
History
of Heroin 1.)
Dominant Trend: Over the space of some three millennia, opium spread from its
home in the eastern Mediterranean to China, creating an extended Asian opium zone.
For the first time in recorded history, opium became a recreational drug in the
cities of Mughal India. 2.) Implication:
The persistent role of opiates as folk medicine and recreational euphoric for
nearly 4,000 years raises questions about the chances of effecting its eradication
in the near future. b.) Early European
Opium Trade (1640-1773): 1.) Dominant
Trend: In this period, there was a shift from a limited trade in opium though
intra-Asian networks to an expanding European commerce that stimulated both supply
and demand. Working separately, European mercantile companies commercialized both
opium cultivation and commerce, making it the basis of a profitable long distance
trade in low-weight, high-value goods. 2.)
Implication: During this era, opium's extraordinarily profitability, combining
the constant demand of a staple with the high price of a luxury, becomes manifest.
As an addictive drug, opium requires a daily dose giving it the inelastic demand
of a basic foodstuff. Long distance sea-trade in bulk foods was still beyond the
capacity of the era's maritime technology, but opium had the low weight and high
mark-up of luxury goods like cloves or pepper. Compounding its profitability,
the Chinese emperor prohibited opium in 1729, thus denying China the opportunity
to produce opium and inadvertently conceding British merchants a de facto monopoly
over the trade. c.) European Mercantilism
(1773-1858): 1.) Dominant Trend: Under
the doctrine of mercantilism, all successful European colonial ventures in Asia
involved commercialization of drugs in some form--caffeine, nicotine, or opiates.
This 18th century trade transformed these drugs from luxury goods into commodities
of mass consumption, making them integral to the economies and lifestyles of both
Asian and Atlantic nations. Within the monopolistic logic of mercantilism, the
British East India Company achieved the highest profits from its export of Indian
opium to China because, from 1773 to 1830, its strong controls over key aspects--production,
export, and sales. 2.) Implication:
From the late 18th century onward, opium became a major trade commodity. Under
the British East India Company (BEIC), centralized controls accelerated the export
of Indian opium to China--from 13 tons in 1729 to and 2,558 tons in 1839. d.)
High Imperial Opium Trade (1858-1907): 1.)
Dominant Trend: During the latter half of the 19th century, opium became a major
global commodity. Across the Asian opium zone, from the Balkans to Manchuria,
there was a steady increase of local opium cultivation and consumption. Moreover,
in the latter half of the 19th century, the modern pharmaceutical industry made
opiates a drug of mass abuse in the cities of the West--Europe, the Americas,
and Australia. 2.) Implication: By the
early 20th century, opium and its derivatives, morphine and heroin, had become
a major global commodity equivalent in scale to other drugs such as coffee and
tea. e.) Multilateral Control (1907-1940):
1.) Dominant Trend: Within the Protestant
churches of England and America a moral reaction to the excesses of a market-driven
expansion of drug abuse inspired a global anti-opium movement in the late 19th
Century. For the first time in the modern era, the anti-opium movement, in alliance
with the larger temperance crusade, succeeded in winning new laws from the state
restricting the individual's control over the body. With the passage of the Harrison
Narcotics Act in 1914, the American state, for the first time, imposed the force
of law over the right to use or abuse the body as the individual saw fit. Through
a complex diplomacy from 1909 to 1925, the League of Nations adopted restrictions
on the recreational use of heroin and opium that produced a major drop in legal
production. 2.) Implication: The
prewar attempt at multilateral controls over narcotics had a mixed result. Although
repression did reduce both production and consumption, the high profits inherent
in the opiates traffic remained to sustain criminal syndicates which now acted
as an unintended market response to limit state control over the drug trade.
Despite all these considerable drawbacks, multilateral controls do have their
successes. Through these efforts, the constant, century-long upward trajectory
in drug abuse was finally broken, and, for the first time since the 18th century,
both use and production began to decline. World opium production dropped from
41,600 tons in 1907 to 16,600 tons in 1934, while licit world heroin production
fell sharply from an 20,000 lbs. in 1926 to only 2,200 lbs. in 1931.
f.)
War & Transition (1940-1947): 1.)
