U.S. General Expects Record Poppy Crop in Afghanistan
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

KABUL, Afghanistan — The American general in charge of NATO’s Afghanistan mission said Wednesday he expects another year of “explosive growth” in the country’s poppy fields, a harvest militants will turn into weapons for use against Afghan and NATO troops.
General Dan McNeill said NATO commanders in Europe have told him to step up the counternarcotics fight this year, “and I will.”
“The money associated with poppy and opiate production continues to appear to be very good,” General McNeill told a news conference. “So without pressure or incentives or dissuasion to keep people from growing it, I expect the amount grown next year to increase.”
After a record haul in 2006, Afghan farmers increased opium production some 34% in 2007. Afghanistan last year produced 93% of the world’s opium, the main ingredient in heroin. Its export value was estimated at $4 billion.
General McNeill, the commander of the 39-nation International Security Assistance Force, recalled being shown a photo of a man and his two boys — both under age 10 — scraping the resin out of poppies in western Afghanistan.
“When I was the age of those boys I remember two things my father taught me: One was to fish … to this day I am still a pretty good fisherman. He also taught me to use hand tools. To this day, I can make a piece of furniture,” he said. “If these two boys live as long as I do … what are they likely to do with the skills they learn at that age?”
NATO’s leaders in Brussels have made clear, General McNeill said, that he is to use the current ISAF mandate to its fullest extent “to help the people of Afghanistan rid themselves of this scourge, and that will be our intent.”
He made clear that NATO will not be involved in eradication of poppies from the fields, but could bear down on drug growers and dealers connected to the insurgency.
Links between drug growers and insurgents have been suspected to be growing in recent years. Proof of that was made clear when Afghan and NATO forces last month recaptured from militants the town of Musa Qala in Helmand province, the world’s largest poppy-growing region.