Troops battle marijuana plants
(Reuters) Updated: 2006-10-16 15:51
Ottawa - Canadian troops fighting Taliban militants in
Afghanistan have stumbled across an unexpected and potent enemy -- almost
impenetrable forests of 10-feet-high marijuana plants.
 Canadian soldiers
patrol in an armored vehicle around fields of corn and marijuana in and
around the village of Kolk in Afghanistan's Panjwaii District in this
handout photo taken September 15, 2006 and released October 12, 2006.
[Reuters] |
General Rick Hillier, chief of the Canadian defense staff, said on Thursday
that Taliban fighters were using the forests as cover. In response, the crew of
at least one armored car had camouflaged their vehicle with marijuana.
"The challenge is that marijuana plants absorb energy, heat very readily.
It's very difficult to penetrate with thermal devices ... and as a result you
really have to be careful that the Taliban don't dodge in and out of those
marijuana forests," he said in a speech in Ottawa.
"We tried burning them with white phosphorous -- it didn't work. We tried
burning them with diesel -- it didn't work. The plants are so full of water
right now ... that we simply couldn't burn them," he said.
Even successful incineration had its drawbacks.
"A couple of brown plants on the edges of some of those (forests) did catch
on fire. But a section of soldiers that was downwind from that had some ill
effects and decided that was probably not the right course of action," Hillier
said dryly.
One soldier told him later: "Sir, three years ago before I joined the army, I
never thought I'd say 'That damn marijuana'."
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