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Reported, but Interim Performance Targets and Evaluation of Justice 
Reform Efforts Needed' which was released on March 9, 2010. 

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Report to Congressional Addressees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

March 2010: 

Afghanistan Drug Control: 

Strategy Evolving and Progress Reported, but Interim Performance 
Targets and Evaluation of Justice Reform Efforts Needed: 

GAO-10-291: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-291, a report to congressional addressees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The illicit drug trade remains a challenge to the overall U.S. 
counterinsurgency campaign in Afghanistan. Afghanistan produces over 
90 percent of the world’s opium, which competes with the country’s 
licit agriculture industry, provides funds to insurgents, and fuels 
corruption in Afghanistan. Since 2005, the United States has allotted 
over $2 billion to stem the production, consumption, and trafficking 
of illicit drugs while building the Afghan government’s capacity to 
conduct counternarcotics activities on its own. 

In this report, GAO (1) examines how the U.S. counternarcotics 
strategy in Afghanistan has changed; (2) assesses progress made and 
challenges faced within the elimination/eradication, interdiction, 
justice reform, public information, and drug demand reduction program 
areas; and (3) assesses U.S. agencies’ monitoring and evaluation 
efforts. To address these objectives, GAO obtained pertinent program 
documents and interviewed relevant U.S. and Afghan officials. GAO has 
prepared this report under the Comptroller General’s authority to 
conduct evaluations on his own initiative. 

What GAO Found: 

The U.S. counternarcotics strategy has changed emphasis across program 
areas over time to align with the overarching counterinsurgency 
campaign. The 2005 U.S. counternarcotics strategy focused on five 
program areas: elimination/eradication, interdiction, justice reform, 
public information, and alternative livelihoods. Since then, U.S. 
Department of Defense (Defense) policy and rules of engagement were 
changed to allow greater military involvement in Afghanistan 
counternarcotics efforts due to the ties between traffickers and 
insurgents. Furthermore, the U.S. counternarcotics strategy has 
shifted to align more closely with counterinsurgency efforts by de-
emphasizing eradication, focusing more on interdiction efforts, and 
increasing agricultural assistance. 

The United States’ use of total poppy cultivation as a primary measure 
of overall counternarcotics success has limitations in that it does 
not capture all aspects of U.S. counternarcotics efforts. In 
recognition of this, the administration is attempting to develop 
measures that better capture overall counternarcotics success. U.S. 
agencies have reported progress within counternarcotics program areas, 
but GAO was unable to fully assess the extent of progress due to a 
lack of performance measures and interim performance targets to 
measure Afghan capacity, which are a best practice for performance 
management. For example, although Defense is training Afghan pilots to 
fly interdiction missions on their own, this program lacks interim 
performance targets to judge incremental progress. Furthermore, a lack 
of security, political will, and Afghan government capacity have 
challenged some counternarcotics efforts. For example, eradication and 
public information efforts have been constrained by poor security, 
particularly in insurgency-dominated provinces. In addition, other 
challenges affect specific program areas. For example, drug abuse and 
addiction are prevalent among the Afghan National Police. 

Monitoring and evaluation are key components of effective program 
management. Monitoring is essential to ensuring that programs are 
implemented as intended, and routine evaluation helps program managers 
make judgments, improve effectiveness, and inform decisions about 
current and future programming. U.S. agencies in all counternarcotics 
areas have monitored program progress through direct U.S. agency 
oversight, contractor reporting, and/or third-party verification. For 
example, eradication figures were routinely reported by U.S. 
Department of State (State) officials and contractors, and verified by 
United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime monitors. U.S. agencies also 
conducted and documented program evaluations to improve effectiveness 
in the elimination/eradication, interdiction, and public information 
program areas. However, State has not formally documented evaluations 
of its justice reform program. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is making several recommendations to State and Defense to improve 
performance measurement of U.S. counternarcotics programs and evaluate 
justice reform efforts. State and Defense generally concurred with our 
recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-291] or key 
components. For more information, contact Charles Michael Johnson Jr. 
at (202) 512-7331 or johnsoncm@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

U.S. Counternarcotics Strategy Changing Emphasis Across Program Areas 
to Support Overarching Counterinsurgency Campaign: 

