton-Smith that "we're not going to
win this war."

NATO officials criticized Carleton-Smith's choice of words but
insisted what the brigadier meant to say was in line with the
alliance's long-stated position: that military means alone cannot win
the war and that Western nations must aid Afghanistan's economic
development and build up the police, legal system and other state institutions.

"Can there be an exclusively military solution to this? No, we have
never suggested that there would be," NATO spokesman James Appathurai
said Tuesday.

The Afghan government is seeking talks with elements in the Taliban
leadership in an effort at reconciliation and the two sides have
reportedly had contacts in Saudi Arabia. NATO says any decision to
open talks with the Taliban is up to the Afghan government but they
will offer support.

Thirty-three thousand U.S. troops make up the bulk of international
forces in Afghanistan, including 13,000 with the NATO-led force and
20,000 fighting the insurgency and training Afghan forces outside the
NATO command.
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