UPDATED ON:
Friday, July 25, 2008
18:34 Mecca time, 15:34 GMT
News Americas
Karzai 'protecting drug lords'
Afghanistan produced 93 per cent of the world's opium last year [AFP]

A former senior US anti-drug official has accused Afghanistan's president of playing the US "like a fiddle" and protecting drug lords in his country for political reasons.

Thomas Schweich, who until June served as US state department co-ordinator for counter-narcotics and justice reform for Afghanistan, said Hamid Karzai was impeding the so-called war on drugs.

But the US government underscored its continued support for Karzai on Thursday despite the allegations.

Schweich wrote in an article on the New York Times website on Wednesday that "narco-corruption went to the top of the Afghan government".

He said the Taliban fighting Karzai's government profited from drugs, but Karzai was reluctant to move against big drug lords in his political power base in the south, where most of the country's opium and heroin is produced.

"Karzai was playing us like a fiddle," Schweich wrote.

"The US would spend billions of dollars on infrastructure development; the US and its allies would fight the Taliban; Karzai's friends could get richer off the drug trade," he wrote.

"Karzai had Taliban enemies who profited from drugs but he had even more supporters who did."

Schweich also accused the Pentagon and some US generals of obstructing attempts to get military forces to assist and protect opium crop eradication drives.

'Warlord government'

Nato and US military commanders have been reluctant to get involved in the drug fight, arguing that destroying farmers' crops would alienate tribesmen and increase support for the Taliban.

Hillary Mann Leverett, a former US National Security Council official for Afghanistan, told Al Jazeera that the US knew that government ministers in Afghanistan, including the minister of defence in 2002, were involved in drug trafficking.

"Karzai was playing us like a fiddle. The US would spend billions of dollars on infrastructure development; the US and its allies would fight the Taliban; Karzai's friends could get richer off the drug trade"

Thomas Schweich,
ex-US state department co-ordinator for counter-narcotics and justice reform for Afghanistan

Afghan ministers at that time had little expertise but were appointed because "they were warlords, they were thugs, they represented various ethnic and sectarian constituencies", Mann Leverett said.

She added that the US government chose to work with them in an attempt to stop Afghanistan becoming a haven for al-Qaeda.

"Instead of funding the warlords we could have funded the UN to have a security peacekeeping force throughout the country.

"Instead we left Karzai without any troops, without any weapons, without any money, without any backing, to the warlords.

Gonzalo Gallegos, a state department spokesman, did not directly address Schweich's allegations but defended US policy and backing for Karzai.

"We know and understand that there is a corruption issue in Afghanistan but we're working with the sovereign government," Gallegos said on Thursday.

"President Karzai has shown us through word and deed that he is working with us to help improve the plight of that country."

Gallegos added that corruption was a deeply rooted problem and solving it would take time.

Production soaring

Drug production has skyrocketed since the US-led invasion that ousted the Taliban.

In 2007, nearly 200,000 hectares of land in Afghanistan was used to cultivate poppy - more than double the area in 2003 – and the country produced 93 per cent of the world's supply of opium, the raw material of heroin.

Karzai says his government is succeeding in the war on drugs and has repeatedly promised his US backers that he is committed to rooting out endemic corruption and fighting the drug trade.

His counter-narcotics ministry says 20 of Afghanistan's 34 provinces will be poppy-free this year, compared to 13 provinces in 2007.

But in the south, cultivation remains rampant.

 Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
 
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Feedback Number of comments : 14
 
Romes
Canada
25/07/2008
Karzai protecting drug lords
I agree with the US official because Abdul Wali Karzai who is Hamid Karzai's brother is a big drug smuggler in Kandahar province and yet nothing has been done about him. Assadullah Khalid who is the governor of Kandahar province is a big drug smuggler. Just naming the two main officials is more than enough that the Afghanistan Government is more curropted and unsafe today than it was 4 years ago. Our men and women of the armed forces fall victim for this unwanted war that we are fighting.

