Afghanistan opium production hits new high as foreign troops pack up
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Despite costly efforts to cut poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, production reached a record high this year, according to the United Nations.
The uptick in production could be tied to increasing insecurity in Afghanistan and economic uncertainty following disputed presidential elections. The process of selecting a new president lasted eight months and involved two rounds of voting, away from the eradication of opium crops, reports The New York Times.
础谤辞耻苍诲听聽with large Taliban representation, according to the report from the UN鈥檚 Office on Drugs and Crime. Since losing power in 2001, the Taliban has waged war against the US-backed Afghan government. Now foreign combat troops are pulling out, leaving behind a training mission under NATO.聽
The increase in poppy cultivation could yield just over 7,000 tons of opium, which is 17 percent more than in 2013.聽
海角大神鈥檚 Dan Murphy聽wrote earlier this year about the challenges of US-led poppy eradication in Afghanistan.
[T]rying to wipe out opium production in Afghanistan would have been a Sisyphean task no matter what strategy was deployed. It's a lucrative business, and poppies are easily cultivated, generating far more money for poor farmers and corrupt middlemen than any feasible substitution crop. During the height of the American counterinsurgency effort, winning over the general population to the side of the government and foreign forces was a big focus. The US found that tearing up crops and impoverishing farmers wasn't very popular.
The early eradication strategy was largely abandoned in favor of going after big opium dealers and encouragng farmers to grow other crops. But that really hasn't worked, either. The country's opium and heroin trade is a top earner, and with the military effort winding down, the business opportunities associated with aid and foreign military spending are set to decline.
Afghanistan's opium lords are not likely to go anywhere.
UNODC country head Andrey Avetisyan discussed the opium problem with Afghanistan鈥檚 new president, Ashraf Ghani, and says he was encouraged by his response, according to the New York Times.
鈥淎shraf Ghani is not a magician but at least Ashraf Ghani said all the right words, with a lot of passion,鈥 Mr. Avetisyan said.
Meanwhile, President Ghani is expected to travel to Pakistan at the end of the week for his first official visit. Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan are troubled; Kabul has repeatedly accused Islamabad of aiding Taliban leaders sheltering across the border. Pakistan helped the group seize control of Afghanistan in 1996 and was among only a handful of countries to have diplomatic relations with the Taliban administration.聽
The US鈥檚 top diplomat in Islamabad, Richard Olson, said this week that the neighboring nations are facing a 鈥渉istorical moment鈥 and an following the election of democratic governments, reports Agence France-Presse.
He pointed to steps taken by both countries that have helped to build confidence, including a Pakistan Army operation in Waziristan, a Taliban stronghold along the shared border.
"I think there is quite genuinely a basis for a new relationship between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Both sides are aware of this historical moment and making efforts to seize it.鈥 Mr. Olson said.
Pakistan鈥檚 national security advisor, Sartaj Aziz, in an interview with Voice of America.
鈥淸President Ghani] himself used the word 鈥榓 new beginning鈥 and a relationship that is based on trust and does not involve blame game and which is multidimensional. The basis will be economic cooperation, trade and investment, at the same time security cooperation and much better people-to-people contacts. So, it is a multidimensional agenda on the basis of which we hope to build this new relationship,鈥 said Mr. Aziz.