US Funded the Biggest Drug Cartel in the World
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VIDEO
Let's talk about heroin. Um, so you write, "Afghanistan after 8 years of US occupation was now producing nine times more heroin than the rest of the world combined." And of course that bled over into the Afghan population. Uh the Afghan National Army was filled with addicts as you write. Um um but then the alliance between in essence these uh uh in the Northern Alliance and everywhere else uh essentially drew in members of these special forces. Explain So Afghanistan under US occupation produced more than more heroin than the entire world could absorb. And the truth around this phenomenon I think is one of the bestkept secrets of the 21st century. And the lack of awareness uh in the general population among Americans is really astonishing. But it's not a surprise their ignorance has been procured by the mass media and the government which is hiding this sort of crime of the century. As I sometimes think about it, the um the 2000s and the 2010s were a time of a global heroin crisis around the world. In the United States uh as it's recent memory, people are well aware that we had a terrible heroin crisis in this country. It became uh nearly the leading cause of death among adults. and then of course morphed and transformed into the fentinel epidemic which is with us today and has never been worse than it is right now. Well, the cause of that heroin crisis was down to the war in Afghanistan. The war in Afghanistan caused the heroin crisis globally in Europe, in Russia, in Australia, in Asia, uh and also in Canada and in the United States. All of these countries, all these uh countries that have um you know that are either first world or have a large market for drug users were inundated with high highly potent and very very cheap heroin from Afghanistan during this time and it's just supply and demand. when there's that much of it becomes a lot cheaper. In the United States, people whose um opiate addiction have been primed by loose prescribing practices around prescription pills found that they could buy heroin for a lot cheaper than they could get, let's say, some percoet pills that have been uh diverted from the elicit drug market. And the dirty secret that no one in in government or media bothered to tell us all these years was that the people in Afghanistan that were producing that drug those drugs, they were people on the US payroll. They were they were um narco warlords that were that were directly armed, sponsored, and protected by the CIA and the special forces. Uh and that complicity went all the way up to the top of the corrupt Afghan client state Carzai and his family in particular. um you know the the they were definitely implicated in it and many other uh named warlords you know I have their names in the book and the site the sources that I cite to demonstrate for a fact that this government this client government in Afghanistan was effectively you know the biggest drug cartel in in world history and the fact that the United States the whole of the United States government was complicit in this is really mind-boggling to contemplate and um not enough people are aware of it in my So let's talk about how these special forces operators use the skills that they have learned uh and become drug dealers. Um you profile I think his name is Huff former state trooper um uh and then maybe Losas I mean so you train these people are highly trained uh and they take those skills into the drug market. talk about that process. I mean, the amount of of heroin that was coming uh the Fort Bragg area, there was a small airport near Fort Bragg that you write about was kind of staggering. I mean, uh uh just massive amounts and much of it was funneled through uh not just former members of special forces units, but active members of special forces units. Mhm. Yeah. That airport, the Rafford drop zone, um or that PK Air Park it's sometimes called, that's a privately owned business. And if I told a lie about them being involved in and their that institution, that facility being involved in international drug trafficking, they could turn around and sue me for defamation really quickly. But the facts are clear. The facts are nailed down. their criminal prosecutions that have either taken place or that have been fully adjudicated uh show that that airport is which is where Delta Force does its uh parachute training has been a hub of international drug trafficking since the 1980s and involving current or former special forces soldiers trafficking drugs into the United States by air and landing them and offloading them in this um this airport that's within Fort Braggs airspace and is contiguous with the base um and has been a center of Delta Force training for decades. Um most recently the the um manager of that airport, a guy named Tim Faker, whose father Jean Thcker was an OG Green Beret who was the sort of the pioneer of this illicit enterprise. Tim Faker, the son was convicted relatively recently uh of methamphetamine trafficking and was said by North Carolina prosecutors to have been uh the biggest meth trafficker in that state's history. That's just one story I tell about systemic drug trafficking taking place in the special forces, you know, around Fort Bragg. And um, you know, to answer your question or to elaborate a little bit more, I think um, it often has to do with that need for stimulation that I talked about. Sometimes these guys aren't necessarily doing it for money. Like you said, they have a certain skill set, this irregular warfare skill set, this attitude, this mindset of um, doing things secretly and getting away with it. Uh that's something that tends to port over relatively easily to the drug trade. And Billy Lavine in his memoir that he wrote that I obtained after my book was published um he talks about specifically this about how as he started to get into the drug game um and started meeting higher level drug traffickers, they were very interested in his background and understood that his skill set was something very valuable to him. and he became an adviser to the cartel helping them do things uh like understand police surveillance because of course as a Delta Force operator he understood these things very very well what the cap uh and um limitations were of um surveillance how it works and how to evade it and also he was helping them traffic drugs by air from Central America into the United States uh including through the use of um uh cargo uh like dropping uh dropping drug cargo with parachute from a plane either either without a person or accompanied by a parachute jumper. I mean, this is the tactic that has used at the airport and in this community since the 1980s. They will fly drugs in from overseas and they will jump out with it and uh into some of the national forests around North Carolina or Tennessee or Georgia um and uh and maybe come back for it later or what have you. But that's the that's the game that they're playing at Fort Bragg. It's been going on for a long time. And whenever it comes to light, it tends to get um passed over or actively covered up by the military
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