‘There was no fear anymore’: The tiny pill that makes Syrian combatants such superhum

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
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‘There was no fear anymore’: The tiny pill that makes Syrian combatants such superhuman fighters



The al-Qaida veterans, hardened Iraqi insurgents, Arab jihadist ideologues and Western volunteers in Syria and Iraq are fuelled by an overlapping mixture of ideologies and political agendas. But experts suspect they’re also powered by something else: Captagon.

A tiny, highly addictive pill produced in Syria and now widely available across the Middle East, its illegal sale funnels hundreds of millions of dollars back into the war-torn country’s black-market economy each year, likely giving militias access to new arms, fighters and the ability to keep the conflict boiling, according to
the Guardian.

“Syria is a tremendous problem in that it’s a collapsed security sector, because of its porous borders, because of the presence of so many criminal elements and organized networks,” the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNDOC) regional representative, Masood Karimipour, told Voice of America. “There’s a great deal of trafficking being done of all sorts of illicit goods — guns, drugs, money, people. But what is being manufactured there and who is doing the manufacturing, that’s not something we have visibility into from a distance.”

A powerful amphetamine tablet based on the original synthetic drug known as “fenethylline,” Captagon quickly produces a euphoric intensity in users, allowing Syria’s fighters to stay up for days, killing with a numb, reckless abandon.


“You can’t sleep or even close your eyes, forget about it,” said a Lebanese user, one of three who appeared on camera without their names for a BBC Arabic documentary that aired in September. “And whatever you take to stop it, nothing can stop it.”

“I felt like I own the world high,” another user said. “Like I have power nobody has. A really nice feeling.”

“There was no fear anymore after I took Captagon,” a third man added.



Captagon has been around in the West since the 1960s, when it was given to people suffering from hyperactivity, narcolepsy and depression, according to a Reuters report published in 2014. By the 1980s, according to Reuters, the drug’s addictive power led most countries to ban its use.

The United State classified fenethylline (“commonly known by the trademark name Captagon”) as a Schedule I drug
under the federal Controlled Substances Act in 1981, according to the National Criminal Justice Reference Service.

Still, the drug didn’t exactly disappear. VOA notes that while Westerners have speculated that the drug is being used by ISIL fighters, the biggest consumer has for years been Saudi Arabia. In 2010, a third of the world’s supply — about seven tons — ended up in Saudi Arabia, according to Reuters. VOA estimated that as many as 40,000 to 50,000 Saudis go through drug treatment each year.

“My theory is that Captagon still retains the veneer of medical respectability,” Justin Thomas, an assistant professor of psychology and psychotherapy at the UAE’s Zayed University and author of “Psychological Well-Being in the Gulf States,” told VOA in 2010. “It may not be viewed as a drug or narcotic because it is not associated with smoking or injecting.”

Five years later, production of Captagon has taken root in Syria — long a heavily trafficked thoroughfare for drugs journeying from Europe to the Gulf States — and it has begun to blossom.

“The breakdown of state infrastructure, weakening of borders and proliferation of armed groups during the nearly three-year battle for control of Syria, has transformed the country from a stopover into a major production site,” Reuters reported.

“Production in Lebanon’s Bekaa valley — a traditional centre for the drug — fell 90% last year from 2011, with the decline largely attributed to production inside Syria,” the Guardian noted.

Cheap and easy to produce using legal materials, the drug can be purchased for less than $20 a tablet and is popular among those Syrian fighters who don’t follow strict interpretations of Islamic law, according to the Guardian.

You’re awake all the time. You don’t have any problems, you don’t even think about sleeping, you don’t think to leave the checkpoint. It gives you great courage and power. If the leader told you to go break into a military barracks, I will break in with a brave heart and without any feeling of fear at all — you’re not even tired
Doctors report that the drug has dangerous side effects, including psychosis and brain damage, according to the BBC.

Ramzi Haddad, a Lebanese psychiatrist, told Reuters that the drug produces the typical effects of a stimulant.
“You’re talkative, you don’t sleep, you don’t eat, you’re energetic,” he said.

But one secular ex-Syrian fighter who spoke to the BBC went further, saying the drug is tailor-made for the battlefield because of its ability to give soldiers superhuman energy and courage:

“So the brigade leader came and told us, ‘this pill gives you energy, try it,’ ” he said. “So we took it the first time. We felt physically fit. And if there were 10 people in front of you, you could catch them and kill them. You’re awake all the time. You don’t have any problems, you don’t even think about sleeping, you don’t think to leave the checkpoint. It gives you great courage and power. If the leader told you to go break into a military barracks, I will break in with a brave heart and without any feeling of fear at all — you’re not even tired.”

Another ex-fighter told the BBC that his 350-person brigade took the pill without knowing if it was a drug or medicine for energy.

“Some people became addicted to it and it will damage the addicts,” he said. “This is the problem.”

source: ‘There was no fear anymore’: The tiny pill that makes Syrian combatants such superhuman fighters | National Post
 

Machjo

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Oct 19, 2004
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We should not allow refugees into Canada until either they can prove no addiction or at least that they have learnt to control their addictions. This could mean forcing addicts through a thorough detox before letting them in.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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The OP is misleading as it is imported into Syria rather than being manufactured there and then sold worldwide while fighting a war with real bullets and bombs. This isn't Disney-land so act accordingly.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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No. refugees.

If IS fighters are addicts, then is it not reasonable to conclude that some civilians might also have had access to the drug?
Think how good they would be driving a combine, harvest in 'one run'. When you have somebody with way too much energy you give them a task that requires a lot of energy. Next it will be promoted that poppies in Afghanistan are there for the same reason they are growing in Flanders Field. That is probably where the factory is, perhaps in a cave like this one.


If you take some then you are better off taking them all as keeping them in a group means they can all get the same brain washing at the same time and by the time they catch on they are ready to live without wearing a tracking collar. Their tractor can get one too.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Yeeeeeeah. They control the country where money and food is hard to come by but regular Joe Syrian has access to IShole dope.
 

MHz

Time Out
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Help create users rather than creating a production facility. Cooking lab in every tank wouldn't even be a 'safe place'. More like gulp 6 so you can jog all night and be 30 miles closer to safety in the morning.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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If they are addicts then 'we' can't just cut them off and then claim we are helping them. Enough to keep them calm for the remainder of their natural life and their children educated in why they shouldn't keep that tradition alive past that generation.

You were the one that suggested homesteading as the solution, well I know a place that is classified as 'useless except for recreation and natural areas' and you could fit 25,000 people there and they would still need to use the phone to hear the nearest one.
The area along Hwy 40 between GP and GC is 90 miles in a straight line, you can also go 60 miles to the east before you are 'off the property'. Just across the 1st river and to the north is a gravel/clean sand that is an island surrounded by a fresh water swamp. Mix the peat with the sand and that works as topsoil for roots. Sand alone has a layer of vines as the ground vegetation. There is enough high ground that you could build a community on that ground and then start to develop the wet areas. Farther away would be the various recreational sites such as the 3 mile long southern exposure along the Smokey River that would be for mobile trailers that could see use 12 months of the year. The natural waterpark created by the river would need some landscaping the 1st winter with some dozers and then you have a 'flood-plain' that can hold 1,000 people without being crowded, the banks are at least 1k deep so there is room for expansion. Tourism would replace produce from 'the field'. (chapter 11teen)
Than you, . . . come again.