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The Geopolitics of Afghani Hash
Afghanistan was once known for producing world-class
hashish. What does the future hold?
by Pete Brady
Afghanistan was once known for producing world-class
hashish. What does the future hold?
In
the middle of the night, in mountains northwest of Kabul,
Afghanistan, where American bombs and missiles have fallen like
acid rain, a young man named Mahmoud is arranging a shipment of
precious, psychoactive agricultural merchandise.
Impoverished Afghanistan, home to 25 million oppressed people,
demonized and flattened by war, lacking permanent water
supplies, surrounded by hostile neighbors who shut out its
refugees, has long been an important source of quality cannabis
products. India, Iran, Pakistan, Kashmir, Nepal, Afghanistan and
most other nations in this region have marijuana traditions that
span centuries and embody the highest arts of cannabis
production, processing, and consumption.
Mahmoud's cargo is one of the last shipments of Afghani hashish
to leave the country before September 11, 2001. His commodity is
a five hundred pound collection of hashish slates. The
individual slates, about the size of a book, are
chocolate-colored on the outside, reddish brown on the inside,
wrapped in plastic and tape, weighing between 250 and 800 grams
each.
The resin powder used to produce them was gathered from short,
tenacious Indicas grown in isolated semi-arid areas in
Afghanistan. Some of the powder is collected and formed into
hashish in Afghanistan, but the Afghan powder is also processed
in regions of Pakistan such as Kurram, Orakzai and Tirah.
The slates are then dispatched on an odyssey that may take them
through Tajikistan and Russia, or through Pakistan and India.
The shipment might travel via caravan through tribal areas,
headed for Baluchistan, where it will exit Pakistan into Iran.
It might also travel through Central Asian republics.
Eventually, after the slates have been transported and handled
by a variety of methods, including mules, camels, trucks, and
intermediaries, they arrive in Europe, primarily to be sold in
Dutch coffee shops for six to eight US dollars per gram.
Today's Afghani hash is considered a mid-grade product, slightly
inferior to primo traditional hashish from Morocco, Nepal,
India, and Europe. It is only about 40% as potent as the newest
types of hashish, such as Ice-O-Later, Nederhash, and Bubblehash,
that are made using technology and modern quality control that
results in a far purer product than can be produced by farmers
and processors in desert countries like Afghanistan.
 |
| Dutch
nerderhash |
Yet, during the 1960's and early 70's, Afghani hash was
considered the best available. Cultivation of squat, rugged,
phat-leaved Indica plants, which cannabists now call "Hindu
Kush," "Afghani," and "Hashplant"
became prevalent during this era; some ethnobotanists say
Afghanistan's earlier cannabis farmers mostly grew Sativa
varieties.
According to cannabis pioneer Wernard Bruining, who created
Holland's first coffee shop nearly 30 years ago, Western hippies
collected Afghan marijuana seeds and spread them across the
world in the 1970's, most notably to Northern California, where
the seeds became genetic precursors for many of today's most
popular cannabis cultivars.
"People who we call ‘the early Skunk pioneers' were
experimenting with these Afghani seeds," says Bruining,
whose Positronics seed bank was one of the earliest to offer a
large menu of international marijuana seeds. "Afghan plants
were highly sought after because they grew fast and short, were
hardy, and produced huge tops full of resin. Some of them had
the characteristic skunky smell and powerful body high that now
identifies varieties known as ‘Skunk.'"
Afghani hash was known for its sticky, resiny, unadulterated
color and texture, its sweet, tangy taste, and its narcotic,
dream-inducing high. Before US anti-drug pressure changed
Afghanistan's cannabis policies in 1974, super-potent
connoisseur hashish was available at teahouses inside
Afghanistan, and as exported fingers, sticks, hooves, half
moons, slabs and bricks that had a wide array of colors, tastes,
and cannabinoid profiles.
Foreign cartels, including drug networks from North America,
purchased tons of Afghan hashish and resin powder, using the
substances to produce and market what came to be known as
"honey oil," a highly-refined, amber-colored fluid
that was often two to three times as potent as hashish.
Farmers in many parts of Afghanistan used primitive methods such
as hand irrigation and fertilization techniques to produce resin
glands for the burgeoning industry. It's not easy work, because
most of the country is barren desert, with marginal soils,
inadequate and unpredictable water supplies, dry, hot summers
and harsh winters.
Huge fields of cannabis, surrounded by huts, barns and other
buildings where resin powder was stored and processed, were seen
near the southern city of Kandahar, in Central Afghanistan, and
around the north-central city of Mazar-i-Sharif.
