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“An American counternarcotics official was killed and two other
Americans wounded in a suicide bombing in western Afghanistan today, while heavy
fighting between Taliban insurgents and Afghan police continued in two southern
provinces, officials said,” reports the New
York Times. “We confirm that a U.S. citizen contractor for the State
Department Bureau of International Narcotic and Law Enforcement, working for
the police training program in Herat was killed in a vehicle-borne I.E.D. attack,”
Chris Harris, an American Embassy spokesman, told the newspaper. After this
mention, the Times moves on to detail the increasing violence between Afghan
puppet police and “militants,” that is to say Afghans fighting against
the occupation of their country, an entirely natural occurrence.
Of course, the Times does not bother to mention that the Afghan opium trade—in
fact much of the opium trade in the so-called “Golden Crescent”
(Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan)—was cultivated and nurtured by the United
States government and the CIA, leading to countless cases of miserable heroin
addiction in America and Europe. Reading the Times, we get the impression the
Taliban—at one time sponsored by the CIA and Pakistan’s intelligence
services, so long as they were kicking Russian hindquarter—are responsible
for the opium trade all on their lonesome. As usual, the Times twists the story
through omission.
“ClA-supported Mujahedeen rebels … engaged heavily in drug trafficking
while fighting against the Soviet-supported government,” writes historian
William Blum. “The
Agency’s principal client was Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, one of the leading
druglords and a leading heroin refiner. CIA-supplied trucks and mules, which
had carried arms into Afghanistan, were used to transport opium to laboratories
along the Afghan/Pakistan border. The output provided up to one half of the
heroin used annually in the United States and three-quarters of that used in
Western Europe. U.S. officials admitted in 1990 that they had failed to investigate
or take action against the drug operation because of a desire not to offend
their Pakistani and Afghan allies,” and also because selling heroin and
spreading misery is highly profitable. In fact, the Soviets attempted to impose
an opium ban on the country and this resulted in a revolt by tribal groups eventually
exploited by the CIA and Pakistan.
“Reports issued by the UN and Drug Enforcement Administration in the
early 1980s stated that by 1981 Afghan heroin producers may have captured 60
per cent of the heroin market in Western Europe and the United States. In New
York City in 1979 alone, the year the CIA-organized flow of arms to the mujahiddeen
began) heroin-related deaths increased by 77 per cent. There were no Superbowl
ads that year about doing drugs and aiding terror. You could say that those
dead addicts had given their lives in the fight to drive back Communism,”
write Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair.
Making sure heroin addiction continues unabated is such a lucrative
business for the CIA and Wall Street investors, Bush decided “not to destroy
the opium crop in Afghanistan. President Bush, who previously linked the Afghan
drug trade directly to terrorism, has now decided not to destroy the Afghan
opium crop,” Charles
R. Smith reported for NewsMax on March 28, 2002, as Bush’s illegal
invasion of the country was well underway. “Several sources inside Capitol
Hill noted that the CIA opposes the destruction of the Afghan opium supply because
to do so might destabilize the Pakistani government of Gen. Pervez Musharraf….
The threat to overthrow Musharraf is motivated in part by Islamic radical groups
linked to the Pakistani intelligence service, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).
The radical groups reportedly obtain their primary funding through opium production
and trade.” In fact, destroying the opium crop would have put a terrible
financial squeeze on the agency and angered financiers who routinely trade in
misery and death.
Naturally, the Times did not bother to mention the fact the Taliban attempted
to eradicate opium production and this was likely one of the reasons Bush the
Junior invaded Afghanistan. “Although the Taliban had virtually stamped
out poppy production, the country now accounts for two-third of the world’s
heroin. As hard as it may be to believe, there is compelling evidence that the
US (via the CIA) may be directly involved in narco-trafficing,” notes
Mike Whitney,
who cites the following from Portland Independent Media:
Before 1980, Afghanistan produced 0% of the world’s opium. But then
the CIA moved in, and by 1986 they were producing 40% of the world’s
heroin supply. By 1999, they were churning out 3,200 TONS of heroin a year—nearly
80% of the total market supply. But then something unexpected happened. The
Taliban rose to power, and by 2000 they had destroyed nearly all of the opium
fields. Production dropped from 3,000+ tons to only 185 tons, a 94% reduction!
This enormous drop in revenue subsequently hurt not only the CIA’s Black
Budget projects, but also the free-flow of laundered money in and out of the
Controller’s banks.
It also put a pinch on the criminals and gangsters in Pakistan. “The
Taliban’s actions … (destroying the opium crop) severed the ruling
military junta in Pakistan from its primary source of foreign revenues and made
bin Laden and the Taliban completely expendable in the eyes of the Pakistani
government. It also cut off billions of dollars in revenues that had been previously
laundered through western banks and Russian financial institutions connected
to them,” explains From the Wilderness (see previous link). “Prior
to the WTC attacks, credible sources, including the U.S. government, the IMF,
Le Monde and the U.S. Senate placed the amount of drug cash flowing into Wall
Street and U.S. banks at around $250-$300 billion a year,” not exactly
small potatoes.
In 2004, according to research conducted by the Democratic Policy Committee,
after “decreasing dramatically under the Taliban regime, Afghanistan now
[2004] produces nearly 3/4 of the world’s opium. CIC [Center for International
Cooperation] found that ‘opium production, processing, and trafficking
have surged, with revenues equaling roughly half of the legal economy of Afghanistan.’
It is estimated that 1.7 million people, or 7 percent of the total population
now grow poppies,” all of this under the United States installed government
of Hamid Karzai, the ex-Unocal employee.
But then none of this should be surprising—the CIA and neolib financiers
and moneymen have long dabbled in drug dealing and drug addiction profiteering.
In addition to turning immense profits for societal parasites and other cockroach
infestations on Wall Street, drug dealing is a great way for the government
to intervene in the business of other nations, as Oliver North well understands
(as the Contra was funded by the smuggling of cocaine). “The CIA functionally
gains influence and control in governments corrupted by criminal narco-trafficking.
Politically, the CIA exerts influence by leveraging narco-militarists and corrupted
politicians… This is really NEO-narco-colonialism, whereby local criminal
proxies do the bidding of the patron government seeking expanded influence.
But because of the quid-pro-quo of protecting the criminal proxies’ illicit
pipelines, the result is still a functional narco-colonialism, involving a narcotics
commodity in the actual practical execution of policy, with the very different
twist of covert action,” summarizes the CIA
& Drugs website.
So it is not surprising, as the New York Times puts it, there is a “Sudden
Rise of Violence in Afghanistan” and the predictable murder of “a
U.S. citizen contractor for the State Department Bureau of International Narcotic
and Law Enforcement.” In Afghanistan, the Hegelian dialect is working
overtime—the U.S. government engineers the Afghan opium trade, thus resulting
in social problems and violence associated with illicit drug distribution and
consumption, and then turns around and organizes police training programs to
combat the scourge it has spawned.
As well, for the Fabian socialist globalists, it is a great way to break down
borders and implement “free trade zones,” that is to say unhindered
thievery zones. Call it a “war on drugs” or the endless war against
“terrorism” (yet another Hegelian contrivance), it is all engineered
to turn the world into a large slave plantation ruled by a decadent and debased
elite cadre of neoliberal criminals.