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Blogger Yukkione said...

I wonder if Boltons influence had anything to do with the reports findings.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Blogger qrswave said...

Bolton? Which report? The one in 2001? I doubt it.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Blogger Red Tulips said...

QRS,

I read that there was a massive stockpile of poppy seeds prior to the invasion of Afghanistan. This massive stockpile means that, even if there has not been any new production of the opium, there's enough on the ground to make up for that.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Blogger qrswave said...

link please.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Blogger Red Tulips said...

QRS,

Okay, I made a mistake. Poppy production increased after the fall of the Taliban, but the Taliban did not stop drug production. There was a stockpile when the Taliban took over which was sold during Taliban years. I actually meant to say this, but my mind got a bit jumbled when I typed. :-p

This is a scholarly article about the poppy trade.

http://www.american.edu/TED/taliban-poppy.htm

Monday, April 03, 2006

Blogger Citisucks said...

Interesting article-Where the imaginary "war on drugs" meets the imaginary "war on terra".

Monday, April 03, 2006

Anonymous Anonymous said...

From http://mondediplo.com/2002/03/13drug


Most heroin sold in Europe comes from Afghanistan’s poppies - it is said up to 90% (2002 estimate).

Iran is on the shortest route from the producers in Afghanistan to European consumers. The Central Asian states of the former Soviet Union have split into separate countries, with many borders to cross. Via Iran, there are only two." Once the smugglers have crossed into Iran, they stick to the mountainous areas in the north and south until they reach the Turkish border. Near Yazd, in central Iran, the Baluchi and Afghan carriers hand over their cargo to Azeris, Persians and Kurds.

So now the Nato (Canadian, British & Dutch) forces are to control that border & hence the passage of opium/heroin.

In 2002 it was reported that around 10% of Iran’s armed forces, are deployed along the eastern border (inc Afghanistan – where the opium/heroin passes through); 1,950 kilometres from Turkmenistan, in the north, down to the Indian Ocean. The border has more than 200 observation posts, dozens of walls blocking mountain passes and hundreds of kilometres of trenches and barbed wire, an investment of $1bn, plus upkeep. Iran’s majlis (parliament) allocated $25m to improve border fortifications in 2000: 3,140 members of the security forces, including two generals, have been killed in skirmishes with smugglers since 1979, a rate of three a day (3).

Also worth noting is that Iran has probably the HIGHEST incidence of opium/heroin addiction in the world – over 2 million users in a population of approx 73 million people.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Blogger qrswave said...

As always, Byrne, thanks for the outstanding information and link.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The linking of War on Terrorism, Energy & Drugs is nothing new.

See the article Big Oil and the War on Drugs and Terrorism
here

http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/OilDrugsTerrorism.html

Other excellent Nexus articles are available here

Thursday, April 06, 2006

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