Pubdate: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 Source: Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) Copyright: 2007 Arizona Daily Star Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/23 WORLDWIDE WAR ON DRUGS LAGGING, STATE DEPARTMENT SAYS WASHINGTON - The United States said Thursday that top anti-terror allies Afghani-stan, Pakistan and Colombia had fallen short in the war on drugs despite enhanced counter-narcotics efforts, It also criticized perennial foes Iran, North Korea and Venezuela for not cooperating. The State Department also noted backsliding in some key Latin American nations like Bolivia while it praised improved performances by Mexico and Asian transshipment points China and Thailand. In its annual global survey of the drug war, the department said massive opium-poppy production in Afghanistan, long the world's top producer of the main ingredient for heroin, continued to pose a major threat. "Afghanistan's huge drug trade undercuts efforts to rebuild the economy and develop a strong democratic government based on the rule of law," the department said in the 2007 International Narcotic Control Strategy Report. "There is strong evidence that narcotics trafficking is linked to the Taliban insurgency. These links between drug traffickers and anti-government forces threaten regional stability," the department said. It added that corruption and security conditions hinder efforts to combat Afghan poppy production that shot up 59 percent to a record 5,644 tons from 2005 to 2006. "More must be done," Anne Patterson, assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs, told reporters. The report stressed that Afghan President Hamid Karzai remained committed to reducing the harvest but Patterson said that results remained "insufficient." Across the border in Pakistan exists a major transit point for opiates and hashish, where Taliban and al-Qaida operatives are also believed to operate, the State Department said. It said it believed the government there had launched several promising new anti-narcotics initiatives. Iran is attempting to deal with a domestic drug-consumption surge but has yet to enact or enforce laws to decrease demand that has resulted in what the report said "can only be called an epidemic of opiate abuse. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek