Results tagged “drugs” from SpyTalk

Karzai Brother a U.S. Snitch?

| | Comments (0)

Evidently taking a page from the Boston Irish mob - and countless crooks before him - Afghan President Hamid Karzai's younger brother has become a snitch for U.S. intelligence, according to an allegation buried deep in a Washington Post story Monday. 

If true, the connection with U.S. intelligence would go a long way to explaining why Ahmed Wali Karzai, the most powerful official in Afghanistan's volatile Kandahar Province, remains free despite a widespread consensus that he is one of Afghanistan's major drug kingpins.

Taliban Shake Down Aid Projects for Millions

| | Comments (0)

As U.S. commanders in Afghanistan ready plans to wipe out drug lords financing the Taliban, there's little they can do about insurgents' biggest source of cash: do-gooders.

According to a little noticed report last week, the mullahs and their henchmen are raking in hundreds of millions of dollars - some say a billion - annually by shaking down foreign organizations and contractors building schools, roads and bridges across the struggling nation.

It's a racket The Sopranos would love: In exchange for a hefty "fee," local Taliban commanders provide "protection" on a project, allowing construction to go forward unmolested.

The Pentagon's Dodgy Plan to Kill Drug Lords

| | Comments (0)

Killing off Afghanistan's drug lords sounds like a nifty idea -- as good as any in the 72 years since Congress outlawed marijuana in the United States.

As presented in the New York Times on Monday, the Pentagon plans to hunt down and kill or capture 50 Afghan drug kingpins supporting the Taliban.
 
It's a very good time, in other words, for the drug lords to switch sides.
Even to a public long grown jaded by ballyhooed drug busts, the roundup of more than 750 alleged traffickers and over 23 tons of narcotics in an operation targeting Mexico's notorious Sinaloa Cartel demands respect.

Fifty-two people were arrested today in California, Minnesota and Maryland as part of Operation Xcellerator, which has targeted the North American tentacles of one of Mexico's most powerful and vicious drug organizations, the Justice Department and Drug Enforcement Administration announced Wednesday.

Has Washington Run Out of Patience with Hamid Karzai?

| | Comments (0)

The grumbling about Afghan President Hamid Karzai has grown so loud you'd think the Obama administration has given up on him.

Indeed, you could almost hear the knees knocking in Karzai's embassy here when incoming Obama officials met privately during inauguration week with at least two Afghan politicians who would like to replace the president.

With the war going badly, criticism has grown of Karzai's seeming tolerance of endemic corruption in his government, which threatens to turn Afghanistan into a narco-state, if not grease the return of the Taliban to power.

Could his days be numbered?

CIA Station, Algeria: The Stranger

| | Comments (0)

North Africa can make outsiders do queer things. The beating heat, the blinding sun, the crushing torpor, the bumping, odiferous bodies in the souk -- these things can stretch and snap a Westerner's tether to his world.
 
Or so it was in "The Stranger," Albert Camus's iconic portrait of one man's existential numbness in Algiers, in which a bored Frenchman kills a local Arab with no real provocation, or remorse. 
Revelations that the CIA misled Congress and the Justice Department about the 2001 downing of a Peruvian plane carrying American missionaries could shake loose still-secret details about another crash in the area two years earlier.

On  July 23, 1999, a U.S. Army surveillance plane went down under mysterious circumstances in the mountains of Colombia near the Ecuador border.

The Defense Department's official investigation said that Army pilot Jennifer Odom lost her way in the darkness amid the high Andes.  But in the weeks leading up to her doomed flight, Odom had confided to her husband, an Army colonel, that she and the crew of intelligence technicians in the back of her plane, who were supposedly eavesdropping on narcotraffickers, had been "lit up" by radar missiles in the jungle.

As I wrote for Salon.com in July 2000, that led the couple to suspect that the intelligence crew were not targeting drug kingpins, as she had been led to believe, but Marxist guerrillas fighting the Colombia government.  Over time, the two became indistinguishable. 

But the reason for covering up important details about her death, her husband, Col. Chuck Odom, told me, was that the U.S. was far more deeply involved in Colombia's civil war than publicly acknowledged, with "hundreds of Special Forces people running all over the country."

