Coalition troops have seized $30 million worth of heroin
intended for sale on Iraqi streets by rebel cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's militia,
the former commander of the 9,000-strong Polish force in south-central
Iraq says. Their customers are mainly Iraqi civilians, but officials do not rule out that some of the drugs have reached coalition troops. Marijuana and hashish also are readily available across Iraq. A U.S. defense official says he is not aware of drug use by U.S. forces in Iraq. "The bitter realism is that there are 130,000 young people over there, and there have been incidents of indiscipline. I haven't heard of any involving drugs, but you can't rule out that possibility." Gen. Bieniek, whose area of responsibility spanned south-central
Iraq from Saudi Arabia on the west to Iran on the east, said most of the
heroin was coming across the porous borders from both neighbors. "We've got some Afghan mujahideen coming in," Gen. Bieniek said. Forces under his command seized at least 60 vehicles illegally crossing from Iran into Iraq. Under former dictator Saddam Hussein, the border with Iran was protected by six battalions of armed and trained police. Today, two battalions are guarding the boundary, Gen. Bieniek said. In a slide presentation at the American Enterprise Institute, the commander showed a photograph of the confiscated heroin carefully laid out in bags. The drug cache has been burned. Gen. Bieniek commanded the Polish-led multinational troop contingent from January through July of this year. Despite a mandate to establish security and stability, his forces never managed to do that. "We are still in the combat zone," he said, facing daily threats and attacks from multiple fronts, including foreign fighters, al Qaeda-linked terrorists, militant Muslims, criminals and former Ba'athists. "Every day and every night, we faced such kinds of
threats," he said, illustrating the peril with photographs of soda-can
bombs, suicide-bomb vests, roadside explosive devices, confiscated weapons
and ammunition. Gen. Bieniek, who studied in California and at Sandhurst, the British military academy, previously served in Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Western Sahara and the Golan Heights. He said he was restrained in Iraq by the limits on his mandate and by other nations' forces under his command. His forces could participate in offensive operations with U.S. troops, but he was not authorized to use his own forces to begin offensive combat operations. Fighting an enemy that used civilians as cover also proved difficult, he said. "They did not respect any rule of law. They would attack from behind a crowd. It was brutal, unconventional war ... but we did everything we can to avoid civilian losses." Iraqis "would sometimes want to use us as a shield,
or be angry at us. [The question always was] to shoot them or allow them
to kill my soldiers. You must have a choice. There is no choice in that
situation." To date, the Iraqi national security forces "in terms of numbers are OK, but in terms of quality, there is still a long way to go." In Washington, Gen. Bieniek met with Pentagon officials, including Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Copyright © 2004 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. graphic, thanks to Cooper 4 Prez |