Marines ignore Afghan opium so as not to upset locals »

Posted By TechnologyExpert 1 year, 1 month ago in News

The Marines of Bravo Company's 1st Platoon sleep beside a grove of poppies. Troops in the 2nd Platoon playfully swat at the heavy opium bulbs while walking through the fields. Afghan laborers scraping the plant's gooey resin smile and wave.

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    BoxMonkey1 year, 1 month ago

    We're off to see the Wizard , the wonderful Wizard of , of , of , ID .

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    MilesAway1 year, 1 month ago

    Afghanistan supplies some 93 percent of the world's opium used to make heroin, and the Taliban militants earn up to $100 million from the drug trade, the United Nations estimates.

    What a irony. Our Marines are protecting all that.

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      ekklesiawarrior1 year, 1 month ago

      Word has it, Tractors - made in America, have come off transport planes, to help maintain these crops.

      Need we tell you which nation is the largest user of 'illicit opium'?

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      walden31 year, 1 month ago

      Interesting dynamic. Legalize it all. Remove the power of the black market, but then of course we'd be killing a tens of billion $ industry. No more black funds to fund black ops, less $ spent on prisons, less $ spent on DOD, less $ spent on law enforcement.

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      mntnman4441 year, 1 month ago

      The idea hs been floated in the UN to buy all the opium produced in Afghanistan for the purpose of stocking it in the supply of opiate based drugs for the World Health Organization...but the drug warriors in DC are against that idea...they would rather continue the failed fight to stop production by eradication methods that have been proven not to be working.

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        bubba21 year, 1 month ago

        Yes, legalize all drugs ... maybe with the possible exception of meth, because that stuff is so insidious and a much quicker path to death.

        It is utterly insane for our OWN government to wage a war on drugs here and at the same time let Afghanistan freely produce opium.

        But, I have a very cynical view of our "war on drugs". Politicians keep it going, via their self-righteous 'stand' of how evil these drugs are, when at the same time they get significant campaign contributions of laundered money from drug cartels.

        Those cartels make billions and its all TAX FREE.

        This situation with Afghanistan has to be on of the most blatant displays of hypocrisy by the self-serving Bush administration.

        If this doesn't convince people how incompetent and crooked the Bush administration is, then I guess nothing will.

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        DeadXXXManXXXTalkin1 year, 1 month ago

        well, it is of course all about money. The drug lords are especially vicious in Afghanistan. They extort money from Afghani Haliburton workers. A common practice is 'skinning' as punishment for nonpayment. A square shaped section of skin is cut from the back. And of course the more commonly known cropping of the fingers is also used.

        The situation with the opium fields is difficult. A couple years ago, I remember reading about the US trying to pay off the war lords and chieftain types with incentives to stop growing poppies. ...and now?

        ---

        You really can't go into other people's countries and expect to get them behave like you want

        I think the Russians were in Afghanistan 10 years before they collapsed. We're on 6, but of course Russia had some other stuff going on, but I wonder how long we can keep it up

        BTW why do they 'need' to ignore the poppy fields from which illegal drugs come to America Kville?

        Can't we bust them over there so we don't have to bust'em here?

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        getreal11 year, 1 month ago

        One of the biggest reason for war is lack of income. Opium although addicting, is a natural pain killer. The US should cut the drug smugglers out of the picture, let the crops get to full harvest, buy the crops, stockpile it and have a cheaper natural pain killer on hand. The locals will have their bread and butter. The drug lords are out their money and the crops go for the intended purpose of their creation. It would be a heck of a lot cheaper for the US to use that drug than the so called synthetic, version they have of it today. Our country don't have a whole lot of money, you know? Pain killer, is pain killer, when you are loaded with gun shot. Of course trading for the real thing might be too easy and save a life on the operating table, out in the field.

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          getreal11 year, 1 month ago

          That natural pain killer sure beats the heck out of getting cancer from these costly man-made drugs they have today.

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            walden31 year, 1 month ago

            At the very least ya gotta give em some other crop to grow.

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            getreal11 year, 1 month ago

            They are growing the crop intended by nature to grow. It wouldn't grow well here. It can, but Our climate is very unstable, not to mention it is illegal.

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            Wolfie20071 year, 1 month ago

            How strange, wonder why there is a story out today about 6 Afghani soldiers killed in a fire fight with opium farmers. I guess, all of the opium crops aren't being protected, if any.

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              unome21 year, 1 month ago

              Of course, one of the main reasons we went into Afganistan was because the Taliban was destroying the poppy fields. Opium and heroin revenue has created vast fortunes not for the growers or street peddlers but for those who can move it from country to country with no questions asked.

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              markmawn21 year, 1 month ago

              Read and learn from someone who is there (a civilian).

              http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/02222008/tran...

              BILL MOYERS: To help fight the insurgents, right? What's happening to that money?

              SARAH CHAYES: Well, we're paying a billion dollars a year to Pakistan, which is orchestrating the Taliban insurgency. So, it's actually US-taxpayer money that is paying for the insurgents, who are then killing, at the moment, Canadian troops. Now if I were the government of Germany or France, I'd have a hard time putting my troops in that kind of equation. I would demand from Washington, that Washington require a lot different behavior from Pakistan.

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