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Cebu_4_2
16th October 2017, 11:41 AM
:o

Afghan Opium Production 40 Times Higher Since US-NATO Invasion

teleSur, Mint Press News
Waking Times Media

Since the U.S.-led NATO invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, the production of opium in the country has increased by 40 times according to Russia’s Federal Drug Control Service, fueling organized crime and widespread death.

The head of the FSKN, Viktor Ivanov, explained the staggering trend at a March U.N. conference on drugs in Afghanistan. Opium growth in Afghanistan increased 18 percent from 131, 000 hectares to 154, 000, according to Ivanov’s estimates.

“Afghan heroin has killed more than one million people worldwide since the ‘Operation Enduring Freedom’ began and over a trillion dollars has been invested into transnational organized crime from drug sales,” said Ivanov according to Counter Current News.

Prior to the invasion of Afghanistan, opium production was banned by the Taliban, although it still managed to exist. The U.S. and its allies have been accused of encouraging and aiding in the opium production and the ongoing drug trafficking within the region. Ivanov claimed that only around 1 percent of the total opium yield in Afghanistan was destroyed and that the “international community has failed to curb heroin production in Afghanistan since the start of NATO’s operation.”

Afghanistan is thought to produce more than 90 percent of the world’s supply of opium, which is then used to make heroin and other dangerous drugs that are shipped in large quantities all over the world. Opium production provides many Afghan communities with an income, in an otherwise impoverished and war-torn country. The opium trade contributed around $US 2.3 billion or around 19 percent of Afghanistan’s GDP in 2009 according to the U.N.

Around 43 percent of drugs produced in Afghanistan are moved through Pakistan, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

The Islamic State Group is reported to have recently taken over opium production and trafficking. In November, the extremist group was estimated to be earning over $US 1 billion from the opium trade. Profits also go to international drug cartels and money-laundering banks.

This article (Afghan Opium Production 40 Times Higher Since US-NATO Invasion) was originally created and published by Mint Press and is re-posted here with permission.

Joshua01
16th October 2017, 02:55 PM
Anyone see the end game yet? We're not fighting a war, we're defending a very profitable industry! Profitability however is not the most critical part of this industry. Opium is what will ultimately be used to control the goy while the rest of the kike global temple is built

Cebu_4_2
16th October 2017, 04:06 PM
Anyone see the end game yet? We're not fighting a war, we're defending a very profitable industry! Profitability however is not the most critical part of this industry. Opium is what will ultimately be used to control the goy while the rest of the kike global temple is built


And thus the un-fightable opioid epidemic in the USi and Russia.

keehah
7th July 2021, 02:23 PM
NYT: In Cities Where It Once Reigned, Heroin Is Disappearing (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/18/health/heroin-fentanyl-deaths-baltimore.html)

May 18, 2019
Heroin’s presence is fading up and down the Eastern Seaboard, from New England mill towns to rural Appalachia, and in parts of the Midwest that were overwhelmed by it a few years back. It remains prevalent in many Western states, but even New York City, the nation’s biggest distribution hub for the drug, has seen less of it this year.

The diminishing supply should be a victory for public health and law enforcement alike. Instead, in cities like Baltimore, longtime users who managed to survive decades injecting heroin are now at far higher risk of dying from an overdose. That is because synthetic fentanyl, a deadlier drug that is much cheaper to produce and distribute than heroin, has all but replaced it.


BBC: The US military left Bagram Airfield - its key base in Afghanistan
(https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-57682290)
DailyMailUK: Afghan troops are filmed laying down arms as US general overseeing NATO exit says he's shocked by how quickly they've surrendered to the Taliban and 1,000 are caught fleeing the country (https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9760119/20-000-Tajikistan-troops-ordered-border-stop-Afghanistan-soldiers-fleeing-Taliban.html)

6/July/2021

The Afghan army is collapsing across the country, with videos posted by the Taliban showing troops laying down their US-made weapons and handing over the keys to their Humvee armoured cars The US left Bagram Airfield last week - its fortress in the country for nearly 20 years - by slipping away in the night without telling the base's new Afghan commander who discovered they had gone the next morning
However, General Austin Scott Miller, commander of US and Nato troops in Afghanistan, said he was shocked by how quickly the Afghan National Army had surrendered to the resurgent jihadists
'I don't like leaving friends in need,' he told ABC on Monday. 'We should be concerned. The loss of terrain and the rapidity of that loss of terrain has to be concerning. You look at the security situation, it's not good'
More than a thousand Afghan National Army soldiers fled into Tajikistan from the northern province of Badkhshan following clashes with the resurgent jihadists on Sunday
Tajikistan said that the Afghans were allowed to enter on the principle of 'good neighbourliness' but called up 20,000 reservists to bolster its border guard and prevent further flooding of the frontier

midnight rambler
7th July 2021, 04:00 PM
The reason why opium production went up forty times higher than before th US invasion is because the Taliban had pretty much eliminated all poppy cultivation by early 2001.

keehah
6th November 2021, 08:35 AM
vice.com: Drug Users Are Nostalgic for ‘Old-School Heroin’ as Fentanyl Takes Over (https://www.vice.com/en/article/5dgzq8/fentanyl-has-overtaken-heroin-market?utm_source=vicenewstwitter)

3.11.21
[T]his March... heroin was becoming harder and harder to find. Then it disappeared altogether...

He hasn’t come across any heroin since September—it’s been entirely replaced with fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that’s up to 50 times more potent.

“Fentanyl sucks,” Garrett said. “It doesn’t last long, it doesn’t provide you much euphoria, so it doesn’t offer me much utility. It’s just fentanyl around now, and I fear it’s going to be like that forever.” ...

“[Heroin] overdoses would be in the thousands every year, which is still bad and requires work. But seeing now almost 100,000 Americans died last year from overdoses, and that’s primarily from fentanyl.”...

Europe’s heroin markets have likely remained intact because there’s a land bridge between Europe and Afghanistan, the source of the morphine.