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Feature: US Gives Up on Eradicating Afghan Opium Poppies, Will Target Traffickers Instead

Submitted by Phillip Smith on (Issue #592)

Thousands of US Marines poured into Afghanistan's southern Helmand province this week to take the battle against the Taliban to the foe's stronghold. But in a startling departure from decades of US anti-drug policy, eradicating Helmand's massive opium poppy crop will not be part of their larger mission.

US envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke told members of the G-8 group of industrialized nations Saturday that attempting to quash the opium and heroin trade through eradication was counterproductive and bad policy. Instead, the US would concentrate on alternative development, security, and targeting drug labs and traffickers.

Afghan anti-drug artwork, Nejat Center, Kabul
"Eradication is a waste of money," Holbrooke told the Associated Press during a break in the G-8 foreign ministers meeting on Afghanistan. "The Western policies against the opium crop, the poppy crop, have been a failure. It might destroy some acreage, but it didn't reduce the amount of money the Taliban got by one dollar. It just helped the Taliban, so we're going to phase out eradication," he said.

"The farmers are not our enemy; they're just growing a crop to make a living. It's the drug system," Holbrooke continued. "So the US policy was driving people into the hands of the Taliban."

The Taliban insurgents are estimated to earn tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars a year from the opium and heroin trade, which generates multiple streams of income for them. Taliban commanders tax poppy farmers in areas under their control, provide security for drug convoys, and sell opium and heroin through smuggling networks that reach around the globe.

As late as last year, US policymakers supported intensifying eradication efforts, with some even arguing for the aerial spraying of herbicides, as has been done with limited success, but severe political and environmental consequences in Colombia. That notion was opposed by the Afghan government of President Hamid Karzai, as well as by the US's NATO partners, particularly Britain, which supports expanded manual eradication of the poppy fields.

On Sunday, Afghan counternarcotics minister General Khodaidad disputed Holbrooke's claims that eradication was a failure, telling the Canadian Press that Afghanistan had achieved "lots of success" with its anti-drug strategy, which relies heavily on manual eradication of poppy fields. Still, he said he was open to the new American strategy. "Whatever program or strategy would be to the benefit of Afghanistan, we welcome it," Khodaidad said. "We are happy with our policy... so I'm not seeing any pause or what do you call it, deficiency, in our strategy. Our strategy's perfect. Our strategy's good."

Britain and US are at odds over opium field eradication plans. According to the London newspaper The Independent, British officials said Sunday they would continue to fund manual eradication in areas under their control. Those officials downplayed any dispute, however, saying details remained to be worked out.

But eradication has met with extremely limited success. According to the UN Office on Crime and Drugs, eradication peaked in 2003, while the Taliban were in retreat, with more than 51,000 acres destroyed. By 2007, that figure had declined to 47,000 acres, and last year, it was a measly 13,500 acres. Similarly, a survey of villages that had participated in eradication last year found that nearly half of them were growing poppy again this year.

The shift in US policy drew praise from observers across the ideological spectrum. It also aroused speculation that it could be emulated elsewhere, particularly in Latin America.

"The new counternarcotics strategy in Afghanistan which scales down eradication and emphasizes rural development and interdiction is exactly right," said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a drugs, development, and security expert with the Brookings Institution. "Under the prevailing conditions in Afghanistan, eradication has been not only ineffective; it has been counterproductive because it strengthens the bond between the rural population dependent on the illicit economy and the Taliban. Backing away from counterproductive eradication is not only a right analysis, it is also a courageous break on the part of the Obama administration with decades of failed counternarcotics strategy worldwide that centers on premature and unsustainable eradication," she added.

"This is clearly a positive, pragmatic step," said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance. "It seems that the Obama administration is so deeply invested in succeeding in Afghanistan that they're actually willing to pursue a pragmatic drug policy. This is an intelligent move," he added. "It is an implicit recognition that you are not going to eradicate opium production in this world so long as there is a market for it. Given that Afghanistan is the dominant opium producer right now, the pragmatic strategy is to figure out how to manage that production rather than to pursue a politically destructive and ineffective crop eradication strategy."

"This administration is finally showing some pragmatism," said Malou Innocent, a foreign policy analyst for the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute. "We are beginning to understand that our policies are affecting the policy outcomes we want. We didn't see this under the previous administration, so this is definitely very promising," she added.

But it doesn't necessarily mean there is light at the end of the tunnel, she was quick to add. "Sadly, this doesn't make me more optimistic about our prospects," she said. "This will win us more hearts and minds on the ground, but it also has to be linked to fewer targeted killings, fewer airstrikes that generate civilian casualties, or any good will is likely to be canceled out," she said.

