Man’s knowledge of Narcotics
and alcohol dates back to the days of the ancient Egyptians and Greeks.
They have been used by people for personal and ritualistic purposes since
before the birth of Jesus Christ. For strictly utilitarian purposes, they
have been seen as a human necessity to enhance pleasure, calm down human
nerves or reduce the suffering from the endless toil and anguish it
sometimes takes to sustain human life. Many religions, especially Islam,
have long prohibited the use of intoxicating products, because they tended
to diminish the ability to reason and to degrade man’s innate common
sense. The reasoning behind the prohibition was that compromised judgment
would lead to an inability to distinguish between what was right and what
was wrong.
Which brings me to the opium
trade and the worldwide commerce in all its derivatives, including heroin.
Opium is the byproduct of poppy seeds (Khashkhash) an eatable delicacy in
South Asia. Poppy seeds are still used in preparing bread and different
curry dishes. When the British landed on the shores of India, they almost
immediately realized the commercial importance of poppy seed and its
byproduct and started exporting it to China. The Chinese fast became the
world’s largest consumers of the drug and the British were more than
willing to quench the Chinese appetite for the drug. Indeed they regarded
the opium trade as a strategic commodity in much the same way that
post-war America came to view oil as strategic commodity.
Since the English had a
monopoly of the Indian opium trade, the Americans who wanted a piece of
the Chinese opium market sent out agricultural delegation to Afghanistan
to secure their own source of the valuable opium poppy. They would assist
the Afghans in cultivating the poppy and buy back the crop at lucrative
prices. A deal was struck and virtually the entire Afghan poppy crop grown
in Afghanistan found its way to China, courtesy of American know-how.
The British and Americans went
to war to protect their opium franchise in China. Indeed, the opium wars
against Chinese nationalists who tried to ban the trade are one of the
most immoral chapters in colonial history. It was enforced slavery by use
of opiates. It is worth noting that some of the most distinguished
American families took part in this trade, including the Astors.
Over the last century, the
Chinese have risen from their opium induced stupor and are now a super
power that demands and gets respect in the West. Ironically, in a strange
reversal of fate, over the last few decades the dreaded opium traders have
found their biggest markets in America and Europe. So much so, that an
American General serving with NATO recently identified drug use as a major
National Security problem that effects as many as 40% of American forces.
Regardless, of the source of opiates, they seem to find their way to
American shores where wealthy drug consumers are willing to pay a premium
for a fix.
It should therefore come as no
surprise that America has intensified a very well publicized war on drugs
in Columbia and Afghanistan. What is hard to explain is America’s
unwillingness to confront another major source of opiates, India, the home
of some of the largest opium plantations in the world.
One would like to believe that
when it comes to the opium trade, American governments would not
differentiate their drug war strategy based on overtly political
considerations. Yet in South Asia, America’s initiatives and policies
against the opium trade seems to be unevenly focused on Afghanistan and
Pakistan. While there is major traffic in narcotics from India, the
anti-narcotics cops seem to write up citations only for Pakistan and
Afghanistan. One only needs to consider the amount and quality of
cultivable land available in Afghanistan compared to India, the economic
isolation of Afghanistan and the fact that the Taliban are vehemently
against the drug trade, as is the Pakistani government. India’s massive
industrial trade with the West allows a vast network that facilitates the
undetected flow of drugs.
India is the largest
cultivator of opium and the largest exporter of Acetic Anhydrite, a
substance used to process opium into heroin. Other South Asian countries
actually import opium and Acetic Anhydrite from India. Nepal is now a
major source of opiates. All the ingredients of the opium trade have
reached Nepal by way of India, including the raw material, the chemicals,
the technical expertise and the marketing channels. With the exception of
the Americans, everyone seems to know the score in Nepal, including the
Nepalese leaders who see it as a major threat to the well being of their
country.
Americans, who introduced
intensive opium cultivation to Afghanistan, need to take a fresh pragmatic
look at the real shakers and movers in the South Asia drug trade. A new
generation of South Asians and Americans are becoming victims to opium
derivatives like heroin. The Indian government needs to be called to task
for not reigning in the heinous opiate trade.
Over the centuries the
motivation for trading in opium have remained constant. The greed of the
opium trader and the need of the opium addict drive the opium market. That
equation has not changed since Britain and America were force feeding
opium to the Chinese masses. Like any other business, the larger the
investment, the greater the profits. Americans should realize that as long
as there are huge profits from opium on the Indian side of the border, the
trade will not stop. As long as the Indians and Americans involved in the
drug business are reaping rewards on their opium investments, the heroin
will continue to flow to American veins. As long as American drug
consumers sustain a market for the drugs, some drug pusher is going to try
to provide the goods.
For purely political
considerations, it has been tempting for the Americans to single out
Afghanistan and Pakistan. If the new American administration is serious
about his war on drugs, they will need to pay more attention to the Indian
front. It took a Chinese revolution to finally win the opium wars. America
needs to reconsider its policies in combating the opium trade in South
Asia.