enhanced_deficit
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- Mar 17, 2013
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Fast shifting aspects of the story of the end of 20 years old war/occupation, couple of unrelated stories breaking in google news today:
Taliban vow to ban heroin, but can they survive without it?
france24
U.S. and I.M.F. Apply a Financial Squeeze on the Taliban
Most of the Afghan central bank’s reserves are frozen at the Federal Reserve. And the International Monetary Fund will block more than $400 million in aid.
Taliban vow to ban heroin, but can they survive without it?
france24
"We are assuring our countrymen and women and the international community, we will not have any narcotics produced," Mujahid told reporters in Kabul.
"From now on, nobody's going to get involved (in the heroin trade), nobody can be involved in drug smuggling."
U.S. and I.M.F. Apply a Financial Squeeze on the Taliban
Most of the Afghan central bank’s reserves are frozen at the Federal Reserve. And the International Monetary Fund will block more than $400 million in aid.
nytimes.com/2021/08/18/business/afghan-central-bank.htmlA crowd gathered to withdraw money this week from a bank in Kabul, Afghanistan.Credit...Kiana Hayeri for The New York Times
By Eshe Nelson and Alan Rappeport
Aug. 18, 2021
Despite the chaotic end to its presence in Afghanistan, the United States still has control over billions of dollars belonging to the Afghan central bank, money that Washington is making sure remains out of the reach of the Taliban.
About $7 billion of the central bank’s $9 billion in foreign reserves are held by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the former acting governor of the Afghan central bank said Wednesday, and the Biden administration has already moved to block access to that money.
The Taliban’s access to the other money could also be restricted by the long reach of American sanctions and influence. The central bank has $1.3 billion in international accounts, some of it euros and British pounds in European banks, the former official, Ajmal Ahmady, said in an interview on Wednesday. Remaining reserves are held by the Swiss-based Bank for International Settlements, he added.