
TRIESTE, Italy — The U.S. is shifting its strategy against Afghanistan’s drug trade, phasing out funding for opium eradication while boosting efforts to fight trafficking and promote alternate crops, the U.S. envoy for Afghanistan said Saturday.
The aim of the new policy: to deprive the Taliban of the tens of millions of dollars in drug revenues that are fueling its insurgency.
The U.S. envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, said that poppy eradication — for years a cornerstone of U.S. and U.N. drug trafficking efforts in the country — was not working and was only driving Afghan farmers into the hands of the Taliban.
“Eradication is a waste of money,” Holbrooke said on the sidelines of a Group of Eight foreign ministers’ meeting on Afghanistan, during which he briefed regional representatives on the new policy.
“It might destroy some acreage, but it didn’t reduce the amount of money the Taliban got by one dollar. It just helped the Taliban. So we’re going to phase out eradication,” he said.
The Afghan foreign minister also attended the G8 meeting.
Eradication efforts were seen as inefficient because too little was being destroyed at too high a cost, said U.N. drug chief Antonio Maria Costa.
Although there was no immediate comment from Kabul on Saturday, the U.S. policy shift was likely to be welcomed by Afghanistan’s government.
The new policy calls for assisting farmers who abandon poppy cultivation. Holbrooke said the international community wasn’t trying to target Afghan farmers, just the Taliban militants who buy their crops.
“The farmers are not our enemy, they’re just growing a crop to make a living,” he said. “It’s the drug system. So the U.S. policy was driving people into the hands of the Taliban.”
Holbrooke told the G8 ministers that Washington was increasing its funding for agricultural assistance from tens of millions of dollars a year to hundreds of millions of dollars, said Foreign Minister Franco Frattini of Italy, the current G8 president. The policy also calls for coordinating a crackdown on drug trafficking across Afghanistan’s border before the heroin reaches addicts in Europe, Russia and Iran.



