Opium Suppression in Afghanistan Was a US-led Failure
The basics of supply and demand still applied.

No single factor can explain the recent swift collapse of the U.S.-backed Afghan government. But one underappreciated mistake has been Washington's long-running effort to suppress the cultivation of opium poppies in Afghanistan and, in turn, the production of heroin and other opioids. The campaign most likely had little effect on the amount of poppy grown. Instead it shifted cultivation to Taliban-controlled territories, bolstering the militia's revenues.
According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Afghanistan accounted for 85 percent of global opium production in 2020. Poppies are a labor-intensive crop, perfectly suited to a country with a large agrarian population and few off-farm income opportunities. Poppy also thrives in Afghanistan's soil and climate conditions, as well as its weak governance and corruption.
American efforts to suppress poppy cultivation, either through direct eradication or through incentives to grow other crops, failed to account for the basics of supply and demand. Suppression policies focus on shrinking supply, which means a fixed quantity of opium will become more expensive to produce. These policies involve a mix of threats to destroy poppy fields and the provision of resources (such as fertilizers) to encourage farmers to cultivate other crops. But if demand is not very sensitive to price increases, the quantity demanded will change little in response to the reduction in supply.
It is likely, for two reasons, that the demand for opium is not very sensitive to price. First, research finds consumer demand to be modestly elastic. Second, and more importantly, "farm-gate" prices of opium account for a small share of traffickers' costs. Smuggling opiates to retail markets entails high risks and large costs, such as dealing with law enforcement, paying bribes, and more. As a result, increases in the price of opium sold by farmers are unlikely to significantly dent traffickers' bottom lines, enabling them to absorb higher prices without curtailing their quantity demanded.
Indeed, recent UNODC reports document that Afghan poppy cultivation has drifted upward since the U.S. intensified efforts to suppress poppy farming around 2005. Afghanistan maintained its key role as the primary supplier of the world's opiates, suggesting those policies were ineffective at curbing opium output.
Suppression efforts not only failed to curb poppy expansion but also shifted production from areas controlled by the Afghan government to territories where the Taliban and other opposition groups had a stronger grip. The Taliban turned this into a growing revenue stream through multiple mechanisms, including a roughly 6 percent tax on opium sales, raking in millions of dollars. Thus, the U.S.-led effort not only failed to curtail opioid supplies but bolstered the Taliban.
The predictable failure of drug-crop suppression policy in Afghanistan, and its unintended but foreseeable consequences, hold a lesson for other efforts to squelch illicit drug supplies. Joint U.S.-Colombian efforts to suppress coca plantations in Latin America, for example, tell a remarkably similar story. As in Afghanistan, paramilitary groups, such as the FARC, took advantage of illicit drug trafficking in areas under their control to bolster revenues, allowing them to continue their fight with the central government.
Alcohol prohibition led to similar effects in the U.S. While the ban may have discouraged drinking to some extent, it was a boon for organized crime. Skirmishes between gangs for control over alcohol distribution, as in the infamous Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, led to murders and corruption.
It is hard to say whether officials will learn the right lessons from the quick demise of the Afghan government. But next time policy makers consider a drug eradication campaign, they should not forget that such efforts not only have a history of failing but can bolster the very groups the government is fighting.
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I heard that lately pharmaceutical companies were able to make up in other ways any lost revenue from black market competition.
Legalizing opium would mean it is processed in labs and controlled for dosage, weight, content, and purity...which means away from the Wu-Flu.
Hence, no need to worry about The Coof spreading by this means and thus, less need for the Bill Gates Microchip, G5 vaccine and you can sleep better even without doing the stuff.
Win-win-win, right, Fist? 😉
In most countries codeine is OTC combined with acetaminophen or robaxin or ibuprofen or guifissen.
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Unmentioned is the fentanyl trade from China through cartels that use the porous southern border, because that conflicts with the open borders crowd.
"because that conflicts with the open borders crowd."
What conflict? The open border crowd favors the free movement of people, goods and ideas.
