Tuesday, August 21, 2012

KEEPING DRUG MONEY FROM THE TALIBAN

FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Members of the 455th Expeditionary Aerial Port Squadron prepare to unload a C-17 Globemaster III during a relief in place/transfer of authority mission March 20, 2012, at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan. The RIP/TOA moved more than 17,000 passengers and 4,000 tons of cargo and allowed 1st Infantry Division to settle into their new mission of working with the Afghan government and Afghan National Security Forces. U.S. Air Force photo, Airman 1st Class Ericka Engblom
 
Joint Task Force Aims to Keep Drug Money From Taliban
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

KABUL, Afghanistan, Aug. 20, 2012 - Corruption is not inevitable in Afghanistan, but is a more recent phenomenon caused by 30 years of war, a coalition officer said here today.
 
And with coalition help, the Afghan government is making progress against it, said Col. Paul Van Den Broek, a New Zealand soldier in charge of Joint Task Force Shafafiyat – a Dari and Pashto word meaning "transparency."
 
"Will it be fast? No. But it is happening," the colonel told reporters traveling with Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who met with Afghan and coalition leaders here today.
 
The Afghan government suggested the need for the task force, the colonel said, to reduce corruption so it does not present a "fatal threat" to the viability of the Afghan state.
 
That threat does exist now, the colonel added, and at its heart is the nexus of drugs and the Taliban.
 
The Taliban provide land for farmers to grow poppies, they provide the workers, they tax the product, and they provide protection, run the laboratories and then traffic the narcotics, he explained.
 
"To the Taliban, it is key money that they need to operate in the war," the colonel said. "It is a case of narcotics leaving Afghanistan in exchange for lethal aid coming in."
 
Van Den Broek likened the situation to insurgents in Colombia using cocaine to fund operations or the Irish Republican Army using racketeering to pay for arms and bombs.
 
Not all narcotics rings in Afghanistan are run by the Taliban, the colonel said, noting that other criminal networks operate in the country. But the Taliban simply cannot operate without drugs and the money they bring in, he added.
 
This, Van Den Broek said, is where his task force gets involved. "There has been progress made in bringing down these networks," he said.
 
Still, he acknowledged, the threat remains, and he quoted a Taliban shadow governor as saying "Where there is poppy, there is Taliban. Where there is no poppy, there is no Taliban."
 
"We are working to make sure there is no Taliban," the colonel said.

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