Americans Are Deeply Involved In Afghan Drug Trade
by admin on November 29, 2009
U.S.-allied drug dealers are put in charge of the police and border patrol, while their rivals are placed on American hit lists
If you’re looking for the chief kingpin in the Afghanistan heroin trade, it’s the United States. The American mission has devolved to a Mafiosi-style arrangement that poisons every military and political alliance entered into by the U.S. and its puppet government in Kabul. It is a gangster occupation, in which U.S.-allied drug dealers are put in charge of the police and border patrol, while their rivals are placed on American hit lists, marked for death or capture. As a result, Afghanistan has been transformed into an opium plantation that supplies 90 percent of the world’s heroin.
An article in the current issue of Harper’s magazine explores the inner workings of the drug-infested U.S. occupation, it’s near-total dependence on alliances forged with players in the heroin trade. The story centers on the town of Spin Boldak, on the southeastern border with Pakistan, gateway to the opium fields of Kandahar and Helmand provinces. The chief Afghan drug lord is also the head of the border patrol and the local militia. The author is an undercover U.S.-based journalist who was befriended by the drug lord’s top operatives and met with the U.S. and Canadian officers that collaborate with the drug dealer on a daily basis.
“It is a war whose order of battle is largely defined by the drug trade.”
Related posts:
- Iran says US, UK, Canada assist Afghan drug trade
- NATO won’t destroy Afghan poppy fields
- Are America’s Mercenary Armies Really Drug Cartels?
- U.N.: Opium Trade Soars in Afghanistan
- Nato forces rely on illegal Afghan militias, CIC report says
- Leave your comment • Tagged as: Afghanistan, American mission, BAR executive editor, CIA transnational anti-crime and anti-drug activities, Dearborn Michigan, Drug lord, Ford Motor Company, Glen Ford, Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com, heroin, Illegal drug trade, Kabul, Kingpin, Law enforcement in the United States, Mafia, Opioids, Opium, Opium production in Afghanistan, police, Politics, Prodrugs, Social Issues, United States, War in Afghanistan
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