That was before 2016, before libertarianism meant a philosophy with an especially especially unattractive and obsequious adherence to whatever Dear Leader says. Time to adjust your ideological blinkers, librul.
The fentanyl crisis is a direct consequence of the war on opium. Legalize the opium and the demand for the fentanyl goes down too. Thus also depriving revenue to Emperor Xi and the People's Liberation Army! Anti-Commies for Drug Lealization sounds like a great headline for The New American to me!
Another advantage to having open borders: better drugs. If I can also get my grass cut for cheaper I’m not really seeing a downside.
One could easily see that situation as an active covert chemical war by proxy. After all the Chinese still remember both Opium wars. There is so much going on but many cannot or will not accept this is a game being played on a multi-dimensional chess board.
"After all the Chinese still remember both Opium wars. "
That's a testament to the communist education system. Most Americans aren't aware of the CIA machinations to weaken the solidarity of their black community with crack during the days of Iran/Contra. And most of those who are aware strenuously deny it.
Gee, why would one think, if one could not control drugs in, say, Peoria, that one might be able to control drugs in thousands of remote villages half-way around the world?
Yep! Prohibition didn't play in Peoria, so it damn sure won't play among the Pashtun, who've been swimming in the crop for perhaps centuries.
Actually, Afghanistan was a minor player in the opium trade until the 1950's. What happened back in the 1950's? Iran banned opium production, so the farmers moved on to greener fields. The only way to end the worst effects of the endless drug war is to legalize the drugs, and then regulate them (when necessary). Oh, and don't do what CA and some other places do with pot, which is taxed so heavily that the black market is still thriving.
It's probably been present to a degree everywhere in Asia since the Brits forced it on the Chinese via The Opium War, then it spread through The Silk Route and other trade paths.
Oh, and I agree drugs shouldn't be taxed any more than any other commodity. (And for the libertarian, the ideal level of taxation is zero.)
The ideal for me is that one wouldn't need government permission to grow your own poppies. Or mushrooms. Or whatever.
"I'll do anything I got to do,
cut my hair and shine my shoes,
and keep on singing the Blues,
if I can stay here
in Jefferson's garden."
-Paraphrase of Stephen Stills' "Johnny's Garden." (Though it could be "John Galt's Garden" too.)
Damn. I might have accidentally flagged that response. Sorry about that!
All looks good from my end. (I, too, have accidentally hit Flags with clumsy fingers.)
+
Flags, like recycling, are just here for show.
That's okay. The world is a show. Or at least a cabaret.
That reminds me: Why can't Reason get creative and make the Flag a Gadsden Flag, or a Rainbow Flag, or even a Rainbow Gadsden Flag? Best yet, a Rainbow Hemp Flag with the Gadsden and Mexican Flag patterns interspersed and overlapping, symbolizing all they stand for and love? (And flying from the back of a food truck, of course.)
Some folks in the CIA will now have to get a second job to help make ends meet.
Oh, the pity of it all, right? 😉
I said this all alone on multiple comment sections of multiple article of Reason, and this article proves me right!
Stop Islamofascist Narco-Terrorism and legalize opium! Make it genetically-modified to kill pain and not people, spice it with kudzu growth gene to make it plentiful and cheap as candy, and sell it over-the-counter to any consenting adult who wants it!
It will mean no more bankrolling of Abrahamic mass-murderers, no more gang wars in the streets of the U.S.A., no more suffering elderly and infirm in hospitals and hospice care, and we taxpayers can keep more of our money for better things!
Oh, and by the way, suck it, NY82!
The US government's efforts and policies toward opium in Afghanistan were split. The dea was running around with their own little afghan dea burning crops, while sof was trying as hard as possible to ignore opium and even stand down operations during harvest. But if you found, say, half a ton of black tar in the back of a hilux, you had to destroy it. It was nonsensical, like every other aspect of our involvement.
Lol, did you smoke yourself stupid on one of your imaginary tours over there with the Delta SEAL Ranger 1st Battalion?
^100! had me rolling! thank you.
This is exactly what happened. And I have been vetted not once, but twice now on these boards.
I know it is much easier for you all to make believe that I'm lying instead of facing your ignorance head on.
