Afghanistan - Dope Republic or Biomedical Engineering Center

by velvetsheen posted: 4. March 2009 03:19


Afghanistan is more than the place where Osama bin Laden might be hiding. It's a place that originates  enormous amounts of dope, every year.
 
Most of that dope comes in the form of opium, papaver somniferum, the sleep producing flower, valued the world over for its somniferous properties, its superlative narcotic effect, and the ease with which it may be converted into cold hard cash.
 
Some people refer to Afghanistan as a failed narco-state, but those people are wrong.

Afghanistan may be thought of as a flourishing, enormously successful narco-state.  It is estimated to produce in excess of ninety percent of the world's supply of opium. That much opium is worth billions of dollars every year, even before its conversion to morphine, codeine and heroin.
 
Thefore, the war in Afghanistan may be thought of as either the Third or Fourth Opium War, depending on whether you count the French, British and American wars in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s AD.

 You may remember that the First and Second Opium Wars were conducted in the South China Sea, fought between the subjects of the soverign of Great Britain and the armies of the Qing Dynasty of China during the mid-1800s AD.

Through the prism of history, Opium Wars I and II are seen to have started because the Qing Dynasty wished to limit the trade of Chinese slaves and dope, and the operators of the British Empire violently disagreed.

The disagreement resulted in the capture and occupation of the island of Hong Kong by the British, and the capitulation to the opium and human trade by the Chinese. The occupation of Hong Kong continued well  into the 20th century, though the legal trade of opium there became a murkier proposition.

The war in Afghanistan did not begin as an opium war, but it may well end there. For all the Taliban's excesses, they succeded in limiting the production of opium during their time in government, by promoting terror in the local population.

In contrast, the production of opium has increased every year since Osama bin Laden allegedly engineered the destruction of the World Trade Center, promoted terror in the local population, and caused the latest invasion of Afghanistan.

A 2007 Ispos-Reid survey in Canada suggests that eight in ten Canadians were likely to support the legalization of the opium trade in Afghanistan. Canada's Armed Forces already support the opium trade in Afghanistan, by looking the other way while the poppies grow.

Canada, you might recall is a renouned producer of dope, chiefly marijuana, valued the world over for its superlative psychoactive properties and the ease with which it may be converted into cold hard cash.


Yet no one considers Canada to be a failed narco-state, except perhaps those who operate the US Drug Enforcement Agency.

The Canadian forces in Afghanistan want to win the hearts and minds of the Afghans, all of them whether they are insurgents or not. And the Taliban want to win the hearts and minds of the Canadian public, whether they support the Canadian Armed Forces activities there or not.

Since support for the opium trade is one of the few uniting elements of this violent drama, there may yet be light at the end of this tunnel of death that is the Afghanistan quagmire.

Afghanistan - Time for Canada to Cut and Run?

by velvetsheen posted: 2. March 2009 15:33
A 2002 report of the Standing Senate Committee on National Security and Defence found that Canada spent approximately $395 per capita on defence, versus $1425 per capita in the United Kingdom and approximately $2000 per capita in the United States.

Some applauded these numbers. Every dollar spent on the military usually maps to at least that much unspent on eliminating child poverty, or building hospitals, or any of a number of other useful objectives of government.

But at the time of the 2002 report there were some other people who saw the numbers as an indictment of current policy, and they promised that if elected, the winds of change would blow through the Department of National Defense.
 
Some background might be in order. In 2002 there was an idealogy holding sway on Parliament Hill that looked upon almost all government spending as waste. Thus were laid to waste great swathes of government spending on health care, welfare, unemployment insurance, maintenance of infrastructure, and the military.

Now comes the unsurprising news from Parliament Hill that the money being spent by DND in Afghanistan, is going to waste. The current Prime Minister has now evidently done the required reading and has come to feel that the war there cannot be won, because as he should have previously known, many have tried to conquer the Afghan hills, and failed.

If peace is the continuance of war by other means, then the august Canadian PM seems to be saying that the time has come for the Afghan people to fight for peace on their own terms. Put another way, it seems that the Canadian Prime Minister is saying that Canada should cut and run from Afghanistan.

Her Majesty's loyal opposition in Canada seems to have no better ideas.

Certainly, the government of Canada suddenly seems to have no source of the necessary funds to press the peace in Afghanistan. It may be that the government of Canada may shortly find that it has not the necessary funds to even build a subway in Scarborough, or arrange for the adequate pay of garbage collectors in Ottawa.

But there is a monolith standing tall over all sides of this vexing debate.

The strong have a right to protect the weak. And Canada is still seen to be listed among the world's strong, often in finance and industry and hopefully still, in moral fibre.

And just as Canada may be listed among the elite of strong nations, unfortunately the ruts between the high hills in Afghanistan are said to be teeming with those in need of protection. They have been abandoned to improvise their own devices before, and now seem fated to be abandoned to that destiny once again.

The history of Afghanistan has been disdainful of conquering armies, whatever their mission. Through those ancient high hills run the same little known roads that have always lighted empires the way to dusty death. Now as in the past, it seems better not to ride the roads through those hills, not if you can help it.

Through Scarborough Ontario also runs a road most have never heard of. It is called the Highway of Heroes. And increasingly so more than in the past it is better not to ride this road, not if you can help it.

To the Canadian military, the Highway of Heroes is the unwelcome welcome home. It is a place to slowly promenade while pride, sorrow and death pave the way.

But look again.

With the right kind of eyes, you can see some of those same heroes going about their daily business now. Some of them are speeding their way to do the bidding of the captains of industry. Others are rushing home to cook, to clean and watch television.

While life beats in their chests, each hero upon this highway has a duty to home, country and planet. The heroes coming back from Afghanistan in stiff repose have already done their part.

The rest is still up to us.