NATO Troops Kill 48 Afghan Militants

Easy-8

Active member
NATO Troops Kill 48 Afghan Militants
Associated Press | October 25, 2006

KABUL, Afghanistan - NATO-led troops backed by artillery and airstrikes battled insurgents in southern Afghanistan, killing 48 suspected militants in three separate confrontations, the alliance said Wednesday, as Afghan police and Western troops elsewhere seized more than 10 tons of marijuana from a truck.

At least four civilians also were wounded in the clashes in Kandahar's Zhari and Panjwayi districts on Tuesday, the alliance said, adding that they were receiving treatment at military medical facilities.

The clashes had targeted militants who were attacking NATO's development efforts in the area, said Maj. Luke Knittig, a spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force.

NATO-led troops used mortar, artillery and air support in the rolling clashes with large groups of insurgents, a NATO statement said.

The troops "positively identified insurgents, killing an estimated 48," NATO said. "We deeply regret any civilian casualties caused."

NATO forces launched a major military operation in the Panjwayi area in September. The alliance said it killed more than 500 suspected militants during that offensive.

NATO-led troops and Afghan police, meanwhile, seized over 10.3 tons of marijuana from a truck in southern Afghanistan, the alliance said Wednesday.

The truck was stopped near Qalat in Zabul province on a road that links the southern city of Kandahar to Kabul, an alliance statement said without providing the exact day when the seizure was made. Four people in the truck were detained.

Marijuana is illegal in Afghanistan but officials here concentrate more on the fight against the opium trade.

In the country's west, U.S. and Afghan troops recovered over 55 kilograms of opium from a car in Farah province, another NATO statement said Tuesday.

The U.S. soldiers were supporting an Afghan National Army checkpoint when a car failed to stop, the statement said. An Afghan soldier noticed a suspicious bag where the spare tire was supposed to be and alerted the next checkpoint. A search of the vehicle there netted 55 kilograms of opium. The car's driver and passenger were detained.

Afghanistan's world-leading opium cultivation rose 59 percent this year, according to U.N. figures released last month.

The record crop yielded 6,100 tons of opium, or enough to make 610 tons of heroin - outstripping the demand of the world's heroin users by a third, according to U.N. figures.

According to the U.N.'s Office on Drugs and Crime, some 2.9 million people were involved in growing opium, representing 12.5 percent of the total Afghan population, and that revenue from this year's harvest was predicted to hit over US$3 billion (euro2.4 billion).

Opium cultivation has surged since the ouster of the Taliban in late 2001. The former regime had enforced an effective ban on poppy growing by threatening to jail farmers - virtually eradicating the crop in 2000.
But Afghan and Western counter-narcotics officials say Taliban-led militants are now implicated in the drug trade, encouraging poppy cultivation and using the proceeds to help fund their insurgency.

The U.N. anti-drug chief also urged the government to crack down on big traffickers and remove corrupt officials and police officers fueling the trade.

http://www.military.com/NewsContent/0,13319,117736,00.html?wh=news
 
Afghanistan's world-leading opium cultivation rose 59 percent this year, according to U.N. figures released last month.

The record crop yielded 6,100 tons of opium, or enough to make 610 tons of heroin - outstripping the demand of the world's heroin users by a third, according to U.N. figures.

According to the U.N.'s Office on Drugs and Crime, some 2.9 million people were involved in growing opium, representing 12.5 percent of the total Afghan population, and that revenue from this year's harvest was predicted to hit over US$3 billion (euro2.4 billion).
If these figures can be trusted, which they problably can...there is something seriously WRONG with the people living there.

Question: The Army has possession of some extremely powerful area-of-effect defoliants, why not just use those weapons: the Afgan insurgency (certain elements of it) is funded by opium production, crippling opium production should in turn cripple them.

Question 2: How is the Opium transported out of the nation, and to where?
 
I think your right Snowblind! Hit them where it hurts the most. There are
many other areas where the same could be said!
 
If these figures can be trusted, which they problably can...there is something seriously WRONG with the people living there.

Question: The Army has possession of some extremely powerful area-of-effect defoliants, why not just use those weapons: the Afgan insurgency (certain elements of it) is funded by opium production, crippling opium production should in turn cripple them.

Question 2: How is the Opium transported out of the nation, and to where?


I'm not too sure, but isn't a lot of it legal, as in pharmaceutical? If I remember correctly, this makes it a lot easier to set up illegal farms and distribution channels. Correct me if I am wrong please.
 
Hmmm, i don't blame the ordinary afghans when they produce opium and other narcotics, because it is their main source of income. If you start erradicating the only source of income for the afghan people the're not going to be pretty happy. Support for the Taleban will increase making the job for the lads on the ground only harder.

There should be an income substitute for these citizens in place before the narcotics are confiscated, otherwise i don't see how their hearts and minds can be won, or the war in general for that matter.
 
Back
Top