Let the Afghan Poppies Bloom – How the drug war is undermining the war on terrorism. By Christopher Hitchens

Wednesday, January 12th, 2005

In Let the Afghan Poppies Bloom – How the drug war is undermining the war on terrorism, Christopher Hitchens explains how Afghanistan’s economy has changed over the years:

Twenty and more years ago, the country’s main export was grapes and raisins. It was a vineyard culture. But many if not most of those vines have been dried up or cut down, or even uprooted and burned for firewood, in the course of the hideous depredations of the past decades. An Afghan who was optimistic enough to plant a vine today could expect to wait five years before seeing any return for it, whereas a quick planting of poppies will see pods flourishing in six months. What would you do, if your family or your village were on a knife-edge?

The primary effect of the War on Drugs is, of course, to move a lot of trade into the black market:

Our entire state policy, at home and abroad, is devoted not to stopping a trade that actually grows every year, but rather to ensuring that all its profitable means of production, distribution, and exchange remain the fiefdom of criminal elements. We consciously deny ourselves access to properly refined and labeled products and to the vast revenue that could accrue to the Treasury instead of to the mobsters here and overseas.

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