If you lie less often, people will be less inclined to think you're lying
The trick of a good professional wrestling promo. Talking points A through C are true and D is kinda true. Then drop item E, which is not true at all.
Took 3 economists to write this 5 paragraph essay?
Also, who else appreciates the irony of radical Islamic fundamentalists who think drinking a beer should be punishable by summary beheading being some of the world's largest peddlers of hard drugs?
The same folks who appreciate the irony of the "Land of the Free" having a military presence in at least 74 different nations. That, of course, is an "official" presence.
That's not really irony, since the two have nothing to do with each other.
There's plenty of things you could've picked from, but that one doesn't work.
I agree. Not my best effort.
Before Afghanistan becomes a Sackler synthetic opioid growth market the Taliban must survive climate change .
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2021/08/sackler-foundation-study-links-opium.html
But wait, that makes no sense. Poppies would absorb the Carbon footprint. Also as The Wicked Witch of the West observed: "Poppies will put them to sleeeeep!" so there's less Carbon footprint to absorb. What are they thinking?
I'm sick of this. It's time we had American heroin made in America by Americans for Americans! MAGA!
Just what I've been saying! I'd also be a scream to watch The Orange Man nod away citing Lou Reed lyrics at a MAGA rally!
Have you ever had anything relevant, intelligent, or interesting to say?
You're a step shy of sqrlsy/hihn
That's what you get from walking on the wild side.
M'MGA (Make 'Merica Grow Again!)
Prior to 1906, a parent could send a kid with a few bucks to a pharmacy to get opiate-based cough syrup over the counter, no questions asked, for Little Sister at home, with change left over for a chocolate malt from the soda fountain. My, how times have changed.
Oops. That was meant as a reply to Chumby.
Hey now! I don't rely on copypasta. My rants are fresh!
And like the Village Idiot on Monty Python, I'm naturally this way. Much as I am pro-legalization, I can't stand chemicals. 🙂
Make Afghanistan Grow Again
Always it's drugs with these people.
Hey guys:
I’m an amateur student of history. Name me one example of where an occupying imperialistic army withdrew from the occupied without there being at least a small bloodbath. I can’t think of any off the top of my head.
Maybe we should learn these things before we actually spend a couple trillion dollars on a 20 year old occupation.
Yes, and we taxpayers will have more fruits of our own labor to keep and enjoy, much to your envious chagrin.
>>spend a couple trillion dollars
should have offered 1/100th of this as a reward for his head. bet they would have served him up.
The British leaving the United States. Unless you count Shay’s Rebellion.
The vikings leaving Vinland.
United States leaving the Philippines.
"The British leaving the United States."
Thousands of loyalists fled to Canada in terror of their lives, leaving almost everything behind. The population of Canada grew tremendously as a result and they really set the tone of the place, which still is evident today.
A few thousand arriving in Canada today would grow their population tremendously. Anyhow, they found themselves in a different situation but it was not a bloodbath.
The Soviet withdrawal from East Germany another example.
"but it was not a bloodbath. "
I agree. More like a tar bath.
"Name me one example of where an occupying imperialistic army withdrew from the occupied without there being at least a small bloodbath."
The sole surviving member of the British expeditionary force that made his way back to India served as the inspiration for Dr. Watson, Sherlock Holmes' sidekick. So, there is that.
>>No single factor can explain the recent swift collapse of the U.S.-backed Afghan government.
does it help to admit neither recent nor swift?
Last I checked, and many times before that, Afghan heroin is <1% of heroin seizured in the US. Talk about 20 years wasted. We colonized the #1 opium-producing country in the world and all we got out of it was 100s of thousands of crummy ChiCom fentanyl ODs
"seized"
Iran has the highest proportion of junkies in the world, last I checked, thanks to Afghan heroin.
not disagreeing buy looking for a source
A source for Iranian heroin?
What happened to Burma being the source of the worlds opium?
I can remember the “Golden Triangle as the source of opium/heroin.
Wait, are you telling me that the government banning something does NOT decrease the demand for it? Whoda thunk.
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