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Until now, responsibility for dealing with the problem has lain with the Afghan police, but NATO commanders believe the fledgling force cannot cope with the problem. They say the time has come for NATO to move against the drug barons. Some allies were concerned that a counter-narcotics campaign could spark a backlash against their troops, even if, as NATO commanders insist, the campaign will not target farmers who depend on growing opium poppies for a living. They also feared that widening the mission could over-stretch the hard-pressed troops and undermine NATO's long-term goal of handing more responsibility to Afghan forces. NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer on Thursday stressed the need for action. "Our guys are killed by the weapons bought by the Taliban, financed by drugs money," de Hoop Scheffer said.
[Associated
Press;
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