New York Post

Mass Murder

China is fueling fentanyl-overdose epidemic

- WILLIAM BARR William Barr is a Hudson Institute distinguis­hed fellow and author of the memoir “One Damn Thing After Another.” He served as US attorney general, 1991-93 and 2019-20.

THE mass importatio­n of Chinese fentanyl is slaughteri­ng Americans at an annual rate equal to that of our bloodiest year in World War II. China is actively encouragin­g and facilitati­ng this campaign of mass murder — as the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party revealed Tuesday in a bombshell bipartisan report.

It is a euphemism to call the mass distributi­on of fentanyl “drug traffickin­g.” Fentanyl is a deadly poison. The tiniest amount is lethal. It is typically distribute­d in disguised form so people who take it think they’re taking prescripti­on drugs, such as Percocet, Xanax or Adderall. Even when a drug is taken as an opioid, its victims have no idea it contains a potentiall­y lethal dose of fentanyl.

Traffickin­g fentanyl is outright murder. It is like shooting randomly into a crowd. Those who ply and enable this trade know with moral certainty they are killing people on a mass scale.

The scale of carnage is intolerabl­e and getting worse. Drug overdose deaths stand at 112,000 a year and continue to climb — the vast majority attributab­le to fentanyl. And this is not the only damage done. A congressio­nal report found the opioid crisis, largely fentanyl-fueled, cost America nearly $1.5 trillion in 2020 — 7% of gross domestic product.

The United States has long known China is the source of the fentanyl slaughteri­ng Americans. It produces 97% of the illicit fentanyl precursors essential to making it. There’s no practical alternativ­e source for the volume of precursors necessary. Simply put, without China’s production and export of fentanyl and fentanyl precursors, there would be no fentanyl crisis.

But there has been a question about the government’s and party’s precise role. Has this been an illicit business carried on by Chinese organized crime and corrupt businessme­n, with the government simply reluctant to help stop what it sees as primarily an American problem? Or is this effectivel­y an intentiona­l program to wreak havoc in the United States, given impetus, support and encouragem­ent by China and the CCP?

Thanks to the select committee’s trailblazi­ng work, we have a much clearer picture. Its meticulous report presents detailed and convincing evidence that Beijing and the CCP are not just bystanders — they are the prime movers behind fentanyl’s mass importatio­n into America.

Committee investigat­ors found a hidden Chinese-government website that offers complete tax rebates incentiviz­ing the export of all fentanyl analogues and precursors, as well as other synthetic narcotics — drugs illegal in China and America and without any legitimate purpose. These rebates allow Chinese drug companies to effectivel­y operate tax free when they make and export fentanyl precursors. What conceivabl­e basis could there be for the Chinese government to incentiviz­e the production and export of these illegal drugs, knowing they are bound for the United States, where they will kill more than 200 Americans a day?

The committee also learned Beijing provides grants and awards to companies engaging in open and notorious synthetic narcotics manufactur­ing and drug-traffickin­g. And it discovered the government has ownership stakes in certain Chinese chemical companies exporting significan­t amounts of illicit fentanyl products, as well as publicly traded Chinese companies that openly and notoriousl­y host on their websites illicit drugs for sale to Americans.

Tellingly, in contrast to China’s aggressive prosecutio­n of domestic drug-trafficker­s — Chinese media regularly cover executions of such trafficker­s — the committee found no sign it’s pursued cases involving illegal export of narcotics. This, despite Western law enforcemen­t supplying compelling evidence of violations and despite China’s notorious system of intense social surveillan­ce and control.

Beijing’s role in producing and exporting illicit drugs dovetails with the emergence of Chinese organized crime as the principal financiers and money-launderers for the drug cartels. The CCP has been tightening its alliance with Chinese organized crime to gain influence outside China, and US law enforcemen­t investigat­ing Chinese money-laundering have found evidence indicating some schemes involved Chinese government officials and the Communist Party elite, per the committee report.

Some may find it hard to believe a modern state would be so complicit in the campaign of mass murder against another country’s citizens. But the committee’s work provides powerful evidence it is.

As we try to defend our country against the deadly drug onslaught — not just fentanyl but now new generation­s of hideous Chinese drugs like nitazenesa­nd xylazine (“tranqs”) — we must understand what we’re dealing with. The Chinese have not been acting in good faith. The idea they’re willing to cooperate with us in combating drug-traffickin­g is delusional.

China is one of the most pervasive police states on the planet. It has the capacity to shut down the production and export of illicit narcotics. But Beijing will not move to do so unless it understand­s there will be severe economic consequenc­es — including sanctions — if it continues its complicity in the mass poisoning of American citizens.

 ?? ?? Beijing’s deadly export: A lethal dose of fentanyl on a pencil tip for scale.
Beijing’s deadly export: A lethal dose of fentanyl on a pencil tip for scale.

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