Abstract

The post-cold war world has become susceptible to multiple non-traditional security threats that are no less formidable than the traditional security threats. Drug trafficking poses one such serious non-traditional security threat for contemporary Eurasian space and drug abuse provides its fuel. Not only do the drugs destroy the very fabric of human resource in a region where trafficking operates and thereby reduces communities to hollow card-boxes but also such trafficking generates loads of dirty money, which fosters the growth of non-state actors engaged in subversive activities. This paper argues that in the wake of the fall of the erstwhile Soviet empire, the entire Central Asia region has become a hotbed of such non-traditional security threats which is being primarily nourished by an enormous demand for drug abuse in Russia.

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