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Afghanistan's Opium Industry Now Employs More People Than Its Military

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Afghanistan Muddy Boots

Afghanistan's opium economy provides more employment — "up to 411,000 full-time-equivalent jobs"— than even the country's armed forces, according to a quarterly report released today by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). 

The country's poppy cultivation is at an all-time high, covering more than 200,000 hectares, another SIGAR report found earlier this month.

Opium and its derivatives are the country's largest export, worth $3 billion in 2013, an increase from $2 billion in the year before.

In fact, Afghanistan's opium production has been on a constant uptick since 2010, according to a chart included in the SIGAR report:

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SIGAR Poppy Cultivation Estimates Graph

"Counternarcotics Appears To Have Fallen Off The Agenda" 

Despite the rampant growth of an illicit drug economy that stokes corruption and even finances the Taliban, the concern over opium has diminished. The US and its partners seem to have given up on opium eradication as a goal in the country. As the SIGAR report notes, it isn't even mentioned in "the declarations and communiqués from the conferences on Afghanistan reconstruction that have become a mainstay of the international effort."

Opium cultivation is paid only "oblique reference" in the 2012 document laying out the country's reconstruction. Indeed, nowhere in the Tokyo Mutual Accountability Framework do the words "poppy" or "opium" appear, even as the industry plays an ever-bigger role in the life of Afghans.

Meanwhile, appropriations for the Department of Defense's Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities Fund (or DOD CN) have plummeted since a steady climb in the aughts and a peak in 2012. Since 2002, the US has spent nearly $7.8 billion trying to tackle Afghanistan's opium problem.

This chart shows how that effort received less and less US budgetary attention, at the same time opium production in the country increased:

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Counter Narcotics Funding Afghanistan SIGAR

Read the entire report here.

SEE ALSO: How ISIS became one of the world's most dangerous terrorist groups

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