News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Column: War On Terrorism Must Come Before War On Drugs |
Title: | US PA: Column: War On Terrorism Must Come Before War On Drugs |
Published On: | 2002-04-14 |
Source: | Inquirer (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 12:59:45 |
WAR ON TERRORISM MUST COME BEFORE WAR ON DRUGS
By all accounts, there's going to be a bumper poppy crop in Afghanistan
this year.
Fields of the pink, violet and white flowers are blossoming in the
provinces of Nangarhar and Helmand, traditionally the source for about 70
percent of the opium and heroin in the world. The gray paste made from
these colorful flowers is a bounty for the farmers and illiterate laborers
who work these fields, a fortune for the drug traffickers who process and
ship it - and a plague for the countries throughout the world that battle
drug addiction.
So the interim government of Afghanistan finds itself caught between local
interests and its international obligations.
Hamid Karzai, the Western-backed leader who stepped in after the Taliban
was ousted last year, is committed to eradicating the crop - and meeting
serious resistance from the growers. The challenge comes while he is also
struggling to manage the traditionally warring factions of his country long
enough to hold elections and establish a democracy. He still faces a strong
threat from remnants of the Taliban and al-Qaeda, elements of which have
been caught plotting assassinations of the new government's leaders. It is
no time for the United States and Europe to be making his task more difficult.
It is vital to the U.S. war on terrorism that the emerging Afghan
government be independent, authentic and successful. Forcing Karzai to
crack down on his country's largest cash crop puts him in the position of
acting like a puppet for Western interests and encourages his (and our)
enemies. Drug addiction remains a serious social problem in the West, but
this it is not the top priority.
The truth is that poppy cultivation works for Afghanistan. Addicts in
Europe, the United States, India, Pakistan and elsewhere pay wealthy drug
traffickers, who pay farmers to grow poppies. Antidrug efforts keep the
supply low, which artificially inflates the price, which means the
impoverished farmers are paid more for poppies than anything else they
could grow.
The system works as an engine for local economies in impoverished nations
all over the world, and the forces waging the drug war have yet to find a
way to fight it. Drug trafficking has delivered more money to the Colombian
and Afghan hinterlands than any government program in history.
There have been intensive efforts to encourage the poppy growers in
Afghanistan and the coca growers in Colombia to cultivate alternative
crops. Programs offer economic incentives to regions that crack down
effectively on poppy production and provide subsidies for growing
alternative crops.
But these efforts have been too poorly funded and too narrowly applied to
be effective. At most, the success they achieve in one region just pushes
the growing elsewhere. So long as there are customers willing to pay
exorbitant rates for drugs, somebody, somewhere, will grow the crops,
process the drugs, and deliver them.
In short, it's a terribly complicated problem that will not be worsened or
solved in the long run by cracking down on Afghanistan this year. The
growers borrow money from traffickers to tide them over during winter, then
repay them when their crops are harvested in spring. Karzai's government
didn't announce its ban on poppy growing until January, after the crop had
been planted, which means growers were already committed to harvesting
their crops. The government program is offering them about $500 per
half-acre, but they can earn about $2,000 by selling the poppies.
Resistance to the government plan has already erupted into violence in Helmand.
What makes the most sense right now is a one-time-only buy-back program,
which would keep the world's largest poppy crop off the market and buy time
until the Afghan government is on its feet. The United Nations and United
States have promised billions of dollars toward rebuilding the country.
Expecting too much too soon could undermine the larger goal.
The Rev. John Langan, a Georgetown University philosophy professor whom I
quoted in last week's column about torture, asked if I would further
explain his views. While he acknowledges that torture might be morally
justifiable "in very rare cases," he does not believe that the case of
al-Qaeda senior leader Abu Zubaydah, who was arrested earlier this month,
meets those conditions. "My point was that if one sets up the supposedly
ideal case for using torture - proximate danger to large numbers of people,
strong evidence that the person to be tortured has the relevant information
- - the conditions will be satisfied only in very rare cases," he said. "I
did say that in the proposed case and in cases very like it we would not
blame the agents, but that is different (importantly different for a moral
philosopher) from endorsing the action. Torture, as I said to you, yields
information of poor quality, puts our own people at greater risk if and
when they become prisoners, damages the character of the torturers and the
reputation of the United States. I also believe that using torture against
al-Qaeda prisoners does not meet the relevant conditions and is likely to
be little more than an act of vengeance."