Although Counternarcotics Programs Reported Some Progress, They Remain 
Challenged by Lack of Security, Political Will, and Afghan Government 
Capacity: 

Monitoring and Evaluation of Most U.S. Counternarcotics Programs Under 
Way: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: U.S. Funding of Counternarcotics-Related Activities in 
Afghanistan: 

Table 2: DEA Interdiction Data for Afghanistan Fiscal Year 2005 
through Fiscal Year 2009: 

Table 3: Capability Milestone Criteria: 

Table 4: Monitoring and Evaluation Activities by Program Area: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Estimated Opium Poppy Cultivation, 2009: 

Figure 2: Allotment of U.S. Funding for Counternarcotics Activities in 
Afghanistan by Program Area from Fiscal Year 2005 to Fiscal Year 2009: 

Figure 3: U.S. Agency Involvement in Afghanistan Counternarcotics 
Activities, as of February 2010: 

Figure 4: Time Line of Counternarcotics Strategies in Afghanistan: 

Figure 5: Total Opium Poppy Cultivation in Afghanistan, 2005-2009: 

Figure 6: Central Eradication Performance Targets and Results, 2005- 
2009: 

Figure 7: Opium Poppy Being Eradicated: 

Figure 8: Governor-Led Eradication Performance Targets and Results, 
2005-2009: 

Figure 9: Counternarcotics Public Information Materials for Schools: 

Abbreviations: 

CM: Capability milestone: 

CNPA: Counternarcotics Police of Afghanistan: 

CSTC-A: Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan: 

DEA: Drug Enforcement Administration: 

ISAF: International Security and Assistance Force: 

UNODC: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime: 

USAID: United States Agency for International Development: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

March 9, 2010: 

Congressional Addressees: 

The illicit drug trade undermines virtually every aspect of the U.S. 
and Afghan governments' efforts to secure and stabilize Afghanistan 
and remains a challenge to the overall U.S. counterinsurgency campaign 
in the country. The production of opium competes with the country's 
licit agriculture industry, provides funds to insurgents, and fuels 
corruption in Afghanistan. 

In 2003, the Afghan government adopted a National Drug Control 
Strategy with the goal of eliminating the production, consumption, and 
trafficking of illicit drugs in Afghanistan. Since 2005, when it 
became more involved in the counternarcotics effort and developed its 
first counternarcotics strategy, the United States has allotted over 
$2 billion to stem the production, consumption, and trafficking of 
illicit drugs in Afghanistan through elimination/eradication, 
interdiction, justice reform, public information, and drug demand 
reduction.[Footnote 1] 

In this report, we (1) examine how the U.S. counternarcotics strategy 
in Afghanistan has changed over time; (2) assess progress made and 
challenges faced within the elimination/eradication, interdiction, 
justice reform, public information, and drug demand reduction program 
areas; and (3) assess U.S. agencies' monitoring and evaluation of 
counternarcotics programs. 

To address these objectives, we obtained information from pertinent 
planning, funding, and program documents detailing U.S. 
counternarcotics efforts and interviewed relevant officials from the 
U.S. Departments of State (State), Defense (Defense), and Justice, 
including the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in Washington, 
D.C., and Afghanistan. To examine how the U.S. counternarcotics 
strategy in Afghanistan has changed, we reviewed U.S. and Afghan 
strategy documents and discussed recent strategic shifts with relevant 
U.S. officials, including the Special Representative for Afghanistan 
and Pakistan, and with the Office of National Drug Control Policy. To 
assess counternarcotics progress and challenges, we reviewed planning 
and reporting documentation and discussed performance measures, 
interim performance targets, and ongoing challenges with State, 
Defense, Department of Justice, DEA, and contractor officials 
implementing U.S. projects in Afghanistan, as well as with officials 
from the Afghan Ministries of Counter Narcotics, Interior, and 
Justice. To assess U.S. monitoring and evaluation of counternarcotics 
programs, we examined contractor reports, agency documentation, and 
available evaluations conducted by U.S. government agencies and third 
parties such as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). 
Additionally, we discussed these monitoring and evaluation activities 
with officials from State, Defense, Department of Justice, and DEA. 

We conducted this performance audit from January 2009 to March 2010, 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. (See appendix 
I for a more complete description of our scope and methodology.) 

