In an August address to the nation on Afghanistan, President Biden attempted to justify Americas surrender and withdrawal by asserting that, among other things, our mission in Afghanistan was never supposed to have been nation-building. President Biden then went on to say that our mission was never supposed to be creating a unified, centralized democracy. These assertions are jaw-droppingliterally fantastical. Havent the President and his advisers read the Bonn Agreement that was signed in December 2001 after the ouster of the Taliban, or observed anything that has followed? Even though it all might have been a fantasy, no one with any knowledge or experience in the postBonn Agreement era would deny that the United States and its allies were engaged in a nation-building exercise, one that was focused on constructing a centralized government.
Despite our dismal record at nation-building, we marched forward in Afghanistan, repeatedly reaching for the foreign-aid checkbook. What makes this so shocking is that professionals of all stripes know that government-to-government foreign-aid schemes typically fail and are often little more than poster children for waste, fraud, and abuse. As a House Foreign Affairs Committee put it back in 1989, U.S. foreign-aid programs no longer either advance U.S. interests abroad or promote economic development. A Clinton administration task force rendered a similar conclusion on the efficacy of foreign aid: Despite decades of foreign assistance, most of Africa, and parts of Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East are economically worse off today than they were 20 years ago.
In Afghanistan, none of the mountains of evidence pointing to the failures of foreign aid and nation-building were ever allowed to see the light of day. As it turns out, the professional elites who live off the delivery of foreign aid are a tightly knit epistemic community that promotes and runs the foreign-aid show. For them, the show must go on. In Afghanistan, it did, and what an extravaganza it was.
To get a handle on the magnitude of waste, fraud, and abuse in Afghanistan, I use the figures reported for Official Development Assistance (ODA). ODA includes both humanitarian and reconstruction aid, mostly in the form of grants and other assistance on concessional terms. ODA excludes military, counter-narcotics, and a plethora of other transfers.
The table below shows the total yearly amounts of ODA that flowed into Afghanistan in the 200219 period. The total was $76.6 billion. This total is second only to the $79.4 billion received by Iraq during the same period. For Afghanistan, the ODA provided a very significant chunk of the countrys GDP, amounting to 22.2 percent in 2019. The comparable figure for Iraq was only 1.0 percent. The relatively large portion of Afghanistans GDP provided by ODA and the fact that it has remained large for the better part of 20 years simply means that the formal economy of Afghanistan is aid-dependent. The training wheels have never been taken off.
Another feature of the ODA data worth mentioning is that it surged when Barack Obama became president in 2009. Recall that it was Commander-in-Chief Obama who ramped up operations in Afghanistan. On his watch, not only did aid surge, but so did the level of U.S. troops, reaching its maximum of 110,000 in 2011. Interestingly, during the U.S. surrender and pull-out phase in Afghanistan, Obama has disappeared like a ghost. Even though he has attempted to leave not so much as a fingerprint, the ODA data reveals some of Obamas handiwork.
Just what has this gravy train delivered? One thing is a cornucopia of corruption. In 2010, bribery amounted to a staggering $2.25 billion in Afghanistan. It then shot up to $2.88 billion in 2016 and settled down to $1.6 billion in 2018. To put these sums into perspective, the taxes collected from Afghans were only $1.12 billion in 2018 and $889 million in 2019.
The Afghan economy was controlled by what was, in essence, an organized-crime syndicate: the Afghan elite who were connected at the hip with the foreign-aid donors. The bribes that flowed up the hierarchy formed the tribute, the protection money, or the informal taxes that were a necessary part of obtaining employment and conducting business in Afghanistan. While the corruption cornucopia made the Afghan elite rich, it also sowed resentment against them. It was not a model designed to win friends and influence people.
The other cornucopia that crackpot foreign-aid plans opened up was the production of opium. Instead of fostering traditional agriculture and markets in the rural areas where most Afghans live, misguided plans gave rise to a massive opium industry. Today, over 40 percent of Afghanistans agricultural land is dedicated to the production of opium poppies. As a result, Afghanistan produces a staggering 85 percent of the worlds opium.
One thing that ODA money never delivered was what the United Nations terms human development. Since 1990, the U.N. has been measuring a Human Development Index. It measures, with a variety of metrics, along three broad dimensions: a long and healthy life, attainment of knowledge, and standard of living. Today, after 20 years of aid programs, Afghanistan ranks a miserable 169 out of the 189 countries covered in the U.N.s 2020 Human Development Report. That is only one notch above Haiti, another failed state that has been lavished with foreign aid.
If Afghanistans current ranking isnt bad enough, its worth noting that in the past five years, its been sinking. And its current rank of 169 is almost exactly where it was in 1993 (171), the first full year after the communist government in Afghanistan departed.
Its clear that our leaders in the foreign-aid community suffer from a pathology that Moisés Naim has identified as ideological necrophilia. They are afflicted with a love for ideas that have repeatedly produced inconvertible failure and should be dead. Indeed, just look at how the Biden administration proposes to stop the flow of immigrants coming from Central America. You guessed it. Our ideological-necrophiliac president has opened the U.S. taxpayers checkbook and has fancifully promised that aid will do for Central America what it was promised to do for Afghanistan.