As this article is being written, US forces are using aerial
bombardment and ground troops against Afghan Taliban government
strongholds in Kabul, Kandahar and Mazar-i-Sharif. It may well
be the first time that a global war machine has attacked a city
that is so linked to marijuana that it has a variety of
marijuana named after it – as advertised in the Marc Emery
seed catalog, "Mazar-i-Sharif" is a potent Afghani
crossbred with a classic "Skunk #1" variety.
 |
| Morrocan
oil hash |
Hash bashed
The modern history of Afghanistan is permeated with cannabis and
conflict. The British ran the country for decades before they
were kicked out in 1919, but the country was relatively stable
during the reign of King Mohammad Zahir Shah, a pro-cannabis
monarch who governed Afghanistan from 1933 until he was
overthrown by a jealous relative in 1973.
According to reports from US spy agencies and Afghan sources in
Holland, the King offered armed protection and horticultural
advice to marijuana growers, encouraging them to increase their
yield with modern fertilization techniques. The ruler's top
aides were allegedly involved in overt hashish smuggling. DEA
officials even allege that the King's private jet was used to
smuggle tons of hashish to Italy and other European countries.
After King Zahir Shah was deposed, the US began sabotaging the
Afghan cannabis industry, beginning a series of intermittent
drug wars in Afghanistan. The US paid Afghan governments
millions of dollars to eradicate cannabis crops and hash
producers beginning in the mid-1970's. The elimination of ganja
farming and hashish production cost lives and money, spurred
production of opium poppies, and plunged a poor country further
into poverty, and also resulted in numerous human rights
violations.
By the time the country was invaded and occupied by the Soviet
Union in 1979, the Afghan cannabis industry was a mere shadow of
what it had been. Mediocre commercial Afghan hash, like the kind
that Mahmoud smuggles, is still exported, but the glory days,
when American pot pilgrims viewed Afghanistan as Mecca, are long
gone.
For those who don't know the historical context of the Soviet
occupation of Afghanistan, it's instructive to note that the US
used to consider communism, China, and the Soviet Union (now
called Russia) as its most dangerous enemies. Today, President
Bush woos China – despite its abysmal human rights record –
and proclaims former KGB leader Vladimir Putin (who was deemed a
mortal enemy of the US when Bush's father was head of the CIA)
to be a "good man" and an ally in the war against
Afghanistan.
In 1979, the US, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia (a country often
accused by the US of sponsoring terrorism), trained and funded
Islamic fundamentalist "freedom fighters," generally
known as the mujahadin, instructing them to use merciless
guerrilla tactics and terrorism to kill large numbers of Russian
soldiers and civilians. Like many of the insurgents that the USA
has employed or assisted, the mujahadin were known producers and
smugglers of illegal drugs, using sales of hashish and heroin to
augment other funding for their war against Russia.
This situation has analogies in Yugoslavia, where the US went to
war two years ago to support the goals of the Kosovo Liberation
Army (KLA), even though the KLA is one of the world's biggest
heroin trafficking organizations (CC#19, Kosovo
Drug War).
It's also similar to a situation in Southern California in the
1980's, as outlined in the book Dark Alliance, when the CIA, DEA
and other government agencies helped right-wing agents smuggle
tons of cocaine into America, so that the profits could be used
to fund the Nicaraguan contra rebels (CC#07, Coo-coo
cocaine corruption, CC#20, Exposing
CIA corruption).
Papa
poppy
Hounded and humiliated by the mujhadin, the Russians fled
Afghanistan in 1989, leaving their soldiers' blood and thousands
of live land mines behind. Mujahadin factions fought amongst
themselves for control of the war-ravaged country; the
ultra-fundamentalist Taliban won the power struggle and
established a theocratic government in Afghanistan in 1996.
The Taliban relied on the drug trade for funding. In 1999, 79%
of the world's opium poppy cultivation took place in
Afghanistan. The Taliban also encouraged domestic production of
heroin; United Nations officials claim that 95% of the heroin
that reaches Europe comes from Afghanistan.
Taliban leader Mohammad Omar recently tried to appease drug
warriors by waging war against domestic poppy producers. Last
May, the US gave the Taliban $43 million, congratulating them
for supposedly eliminating 90% of the country's opium poppy
cultivation in the previous growing season. Intelligence sources
say that 225,000 acres of poppies were cultivated in 1999, but
only 19,000 acres were cultivated during the 2001 poppy season.
Three years of drought almost certainly contributed to the
alleged decrease in cultivation, but whatever anti-poppy
progress has been made is likely to be reversed: the war on
Afghanistan has resulted in Afghan poppy farmers getting the
go-ahead from the Taliban to again increase cultivated acreage.
