Author Topic: Afghan Narcotics: 2000-2018: From Control and Elimination Efforts to a Drug Economy and Bombings La  (Read 410 times)

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Drug Economy and Bombings Labs
By Anthony H. Cordesman

May 29, 2018


If the Afghan government is going to defeat the Taliban and other insurgent and extremist elements, it must win at both the military and civil levels. At present, it at best faces a military stalemate and the situation may well be worse at the civil level. Far too many elements of the Afghan government and economy remain the equivalent of a kleptocracy. Despite repeated promises of reform, the World Bank and Transparency International rate the Afghan government as one of the most corrupt and least effective in the world.

Senior officials like President Ghani do continue to pursue reform with integrity, but the Afghan power structure is still filled with corrupt politicians, officials, and senior officers. Its political leadership is too divided to function effectively, and the central government in "Kabulstan" has limited or no real control over many power brokers, warlords, and local officials even in the areas nominally under government control while the Taliban controls much of the key areas for opium growing in the south.

https://www.csis.org/analysis/afghan-narcotics-2000-2018-control-and-elimination-efforts-drug-economy-and-bombings-labs