What do we have to show for
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan?
"In both countries, that power quickly succeeded in its stated objective of
“regime change,” only to find itself mired in deadly conflicts with
modestly armed minority insurgencies that it simply couldn’t win. In each
country, to the tune of billions
and billions
of dollars, it built up a humongous army and allied “security” forces,
poured
money into “reconstruction” projects (most of which proved disasters
of corruption
and incompetence),
and spent trillions
of dollars of national treasure.
Having imagined that, ask yourself: How well did all of that turn out for this
other power? In Afghanistan, a recent news story highlights something
of what was accomplished. Though that country took slot 175
out of 177 on Transparency International’s 2013 Corruption Perceptions
Index, though its security forces continue to suffer grievous
casualties, and though parts of the country are falling
to a strengthening
Taliban insurgency, it has for some years proudly held a firm grip on one record:
Afghanistan is the leading narco-state on planet Earth.
In 2013, it upped its opium poppy cultivation by 36%,
its opium production by almost
50%, and drug profits soared. Preliminary figures for this year, recently
released
by the U.N., indicate that opium cultivation has risen by another 7% and opium
production by 17%, both to historic highs, as Afghanistan itself has become
“one of the world’s most addicted societies.”"
And now the US is back at war in Iraq.
"In other words, after 13 years of doing its damnedest, on one side of the Greater
Middle East this power has somehow overseen the rise of the dominant narco-state
on the planet with monopoly control over 80%-90%
of the global opium supply and 75%
of the heroin. On the other side of the region, it’s been complicit
in the creation of the first terrorist mini-oil state in history, a post-al-Qaeda
triumph of extreme jihadism."
This is what passes for success in Washington.
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