Bob T
03-10-2005, 06:01 AM
* AFGHANISTAN: THE POPPY DILEMMA
Wed March 9, 2005
Dear Thirsters:
This is recently in from Thirster at the University of California Dave Szanton, anthropologist, academic and foundation administrator, and RPCV from the Philippines.
This item merits your close reading. “Nuances” keep popping up. Do US and Coalition policy-makers understand these nuances?
Clearly, the US and coalition governments must spend more – much more, and for some years – before there is any real chance of mitigating poppy production.
Thanks, Dave!
Best,
Bob
###################################
Dear Bob -
Paula Newberg is a good friend who for many years has visited and written about Pakistan and Afghanistan. Here is a piece she is circulating on the painful nexus of politics and poppies in Afghanistan. W touts it as a great exemplar of democracy. Beneath the surface it seems a little more complicated, contentious and fragile.
Cheers,
David
==================================
From: Paula Newberg <paula.newberg@worldnet.att.net>
PAULA R. NEWBERG: AFGHANISTAN/NARCOTICS
YaleGlobal Online, 7 March 2005
WASHINGTON: Last week, the International Narcotics Control Board made official what everyone in Afghanistan already knew: poppy production rose to near-record levels in 2004 and now accounts for at least 40% of the country’s small GDP. The World Bank calls poppy the country’s “economic lynchpin,” and study after study now laments the ways that narcotics rocks the country’s rickety economic prospects and bemoans the warped politics that narcotics so easily imposes on government and society alike. This dismal poppy news reflects deep divisions within the development and political communities – in Kabul and internationally – about how to sustain post-conflict recovery in a drug-torn state. Poppy has therefore emerged as major bone of contention among donor governments, and between them and the Afghan government. Unless acceptable solutions are found, Afghanistan's renewal could easily fail.
Afghanistan's narcotics problems have long accompanied its long journey through war. Poppy profits helped finance the anti-Soviet war of the 1980s: almost every mujahidin group profited from drugs trading, but the Soviet defeat was more important to their patrons than stopping trafficking, and when anarchy overtook war, narcotics trafficking increased dramatically. After central Asia's borders opened in 1991, Afghanistan became the primary source of opium in London and Moscow and by the time the Taliban seized power, solving the drug problem had risen high on the west’s diplomatic agenda. The Taliban therefore banned cultivation and production, briefly and repressively, just before it lost power. The absence of poppy was more formal than real: poppy was a profit center for war, so the ban was meant to help to correct a market glut in an economy otherwise devastated by the failures of the Afghan state. When the Taliban was overthrown in late 2001, soon after the ban was enforced, almost no poppy was grown in Afghanistan.
That's when current troubles began. The new Afghan government certainly didn't want illegal poppy. But warlords across the country – patronized substantially by the western coalition in its fight against Al Qaeda – invested in poppy to support their private armies as they tussled for power with the new government. President Hamid Karzai – and crucially, his major donors -- missed his chance. Desperate for political unity, he cultivated warlords so they wouldn't cultivate conflict. Poppy was outlawed, but took over the economy.
How important is poppy for today’s Afghan economy? The answers loom large and small. Before war overtook the economy, Afghanistan could easily feed itself and even export foodstuffs. But violence and then anarchy destroyed the state and in the wake of that destruction, drugs traders became surrogate bankers. For a small investment in food seeds, farmers agree to grow poppy, although they rarely see direct profits from the crop. But rural Afghans live lives of profound poverty, and strike these sad deals just to survive. For the state as a whole, the consequences are equally severe. Poppy is illegal and illegal profits, no matter how substantial, can’t be taxed. Drugs therefore enrich a few at the expense of the many, and cost the government in law enforcement without contributing to the public exchequer.
