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1994-05-02
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<text>
<title>
Combatting Narcotics in Pakistan
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Foreign Service Journal, November 1991
Operation Islamabad: Combatting Narcotics in Pakistan
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Joseph Limprecht. Mr. Limprecht was counselor for Narcotics
Affairs at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad 1988-91. He is
currently deputy director of the Office of Israel and
Arab-Israeli Affairs, Bureau of Near East and South Asian
Affairs. The opinions expressed are the author's and not those
of The Department of State.
</p>
<p> Arriving in Islamabad to take over the Narcotics Affairs
Section (NAS), I found myself working in one of the roughest
and most remote frontier areas in the world. As long as anyone
can remember, opium has been a traditional cash crop for the
fiercely independent, Pushtu-speaking Pathan tribesmen of
eastern Afghanistan and Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province
(NWFP). To travel among the Pathans is to begin to know one of
the most interesting traditional cultures left on earth. These
people have demonstrated their toughness and resilience in years
of warfare against the British and the Soviets, and in
continual feuding among themselves. They are among the most
hospitable people in the world--people who will offer a
visitor everything they have--but they are also among the most
warlike.
</p>
<p> On one excursion to Mohmand Agency, a tribal area north of
Peshawar, a Pakistani official responsible for maintaining some
semblance of law and order among the Pathan tribes told me how,
two weeks earlier, he had talked a tribesman out of an armored
personnel carrier. The tribesman, who had been driving the APC
down the main road, had stolen it from his rebel commander in
Afghanistan, driven it over the pass into Mohmand Agency, and
planned to sell it in the local arms bazaar. There he would
have found a ready market for it, since Mohmand people love
weapons above all else.
</p>
<p> That point was underscored when the official and I pulled
into the fortress compound of a key tribal chief. At least 100
of his fellow tribesmen greeted us, 10 of them firing AK-47s in
a traditional Pathan greeting, emptying their clips into the
air. Then one of the chief's men opened fire with the chief's
very own anti-aircraft artillery piece, blasting away at the
nearest mountainside until he had finished off a whole belt of
ammo. I asked later what use the chief could possibly have for
a towed anti-aircraft gun. For artillery fire against enemy
local clans, I was told. I knew then what we were up against.
</p>
<p>Epidemic
</p>
<p> The narcotics problem is an extremely difficult one in
Pakistan. The country has supplied upwards of 40 percent of the
heroin consumed in the United States in recent years. Right
now, the figure is somewhat lower, since the better-organized,
Chinese-run Southeast Asian trafficking organizations have
taken over a larger share of the business. Most of Europe's
heroin, however, still comes from Pakistan. But the bulk of the
heroin produced in Pakistan stays right there--Pakistan now
has somewhere between 1 and 2 million heroin addicts--more
than twice as many as the United States. According to one recent
estimate, one in nine males between 15 and 30 in Karachi is
addicted to heroin. And this is a recent phenomenon--12 years
ago Pakistan had no heroin addicts.
</p>
<p> Agriculture has always been relatively marginal in many
parts of the NWFP, but opium has thrived. For decades opium was
grown and harvested there, then transported by caravan across
Afghanistan and Iran to heroin refining labs in France, Sicily,
and Eastern Turkey. But police crackdowns in the West and in
Turkey in the 1970s, Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, and the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan at the same time disrupted this
trade.
</p>
<p> The drug financiers in the West and Middle East responded by
teaming up with smart, tough Pathan operators to set up simple
heroin production laboratories in the semi-autonomous Tribal
Areas along the border between the NWFP and Afghanistan. Within
35-40 miles of Peshawar, the ancient trading center on the
Pakistan side of the Khyber Pass, Pathan tribesmen still live,
free of almost all interference from the government of Pakistan
and operating under the protection of both vague tradition and
genuine 100-year-old treaties dating from British days. Western
drug enforcement authorities estimate that, at any given time,
more than 100 labs are functioning free of government
enforcement in these "politically inaccessible" areas (tribal
areas where Pakistan government officials have no authority and
may enter only with tribal permission). These labs process the
opium grown in the NWFP and across the border in Afghanistan.
</p>
<p>The U.S. role
</p>
<p> U.S. counter narcotics programs now account for more than
$150-million per year in assistance to other countries (this is
distinct from A.I.D.-funded programs such as the Gadoon-Amizai
Project in Pakistan). These programs are administered by the
Bureau of International Narcotics Matters (INM) headed by an
assistant secretary, who is responsible for all U.S. counter-
narcotics policy beyond the borders of the United States. While
the bulk of these expenditures go to the large programs in the
Andean coca-producing countries--Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia--there have been programs in the Asian heroin-producing
countries since the 1970s. Today there are significant programs
in Pakistan and Thailand, each under the direction of the
ambassador coordinating the work of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, A.I.D., and the State Bureau of International
Narcotics Matters.
</p>
<p> INM's Pakistan program is funded at about $5-7 million per
year. While far smaller than programs in Latin America, it is
one of the broadest and most extensive programs anywhere. More
than half of the funds go to the crop control program-rural
development programs that are designed to bring development to
remote, opium-growing areas, provide alternative cash crops to
opium farmers, and help the government of Pakistan open up
hitherto "inaccessible" areas to enforcement of the ban on
opium cultivation. There is equipment and training for law
enforcement agencies charged with drug enforcement. Finally,
there is a relatively small demand-reduction program, designed
to help Pakistan combat its growing addiction problem.
</p>
<p> Each of these projects is designed specifically to further
U.S. counter-narcotics objectives in Pakistan:
</p>
<p>-- to reduce opium cultivation in the NWFP;
</p>
<p>-- to induce the government of Pakistan to arrest, prosecute,
convict and imprison major drug traffickers;
</p>
<p>-- to shut down heroin production labs and bring their operators
to justice; and
</p>
<p>-- to extradite from Pakistan alleged traffickers indicted in
U.S. courts.
</p>
<p> The crop control program is managed from the Narcotics
Affairs Section's Peshawar satellite office, headed by a retired
A.I.D. officer with nearly three decades of experience in the
rural areas of Asia. He is assisted by two Pakistani engineers
and two agricultural specialists. Its efforts are currently
focused on Bajaur and Mohmand Agencies, semi-autonomous tribal
areas northwest of Peshawar on the Afghan borders where, along
with nearby Dir District (where there is a similar
U.N.-sponsored project), more than 75 percent of the opium poppy
grown in Pakistan is cultivated.
</p>
<p> The embassy's counter narcotics policy is that INM money
must be spent in a clearly focused manner to ensure that U.S.
counter-narcotics goals are met. Thus, the crop control program
is principally directed toward road building in the tribal
areas. Once a road is built into a hitherto inaccessible,
poppy-growing valley, government of Pakistan authorities are at
least theoretically able to patrol and enforce the ban on opium
cultivation.
</p>
<p>Warrior culture
</p>
<p> It sounds simple, but it is not always easy. In one
confrontation a few years ago (fictionalized effectively in the
British television