By all accounts, there's going to be a bumper poppy crop in Afghanistan
this year.
Fields of the pink, violet and white flowers are blossoming in the
provinces of Nangarhar and Helmand, traditionally the source for about 70
percent of the opium and heroin in the world. The gray paste made from
these colorful flowers is a bounty for the farmers and illiterate laborers
who work these fields, a fortune for the drug traffickers who process and
ship it - and a plague for the countries throughout the world that battle
drug addiction.
So the interim government of Afghanistan finds itself caught between local
interests and its international obligations.
Hamid Karzai, the Western-backed leader who stepped in after the Taliban
was ousted last year, is committed to eradicating the crop - and meeting
serious resistance from the growers. The challenge comes while he is also
struggling to manage the traditionally warring factions of his country long
enough to hold elections and establish a democracy. He still faces a strong
threat from remnants of the Taliban and al-Qaeda, elements of which have
been caught plotting assassinations of the new government's leaders. It is
no time for the United States and Europe to be making his task more difficult.
It is vital to the U.S. war on terrorism that the emerging Afghan
government be independent, authentic and successful. Forcing Karzai to
crack down on his country's largest cash crop puts him in the position of
acting like a puppet for Western interests and encourages his (and our)
enemies. Drug addiction remains a serious social problem in the West, but
this it is not the top priority.
The truth is that poppy cultivation works for Afghanistan. Addicts in
Europe, the United States, India, Pakistan and elsewhere pay wealthy drug
traffickers, who pay farmers to grow poppies. Antidrug efforts keep the
supply low, which artificially inflates the price, which means the
impoverished farmers are paid more for poppies than anything else they
could grow.
The system works as an engine for local economies in impoverished nations
all over the world, and the forces waging the drug war have yet to find a
way to fight it. Drug trafficking has delivered more money to the Colombian
and Afghan hinterlands than any government program in history.
There have been intensive efforts to encourage the poppy growers in
Afghanistan and the coca growers in Colombia to cultivate alternative
crops. Programs offer economic incentives to regions that crack down
effectively on poppy production and provide subsidies for growing
alternative crops.
But these efforts have been too poorly funded and too narrowly applied to
be effective. At most, the success they achieve in one region just pushes
the growing elsewhere. So long as there are customers willing to pay
exorbitant rates for drugs, somebody, somewhere, will grow the crops,
process the drugs, and deliver them.
In short, it's a terribly complicated problem that will not be worsened or
solved in the long run by cracking down on Afghanistan this year. The
growers borrow money from traffickers to tide them over during winter, then
repay them when their crops are harvested in spring. Karzai's government
didn't announce its ban on poppy growing until January, after the crop had
been planted, which means growers were already committed to harvesting
their crops. The government program is offering them about $500 per
half-acre, but they can earn about $2,000 by selling the poppies.
Resistance to the government plan has already erupted into violence in Helmand.
What makes the most sense right now is a one-time-only buy-back program,
which would keep the world's largest poppy crop off the market and buy time
until the Afghan government is on its feet. The United Nations and United
States have promised billions of dollars toward rebuilding the country.
Expecting too much too soon could undermine the larger goal.
The Rev. John Langan, a Georgetown University philosophy professor whom I
quoted in last week's column about torture, asked if I would further
explain his views. While he acknowledges that torture might be morally
justifiable "in very rare cases," he does not believe that the case of
al-Qaeda senior leader Abu Zubaydah, who was arrested earlier this month,
meets those conditions. "My point was that if one sets up the supposedly
ideal case for using torture - proximate danger to large numbers of people,
strong evidence that the person to be tortured has the relevant information
- - the conditions will be satisfied only in very rare cases," he said. "I
did say that in the proposed case and in cases very like it we would not
blame the agents, but that is different (importantly different for a moral
philosopher) from endorsing the action. Torture, as I said to you, yields
information of poor quality, puts our own people at greater risk if and
when they become prisoners, damages the character of the torturers and the
reputation of the United States. I also believe that using torture against
al-Qaeda prisoners does not meet the relevant conditions and is likely to
be little more than an act of vengeance."
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