This is how humanitarian and development groups understand the economy. They note, quite accurately, that poppy fills an economic vacuum, and argue that only investments in the rural economy, education and health can release Afghan farmers from a tragic, poverty cycle. Afghanistan ranks 5th from the bottom in the UN’s human development index and even with the benefits of foreign assistance, 15% of the population received 80% of the benefits of growth – with rural areas disproportionately disadvantaged -- Even though Afghanistan now has a banking system and unified currency, and aspires to join the World Trade Organization, farmers remain small cogs in an illegal economic machine, and the machine itself must be rebuilt from scratch.
But discord now reigns among aid providers and development experts about how to remove drugs without creating greater poverty and courting instability. Recent debates have highlighted the eradication policies that are promoted by major donors (and political allies) in the US and UK. Fearing that the premature eradication of poppy by the United States, United Kingdom and others – removing it before alternative crops and stable economic policies are put in place -- an alliance of 31 international and Afghan aid organizations, led by CARE, publicly petitioned US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice this winter to end current US poppy eradication practices in Afghanistan. They cited the fears of grassroots organizations – more than 350 were represented in the CARE letter – that a political system dominated by drugs profiteers will compromise Afghanistan’s potential recovery. The World Bank echoed these sentiments last week, warning against the “vicious cycle associated with the opium economy warlords.” Many observers rightly anticipate that parliamentary and local elections, scheduled for later this year, could be held hostage to narcotics profiteers and provoke more instability.
But stability means something different to the US-led anti-terror coalition, which views Afghanistan as a signal player in a global war -- and predictably, Rice promised little. Until now, the coalition has alternately ignored drugs production, cultivated drug lords as intelligence and military assets – and occasionally provided funds to areas that might otherwise support alleged terrorists. The result: high poppy producing areas receive disproportionate assistance that – no surprise – often ends up in the hands of warlords already enriched by poppy. Power doesn't change hands, law and order deteriorates, Afghanistan's development becomes increasingly unbalanced – and narcotics flourish in Afghanistan and among its neighbors.
But with cultivation and production rising steadily and dangerously, coalition partners are looking for quick fixes to Afghanistan's drugs problem. For them, eradication seems an efficient tactic. Indeed, Afghan farmers in some areas believe that aerial spraying began last autumn – although the US and UK deny that this has happened – and now fear that crop contamination will turn a short-term tactic into a strategic disaster. And of course, drug lords can live off their stockpiles, but farmers can easily starve.
The coalition’s backup strategy is to condition all economic aid to tangible anti-narcotics process. The goal isn't wrong: combating trafficking is a clear social and economic good. But holding all recovery to an anti-drugs standard is a risky venture. Afghans knows too well the devastation that poppy wreaks on its fragile politics. They also know that when fighting drugs weakens the Afghan polity, the anti-narcotics fight fails; when fighting terrorism allows drugs to flourish, the anti-terror fight fails, too. In fact, some Afghan ministers have been warning of the dangers of drug cartels, narco-terrorists and possible state failure since Karzai took office three years ago.
Even more, Afghans know that a commodity is valuable only if someone buys it. The market for opium is not in Afghanistan but in Europe – where Afghan opiates account for more than 75% of the market -- and if any place is to benefit from these blunt anti-poppy measures if will be Europe, not Afghanistan. Although Karzai has assured the Narcotics Board that Afghanistan will take all measures to become “narcotics-free,” his Minister of Counter-Narcotics continues to remind donors that drugs are a “multi-dimensional” problem whose solution requires shared and “equal responsibility” -- and refuses aid that is “tied, in any direct or indirect way, to the fight against narcotics."
These disputes pit rich donors against poor farmers, and Afghanistan's hard-won sovereignty against a global anti-narcotics struggle. When Afghanistan’s state failed, the world learned that Afghanistan can’t go it alone – on drugs or anything else. Only a legal economy, honest politics, and educated citizens will make it possible for Afghanistan to survive. The first step is taking its government seriously by helping it replace drugs – investing, not destroying. Otherwise, Afghanistan’s failure will be built on the self-defeating intentions of others.
