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The Russian deep state claims he’s a softy. Once he’s gone, the hardliners will take over.
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Erdogan is full of surprises.
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I am working on setting up my own Farcast Hub or at least trying to.
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Finally, New York City is being littered with Arab Coffee and Tea Cafes. About time one can get a decent cup of coffee or tea. Otherwise, it was just barren land with these lame boutique style coffee shops.
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With pistachio and almonds or just pink?
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10/10 The CIA’s 1980s drug war legacy still haunts the region. Afghanistan remains unstable, Pakistan struggles with narco-politics, and the heroin trade continues. A stark lesson in how covert wars can create long-term crises that outlive their original goals.
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8/10 By the late 80s, Afghanistan & Pakistan were the top heroin suppliers worldwide. As the CIA wrapped up its war, it left behind a thriving drug trade that had entrenched corruption, funded warlords, and created lasting instability in the region.
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9/10 Fast forward to 2001: After 9/11, the U.S. returned to Afghanistan, allying once again with warlords—many of whom had enriched themselves through drugs. By 2007, Afghan opium production hit 8,200 tons, fueling both the insurgency and criminal networks.
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7/10 The U.S. knew Pakistan’s generals were profiting off drugs. In 1984, VP George H.W. Bush visited Islamabad and publicly praised Zia’s anti-drug stance—while privately ignoring intelligence that Pakistani officials were involved in heroin trafficking.
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5/10 The CIA turned a blind eye. A 1986 U.S. State Dept. report acknowledged opium was financing the war, but officials admitted stopping the drug trade was “not a priority.” Convoys carrying CIA weapons into Afghanistan often returned to Pakistan loaded with opium.
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6/10 The Pakistani military, led by Gen. Zia-ul-Haq, was deeply complicit. The ISI oversaw heroin labs along the Afghan border, while Pakistan’s National Logistics Cell—run by the army—allegedly moved drugs alongside arms shipments.
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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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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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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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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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If anyone is interested in following Pakistani politics via military dictatorships then subscribe to frametheglobenews.com (it’s free).
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Portuguese churrasco with rice, fries, and hot chilli oil is another banger.
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Where is Türkiye headed in this game of geopolitical chess between the East and West. https://www.frametheglobenews.com/p/turkiyes-looming-geopolitical-dilemma
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My publication’s views on the Egypt Gaza plan. https://www.frametheglobenews.com/p/egypts-53-billion-gaza-reconstruction
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I wrote on my substack about the fall of the Roman Empire, the conquests of the Vikings, and the passing of Pax Americana. https://open.substack.com/pub/leightonwoodhouse/p/the-fall-of-rome?r=sm4k&utm_medium=ios
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