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US, China clash over international fentanyl coalition

July 7, 2023

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has told some 80 countries that the drug fentanyl is likely to spread further than the US. Washington at least partly blames China, which did not attend the meeting.

https://p.dw.com/p/4Tb6f
Two homeless addicts share a small piece of fentanyl in an alley in Los Angeles, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2022.
Fentanyl started out as a pharmaceutical heavy duty painkiller and sedative but it and its variants found their way to the streets Image: Jae C. Hong/AP/picture alliance

The US on Friday called on dozens of countries to work together to combat synthetic drugs, but China declined an invitation to attend.

Blinken: Cartels have 'saturated' US market

Blinken told representatives of 84 countries at a virtual conference in Washington on Friday that the US had been a "canary in the coal mine" for the opioid, but that an international "coalition" combating synthetic drugs' spread was necessary as cartels set their sights further afield. 

"Having saturated the United States market, transnational criminal enterprises are turning elsewhere to expand their profits," Blinken said. 

"If we don't act together with fierce urgency, more cities around the world will bear the catastrophic costs" witnessed in the US, he said. 

South Korean Foreign Minister Park Jin said that COVID-19 showed the need for global coordination on emerging epidemics, including drugs. 

"We once prided ourselves as a drug-free country. Yet today we are witnessing a significant increase in drug consumption, especially among our youth," Park said. 

A poster titled "Lost voices of fentanyl" shows a series of young deceased fentanyl users' pictures. New York, June 3, 2022.
Fentanyl is one of the leading causes of death in young adults under the age of 45 in the US; in 2021 it trailed only accidents, claiming more lives than suicideImage: John Marshall Mantel/ZUMA Press/picture alliance

What is fentanyl and what is the China link? 

Pharmaceutical fentanyl is a recognized heavy duty medical painkiller and sedative that can be many times more potent than morphine.

It's typically used to treat patients in severe discomfort such as late stage cancer patients, or possibly in emergency rooms.

It's approved for medical use around most of the world but is usually not available over the counter.  

However, it's also highly addictive and variants of the drug can be more so. The US outlawed several variants of fentanyl as "Schedule 1" drugs in 2018 and there have been pushes to widen the restrictions. 

Overdose deaths from the drug had been rising steadily in recent years. Almost 80,000 people died from opioid-related overdoses in the US in 2022, according to the Centers for Disease Control, fewer than a record tally of more than 100,000 in 2021. Fentanyl is now thought to be the most common overdose contributor in the US. 

A poster titled "Lost voices of fentanyl" shows a series of young deceased fentanyl users' pictures. New York, June 3, 2022.
Fentanyl is one of the leading causes of death in young adults under the age of 45 in the US; in 2021 it trailed only accidents, claiming more lives than suicideImage: John Marshall Mantel/ZUMA Press/picture alliance

Addicts often mix fentanyl with other narcotics like heroine. 

The US at least partly blames China for fentanyl's continued presence in the US, although Beijing agreed to stop all exports of the drug in 2019 and carried out some operations in partnership with the US in light of how addictive it and its variants were.

China still exports the precursor materials to Central America and countries like Mexico, where cartels produce fentanyl and then smuggle it across the US border

Fentanyl, America's silent killer

China declines invitation, accuses US of 'smears'

China did not attend Friday's conference in Washington, seemingly criticizing the US for sanctions recently imposed on Chinese companies over fentanyl. 

Beijing said that it was open in principle to international cooperation on narcotics trade but that it was up to the US to "create necessary conditions" for anti-drugs cooperation, following complaints from Washington that Beijing has ignored its calls for a crackdown. 

China takes an "active part in international anti-narcotic cooperation and firmly opposes smears and unilateral sanctions on other countries under the pretext of fighting against drugs," Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said at a daily briefing. 

"We urge the US to correct wrongdoings with concrete actions and create necessary conditions for the two countries' anti-narcotic cooperation," he said. 

The US Justice Department late last month filed criminal charges against four Chinese companies and eight individuals accused of trafficking the chemicals used to make fentanyl in the United States and Mexico. 

But Washington and Beijing are also at odds over a number of issues, such as Taiwan — contacts were cut on an array of issues following House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's Taipei visit last year and have only been partially restored — and sanctions against China's defense minister, military general Li Shangfu.

Close up of two hands holding a small vial of fentanyl
Roughly 80 are aiming to cooperate more to stop the spread of various synthetic drugsImage: TNS/ABACA/picture alliance

US argues solution must be multinational

China is the world's chief producer and exporter of fentanyl precursor materials, but Blinken on Friday did implicitly acknowledge it could not be held solely responsible for the drug's presence in the US, saying this was also the reason cooperation would prove essential. 

"When one government aggressively restricts a precursor chemical, traffickers simply buy it elsewhere," he said. 

Another US official, Todd Robinson, had also sought to strike a conciliatory tone. The US assistant secretary for international narcotics and law enforcement said the US would welcome China's participation in future meetings and hoped the other countries would reach out to Beijing. 

"Part of the reason we're trying to bring this coalition together is to engage countries in their efforts against these supply chains, and part of their responsibility is going to be engaging with the PRC," he said, in reference to the People's Republic of China.  

What happens next? 

Members of the coalition are planning to meet in person in September on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, Blinken said. 

The new grouping also aims to address other synthetic drugs including captagon, the amphetamine-like stimulant that has seen a surge of use in Arab countries including Saudi Arabia, which participated in Friday's meeting. 

The drug's production and export has become a core industry in war-torn Syria. 

msh/jcg (AFP, AP, Reuters)