Background: 

[Side bar: Opium Poppy: 

[Photograph of opium poppy: Source: State] 

Opium poppy is a hardy, drought-resistant crop that is easily grown 
throughout Afghanistan’s rugged territory. Opium poppy is an annual 
crop with a 6 to 7 month planting cycle. It is planted between 
September and December and flowers approximately 3 months after 
planting. After the flower’s petals fall away, the opium, an opaque, 
milky sap found in the plant’s seed capsule, is harvested between 
April and July. The sap can then be refined into morphine and heroin. 
End of Side bar] 

Afghanistan produces over 90 percent of the world's opium, which is 
refined into heroin in Afghanistan and other countries. According to 
UNODC, in 2008, the value of the illicit narcotics industry equaled as 
much as one-third of Afghanistan's licit economy--it is a notable 
source of funding for the insurgency, competes with licit development, 
and undermines governance. Processing and transit points for narcotics 
are spread throughout Afghanistan, and finished opiates are smuggled 
across Afghanistan's borders and into the global market. Of the 
roughly $3 billion dollars generated by the Afghan narcotics trade, 
UNODC estimates that $90-$160 million per year is channeled to the 
insurgency. 

As figure 1 shows, most opium poppy cultivated in 2009 was in 
Afghanistan's southern and western regions. These are also the most 
insecure areas with active insurgent elements. 

Figure 1: Estimated Opium Poppy Cultivation, 2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated map of Afghanistan] 

Estimated Opium Poppy Cultivation: 

Province: Helmand; 
Amount: More than 50,000 hectares. 

Province: Badghis; 
Amount: 1,000-19,999 hectares. 

Province: Farah; 
Amount: 1,000-19,999 hectares. 

Province: Daykondi; 
Amount: 1,000-19,999 hectares. 

Province: Kandahar; 
Amount: 1,000-19,999 hectares. 

Province: Oruzgan; 
Amount: 1,000-19,999 hectares. 

Province: Zabol; 
Amount: 1,000-19,999 hectares. 

Province: Herat; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

Province: Nimruz; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

Province: Kabul; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

Province: Nangahar; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

Province: Laghman; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

Province: Konar; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

Province: Badakhshan; 
Amount: 100-999 hectares. 

All other provinces are poppy free. 

Source: UNODC Afghanistan Opium Survey 2009. 

Note: Provinces qualifying as poppy-free are where UNODC estimates 
there are 100 or fewer hectares of poppy cultivated. One hectare 
equals approximately 2.47 acres. 

[End of figure] 

Since 2005, the United States has allotted approximately $2.5 billion 
for elimination/eradication, interdiction, justice reform, public 
information, and drug demand reduction activities in Afghanistan. 
These counternarcotics-related activities are funded through State's 
International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement account, the 
Global War on Terror supplemental funding account, and Defense's 
Counternarcotics account (see table 1). 

Table 1: U.S. Funding of Counternarcotics-Related Activities in 
Afghanistan: 

Allotments: Elimination/eradication[A]; 
FY 2005: $258.0 million; 
FY 2006: $134 million; 
FY 2007: $166.7 million; 
FY 2008: $196.4 million; 
FY 2009: $237.0 million; 
Total: $992.2 million. 

Allotments: Interdiction; 
FY 2005: $213.3 million; 
FY 2006: $102.5 million; 
FY 2007: $253.2 million; 
FY 2008: $204.2 million; 
FY 2009: $193.0 million; 
Total: $966.3 million. 

Allotments: Rule of law/justice[B]; 
FY 2005: $24.0 million; 
FY 2006: $26.5 million; 
FY 2007: $55.5 million; 
FY 2008: $94.4 million; 
FY 2009: $182.0 million; 
Total: $382.5 million. 

Allotments: Public information[C]; 
FY 2005: $8.4 million; 
FY 2006: $2.0 million; 
FY 2007: $6.0 million; 
FY 2008: $2.0 million; 
FY 2009: $17.0 million; 
Total: $35.4 million. 

Allotments: Drug demand reduction; 
FY 2005: 0.0; 
FY 2006: $2.7 million; 
FY 2007: $2.0 million; 
FY 2008: $2.0 million; 
FY 2009: $11.0 million; 
Total: $17.6 million. 