Similarly, Felbab-Brown cautioned that the Obama administration must be prepared to defend the shift at home. "It is imperative that the administration lay down the political groundwork and inform Congress, the public, and the international community that it is unlikely that the new policy will result in a substantial reduction of cultivation or of the dependence on the illegal economy any time soon since rural development is a long-term process dependent on security," she said. "Setting the right expectations now is necessary so that accomplishments of the new strategy in two or three years are not interpreted as failures since the numbers of hectares cultivated with poppy has not dramatically decreased."

Nadelmann suggested that the new strategy is not likely to significantly impact the drug trade. "With the alternative measures they're proposing, such as the focus on traffickers, there's not much reason to think it will have any significant impact on Afghan opium and heroin exports, but it will enable the US, NATO, and the Afghan government to pursue a more discriminating and productive strategy, at least at the political level," he said.

"The really potentially interesting implication of this is for Latin America," said Nadelmann. "It makes one wonder if the Obama administration might come to realize that the same strategy they are pursuing for opium in Afghanistan makes sense in Latin America for coca cultivation in the Andes."

That may be premature. With analysts predicting no decrease in the poppy crop and little impact on the drug trade, in the medium term, the only political selling point for the move away from eradication will be success in defeating or significantly weakening the Taliban insurgency. That will be a difficult task, one whose success is by no means guaranteed.

Permission to Reprint: This content is licensed under a modified Creative Commons Attribution license. Content of a purely educational nature in Drug War Chronicle appear courtesy of DRCNet Foundation, unless otherwise noted.

Comments

Anonymous (not verified)

The Taliban eradicated the opium industry in Afghanistan because it goes against Muslim principles, that's why we—The US—went into Afghanistan, to bring the industry back. This war of ours is a Rothschild war, a Zionist war, and they control the opium industry, and us with it. C'mon, stopthedrugwar.org, you can do better than that.

Fri, 07/03/2009 - 11:12am Permalink
borden (not verified)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Okay, we don't need any anti-semitism here. Especially this truly freakish stuff about the Rothschilds controlling the opium industry and the government...

David Borden, Executive Director
StoptheDrugWar.org: the Drug Reform Coordination Network
Washington, DC
http://stopthedrugwar.org

Fri, 07/03/2009 - 10:49pm Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

well no kidding,pay them to grow food,i mean the whole works,give them machinery,irrigation we would have way more pollitical support in the war and the taliban would eventualy have no more heroin, if we cant even accomplish that,lets get out of their country. this war is going nowhere inless we deal with opium,as far as i understand the farmers would be more then willing to grow legal food crops,as long as they can get by,thats up to us to help them,thats how it works like it or not,and if we dont help them economicly how can we win a war? how can we win if the taliban make 100's of millions annualy to buy and make weapons,how will we win the hearts of afghans. yea time to end the drug war as we know it.it needs dramatic changes.ofcourse on the other hand,what will happen to mexico if we rid afghanistans opium,mexico would have to pick up the slack,is it any wonder the whitehouse is making such pathetic "attepmts" to destroy the opium,the taliban so easily destroyed,rite then and there we could of paid farmers to grow food,well history shows what we did in 2001.........

Sun, 08/16/2009 - 4:09pm Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

They have stopped nothing. I believe they have only been giving the appearance of of opium eradication, since they are the true profiteers. It's been a win-win situation for the DEA and CIA since the drug war began. The CIA grows for cash and the DEA, while allowing most illicit drugs to pass, bust around 10% to maintain rationale for the billions we taxpayers give them! Americans are truly Sheeple!!!!

Fri, 07/03/2009 - 11:24am Permalink
sicntired (not verified)

[email protected],Vancouver,B.C.Canada The poppy crop is already on the street.It was harvested a while back.While it's prime poppy season here right now(if anyone's interested)it ended in Afghanistan months ago.I have an idea why the statement was made but it has no basis in fact.Imagine that,the army saying something irrelevant.When will the west discover they have no place interfering in a foreign countries affairs?Why is it that we see democratically elected governments being overthrown by the US when they don't like the people elected but they cry democracy and claim it as the reason for their interference in countries that won't cooperate with US foreign policy?People bought the Obama lie and now they see he's just another wall street shill and that any hope for real reform is another seven years down the road.Seven because the alternative is unthinkable.

Sat, 07/04/2009 - 6:38am Permalink
J M Jones (not verified)

