Afghanistan is, by far, the largest grower and exporter of opium in the  world today, cultivating a 92 percent market share of the global opium  trade. But what may shock many is the fact that the US military has been  specifically tasked with guarding Afghan poppy fields, from which opium  is derived, in order to protect this multibillion dollar industry that  enriches Wall Street, the CIA, MI6, and various other groups that profit  big time from this illicit drug trade scheme.
Prior to the  tragic events of September 11, 2001, Afghanistan was hardly even a world  player in growing poppy, which is used to produce both illegal heroin  and pharmaceutical-grade morphine. In fact, the Taliban had been  actively destroying poppy fields as part of an effort to rid the country  of this harmful plant, as was reported by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on February 16, 2001, in a piece entitled Nation's opium production virtually wiped out (http://news.google.com/newspapers?n...).
But  after 9/11, the US military-industrial complex quickly invaded  Afghanistan and began facilitating the reinstatement of the country's  poppy industry. According to the United Nations Drug Control Program  (UNDCP), opium cultivation increased by 657 percent in 2002 after the US  military invaded the country under the direction of then-President  George W. Bush (http://www.infowars.com/fox-news-ma...).
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