Justin Marozzi

Smack in your face

In Afghanistan more provinces than ever are producing opium. Justin Marozzi watches Britain lose its farcical war on drugs

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‘How sad,’ Lesley Pallett, head of the Foreign Office’s drugs and international crime department, commented tartly.

The local ministry of agriculture official welcomed British support. He talked of the need for alternative crops, noting that the price of potatoes was very low. If they had money for a research laboratory, he hinted, they could research higher-yield varieties. The conversation had an otherworldly air about it. When it comes to marketable crops, there’s only one show in town and everyone knows it’s opium. In one of the poorest countries in the world, where 70 per cent of the people live on less than $2 a day, opium represents security, hard currency and guaranteed credit.

‘I am sure I can promise you that if there is support from your side [more money, please] we will not grow poppies in Bamiyan,’ he assured Bill. The minister thanked him and said it was all very positive.

I didn’t quite see the drugs angle during the next stop on Bill’s drugs-busting jamboree, a brief visit to what were once the magnificent Buddhas of Bamiyan, destroyed by the Taleban in 2001. Maybe Bill was reminding us that things were a lot better now than under the beastly Taleban. Whatever, still no trace of Mr Apricot.

Perhaps we would catch him at our last port of call in Bamiyan and there he would be, standing over a mound of destroyed poppies with sickle in hand, munching apricots and extolling the life-affirming qualities of dried fruit. It was not to be. First we trooped off to see the governor of Bamiyan — ‘up to his neck in the drugs business’, according to one source in Kabul — who reminded the minister that the recent British wheeze, the so-called ‘governor-led’ eradication programme, had not worked out. It was in truth a failure of farcical proportions.

The idea was to compensate financially those farmers who got rid of their opium. The result was a surge in farmers planting it, lured by the promise of extra cash. The Afghans can see us coming. ‘It was a one-off programme,’ Bill interjects hastily. The fact is, more provinces in Afghanistan now produce opium than ever before and a bumper crop is forecast for 2004, 3,500 tons of the stuff, give or take. Keeping it illegal maintains high prices, of course. If you were starting from scratch, it would be difficult to come up with a more effective incentive to grow the stuff.

Overnight in Kabul, a friend at the UN pooh-poohed Bill’s choice of provincial visit. ‘If he’s a drugs guy, what the hell is he going to Bamiyan for? It’s a holiday spot. It’s like researching inner-city deprivation in Knightsbridge. He should have been in Kandahar, Hilmand or Uruzgan. The Brits have fucked up with drugs. It’s a complete disaster, but how could they succeed?’

It is a question worth asking. Whatever one’s position on the war on terror, most would agree that, as it is prosecuted, we experience a number of reversals and a number of successes. Bomb, bomb, beheading, bomb, foiled bomb plot, something like that. The war on drugs, however, is being fought and lost. It’s not so much a defeat as an utter rout.

The next morning, Bill was looking sprightly and ready to do battle with the drugs scourge once more. We travelled out to a British-funded project called the Kabul City Gates, and this, as much as anything else — the fact that President Karzai’s half-brother is reportedly one of the country’s biggest drug-dealers, for example — showed what Britain is up against in the war on drugs. Afghans with baseball caps displaying the British Customs and Excise logo pulled over the odd car or truck and searched the contents of the vehicle in front of the cameras. ‘Do you know how big the drugs problem is in Afghanistan?’ Bill asked one driver who looked nonplussed at the attention. ‘You don’t have a problem being searched?’ he continued, a little improbably. Meanwhile, huge trucks carrying tons of boulders streamed through. They could be carrying tons of opium and no one would be any the wiser. And what would these Afghans do if they intercepted a large consignment? Their low salaries — one of the pluckier men asked Bill for a pay rise — suggest they would turn a blind eye for a backhander.

Bill Rammell is a sincere and decent man with a ministerial portfolio that makes Northern Ireland Secretary sound an attractive option. He says the next 15 months are critical in the war on drugs in Afghanistan. We should judge him by these words, and expect him to fail. If the Kabul government is to make the high-level arrests and prosecutions he says are essential in the short term, President Karzai will have to take on — and beat — the warlords who are generally considered most deeply involved in the drugs business. The snag is, these men are supported by the Americans as allies in the war on terror. This means that the opium business, particularly thriving in the south, the stronghold of al-Qa’eda and Taleban forces, will continue to fund terrorism in this region. Such is the law of unintended consequences.

As an experienced agronomist in Kabul puts it: ‘The policy of the people who are fighting the war on terror is in complete conflict with the people fighting the war on drugs.’

Politicians generally don’t like talking about legalisation because it is controversial and not a vote-winner. Bill says he is not convinced by it. Legalisation will ‘emphatically’ not be government policy. He should keep a more open mind. Governments are notoriously inefficient spenders of other people’s money, and the war on drugs is one of the most egregious examples of misdirected profligacy.

One thing is certain. Whatever we are doing now is emphatically not working. Dried apricots are not the answer. We are losing the war on drugs hands down. To pretend otherwise is to indulge in an Orwellian fantasy.

Justin Marozzi’s history of Tamerlane will be published by HarperCollins in August.

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