mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-18 04:04:34 -05:00
96 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
96 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile>WRONG NUMBER FILE NAME: WTCBOMB4.ZIP
|
||
[Reproduced from _The Village Voice_, 4/15/93]
|
||
THE CIA AND HEROIN FINANCED THE MUJAHEDEEN
|
||
By Robert I. Friedman
|
||
The World Trade Center bombing is the legacy of the CIA's disastrous policy
|
||
of arming the mujahedeen in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Not only have Afghan
|
||
war veterans been implicated in the worst act of terrorism in U.S. history,
|
||
but mujahedeen warlords also have become the world's biggest heroin
|
||
producers, according to experts in the international drug trade.
|
||
The CIA's arms shipments and training program for the mujahedeen became one
|
||
of its most massive covert operations, costing at least $2000000000, far
|
||
surpassing U.S. support for the Nicaraguan contras. If anything, the battle
|
||
for Afghanistan motivated the CIA more than the war against the
|
||
Sandinistas. In Nicaragua, the CIA fought Soviet proxies. In Afghanistan,
|
||
the enemy was the Soviet army, which invaded Afghanistan in December 1979.
|
||
Support for Nicaraguan and Afghani "freedom fighters" became the
|
||
cornerstone of the so-called Reagan Doctrine-an attempt not just to contain
|
||
Communism but to roll it back. While the contras were mostly a collection
|
||
of former dictator Anastasio Somoza's street thugs, in Afghanistan the
|
||
rebels were Islamic extremists and narco-terrorists who hated America as
|
||
much as they despised the Godless Russians.
|
||
Billions of dollars of CIA money, matched by billions from Saudi Arabia (a
|
||
quid pro quo for receiving AWAC surveillance planes over the adamant
|
||
protests of the pro-Israel lobby), were passed through the Bank of Credit
|
||
and Commerce International to the Afghan rebels. The bank was also used to
|
||
channel funds to the contras. But no matter how much money the Afghan
|
||
rebels received it never seemed to be enough. In order to augment their
|
||
funds, rebel chieftains began to grow poppies, refine opium into heroin,
|
||
and sell the drug in the U.S. and Europe. In 1979, Pakistan and Afghanistan
|
||
exported virtually no heroin to the West. By 1981, the drug lords, many
|
||
high-ranking members of Pakistan's political and military establishment,
|
||
controlled 60 per cent of America's heroin market. "Trucks from the
|
||
Pakistan army's National Logistics Cell arriving with CIA arms from Karachi
|
||
often returned loaded with heroin-protected by ISI [Pakistan's internal
|
||
security service] papers from police search," wrote Alfred McCoy in The
|
||
Politics of Heroin (Lawrence Hill, 1991).
|
||
Of the seven rebel mujahedeen leaders who operated from base-camps in
|
||
Peshawar, by far the most dominant is Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who received
|
||
more than $1000000000 in covert U.S. aid. Hekmatyar was an obscure Islamic
|
||
fanatic before he was tapped by the CIA. Today, his forces are nine miles
|
||
from Kabul, where until recently he was engaged in bloody battles against
|
||
the Afghan army-indiscriminately raining tens of thousands of rockets and
|
||
artillery shells on the nation's capital. A March 7 Pakistani-brokered
|
||
peace accord named Hekmatyar Afghan's prime minister-designate.
|
||
All through the 1980s, Hekmatyar received accolades from the U.S. press,
|
||
even though Asia Watch, among others, published gory reports about his
|
||
human rights abuses. Hekmatyar brutally murdered rivals, then had their
|
||
corpses ritually mutilated. "He really did dominate the Afghan refugee
|
||
camps and was known among the refugees as being willing to retaliate
|
||
against anyone who challenged his political authority," McCoy, a professor
|
||
of Southeast Asian history at the University of Wisconsin, told the Voice.
|
||
Only after the Soviets left Afghanistan in 1989 did The New York Times
|
||
criticize Hekmatyar's "sinister nature." The Times, however, never
|
||
bothered to tell its readers that Hekmatyar is also among the world's
|
||
biggest heroin dealers, a distinction he has enjoyed for nearly a decade.
|
||
A May 1990 front-page article in The Washington Post charged that U.S.
|
||
officials had ignored Afghani complaints of heroin trafficking by Hekmatyar
|
||
and Pakistani intelligence. Some experts now believe that Hekmatyar will
|
||
vastly increase Afghanistan's opium harvest when he becomes prime minister.
|
||
"There were preliminary reports about six months ago based on interviews
|
||
with UN personnel in the region that Afghanistan by itself could produce
|
||
3000 tons of opium," says McCoy. "Now that's nearly equivalent to the
|
||
world's supply no matter how you calculate it. It's one little country and
|
||
it's going to double the world's supply all by itself."
|
||
It's easier-and far more profitable-for the 4 to 5000000 Afghans
|
||
returning home from the refugee camps in Pakistan to plant poppies than
|
||
rebuild their war-shattered economy, says McCoy. Afghanistan's agriculture
|
||
was destroyed by the war and it will take a lot of nurturing to revive the
|
||
groves of oranges, its principal cash crop before the war. Poppies need
|
||
little tending and they will guarantee peasants an almost immediate income.
|
||
"Opium is the ideal solution," says McCoy. "They can put it in and in six
|
||
months they've got a harvest." But while Hekmatyar has inundated the U.S.
|
||
and Europe with the potent powder, U.S. officials have remained silent.
|
||
Ruined citrus crops, a plague of heroin, and hundreds of thousands of
|
||
casualties didn't deter the CIA from its holy war against communism in
|
||
Afghanistan. "On the afternoon of February 15, 1989, the champagne began
|
||
flowing at CIA headquarters," wrote Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Tim
|
||
Weiner in Blank Check, a book about covert operations. "A rare exultation
|
||
filled the air. After fifteen years of failure and humiliation, the Agency
|
||
had won a famous victory. The last Soviet troops had left Afghanistan. The
|
||
Agency's biggest covert action since the height of the Vietnam war had
|
||
achieved its goal. The CIA had won its jihad."
|
||
The real winners, of course, are Hekmatyar and the tens of thousands of
|
||
Islamic holy warriors -- trained and financed by the CIA -- who are today
|
||
locked in a life and death struggle with America. According to this week's
|
||
New Yorker, it was Hekmatyar who "most likely" introduced Sheikh Omar Abdel
|
||
Rahman to the American and Pakistani intelligence officials who were
|
||
orchestrating the Afghan war when the sheikh visited Pakistan just prior to
|
||
moving to Brooklyn in May 1990. As the Voice previously reported, the CIA
|
||
almost certainly facilitated the sheikh's entry into the United States as a
|
||
reward for helping the mujahedeen-despite his presence on a State
|
||
Department terrorism watch list. Mahmud Abouhalima, an Afghan war vet and
|
||
the sheikh's driver, has been indicted for his alleged involvement in the
|
||
World Trade Center bombing. The wreckage and death caused by the blast is
|
||
a depressing coda to the end of the Cold War. And thanks to the CIA's
|
||
favorite freedom fighters, heroin addiction is again on the rise in
|
||
America. *
|
||
WRONG NUMBER FILE NAME: WTCBOMB4.TXT</conspiracyFile> |