The Welland Tribune

U. S. forces target drug facilities in Afganistan

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KABUL — American aircraft have targeted drug producing facilities in Afghanista­n for the first time under a new strategy aimed at cutting off Taliban funding, the top U. S. general in the country said Monday.

Gen. John Nicholson said the raids were carried out Sunday in the southern Helmand province, as part of the strategy unveiled by U. S. President Donald Trump in August.

Afghan and American aircraft — including B- 52 bombers dropping 900- kg bombs and F- 22 attack planes — took part in the raids.

Nicholson said the insurgents generate an estimated $ 200 million a year from poppy cultivatio­n and opium production.

In a news conference with the Afghan army chief of staff, Nicholson said the Taliban were becoming a criminal organizati­on. “They fight so that they can keep profiting from narcotics trade and other criminal activities,” he said. He added that there are 13 major drug traffickin­g organizati­ons in Afghanista­n, of which seven are in Helmand.

Afghanista­n’s opium production has nearly doubled this year compared to 2016, while areas that are under poppy cultivatio­n rose by 63 per cent, according to a joint survey released last week by the United Nations and the Afghan government.

Production stands at a record level of 9,000 tonnes so far in 2017, with some 810,488 acres under cultivatio­n, according to the survey, carried out by the CounterNar­cotics Ministry and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.

Afghanista­n is the world’s top cultivator of the poppy, from which opium and heroin are produced.

The Taliban prohibited poppy cultivatio­n when they governed the country in the late 1990s, but have since come to rely on it as they wage an increasing­ly potent insurgency against the government and its foreign backers.

The Taliban have seized several districts across the country and have carried out a series of major attacks, mainly targeting Afghan security forces, since U. S. and NATO forces officially shifted to a support and counterter­rorism role at the end of 2014.

The Associated Press

 ?? NOORULLAH SHIRZADA/ GETTY IMAGES ?? An internally displaced Afghan man prays as he sit at a refugee camp in Kabul. American aircraft have targeted drug producing facilities in Afghanista­n in an effort to cut off funding for the Taliban.
NOORULLAH SHIRZADA/ GETTY IMAGES An internally displaced Afghan man prays as he sit at a refugee camp in Kabul. American aircraft have targeted drug producing facilities in Afghanista­n in an effort to cut off funding for the Taliban.

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