Wiz
Pakistan
25/07/2008
Finally...!
This is the beginning... someone broke the ice... and there is more to come about this puppet president...!

zeliski
Poland
25/07/2008
Think twice
Have You forgotten who pushed Afghanistan into those problems? Maybe You prefer not to remember that US supported mujaheedins (taliban) during the occupation of USSR in 80s. It was when they have come to power. What's more, when the war was over no one cared about Afganistan. US left Afghans on their knees. Now You say "eradicate opium production", but please explain me what those poor people will do if they are unable to live from opium cultivation?

Santos
Philippines
25/07/2008
enemys within
If the allied forces really want stable and peaceful afghanistan. they dont need to guard every inches of the afghan border with pak to fight the enemy. their real enemy are those corrupt and murderer warlords and druglords within the ranks of their puppet afghan govt because they the afghan people to rebel.

Amal
Sudan
25/07/2008
Give Afghans an alternative
It is naive to believe that a country's culture and socio-economics can be changed overnight by an order from Washington. For many Afghan farmers, poppy is the main source of livelihood and it will continue to be so until they are offered a viable alternative that is just as profitable.

Robert
Ireland
25/07/2008
Wrong Questions..!
Karzai is a puppet of the U.S. government. Yes. Most agree because it is obvious. But more importantly, Opium production has soared in recent years to many times the amount produced during the Taliban. Ok, protect the farmers, try to give them a decent and viable alternative, thats fine and just. But how does this explain the rapid proliferation of the poppy crop across Afghanistan? If Karzai is a puppet of the U.S. a puupet of the U.S.is it not implicit that they condone/encourage the practice?

will Diaz
United States
25/07/2008
drugs
Of course the Bush administration knows that his puppet government is corrupt. Only now that he has Iraq and the oil you see afganistan is taking a back seat to his war on terror. Bush and Cheney are the biggest terrorist in the world. Maybe when Obama gets elected in november the US will again start traking down the radicals and destroy them so the world is safe.

Ernest Saenz
United States
25/07/2008
Opium and Heroin
Do you know where and how the drugs are being used? Are people able to be users and not ruin their lives? How many addicts resort to being liars, thieves and cheats? How many succumb to indecent and immoral lives? Would these drugs be able to be used for medicinal purposes where the growers would still be able to function comfortably in their livelihoods? This being said, drug testing by employers, agencies etc., needs to be random with no advanced notice. Hair tests are very revealing

Hawa Ahmed
Afghanistan
25/07/2008
finally someone has blown the whistle
Hamad Karzai has always been and will ever be an American puppet.afganistan was better during taliban times but the world {AMERICA}never saw that.Lets now see what their puppet{Karzai} can do.how do you expect the americans including karzai to fight drugs when they are the same people benefitting?

Neil Hoskins
United Kingdom
25/07/2008
Duh...
This is, as we say in England, a statement of the bleedin' obvious.

Lisa Mc
Afghanistan
25/07/2008
Afghanistan should be left alone by the US whom only invaded the country to plunder the natural resources such as oil & opium etc. Its not just the drug lords abusing the country, yes there needs to be a change in power ,but this will never happen whenn the US is involved. The people of Afghanistan need to pull together & can only change themselves. The US is the biggest importer of heroin......wonder where they get it??

ily
Pakistan
25/07/2008
i m living in small town. the condition is too bad here. youngsters without employment are edicted to heroin. this drug is easily available.......

swedeni
Sweden
25/07/2008
the time is over
no body discovered this scandal before, while they had a seat at sharing drugs but now the time is over and for bush administration and they ll finish the drug activity and let the becoming us presidant choose his own puppet in afghanistan. unrooting the current gvment in afg will never grant the deaths of thousands civilians.

ayub
Afghanistan
25/07/2008
Poppy nation.
I thought the war on drugs in columbia was bad.This is a $400billion dollars a year business for the pharmaceutical cos.I am convinced the US with the help of karzai is profiting from this.Who is running the country?..Could someone shed some light on this,please?...

 
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