US anti-drug officials allege that the Taliban uses heroin as a
terrorist weapon. They claim that massive heroin stockpiles
inside Afghanistan are being shipped to Europe at cut-rate
prices, and that Osama Bin Laden had unsuccessfully tried to
create a super-strong form of heroin, called "Tears of
Allah," that would spread throughout the West like a
biological weapon, causing instant addiction and death.
Yet if the US is really serious about its drug war, it's
puzzling to see that it is now using the Northern Alliance, one
of the mujahadin factions that worked with the US and the
Taliban to defeat the Soviet Union, to defeat the Taliban. US
forces are working in concert with the Northern Alliance as it
tries to take key cities. US officials refer to the Northern
Alliance as allies. Yet, these "allies" are heavily
involved in hashish and heroin production and marketing. Last
year, the only parts of Afghanistan that saw an increase in
poppy cultivation and heroin production were those controlled by
the Northern Alliance.
The perils, contradictions, and ironies of the drug war are
starkly outlined by US policy failures in Afghanistan. Almost
two decades ago, the anti-drug US government hired drug
producers and smugglers to do its dirty work against the
Russians. The people that George W Bush now refers to as
"the evil ones" were at that time called "freedom
fighters" by president Ronald Reagan, and by Bush's father,
who was then vice president. While Reagan and Bush revved up the
domestic and international drug war, they turned a blind eye to
the drug trade and brutalities of their allied Afghani freedom
fighters.
During the 1990's, the US government overlooked the Taliban's
involvement in terrorism in order to enlist it as a paid ally in
the drug war. The US also worked to decrease hashish trafficking
carried out by the Northern Alliance. Now that the US has
declared that the Taliban must be vanquished by the Northern
Alliance, it has gone silent about the Northern Alliance's
involvement in drug running. The US has also intimately allied
itself with Pakistan, another country that until recently was
condemned by the US for harboring terrorism, nuclear weapons,
and drug smugglers.
Officials also acknowledge that the US wants to overthrow the
Taliban and reinstall King Zahir Shah, who is now 86 years old
and living in Italy, to the Afghan throne that he lost in 1973.
If the former King is reinstalled, will the US allow him to
again implement his cannabis-friendly policies in Afghanistan?
Freedom
for Afghanistan
The US government knows that the Northern Alliance uses the
profits it makes from selling heroin and hashish to fund its war
against the Taliban. This profit chain includes marketing of
Northern Alliance hashish to Dutch coffee shops. At the end of
the clandestine "pipeline" that brings Afghan hash to
Holland are coffee shop owners who pay about $4000 per kilo for
the Alliance's product.
In the intersection of commerce, politics and cannabis created
by the illegal system that provides marijuana products for the
Dutch retail market, Afghan hash is perhaps the only cannabis
commodity imprinted with a revolutionary slogan. In gold
letters, stenciled on the hardened brown crust of each slate,
are the words "Freedom for Afghanistan," or
"Freedom of Afghanistan." These slogans are the
calling cards of the Northern Alliance.
There's a lot of worry about Afghan hash in Holland these days.
Most coffee shop owners, even those who consider themselves
hashish specialists, are scared to associate their name with
quotes about such hash. Some Dutch cannabists assume that the
Afghan hash trade provides funding for the Northern Alliance's
fight against the Taliban, others suspect that all factions in
Afghanistan export hashish and heroin.
"Buying slates of Afghan hash from the Alliance is a very
direct way to fund the Alliance's fight against the Taliban,"
one shop owner asserted. "If we want to fight terrorism,
the best thing we can do is buy Afghan hash."
Another coffee shop owner said that he bought hash marked with
Alliance slogans, "even though it is a slower seller and
costs more than I think it is worth."
"The only politics I ever thought about in this business is
that the more marijuana we sell the more money we make and the
more popular our products are," the owner said. "Now I
am seeing that there might be bigger things than that. Like, if
we buy our hash from somebody, is that person using the money to
make bombs, or to ship heroin, or to support Afghan farmers?
Should I always turn a blind eye to the politics and morals of
the people I get my supplies from? A lot of them are sleazy.
They're real criminals. They probably bring in things other than
hash, like guns and harder drugs. I don't know quite what to
do."
Some American "patriots" who posted opinions on
Internet sites about the geopolitical ethics of Holland's coffee
shop industry after September 11 think they know what Dutch
marijuana businesspeople should do: the American posters called
for a boycott of many varieties of hashish, especially those
from Morocco, Lebanon, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Afghanistan,
alleging that buying hashish from those countries was tantamount
to supporting terrorism.