Well, well, well.......... another sign of significant change?
or just realism?
The last ten years UN plan to eradicate all drugs is fading rather fast here......Costa will not be very happy about this, I bet: do I detect a significant crack in the UN drug policy foundations?
Things appear to be falling apart for the US/UN............... Portugal is starting to flex its muscles, some South American nations have had just about enough, and even the recent "call" by Costa to consider if executing people is just a wee bit over the top........
However, behind all this remain the myths/memes/placebo text {DeGrandpre} which delude the majority of the worlds population regarding "drugs", fuelled of course by the medical profession and the pharmaceutical industry..............
The whole debate is based upon mythology, deliberately perpetuated by governments, NGO's, politicians, churches and those whose jobs depend upon the myth of addiction, amongst others........... its a long list.
We appear to be living through the death throes of capitalism as we know it, and I wonder if this is what is behind some of the recent significant shifts we are witnessing?
The current system has no long term feasability: we will run out of resources long before everybody in the third world gets their glittering baubles of tv's, dvd players, and such like................ it is simply not sustainable, from whatever viewpoint.
Bruce Alexander (2008) really has a lot to say about what is happening, and why. Couple his work with DeGrandpre (2006) and the picture becomes clearer.
Myself, I would just like to see some honesty............... the truth may just help to clear away some to the toxic fog that obscures the debate, but who will be brave enough to start the process?
Capitalism and the free market economy appears to be causing dislocation on an ever grander scale, with "legal" {and ever increasingly useless, but more dangerous to the individual} drugs being offered to those who are suffering as an antidote, meanwhile the list of plants which need to be kept from us increases by the day - to save us from ourselves? Or is it to prevent us from seeing clearly just how rotten the system we live under is? And, perhaps raising our voices in unison to denounce the fallacy for what it is?

Sat, 07/04/2009 - 12:06pm Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

Perhaps what is happening here, is that organized crime including some participating Governments have given the U.S. the green light to eradicate the Taliban, as long as Afghanistan’s opium fields are left alone.

If the Obama Administration believes eradication of poppy plants in Afghanistan is counterproductive, that the U.S. should instead only pursue heroin drug-traffickers, shouldn’t Obama then take that same position in the U.S. and stop eradicating marijuana fields? Frankly I find the reports referred to in this article on Afghanistan Opium farmers’ connection to the Taliban contradictory. For Example, if the Taliban is extorting from opium farmers a 10% protection tax and earning millions from the resulting heroin trade, the U.S. should then destroy all Afghanistan’s opium fields no matter whose territorial control the crops are under. Note following that contradiction of facts in the above article: “The Taliban insurgents are estimated to earn tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars a year from the opium and heroin trade, which generates multiple streams of income for them.” Obviously if there were no opium crops in Afghanistan would not the Taliban derive no funds from the heroine trade? Interestingly, U.S. satellites have the ability to locate all of Afghanistan’s significant opium fields as they are generally in open areas unlike coca fields hidden in Colombian jungles.

Sat, 07/04/2009 - 12:26pm Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

ha they can easily destroy coca crops too,the cia flighs it into mexico for the cartels now,instead of rite into california. clearly if he doesnt want to destroy the crops,because those damn stubern farmers dont want to grow food cough cough,he wants the drugs to hit europe and america,at basicly the same rate. They dont even use afghanistan for pharmisuticals,they grow the norman poppy all over the world in restricted areas,which contains no morephine but alkaloids for more expensive,and much more powerful narcotics then morphine or heroin. i guess when they say the war will last 100 years they mean it!

Sun, 08/16/2009 - 4:48pm Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

I think that instead of destroying the confiscated opium and its derivatives, it would be wiser to redirect this contraband into areas of the world where morphine supply is low and diseases such as cancer and AIDS are on the rise. I doubt that this will come to fruition anytime soon, but I favor the use of opium when and where needed.

Tue, 07/07/2009 - 1:55am Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

check out the norman poppy,it makes you wonder,if afghanistan is still producing opium,and none of the norman poppy,then they are only producing heroin basicly,inless there is still a morphine need,but it sounds like the norman poppy should make no need for morphine and its already being grown in mass production.

Fri, 08/21/2009 - 2:57pm Permalink
Mike H (not verified)

What really is the US foreign policy for eliminating the
Taliban and how do the US intend to achieve this? On the one hand there appears to be no hard policy to destroy the opium fields and on the other hand there is an admission that the Taliban cannot be defeated militarily. It seems that the only other alternatives seem to be economic force or political change which could alienate the ordinary Afghan people so what does the US and its Allies intend to do? My own view is that success for the Taliban would mean utter defeat for the rights of Afghan women and children and adverse repercussions for muslim women worldwide.

Mon, 07/13/2009 - 6:33pm Permalink
Slav (not verified)

Yea, target the traffickers or more exactly the drugs, so the DEA can get their own greedy hands on the heroin. I hate this world sometimes. It is so obvious that the US govt is trafficking heroin in the middle east. Does anyone here really think that the US govt. just cant eradicate poppies from a field? Or spend some measly dollars to give to the farmers so they can stop growing? The govt. can spend a ton of money on many many things but to spend just a little on the Afghan farmers is of course out of the question. I am not for prohibition but the state of the worlds affairs is disgusting, how and when will all these corrupt people be judged?

Wed, 12/30/2009 - 5:33pm Permalink

Taliban control opium market...
How about how to control Taliban... if we find the way that is good for its economy but it is not affect health of people, it might be advantage. By the way, we should let anyone control people.

Sun, 01/17/2010 - 1:14pm Permalink

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