The Taliban’s Unsustainable War on Drugs
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Can the stick-wielding Taliban soldiers accomplish what the international community failed to achieve? There are genuine reasons to doubt the group’s ability to stick to its promise for long. Similarly, whether the Taliban can expand the implementation of the decree with the same zeal in more remote provinces is another question. Operations, for now, have concentrated only in accessible provinces such as Nangarhar, Kandahar, and Helmand, under watch by some embedded journalists. The interior provinces, like as Badakhshan, have so far been free from such operations. More importantly, it is simplistic and naive to picture the opiate economy, which according to UNODC, was estimated to be $1.8 to $2.7 billion in 2021, as so fragile as to be disrupted by a one-time crop destruction campaign in some provinces. The total value of opiates, including domestic consumption and exports, stood at between 9 to 14 percent of Afghanistan’s GDP, exceeding the value of its officially recorded licit exports of goods and services (estimated at 9 percent of GDP in 2020). The humongous trade is run by regional and multinational cartels with complex and elaborate illicit networks across the region. Politicians, security force personnel, and even the Taliban have been part of this symbiotic nexus, profiteering enormous amounts of money. Amid the anti-poppy measures of the Taliban, a record amount of Afghan drugs moved by Pakistani and Iranian cartels, almost 2,500 kilograms of methamphetamine, were recovered in India in May 2023. Drugs sourced from Afghanistan continue to reach the African continent, Sri Lanka, Australia, and European countries. It will be simply unimaginable that all the stakeholders will bring shutters down on this trade without a fight. The Taliban, once a willing participant in the entire drug trade, lack the wherewithal to dismantle such a mammoth network. To be successful, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan would need to coordinate its efforts with the regional and international community, which it has shown no intention of doing. While the Taliban, for the time being, are holding their ground in a likely effort to showcase their ability to govern the country responsibly and be responsive to international concerns regarding drugs, the achievement could very well be temporary, with the prospect of a full-scale revival of poppy cultivation looming large in the medium to long term.