Wed March 9, 2005
Dear Thirsters:
This is recently in from Thirster at the University of California Dave Szanton, anthropologist, academic and foundation administrator, and RPCV from the Philippines.
This item merits your close reading. “Nuances” keep popping up. Do US and Coalition policy-makers understand these nuances?
Clearly, the US and coalition governments must spend more – much more, and for some years – before there is any real chance of mitigating poppy production.
Thanks, Dave!
Best,
Bob
###################################
Dear Bob -
Paula Newberg is a good friend who for many years has visited and written about Pakistan and Afghanistan. Here is a piece she is circulating on the painful nexus of politics and poppies in Afghanistan. W touts it as a great exemplar of democracy. Beneath the surface it seems a little more complicated, contentious and fragile.
Cheers,
David
==================================
From: Paula Newberg <paula.newberg@worldnet.att.net>
PAULA R. NEWBERG: AFGHANISTAN/NARCOTICS
YaleGlobal Online, 7 March 2005
WASHINGTON: Last week, the International Narcotics Control Board made official what everyone in Afghanistan already knew: poppy production rose to near-record levels in 2004 and now accounts for at least 40% of the country’s small GDP. The World Bank calls poppy the country’s “economic lynchpin,” and study after study now laments the ways that narcotics rocks the country’s rickety economic prospects and bemoans the warped politics that narcotics so easily imposes on government and society alike. This dismal poppy news reflects deep divisions within the development and political communities – in Kabul and internationally – about how to sustain post-conflict recovery in a drug-torn state. Poppy has therefore emerged as major bone of contention among donor governments, and between them and the Afghan government. Unless acceptable solutions are found, Afghanistan's renewal could easily fail.
Afghanistan's narcotics problems have long accompanied its long journey through war. Poppy profits helped finance the anti-Soviet war of the 1980s: almost every mujahidin group profited from drugs trading, but the Soviet defeat was more important to their patrons than stopping trafficking, and when anarchy overtook war, narcotics trafficking increased dramatically. After central Asia's borders opened in 1991, Afghanistan became the primary source of opium in London and Moscow and by the time the Taliban seized power, solving the drug problem had risen high on the west’s diplomatic agenda. The Taliban therefore banned cultivation and production, briefly and repressively, just before it lost power. The absence of poppy was more formal than real: poppy was a profit center for war, so the ban was meant to help to correct a market glut in an economy otherwise devastated by the failures of the Afghan state. When the Taliban was overthrown in late 2001, soon after the ban was enforced, almost no poppy was grown in Afghanistan.
That's when current troubles began. The new Afghan government certainly didn't want illegal poppy. But warlords across the country – patronized substantially by the western coalition in its fight against Al Qaeda – invested in poppy to support their private armies as they tussled for power with the new government. President Hamid Karzai – and crucially, his major donors -- missed his chance. Desperate for political unity, he cultivated warlords so they wouldn't cultivate conflict. Poppy was outlawed, but took over the economy.
How important is poppy for today’s Afghan economy? The answers loom large and small. Before war overtook the economy, Afghanistan could easily feed itself and even export foodstuffs. But violence and then anarchy destroyed the state and in the wake of that destruction, drugs traders became surrogate bankers. For a small investment in food seeds, farmers agree to grow poppy, although they rarely see direct profits from the crop. But rural Afghans live lives of profound poverty, and strike these sad deals just to survive. For the state as a whole, the consequences are equally severe. Poppy is illegal and illegal profits, no matter how substantial, can’t be taxed. Drugs therefore enrich a few at the expense of the many, and cost the government in law enforcement without contributing to the public exchequer.
