You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Afghanistan/South Asia
US general links al-Qaeda to drug trade
2004-04-03
U.S. forces are finding increasing quantities of drugs during raids to hunt Taliban and al Qaeda fighters in Afghanistan, a top general said on Friday. "There are indications that there is some degree of linkage between the drugs and terrorists. It's still emerging how extensive or not extensive that might be," Lieutenant General David W. Barno, a commander with the U.S.-led force hunting for Osama bin Laden and other al Qaeda fugitives, said in an interview.
We noticed this a couple years ago.
He said troops had found drugs or signs of drug activity on more operations in recent months but it was still not clear how far al Qaeda or the Taliban were raising funds from narcotics. "Clearly there's some connection out there," he said. "It's a cash economy so money moves very quickly through legitimate means, illegitimate means, corruption and crime without any real traces on the money."
A year ago it was estimated at 35 percent...
Concerns about the inter-related threats from drugs, warlords and terrorism partly overshadowed a conference in Berlin this week at which foreign donors pledged $4.5 billion to finance Afghanistan's reconstruction in the coming year. Barno said U.S. forces were not only sharing intelligence on drugs with Afghan authorities, but were routinely turning over drug hauls to them or destroying them on the spot. During a raid north of Kandahar last month, troops "came into a compound, had a fight there and found poppy in a paste form that one of our FBI elements who was with us estimated at about $15 million of street value," he said. Barno said the United States would provide "additional robust assistance" in wiping out poppy cultivation but made clear Afghan authorities had to take the lead in dealing with drugs and factional fighting. Barno praised Pakistani authorities who have stepped up their efforts on the other side of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.
Yeah. They need their positive strokes...
Barno said U.S. troops typically did not meet the entrenched resistance encountered by the Pakistani forces in the wild border region, where central government has never held sway. "We don't run into that in Afghanistan, typically. At the stage we're in right now we have more hit and run type attacks," he said. "In Pakistan, it's a very different dynamic," he said, but added that local operations were bearing fruit. "The Pakistanis...have put a great deal of pressure on the al Qaeda network in the tribal areas of Pakistan. I think that's certainly pressurising the (Qaeda) leadership as well."
We don't meet that kind of resistance because the headquarters and rear areas are in Pakland. Afghanistan's the front line. When we eventually do cross into Waziristan, we'll meet the same kind of resistance. Hopefully we won't play pattycake with them like the Paks are doing.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#1  Very cool Paki breifing this morning.
Posted by: Lucky   2004-04-03 11:57:02 AM  

00:00