And there were other sinister factors in the mystery: Jennifer Odom reported to Col. James Hiett, the top U.S. counter-narcotics official in Colombia. 

It would later emerge that Hiett and his wife had been corrupted by the drug lords. He was helping her launder the proceeds of her cocaine smuggling through the U.S. embassy with the help of his chauffeur.

All this was unknown to Jennifer Odom, who had been planning her surveillance flights with Hiett. 

Hiett was under investigation, but according to later reports he was being tipped off by the investigators. Until then-U.S. Customs Director Ray Kelly (now chief of the NYPD) blew the whistle, the Army was planning to dispose of the case quietly

Their arrest five months after Odom's death left her family wondering whether Hiett or other U.S. officials responsible for sensitive drug interdiction missions could be trusted.

"Jennifer briefed Hiett on her mission on July 14," her grief-stricken mother, Janie Shafer, told me. "Nine days later the crew was dead." 

Chuck Odom, who has struggled to get to the bottom of the case for almost a decade, could not be reached for comment Thursday. 

In the Peru case highlighted today by Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., the CIA recklessly downed at least 10 aircraft suspected of carrying narcotics over the South American country. 
The Washington Post's Joby Warrick reported

"As part of a joint U.S.-Peruvian anti-drug program that began in the mid-1990s, CIA officers helped Peruvian air force pilots identify aircraft suspected of carrying illegal drugs through the country's airspace. The program had succeeded in bringing down numerous suspected planes when, in April 2001, a Peruvian pilot mistakenly shot into a small plane carrying U.S. missionaries. Two of the Americans on board, Veronica 'Roni' Bowers and her infant daughter, Charity, were struck by bullets and killed. The pilot, although wounded, managed to land the plane. Bowers's husband and their 6-year-old son were not injured."

According to the agency's inspector general, CIA managers covered up the problems and knowingly gave false accounts to government officials investigating whether agency employees committed crimes, Hoekstra said.

"These are the most serious and substantial allegations of wrongdoing I've seen in my time on the committee," said Hoekstra, whose western Michigan district was home to two of the Americans killed in the 2001 incident.

A CIA spokesman said agency director Michael V. Hayden is looking into the matter.

Heroin Killing U.S. Effort in Afghanistan

| | Comments (0)

Barack Obama sounds almost Rumsfeldian when he talks about a couple brigades -- about 7,000 troops -- being enough to save our bacon in Afghanistan. The Pentagon says it wants three, which also could turn out to be far from adequate.

Currently there are 36,000 U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan, including 17,500 serving with the U.S.-led NATO coalition and another 18,500 conducting training and counterinsurgency operations.

By comparison, in the 1980s the Soviet Union had from 80,000 to 104,000 troops in-country at any one time over its 10-year, ultimately futile occupation, during which time it built a 300,000-strong Afghan army in a losing effort to fight the U.S.-backed mujahideen.

But in light of new revelations on Afghanistan, comparing the U.S. campaign to the Soviets' may be less apt than harking back to the American experience in South Vietnam, where high-level official corruption negated the effort of over a half million troops and tens of thousands more civilians in the late 1960s.

Writing yesterday in the New York Times Sunday Magazine, the State Department's former number two anti-drug official, Thomas Schweich, described U.S. efforts to counter the cultivation of poppies -- which make heroin -- as stymied by the Pentagon, which has  resisted getting involved in the drug war, and Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his cronies, who have bought the loyalty of the drug lords by letting them turn their turf into the world's leading heroin source. 

"A lot of intelligence -- much of it unclassified and possible to discuss here -- indicated that senior Afghan officials were deeply involved in the narcotics trade. Narco-traffickers were buying off hundreds of police chiefs, judges and other officials. Narco-corruption went to the top of the Afghan government. The attorney general, Abdul Jabbar Sabit, a fiery Pashtun who had begun a self-described "jihad against corruption," (said)  he had a list of more than 20 senior Afghan officials who were deeply corrupt -- some tied to the narcotics trade. He added that President Karzai -- also a Pashtun -- had directed him, for political reasons, not to prosecute any of these people."

Problem: The main growth of poppy farming is in provinces where the Taliban dominate, filling their coffers.