This is how humanitarian and development groups understand the economy. They note, quite accurately, that poppy fills an economic vacuum, and argue that only investments in the rural economy, education and health can release Afghan farmers from a tragic, poverty cycle. Afghanistan ranks 5th from the bottom in the UN’s human development index and even with the benefits of foreign assistance, 15% of the population received 80% of the benefits of growth – with rural areas disproportionately disadvantaged -- Even though Afghanistan now has a banking system and unified currency, and aspires to join the World Trade Organization, farmers remain small cogs in an illegal economic machine, and the machine itself must be rebuilt from scratch.
But discord now reigns among aid providers and development experts about how to remove drugs without creating greater poverty and courting instability. Recent debates have highlighted the eradication policies that are promoted by major donors (and political allies) in the US and UK. Fearing that the premature eradication of poppy by the United States, United Kingdom and others – removing it before alternative crops and stable economic policies are put in place -- an alliance of 31 international and Afghan aid organizations, led by CARE, publicly petitioned US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice this winter to end current US poppy eradication practices in Afghanistan. They cited the fears of grassroots organizations – more than 350 were represented in the CARE letter – that a political system dominated by drugs profiteers will compromise Afghanistan’s potential recovery. The World Bank echoed these sentiments last week, warning against the “vicious cycle associated with the opium economy warlords.” Many observers rightly anticipate that parliamentary and local elections, scheduled for later this year, could be held hostage to narcotics profiteers and provoke more instability.
But stability means something different to the US-led anti-terror coalition, which views Afghanistan as a signal player in a global war -- and predictably, Rice promised little. Until now, the coalition has alternately ignored drugs production, cultivated drug lords as intelligence and military assets – and occasionally provided funds to areas that might otherwise support alleged terrorists. The result: high poppy producing areas receive disproportionate assistance that – no surprise – often ends up in the hands of warlords already enriched by poppy. Power doesn't change hands, law and order deteriorates, Afghanistan's development becomes increasingly unbalanced – and narcotics flourish in Afghanistan and among its neighbors.
But with cultivation and production rising steadily and dangerously, coalition partners are looking for quick fixes to Afghanistan's drugs problem. For them, eradication seems an efficient tactic. Indeed, Afghan farmers in some areas believe that aerial spraying began last autumn – although the US and UK deny that this has happened – and now fear that crop contamination will turn a short-term tactic into a strategic disaster. And of course, drug lords can live off their stockpiles, but farmers can easily starve.
The coalition’s backup strategy is to condition all economic aid to tangible anti-narcotics process. The goal isn't wrong: combating trafficking is a clear social and economic good. But holding all recovery to an anti-drugs standard is a risky venture. Afghans knows too well the devastation that poppy wreaks on its fragile politics. They also know that when fighting drugs weakens the Afghan polity, the anti-narcotics fight fails; when fighting terrorism allows drugs to flourish, the anti-terror fight fails, too. In fact, some Afghan ministers have been warning of the dangers of drug cartels, narco-terrorists and possible state failure since Karzai took office three years ago.
Even more, Afghans know that a commodity is valuable only if someone buys it. The market for opium is not in Afghanistan but in Europe – where Afghan opiates account for more than 75% of the market -- and if any place is to benefit from these blunt anti-poppy measures if will be Europe, not Afghanistan. Although Karzai has assured the Narcotics Board that Afghanistan will take all measures to become “narcotics-free,” his Minister of Counter-Narcotics continues to remind donors that drugs are a “multi-dimensional” problem whose solution requires shared and “equal responsibility” -- and refuses aid that is “tied, in any direct or indirect way, to the fight against narcotics."
These disputes pit rich donors against poor farmers, and Afghanistan's hard-won sovereignty against a global anti-narcotics struggle. When Afghanistan’s state failed, the world learned that Afghanistan can’t go it alone – on drugs or anything else. Only a legal economy, honest politics, and educated citizens will make it possible for Afghanistan to survive. The first step is taking its government seriously by helping it replace drugs – investing, not destroying. Otherwise, Afghanistan’s failure will be built on the self-defeating intentions of others.