$8.5 Billion U.S. Counter Narcotics Effort in Afghanistan Boosts Opium Production

Via Judicial Watch

The U.S. government’s multi-billion-dollar effort to counter narcotics in Afghanistan is a humiliating failure that’s resulted in a huge increase in poppy cultivation and opium production. Despite the free-flow of American tax dollars to combat the crisis, opium production rose 43% in the Islamic nation, to an estimated 4,800 tons, and approximately 201,000 hectares of land are under poppy cultivation, representing a 10% increase in one year alone.

Uncle Sam’s embarrassing counter narcotics effort is part of a broader and costly failure involving the reconstruction of Afghanistan. More than $100 billion have been dedicated to help rebuild the war-torn country and much of it has been lost to waste, fraud and abuse not to mention corruption. The drug initiative is a recent example, documented by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) in a quarterly report to Congress. The document is painful to read because it goes on for 269 pages, but Judicial Watch created a link for the counter narcotics section, which is around 19 pages and includes informative charts, graphs and the latest available statistics.

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As of December 31, 2016, the United States has spent an astounding $8.5 billion for counter narcotics efforts in Afghanistan since 2002, the report reveals, making it clear that the cash will continue flowing. “Nonetheless, Afghanistan remains the world’s leading producer of opium, providing 80% of the global output over the past decade, according to the United Nations,” SIGAR writes. The watchdog includes statistics from the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) confirming a 10% increase in the amount of Afghan land that was under poppy cultivation between 2015 and 2016. Despite Uncle Sam’s generosity, poppy eradiation results were the lowest this decade, the watchdog states. “No eradication took place in the biggest opium-growing provinces because of the grave security situation,” the report reveals, noting a steady rise in production and cultivation in the past decade. “Eradication efforts have had minimal impact on the rise in illicit opium cultivation.”

This, of course, translates into a large increase in opium production—43% in a year—the watchdog reveals, to an estimated 4,800 tons. “The reported production increase reflected the larger area under cultivation, higher yields, and lower eradication results.” Part of the problem, U.S. authorities say, is that between 2.5 and 3 million Afghans are drug users and the country lacks sufficient treatment centers to address the growing drug-abuse problem, particularly for women and children. American cash hasn’t put a dent on that problem either. A State Department branch known as the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) doled out $12.9 million in 2015 for drug treatment and education programs in Afghanistan and has allocated millions more despite past failures. INL also funds a scandalous, multi-million-dollar program called Governor-Led Eradication (GLE) that pays provinces for the cost of eradicating poppies. Between 2008 and 2016 INL disbursed $4.6 million, according to the SIGAR.

Afghanistan reconstruction has been a huge debacle that continues fleecing American taxpayers. Judicial Watch has reported on the various boondoggles over the years, most of them documented in tremendous detail by the SIGAR. Highlights include the mysterious disappearance of nearly half a billion dollars in oil destined for the Afghan National Army, a $335 million Afghan power plant that’s seldom used and an $18.5 million renovation for a prison that remains unfinished and unused years after the U.S.-funded work began. Among the more outrageous expenditures are U.S. Army contracts with dozens of companies tied to Al Qaeda and the Taliban. The reconstruction watchdog recommended that the Army immediately cut business ties to the terrorists but the deals continued. Another big waste reported by Judicial Watch a few years ago, involves a $65 million initiative to help Afghan women escape repression. The government admits that, because there’s no accountability, record-keeping or follow-up, it has no clue if the program was effective.

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19 Comments
monger
monger
February 10, 2017 9:44 am

“No eradication took place in the biggest opium-growing provinces because of the grave security situation,”

ahaa, like security concerns would stop aerial defoliation….

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
February 10, 2017 9:45 am

Wow and I thought I was the only man in America that made the connection between my countries meddling in Afghanistan and the extreme increase in heroin on our streets ! You must accept the war on drugs is nothing less than a self perpetuating federal jobs program set up to bleed the taxpayer ! Legalize it tax the sale of it “ALL OF IT” ! And save trillions ! Counseling treatment is cheap compared to the present results plus you take the money out of the criminal efforts so is it a war on drugs or the taxpayer ? Once again a bloted federal agency would have to lay people off and they can get $15 per hour part time as a security guard. At WALMART ! All our government wonks think that’s a good salary so come on all you federal employees show us how much you really care

Persnickety
Persnickety
  Boat Guy
February 10, 2017 11:52 am

Gee, if I was really totally crazy, I might think that rogue elements of the US government were involved in opium and cocaine smuggling, that the “war on drugs” is merely a profitable way to create a police state, and that the US economy runs in large part on the drug trade, both illegal and technically legal (big Pharma)…

That sure would be crazy talk wouldn’t it. Glad I’m not saying that or hearing any of it.

aguila2011
aguila2011
  Persnickety
February 10, 2017 11:47 pm

President Trump, please stop this insanity right now! This is sad, so sad, it is depressingly sad. Please fix this! Please. You can use your pen to fix this insanity and it is better than a wall.

