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LAT: Afghan heroin's surge poses danger in U.S.: Purest in world

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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 03:29 AM
Original message
LAT: Afghan heroin's surge poses danger in U.S.: Purest in world
Edited on Tue Dec-26-06 03:40 AM by DeepModem Mom
Afghan heroin's surge poses danger in U.S.
The world's purest form can kill more addicts, as seen in L.A. County.
By Garrett Therolf, Times Staff Writer
December 26, 2006

Supplies of highly potent Afghan heroin in the United States are growing so fast that the pure white powder is rapidly overtaking lower-quality Mexican heroin, prompting fears of increased addiction and overdoses.

Heroin-related deaths in Los Angeles County soared from 137 in 2002 to 239 in 2005, a jump of nearly 75% in three years, a period when other factors contributing to overdose deaths remained unchanged, experts said. The jump in deaths was especially prevalent among users older than 40, who lack the resilience to recover from an overdose of unexpectedly strong heroin, according to a study by the county's Office of Health Assessment and Epidemiology....

According to a Drug Enforcement Administration report obtained by The Times, Afghanistan's poppy fields have become the fastest-growing source of heroin in the United States. Its share of the U.S. market doubled from 7% in 2001, the year U.S. forces overthrew the Taliban, to 14% in 2004, the latest year studied. Another DEA report, released in October, said the 14% actually could be significantly higher.

Poppy production in Afghanistan jumped significantly after the 2001 U.S. invasion destabilized an already shaky economy, leading farmers to turn to the opium market to survive.

Not only is more heroin being produced from Afghan poppies coming into the United States, it is also the purest in the world, according to the DEA's National Drug Intelligence Center....

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-heroin26dec26,0,7339972.story?coll=la-home-headlines
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Bombtrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 03:40 AM
Response to Original message
1. Does anyone know where most of the Afghan heroin goes in the US, geographically ?
I was reading about the sharp rise in opiate addiction in the Northeast and it seemed to indicate that almost all of it came from Dominican groups.
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Massacure Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 08:56 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. No, but much more Afghan heroin goes to Europe than to the United States.
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karynnj Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 09:01 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. Most of it supposedly goes to Europe
but this does not diminish the damage to the US. This is clearly a huge increase to the amount on the world's illicit markets - so it likely does or will add the amount available here.

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High Plains Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 12:20 PM
Response to Reply #4
10. Afghan heroin is going to junkies in the Middle East and Asia, too.
Iran and Pakistan are two of the largest markets, and there are rising rates of addiction in the Central Asian 'stans, too. Iran reportedly has the world's highest rate of heroin addiction.
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MadHound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 08:35 AM
Response to Original message
2. Mission Accomplished!
Looks like the CIA is back in business again, with their old buddies from SE Asia. And we the people will pay the price. Not only should we expect the addiction numbers to jump here in the US, but also look for our returning soldiers to be addicted also, much like what happened in Vietnam.

For a very scholarly look at the US involvement in poppy production, I would strongly recommend Alfred McCoy's book "The Politics of Heroin" First published in 1972, this work explores how the CIA is involved in the world-wide poppy trade that originates out of SE Asia. A revised, updated version of this book also deals with the emergence of Afghanistan, the Taliban, and folks like bin Laden into the poppy trade, and how they deal with the CIA.

A very well done book.
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karynnj Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 09:06 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. Afghanistan is effectively a narcoeconomy (or very close to it) - here is part of the SFRC
hearing from September 2006. (This is taken from an old post on the JK group)

KERRY: Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.

General, thanks. Welcome. Thanks for the job you're doing. And thank you also for the time to visit the other day on the telephone. I appreciate it very, very much -- and I see the five pillars here and it's part of the public testimony.

I've always felt that Afghanistan is the real center of the war on terror, not Iraq. And it's troubling to me that we have seven times the numbers of troops in Iraq that we do in Afghanistan and that suicide attempts I think are up, triple; roadside bombs are up double.

And you yourself have said, General, that narcotics is at the core of everything that can go wrong in Afghanistan if not properly tackled.

But we're not making progress -- we're losing ground.

President Karzai has said that our approach to the narcotics, counternarcotics, have failed. And the U.N.'s top counternarcotics official said yesterday that NATO forces have to somehow help the Afghan army to fight the opium trade.