Allotments: Program development and support; 
FY 2005: $12.2 million; 
FY 2006: $13.2 million; 
FY 2007: $23.9 million; 
FY 2008: $21.2 million; 
FY 2009: $40.2 million; 
Total: $110.9 million. 

Allotments: Total[D]; 
FY 2005: $516.0 million; 
FY 2006: $280.9 million; 
FY 2007: $507.3 million; 
FY 2008: $520.4 million; 
FY 2009: $680.3 million; 
Total: $2,504.9 million. 

Sources: GAO analysis of State and Defense budgetary documents. 

Note: This table excludes alternative development and agriculture 
programs. Funding allotments for U.S. alternative development and 
agriculture programs, which we will report on separately in spring 
2010, totaled approximately $1.4 billion from fiscal years 2005 
through 2009. 

[A] While these figures include the full cost of State's Air Wing 
fleet in Afghanistan, these aircraft also support other 
counternarcotics programs, as well as other Embassy Kabul activities. 

[B] During the course of our review, State was unable to provide a 
detailed breakout of counternarcotics-specific activities within the 
rule of law/justice reform program area. Therefore, this figure 
includes some activities unrelated to counternarcotics programs. 

[C] Figures do not include funding for Counternarcotics Advisory 
Teams, which are counted under elimination/eradication. 

[D] Numbers may not sum to totals due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

As figure 2 illustrates, excluding the U.S. investment in alternative 
development programs, the majority of U.S. counternarcotics-related 
funding has been in the elimination/eradication and interdiction 
program areas. 

Figure 2: Allotment of U.S. Funding for Counternarcotics Activities in 
Afghanistan by Program Area from Fiscal Year 2005 to Fiscal Year 2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

Elimination/eradication: 39.6% ($992 million); 
Interdiction: 38.6% ($966 million); 
Rule of law/justice: 15.3% ($383 million); 
Program development and support: 4.4% ($111 million); 
Public information: 1.4% ($35 million); 
Drug demand reduction: 0.7% ($18 million). 

Sources: GAO analysis of State and Defense budgetary documents. 

[End of figure] 

Elimination/Eradication: 

The United States has allotted approximately $992 million in support 
of elimination/eradication programs since fiscal year 2005. These 
programs seek to reduce opium poppy cultivation by destroying opium 
poppy plants before farmers are able to harvest their illicit crops 
(eradication) and by providing rewards to provinces for reductions in 
opium poppy cultivation. State has supported an Afghan central 
eradication force, a governor-led eradication program, and an 
incentive program called the Good Performers Initiative, which rewards 
provinces for reductions in poppy cultivation. 

Interdiction: 

State and Defense have allotted approximately $966 million for 
interdiction programs since fiscal year 2005. U.S. interdiction 
programs aim to decrease narcotics trafficking and processing by 
conducting interdiction operations, which include, among other things, 
raiding drug laboratories; destroying storage sites; arresting drug 
traffickers; conducting roadblock operations; seizing chemicals and 
drugs; and conducting undercover drug purchases. The interdiction 
program also seeks to increase the capability of Afghan law 
enforcement to disrupt and dismantle drug trafficking organizations. 
DEA plays a significant role in the U.S. interdiction effort and is 
the lead U.S. agency responsible for conducting interdiction 
operations in Afghanistan.[Footnote 2] DEA works with the specialized 
units of the Counternarcotics Police of Afghanistan (CNPA) to conduct 
investigations, build cases, and arrest drug traffickers, which we 
discuss in detail later in this report. DEA also works to build Afghan 
law enforcement capacity by mentoring CNPA specialized units. Defense, 
which also conducts interdiction operations in support of its 
counterinsurgency mission, supports the training, equipping, and 
sustainment of the CNPA specialized units, as well as the construction 
of CNPA-related infrastructure projects.[Footnote 3] 

Justice Reform: 

Since fiscal year 2005, State has allotted approximately $383 million 
to support the Afghan government's efforts to establish 
counternarcotics-specific criminal justice institutions and increase 
the Afghan government's capacity to arrest, prosecute, and punish 
traffickers. State supports six Department of Justice attorneys that 
train, mentor, and assist prosecutors and investigators on the Afghan 
Criminal Justice Task Force (Task Force) and the judges on the Afghan 
Central Narcotics Tribunal (Tribunal). These institutions have 
exclusive national jurisdiction over the adjudication and prosecution 
of mid-and high-level narcotics cases in Afghanistan. 