Dominant Trend: During World War II, restrictions on shipping and strict port
security produced a marked hiatus in global opium trafficking. Denied illicit
opiates from Asia, the United States drew limited supplies of low-grade heroin
from Mexico that failed to meet even a fraction of consumer demand. By the end
of the war, the US addict population had dropped to an historic low of some twenty
thousand. Once smuggling resumed after the war, however, the US addict population
resumed the habit. 2.) Implication:
Under extreme circumstances, a reduction in drug supply can lead to a sudden,
albeit ephemeral, decrease in consumption.
g.) Cold War Opium Expansion (1948-1972):
1.)
Dominant Trend: The Cold War brought major changes to the world's illicit opium
traffic. The Communist victory in China eliminated the world's major opium market
within a decade, removing the globe's major producer and consumer of opiates from
the market. Although the Asian opium zone contracted geographically, Cold War
geo-politics, combined with illicit market forces, stimulated a steady increase
in opium production in the remaining area, which now stretched from Turkey to
Thailand. Supplied by the Asian zone, other markets--particularly in the
United States and Iran--expanded their consumption of opiates steadily during
this period. 2.) Implication: External
intervention in the remote tribal areas along the Asian opium zone contributed
to the rise of drug lords and their armies, allowing them to position themselves
for a massive expansion of local opium production. By providing arms, logistics,
organization, and political protection, external alliances created the preconditions
for a later leap in opium production in Burma and Afghanistan. h.)
US Bilateral Suppression (1973-1979): 1.)
Dominant Trend: Although repression disrupted the global heroin trade for several
years, over the longer term Nixon's drug war stimulated both opium production
and heroin consumption. Ignoring these lessons, the Reagan and Bush administrations
later pursued parallel policies in Latin America with dismal results. In essence,
all three drug wars extended a local law enforcement model into the international
arena in a way that failed to reduce either drug production or exports. Stimulated
in part by three US drug wars, Asian opium production increased from 1,000 tons
in 1970 to 4,000 tons in 1989.
2.) Implication: When law enforcement is applied to such an elaborate commerce,
drug syndicates usually react in ways not foreseen by enforcement agencies. Treating
this global commodity trade as if it were a localized vice, U.S. drug agencies
often apply repression without any awareness of the intricate dynamics of these
worldwide marketing systems. For both legal and illicit commodities, a crop failure
in one production zone--whether from war, drought, or disease--creates a shortage
of supply and raises the price for producers elsewhere, stimulating increased
production in the next crop cycle.
i.)
Increase in Asian Zone (1979-1989): 1.)
Dominant Trend: For the first time in opium's history, highland drug lords began
to act as independent entrepreneurs, responding creatively to market opportunities
for their product. In Burma, for example, opium production increased exponentially
from 550 tons in 1981 to 2,500 in 1989, in large part through the efforts of leading
warlords like Khun Sa. Similarly, the emergence of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar as the
dominant rebel leader in Afghanistan created a parallel figure of power who could
control much of the country's opium production, heroin processing, and export.
2.) Implication: The capacity of powerful
opium warlords in Burma and Afghanistan to both produce and export has had a growing
influence on Western heroin markets--sending vast new supplies of Burmese heroin
to America and giving the Sicilian mafia a major new role as brokers for South
West Asian heroin to Europe and the United States. j.)
Global Proliferation of Opium (1989-1994): 1.)
Dominant Trend: In the early 1990s, heroin recovered its historic preeminence
as a leading illicit narcotic and became something of a "world" drug.
Expansion of established opium areas in Burma and Afghanistan, combined with introduction
of the crop into Central Asia and Latin America, led to a steady increase in world
supply. Increased opium harvests have led to a dramatic proliferation of heroin
abuse around the globe--a phenomenon so vast that we can speak, without hyperbole,
of a "globalization" of heroin consumption. Paralleling the rise of
use in established consuming regions, heroin abuse shot upward in new areas of
Europe and Asia. 2.) Implication: World
opium supply is growing without any apparent restraint. Since all opium produced
is always consumed, rising supply is now a powerful force driving a sharp increase
in world heroin consumption, creating insatiable demand for the drug, not seen
since early 19th Century China, that may, in turn, yield further production increases
in Latin America or Central Asia. top
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