The head of the US Drug Enforcement Administration, a
born-again, right-wing Christian fundamentalist named Asa
Hutchinson, recently said that buying illegal drugs supports
terrorism and that the war on drugs is a war on terrorism. The
newly-created US Office of Homeland Security echoes internal
drug war efforts which have encouraged Americans to spy on and
inform on each other. The Office advises Americans to report
neighbors who are quiet, who do not fit in, who express
progressive sentiments. Under special war powers and
anti-terrorism laws rushed through Congress and the executive
branch after September 11, the government can act on citizens'
tips by secretly searching homes, secretly monitoring emails and
phone communications, using bugging devices without a search
warrant, and detaining people without arresting them and without
probable cause.
Some American marijuana users have convinced themselves that
these new government powers will be used only against Muslim
suicide bombers and their allies, but the government definition
of terrorism has included not just the fanatic Bin Ladens of the
world, but also environmentalists, anti-globalization activists,
and civil rights advocates.
The American commentators who alleged that buying "Middle
Eastern" hashish helped terrorism advised Europeans to buy
local hashish, or to make their own. A few Dutch shops
reportedly removed some varieties of hash from their menus in
response to the postings.
 |
| l to r:
Indian Black, Nepalese Temple Ball, Bubblehash |
Crumble and smoke
Dutch coffee shop owner and marijuana activist Nol Van Schaik
provided the Afghan slates pictured in this article. Van Schaik,
who owns three marijuana shops and a cannabis museum in Haarlem,
Holland just outside Amsterdam, said that boycotting hashish to
protest terrorism was a stupid idea.
"If the Northern Alliance are the people on the ground who
are going to defeat the Taliban, people who want to defeat the
Taliban should buy as much of their hash as they can," Van
Schaik said, slicing open an Afghan slate covered in red
cellophane. "It's a patriotic duty to buy their hash.
Boycotting hash doesn't make sense. A lot of the hashish we get
comes from Hindu or secularized countries. And even if hashish
is produced by Muslims, that doesn't mean that the proceeds
support terrorism. Are all Muslims terrorists? People who
believe that are racists."
Van Schaik says hashish should be viewed strictly as a
psychoactive commodity subject to market pressures. He says that
supply and demand will govern the production, price and
availability of hash, and cites the example of Lebanon, which
accepted US drug war money 15 years ago and used it to destroy
its thriving Bekka Valley hashish industry.
Cannabis farmers went broke because the Lebanese government and
its drug war allies failed to provide compensation to those who
lost income due to the crackdown on cannabis cultivation and
hash production. Last year, the farmers rejected the drug war
and again planted crops of hashplants in the Lebanese desert.
This year, Holland is seeing the first shipments of the
legendary Lebanese product in more than a decade.
Van Schaik crumbles some of the Afghan hash into a Dutch joint,
and lights it. The revolutionary hash has a distinct flavor and
produces a formidable high, but it is nowhere near as potent or
pure-tasting as gold-colored Moroccan primero that he had smoked
with me the day before.
 |
| l to r:
Afghani chunk (from intro pic) sliced, Ice-o-lator hash
(background: wet/unpressed) |
As I networked the back alleys of the Dutch pot industry
searching for information about Afghan hash, I found a Muslim
who admitted to being involved in the smuggling of hashish into
Holland. He told me about Mahmoud, bribing military, police,
civilians and government officials in several countries, and
about the political-economic implications of the hash trade.
"Afghanistan people like hashish," the man said.
"They have special rooms and pipes to smoke it. It's not
all just to sell here. You can go to special markets and shops
to buy it, especially near the border with Pakistan."
The man said that Afghan hash had lost its formerly sterling
reputation because it was now a conglomeration of resin powders
from different types of plants, screened through relatively
large bore screens, held together by binders like honey, animal
fat, or tree sap.
"It is still stronger and better than marijuana, gram for
gram," the man said. "It has a little dust in it from
the winds, but it is a flower of the desert. With this war, we
might not be able to get any here for a long time."
The man seemed sad and cynical when I asked him about the
effects of war on Afghanistan and Afghan hashish. The US had
just announced plans to bomb poppy fields, and the man worried
that cannabis plantations could also be hit.
"It's a tribal country that people make fun of because they
don't understand it," he said. "The Taliban were good
at killing communists, but they are bad at running the country.
The Northern Alliance isn't any better. Bin Laden's family is
friends with Bush's family. They've all worked together in the
past, and then they start hating each other. Who knows what is
really going on? The big countries always like to use our
country as a target practice. The holy men who smoke hashish say
that all of them are wicked people. It doesn't matter. If we
survive the winter and the snows come, there will be more
cannabis planted next year. There will be more Afghan hashish to
smoke in Holland." |
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