Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07USNATO315
2007-05-18 15:21:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Mission USNATO
Cable title:  

ONDCP DIRECTOR WALTERS' MAY 8 COUNTERNARCOTICS

Tags:  NATO PREL MOPS MARR SNAR AF PK 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 USNATO 000315 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/16/2017
TAGS: NATO PREL MOPS MARR SNAR AF PK
SUBJECT: ONDCP DIRECTOR WALTERS' MAY 8 COUNTERNARCOTICS
DISCUSSIONS AT NATO HQ

Classified By: Deputy Chief of Mission Richard G. Olson, for reasons
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 USNATO 000315

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/16/2017
TAGS: NATO PREL MOPS MARR SNAR AF PK
SUBJECT: ONDCP DIRECTOR WALTERS' MAY 8 COUNTERNARCOTICS
DISCUSSIONS AT NATO HQ

Classified By: Deputy Chief of Mission Richard G. Olson, for reasons 1.
4 (b) and (d)


1. (C) SUMMARY. During separate May 8 meetings at NATO HQ
with select Permanent Representatives and Deputy Secretary
General (D/SYG) Minuto-Rizzo, Director of the Office of
National Drug Control Policy John Walters highlighted the
role that security and good governance play in reducing poppy
cultivation in Afghanistan, the link between poppy
cultivation and insurgency funding, and the need for the
international community to do more to bring down the large
traffickers in Afghanistan, who profit from the trade on the
backs of small farmers. PermReps were generally supportive,
but questioned how not to alienate the average Afghan through
eradication, with the Netherlands advocating for providing
alternative livelihoods, and following an Afghan government
lead. The D/SYG commented that the Afghan counternarcotics
strategy had improved over the past few years, but that
corruption and general governing incapacity hampered the
Afghan effort. Both Director Walters and the D/SYG agreed on
the need to harmonize the different, ongoing international
efforts in Afghanistan; the D/SYG noted that NATO's
"comprehensive approach" aims to enable NATO to work more
closely with other international actors. END SUMMARY.


2. (C) Director Walters met with Ambassadors from the
Netherlands, Italy, Lithuania, and Australia, plus Deputies
from the UK, Canada, and Spain in the U.S. Mission on May 8.
He thanked them for their solidarity, and for working to make
a difference in Afghanistan. Pointing to decreases in poppy
cultivation in the north, and troubling increases in the
south, he noted that analysis shows where security and
governance exist, poppy cultivation has been dramatically
decreased. He highlighted a growing consensus that the drug
trade has contributed to financing of the OMF (opposing
militant forces),and explained how the OMF use it as a means

of taxing the local populations, and intertwining their lives
with the trade, so that locals are tied to the OMF rather
than the Afghan government.


3. (C) Looking at where the money from drugs is going in
Afghanistan, Director Walters pointed out that small
farmers are not getting rich, but rather, are actually
victims of larger forces. He urged the international
community to do more to influence the warlords, traffickers,
and corrupt government officials, noting that
a collective effort is needed to pull together the diverse
strands of governance, security, development, and
counternarcotics operations (including eradication). The
Director noted that attitudes within the U.S. military
establishment are changing with regards to counternarcotics,
as the link between drugs and the insurgency becomes clearer;
he urged international military forces to recognize this
link, as well. The Director also pushed back hard against
advocacy by organizations such as the Senlis Council that
recommend purchase of the poppy crop by the international
community, noting that would simply drive subsistence
agriculture out of Afghanistan as the drug barons maxed out
poppy production and reaped record profits. The Director
urged European governments to do more to seek extradition of
trafficking suspects from Afghanistan, noting that the Afghan
legal structure is still too weak to take effective action
against the kingpins and other leaders of the trade, and that
the U.S. has had some successes with this tactic both in
Afghanistan and elsewhere, such as Colombia.


4. (C) The Australian ambassador agreed with the Director's
statements against international purchasing of
the Afghan poppy crop. The Dutch ambassador, while
recognizing the role of eradication in an overall Afghan
counternarcotics strategy, questioned the degree to which
NATO should be involved. He highlighted the need for NATO
and the international community to follow an Afghan lead, and
for aggressive alternative livelihoods programs in areas

USNATO 00000315 002 OF 002


subject to poppy eradication. He drew attention to the need
to eradicate poppy in areas that were not under the writ of
the Afghan government, in order to avoid the perverse effect
of "punishing" loyal provinces, and pushing them toward
Taliban "protection" from government forces. The Italian
ambassador asked what it would take to get local farmers out
of the poppy business, and whether the Taliban had shown
signs of morphing from mainly "tax collectors" of drug
profits, to become more engaged in the trade, as the FARC in
Colombia had done. The Director noted the Taliban appeared
to be largely engaging in tax collection, but highlighted the
additional dangers to Afghan stability should they begin
transforming that role. On getting local farmers out of the
trade, he stressed the need for rural development, and
balancing economic aid with the risk disincentive of law
enforcement and crop eradication.


5. (C) Reinforcing themes addressed earlier with PermReps,
Director Walters focused on international cooperation during
his meeting with the Deputy Secretary General, and asked
D/SYG Minuto-Rizzo for his thoughts on how the
efforts of NATO and the international community were
progressing, and the way ahead. The D/SYG commented that
he was pleased by improvements in the Afghan government's
counternarcotics strategy over the past years. Noting that
"more NATO should mean fewer drugs," he acknowledged the
strong positive correlation between security and reduced
poppy cultivation. Agreeing with the Director's observation
that the international effort in Afghanistan needed better
coordination, the D/SYG pointed to NATO's efforts to codify a
"comprehensive approach," which would enable NATO to work
better with other international actors, to include
organizations as well as NGOs. He highlighted that
Afghanistan was very much a multilateral challenge, with NATO
having an important piece, but not responsibility for the
entire picture.


6. Director Walters party cleared this cable.

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