How Opium Defeated the US in Afghanistan
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/35526-how-opium-defeated-the-us-in-afghanistan
Were you to cut through the Gordian knot of complexity that is the Afghan War, you would find that in the American failure there lies the greatest policy paradox of the century: Washingtons massive military juggernaut has been stopped dead in its steel tracks by a pink flower, the opium poppy.
For more than three decades in Afghanistan, Washingtons military operations have succeeded only when they fit reasonably comfortably into Central Asias illicit traffic in opium, and suffered when they failed to complement it. The first U.S. intervention there began in 1979. It succeeded in part because the surrogate war the CIA launched to expel the Soviets from that country coincided with the way its Afghan allies used the countrys swelling drug traffic to sustain their decade-long struggle.
On the other hand, in the almost 15 years of continuous combat since the U.S. invasion of 2001, pacification efforts have failed to curtail the Taliban insurgency largely because the U.S. could not control the swelling surplus from the countys heroin trade. As opium production surged from a minimal 180 tons to a monumental 8,200 in the first five years of U.S. occupation, Afghanistans soil seemed to have been sown with the dragons teeth of ancient Greek myth. Every poppy harvest yielded a new crop of teenaged fighters for the Talibans growing guerrilla army.
At each stage in Afghanistans tragic, tumultuous history over the past 40 years -- the covert war of the 1980s, the civil war of the 1990s, and the U.S. occupation since 2001 -- opium played a surprisingly significant role in shaping the countrys destiny. In one of historys bitter twists of fate, the way Afghanistans unique ecology converged with American military technology transformed this remote, landlocked nation into the worlds first true narco-state -- a country where illicit drugs dominate the economy, define political choices, and determine the fate of foreign interventions.