When I was in Afghanistan and met with President Karzai earlier in the year, I asked him about the narco-situation and whether or not Afghanistan is now a narco-economy.



KERRY: And he said yes. He agreed.

I think our experts agree, I think you would agree, it is a narco-economy.

At what point does it become a narco-state? And if our efforts have currently failed, and that's the center of everything that could go wrong, what's going to change?

JONES: I don't know what the tip-over point is, but when over 50 percent of your economy is tied to the narco-trafficking portion of it, you're well on your way. I don't know exactly when you become a narco-state by definition, but it's clear that the influence of narcotics on all organs of emerging Afghan society is there.

It fuels the insurgency. It contributes to the corruption. It is omni-present. And it's something that, frankly, the family of nations ought to be worried about.

I think one of the things I mentioned to you in our conversation was that 90 percent of the products are sold in European capitals.

KERRY: Well, with all of the troop level that we have there, what is the problem in engaging in a massive crop destruction effort? Are they afraid of the instability that that will incur on the population, so they're, in a sense, locked?

JONES: It is a vicious circle, because I think what is needed is a comprehensive international plan that everybody signs up to that's multi-faceted.

If we simply focus on crop eradication, then you're affecting the livelihood of a significant portion of the country, and so you have to have crop substitution, you have to have means of getting alternative crops to the markets, which means you have to build roads that may not exist.

There's a whole series of dominoes that line up. But absent a clearly defined, well thought-out, agreed-upon finance and resource plan, you wind up doing a little bit of everything and nothing very well.

KERRY: That's what really concerns me, General. Here we are. President Karzai said, quote, The same enemies that blew up themselves -- that's his quote -- in the Twin Towers in America are still around.

The plot against these airliners that was stopped in London was hatched in Afghanistan. Yet the center of changing this is to have economic success and reform success.

And yet 40 percent of the Afghan population is unemployed right now, before you even do crop destruction. Ninety percent lack regular electricity. And yet this administration has appropriated nearly four times more in reconstruction funds for Iraq than Afghanistan. And, in fact, aid money was cut by 30 percent this year.

So I would assume that greater construction efforts and greater focus in pulling together this comprehensive eradication or substitution plan would significantly bolster your efforts of our troops on the ground.

MORE

JONES: I completely agree. I think that the military aspect of what we're doing is important. But the long-term reconstruction is tied to how well we do in those pillars.

KERRY: So if the stakes are as high as everybody says, if the president says this is a battle for civilization and so forth, why aren't we doing this?

JONES: I think we're doing quite a bit. I mean, just to put a positive spin on this, we have 6 million Afghan children who are going to school today, 2 million of them are girls. We've rebuilt over 3,000 kilometers of roads. Eighty percent of the Afghan people now have access to some form of health care.

There are interesting measures of progress out there.

KERRY: Can I just interrupt one second? I don't mean to cut you off at all, but the time is limited.

I agree -- and I want to pay tribute to that. I think you and efforts on the ground have really been quite remarkable in a lot of respects.

But what you're telling us, what President Karzai is telling us, what experts are telling us on the ground is that all of that -- and it's good -- is at huge risk because of what's happening with the three pillars of the five that are affected by the narcotics, by the criminality, by the lack of judicial reform, the lack of competency within the police force.

And I think you said you have something like, was it 40,000 troops now?

JONES: There's 20,000 NATO troops and 20,000...

KERRY: No, of the Afghan army, trained.

JONES: Oh, I'm sorry. About 30,000.

KERRY: Thirty thousand now.

That's not going to be able to do what's necessary if your economy is lost to this other effort, correct?

JONES: That's correct. I think you do need an Afghan army. I think you need the internal police force. That's got to be fixed. Judicial reform -- you've got to be able to prosecute the people who are causing these difficulties in the narcotics.

But to me I think that talking about this is important. I think it will have the effect in the international community to focus those people whose jobs it is to bring this about.

I appear today as a NATO commander. My NATO responsibilities stop at stability and security and the management of the provincial reconstruction teams.

There is an entire other sector that I talk about, but I don't have an assigned mission in, for instance, judicial reform. But I know that if we don't have judicial reform, the security of the country is going to be jeopardized, so we have to talk about it.

And I think we have to bring more international focus and energy to it. And I must say that if we do that, I'm optimistic that this will be a success story.

So I'm optimistic about where Afghanistan can be in a few years.

KERRY: If we do this, now.

