Pubdate: Tue, 02 Oct 2001 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Authors: Alan Cullison and James M Dorsey, Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL IN TARGETING TERRORISTS' DRUG MONEY, U.S. PUTS ITSELF IN AN AWKWARD SITUATION Analysts Say Taliban's Foes -- Bush's Likely Allies -- Are Using Opium and Other Drugs for Funds as Well DUSHANBE, Tajikistan -- In its assault on terrorism, the U.S. may seek to choke off profits from the Central Asian drug trade that are used to buy arms and explosives. But some important potential allies in Washington's struggle with Afghanistan are also believed to be reaping the rewards of the nation's burgeoning heroin trade. Nowhere is the problem clearer than along Afghanistan's northern border with Tajikistan, a sworn ally in President Bush's antiterrorist efforts -- and a major conduit for heroin and opium on its way to consumers in Europe. United Nations officials say as much as half of Afghanistan's opium and heroin flows across the 800-mile border with Tajikistan before finding its way to Russia and points west. For most of the past five years, the narcotics have come from areas almost entirely controlled by the Northern Alliance, the main rival of Afghanistan's Taliban regime, say drug-enforcement officials. An aggressive Taliban offensive that has driven Northern Alliance forces out of some border regions hasn't affected the trade much. The trade creates an awkward situation for the U.S., which hopes to enlist the help of the Northern Alliance fighters, who know the dizzying mountains and deserts of Afghanistan and could help in the effort to track down Osama bin Laden, Washington's chief suspect in last month's terrorist attacks in the U.S. Mr. Bush has demanded that the Taliban, who claim to know Mr. bin Laden's whereabouts, turn him over. The Taliban, invoking Islam, has largely stamped out opium production in most of Afghanistan. Northern Alliance leaders, for their part, deny any connection to drug trafficking but concede that it does take place on their territory. "All the leaders on both sides in Afghanistan are fed by drugs," says Muzaffar Olimov, director of the Center for Oriental Studies, a Dushanbe think tank. "It is of course not open or official, and nobody confirms it. But people can't buy all the weapons that they have with gems alone." U.N. officials hesitate to guess which side has been making more from the drug trade in Afghanistan, which produces about 75% of the world's heroin. But they do think the anticipated U.S. retaliation against terrorists in Afghanistan, and perhaps the Taliban government itself, has sparked selling. The officials say Afghan drug dealers, expecting a Western strike, appear to be selling off their narcotic stockpiles for cash. Meanwhile, across the Stans and the Caspian Sea, in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, some pray for a speedy U.S. attack on Afghanistan. "It's good for business," says Muhammed, standing in a garage full of cannabis, a pistol tucked in his belt. He is just back from harvesting this year's cannabis crop. "It'll drive up hashish prices," he explains. Muhammed assures a prospective client that transport of 2,500 kilograms (5,500 pounds) to Amsterdam from the Bekaa -- controlled by Syrian troops as well as Syrian- and Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim Hezbollah fighters -- can be arranged. Like most farmers in this remote region, he has returned to his time-honored crop for the first time in almost a decade. The revival of Lebanon's drug trade symbolizes the failure of Western attempts to persuade farmers to switch from high-value cannabis and poppy seeds to unprofitable potatoes and vegetables. There is a standard transport route here as well. The Bekaa's farmers say an Istanbul-based company moves the hashish from eastern Lebanon to Istanbul aboard Turkish trucks. In Istanbul, the hashish is switched to German-made trucks, with German license plates, headed for Bologna, in Italy. "Transportation is no issue," says Muhammed. "I spoke to our transporters in Turkey this morning. The government isn't a problem either. We can deal with them." Back in Central Asia, Russian and Tajik border troops have pounced on more than three tons of pure heroin in the past few months -- about three times the amount they had discovered by this time last year. The heroin, they say, is often high-quality, neatly tied in one-kilogram loaves and stamped with trademarks by its manufacturers, like care packages with designer labels. Any serious cleanup, however, could send tremors through Tajikistan, which would be a valuable jumping-off point for military operations against the Taliban but is itself badly addicted to the drug trade. Drug money, in fact, has proved a lubricant for a peace agreement signed in 1997 that ended Tajikistan's civil war, analysts say. To persuade the country's competing warlords to lay down their arms, military leaders and their followers were given posts in the government. Now former warlords and their troops control portions of the Tajik border, regional police and customs. Says a Western diplomat: "Government people are up to their eyeballs in the drug business." Officials say Russian police last year seized one shipment of heroin that was sent to Moscow in a diplomatic pouch. And Tajikistan was forced to recall its ambassador from Kazakstan last year after police in Almaty searched his car and a garage and found 62 kilograms of heroin and $54,000 in cash. The ambassador blamed the incident on his trade representative, who he said had borrowed the car. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom