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1/10 The CIA’s secret Afghan war of the 1980s didn’t just fight the Soviets, it helped turn Afghanistan & Pakistan into the world’s heroin capital. A look at how U.S. intelligence fueled the drug trade and backed military dictatorships. 🧵
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FrameTheGlobeNews
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2/10 In 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. The CIA responded with ‘Operation Cyclone,’ pouring billions into funding & arming the Mujahideen via Pakistan’s ISI. What followed was a surge in opium production that transformed the region into a narco-state.
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FrameTheGlobeNews
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3/10 Afghan opium output jumped from 100 tons in the 1970s to 2,000 tons by 1991. By the mid-80s, Afghanistan-Pakistan heroin supplied 60% of the U.S. market, 80% of Europe’s. This flood of drugs created a heroin epidemic in Pakistan, where addiction rates soared.
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FrameTheGlobeNews
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4/10 The ISI, Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency, controlled the CIA’s arms pipeline. Many of its favored Afghan commanders, like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, became drug lords, using CIA-supplied weapons & funds to dominate the heroin trade.
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