JONES: If we do this. If we do this. And if we're successful at doing this.

KERRY: What about the effort on Osama bin Laden? The Waziristan deal seems really troubling, and a lot of people seem troubled by it, and most believe that while some things are stated about what will happen, the expectations are considerably lower that they will, in fact.

MORE

KERRY: Are you satisfied that you're able to do everything that you want to do, would like to do, believe is necessary to capture or kill Osama bin Laden?

JONES: This is the delicate part of my appearance here. As a NATO commander, my mission from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization is to assist the government of Afghanistan in providing a safe and secure environment for reconstruction.

KERRY: I know CENTCOM is doing that.

JONES: And that's why I need to make that distinction that the ISAF mission and the Operation Enduring Freedom mission, led by CENTCOM, that's the one that has the more kinetic counterterrorist mission.

And so I am not involved in the active border participations. NATO's focus is more on security, stability and reconstruction. Which isn't to say that if we ever came across Mr. bin Laden, that we wouldn't apprehend him; we would. If we had indications that he might be in one of our areas, would we go try to get him? We probably would.

KERRY: And you don't want to venture to share with the committee, just from your experience and judgment, whether or not you think we're able to do all that is necessary or we would like to do?

JONES: Well, I can tell you that I know General Abizaid has spent a considerable amount of time working with the Pakistani authorities. We have large numbers of troops up in the border areas. And I think we're doing everything we can to locate him and locate other leaders and to discourage the border from being a sieve through which Taliban fighters come across to Afghanistan and contribute to the problems that we have there.

So I think that, over the next 30 to 60 days, while we give the Pakistani authorities a chance to test their new agreements in the border regions, I think the next 30, 60 days will be interesting to see how effective we're going to be.

KERRY: Thank you, General.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

LUGAR: Thank you, Senator Kerry.

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anotherdrew Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 12:56 PM
Response to Reply #2
13. yeah, it should read, "Poppy's production of heroin jumped..." n/t
Edited on Tue Dec-26-06 12:56 PM by anotherdrew
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alfredo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 01:54 PM
Response to Reply #2
14. Remember, Richard Secord was one of, if not the first
contractor to set up shop in the Stans right after 911. I remember the days of Air America and Southern Air. If there are drugs to be shipped, Ole Richard is "Johnny on the spot. "

I read that book many years ago. Glad someone else knows about it.

One reason Kerry is so hated is because he uncovered the Contra Cocaine connection. Again, it was Secord and North in the thick of it. I wonder if North is involved in this new drug explosion?
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truthisfreedom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 09:31 AM
Response to Original message
6. I seem to recall from science classes that a parasite that kills its host is doomed to extinction...
Idiotic heroin producers.
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karynnj Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 10:11 AM
Response to Reply #6
7. Except in this case killing the host country works to their benefit
The failed state does their bidding and as they are the source of money and goods, they actually get the protection of the people in the areas they are in. This is a very major problem with global crime.

Read Senator Kerry's book "The New War". It explains what was happening and how the globization of illegal activities is as significant as globalization of legal economic enterprises. (Though Kerry's book was published in 1997 - it is still ahead of where many people are on this iisue.)
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Javaman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 10:43 AM
Response to Original message
8. I guess jenna and barbara are going to east austin to make a hit soon...;) nt
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EST Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 11:18 AM
Response to Original message
9. Sounds like the latest wmd panic to me.
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saigon68 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 12:28 PM
Response to Original message
11. Notice how Lap Dog, Bush Puppet, McKarzai Plays into this thing
Bush shouts, McKarzai jumps and yells "How High".

DISGUSTING


The Mayor of Kabul Charlie McKarzai



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High Plains Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-26-06 12:46 PM
Response to Original message
12. This is a serious problem for the US and NATO in Afghanistan
Opium production is the mainstay of the Afghan economy, accounting for somewhere between a third and a half of all economic activity. Efforts to eradicate the crop push people into the waiting arms of the Taliban, who are vowing to protect farmers from the "infidels" and their lackey, Mr. Karzai. US drug czar John Walters is pressing hard for eradication using herbicides, and it looks like the Afghan government may give in and do that. But that will push even more people into an alliance with the Taliban. You can have your war on drugs or you can have your war on terror, but you're not going to succeed in Afghanistan if you try to prosecute both at once.

And no, I don't think this is a CIA operation.
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