PatrioTEA
PatrioTEA
  Boat Guy
February 11, 2017 6:51 pm

The efforts for at least the past 8 years have been to do damage to this country & support/reward those who do it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 10, 2017 10:12 am

I think most of the time when our government gets involved in solving a problem, any problem, the problem gets worse.

PatrioTEA
PatrioTEA
  Anonymous
February 11, 2017 6:53 pm

BINGO!

Pieter in ZA
Pieter in ZA
February 10, 2017 10:31 am

Anyone who thinks we were trying to reduce opium production is a fucking moron. The Taliban banned it. We went in there to get it running again.

Persnickety
Persnickety
  Pieter in ZA
February 10, 2017 11:50 am

Meh. The Taliban only banned it because they had a huge stockpile in their warehouses and wanted to drive the price up. They were/are drug dealers too.

Which is not to say that the US coalition is actually TRYING to stop cultivation…

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 10, 2017 10:40 am

Why are we in Afghanistan?

starfcker
starfcker
  Anonymous
February 10, 2017 11:00 am

We are in afghanistan to turn tax money into corporate profits. Mission accomplished

Philip Arlington
Philip Arlington
  starfcker
February 11, 2017 10:53 am

That may be happening too, but it makes things sound more organised than they really are. Bush II invaded out of braggacio and the main reason for staying is that no-one in power has the guts to admit that the intervention is an utter failure.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
February 10, 2017 2:20 pm

How much of that $8.5 billion is being spent to import and distribute heroin by the CIA/MIC?

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
February 10, 2017 4:28 pm

The U.S. army is protecting and transporting it to the distribution centers.

We also control the cocaine business. Besides funding black ops it lines the coffers of the U.S. Senate. We don’t tolerate free lancing scabs.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
February 10, 2017 5:21 pm

Must be a braindead NeoCon on here voting down all of our comments on something that can be known by anyone wanting to know.
Whoever you are I bet you believe building 7 imploded itself out of empathy for the others.

TMH
TMH
February 11, 2017 7:29 am

I have pounded into my 5 kids for their entire lives that you cannot fix government – it is inherently damaged, corrupt, and the most inefficient conveyor of your economic well being and the only way to fix government is to limit the money given to government!

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
February 11, 2017 7:42 am

Our government is not ours any more

Anon
Anon
February 11, 2017 10:11 am

“Our” Government never was, and never intended to be. Thomas Jefferson saw that, so did the other founding fathers. That is why they attempted put so many checks and balances in place. That is also the purpose of the 2nd amendment. They knew, from seeing the British system, that the Government is always us and them. The difference was supposed to be that, in this country, when the “them” got too big for their britches, the gun toting citizens had a responsibility to “water the tree of liberty with the blood of patriots and tyrants”.
The problem is that once the industrial world grew up, we got lazy, and slowly allowed the government to pay us (new deal) to be complacent. Now, we are to the point where watering the tree would be a complete civil war, and even then, we may just get a worse tyrant.
It is OUR own fault unfortunately.
As mentioned above, the war on drugs is a massive money laundering and make work program for black ops and shadow government contractors / operators. They can make huge sums to fund their private wars and have no accountability to anyone. And everyone in power is either too pussified or too compromised to do anything about it.

Pitchman
Pitchman
February 12, 2017 6:25 pm

This historic account is inspired by George Webb’s investigation, “DynCorp, Haiti, and Me. Who Killed Monica Petersen?” The open-source, data-driven, investigation has a new moniker.

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On September 10th 2001 Donald Rumsfeld held a news conference to tell the public the Pentagon could not account for $2.3 trillion that apparently had fallen into the couch of defense spending. The next day a ‘plane’ slammed directly into the DOD Budget Analyst Office in the Pentagon. Later in 2005, during a 2006 defense budget hearing, U.S. Representative Cynthia McKinny, questioned Donald Rumsfeld about the missing funds and specifically about DynCorp’s contracts, when she pointedly asked,

“Mr. Secretary is it the policy of the US government to reward companies that traffic in women and little girls?” (see video below)

A year earlier Catherine Austin Fitts identified DynCorp as the manager of numerous U.S. agency budgets and their covert operations, doing so with the use of PROMIS software. PROMIS, or Palantir, the latest incarnation, is used to manage the Deep State’s off the books Black Budgets within Americas Defense, Intelligence, Homeland security, and Diplomatic agencies.

Today those missing Pentagon funds have grown to $6.7 Trillion and may be as high as $9 Trillion.”

“DynCorp, Haiti & Me: Will Trump Drain the Swamp? This is How We’ll Know”

https://notionalvalue.blogspot.com/2017/01/dyncorp-haiti-me-will-trump-drain-swamp.html