Afghan police found and destroyed a whopping 260 tons of hashish near Spin Boldak in Kandahar province near the Pakistan border Monday. The contraband cannabis was buried in trenches and bunkers in the desert, and the stash was so extensive that NATO called in two aircraft to bomb it. Also found was five tons of opium.
"With this single find, the police have seriously crippled the Taliban's ability to purchase weapons that threaten the safety and security of the Afghan people and the region," said General David McKiernan, commander of ISAF, the International Security Assistance Force.
The hash had an estimated regional wholesale value of $400 million. ISAF officials estimated that the Taliban would have pocketed about $14 million from the sale of the drugs. But despite McKiernan's claim, that's chump change compared to the hundreds of millions of dollars the Taliban is estimated to make each year from the opium trade.
Still, NATO and the West were patting themselves and their Afghan partners on the back. "This was the largest ever single find of narcotics in history," British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said in a statement. "It reflects the efforts of the Afghan government against the drug trade, and was so large that two aircraft were brought in to destroy the underground bunker in which the hashish was being stored."
"The Afghan National Police Special Task Force has made a huge step forward in proving its capability in curbing the tide of illegal drug trade in this country," said General McKiernan. "The international community will continue to support the Afghan forces with more of the same training and support that helped them achieve such success in this mission."
Meanwhile, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime's most recent report on the Afghan crop, Afghan opium production this year looks to maintain its record high levels. The country currently supplies more than 90% of the world's opium.
Comments
Bombing Brings Up "Owner of the Hash" Question
One has to stop and wonder about the U.S. government's ability to fabricate the presumed "Owner of the Hash" theory, as it is just as likely that the hash belonged to Afghani leaders, government officials, or even the Afghani people. In short the U.S. has no sovereign right to bomb a hash bunker, regardless of who it may have belonged to, when we're supposed to be out there to catch Osama bin Laden.
And, don't ignore the "pocket change" commentary regarding this story. Did we really send our military troops, our soldiers, into Afghanistant to bomb "pocket change?" If Hamid Karzai had any common sense, he'd recognize that the Bush administration doing little more than disenfranchising his people with U.S. Hash Bombs.
Effects of "bust"? Some perspective.
260 tons of hash - that's kinda impressive if you calculate the amount of joints you could roll from those tons. I just wonder. I'm from Denmark, a country of just 5-6 million people, that's something like 1/4 of New York or something similar.
When police busted 14 tons of hash on a fishing boat in Denmark some years ago prices weren't affected in the least. So this bust is like 19 busts of this size. Something like five New Yorks could absorb this. LOL.
5 NY's
excellent point it's all perspective.
if that stash is only 5 ny's then what is the world demand/supply
THE DICHOTOMY
[email protected],Vancouver,B.C.Canada While the Afghans are putting on one of their dog and pony shows in the desert.The British Army has assured farmers that they will protect the opium crop.Canadians have been witness to lesser d&p shows and are also told to leave poppies alone.It makes one wonder whose pot it was as every time the AA goes into battle they toke up at every lull in the firing.They may have sacrificed what was left from what they needed to keep the army fighting and to give the Americans film to show back home.This is the most phony and corrupt drug war in the history of the abomination.As usual the CIA runs the heroin and blames everyone else.
ur gay
drugs ar the best
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