In addition, Defense constructed the State-funded Counternarcotics 
Justice Center (Justice Center), which serves as a secure facility for 
the Task Force and Tribunal to carry out their adjudication missions. 
The Justice Center consists of a detention building and a courthouse; 
offices for judges, investigators, and prosecutors; and barracks for 
members of the protective Afghan Judicial Security Unit. Additionally, 
the Department of Justice's United States Marshals Service trains and 
equips the Afghan Judicial Security Unit to provide facility 
protection at the Justice Center and to serve as a private security 
detail for Afghan judges and high-threat detainees.[Footnote 4] 

Public Information: 

State and Defense have allotted approximately $35 million to support 
the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics in developing and 
disseminating counternarcotics messages through nationwide public 
information campaigns and through province-based activities of 
Counternarcotics Advisory Teams (advisory teams).[Footnote 5] Advisory 
teams are staffed with two contract advisors and eight Afghan Ministry 
of Counter Narcotics employees that specialize as either public 
information, gender affairs, alternative livelihoods, or monitoring 
and evaluation officers. Staffed to seven provinces,[Footnote 6] 
advisory teams work directly with provincial and local leaders to 
implement counternarcotics plans and disseminate counternarcotics 
messages. These messages are for the most part developed by State's 
other public information contractor, which subcontracts with Afghan 
companies to produce and disseminate counternarcotics messages via 
radio, television, and print materials in both Dari and Pashto. These 
messages are also publicized at community events held by advisory 
teams. State officials report that public information enhances other 
counternarcotics program areas, and its success is, therefore, tied to 
the success of the other program areas. 

Drug Demand Reduction: 

Since fiscal year 2006, State has allotted approximately $18 million 
to address the drug addiction problem in Afghanistan through technical 
and training assistance to the Afghan government in creating national 
drug abuse treatment, intervention, and prevention programs. State's 
program supports rehabilitation clinics, including clinics exclusively 
for women and children. The program also supports mosque-based drug 
intervention services and trains community and religious leaders on 
counseling drug addicts. 

Overview and Coordination of U.S. Agency Involvement: 

As shown in figure 3, multiple U.S. agencies are involved in U.S. 
counternarcotics activities in Afghanistan. 

Figure 3: U.S. Agency Involvement in Afghanistan Counternarcotics 
Activities, as of February 2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table, containing photographs] 

Elimination/Eradication: 
State: 
* Funds and manages program; 
* Provided aircraft for operations. 

Interdiction: 
Justice (DEA): 
* Conducts operations and mentors specialized units; 
Defense: 
* Funds Afghan interdiction aircraft; 
* Conducts operations in support of counterinsurgency; 
* Builds and maintains facilities; 
* Conducts police training; 
State: 
* Funds operation and maintenance costs of facilities and provides 
aircraft for operations. 

Justice reform: 
Justice: 
* Implements program; 
* Mentors prosecutors and judges; 
State: 
* Funds program and operation and maintenance costs of facilities; 
Defense: 
* Builds facilities. 

Public information: 
State: 
* Funds and manages program. 

Drug demand reduction: 
State: 
* Funds and manages program. 

Sources: GAO analysis of State, Defense, and Justice program 
documents; (left to right) State, Defense, GAO, State, and State 
(photos). 

[End of figure] 

U.S. officials involved in Afghan counternarcotics stated that 
coordination between agency partners has been largely successful. 
Agency partners meet regularly through several coordinating bodies in 
Kabul, such as the Eradication Working Group and Counternarcotics Sync 
Group. Additionally, interdiction operations and intelligence are 
coordinated through a variety of mechanisms. The Interagency 
Operations Coordination Center coordinates and analyzes intelligence 
information in Kabul to produce targets for interdiction operations 
and is jointly led by DEA and the United Kingdom's Serious Organized 
Crime Agency. The Combined Joint Interagency Task Force-Nexus 
established by Defense in Kandahar is intended to provide coordination 
support, intelligence, and target packages for DEA interdiction 
missions as well as International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) 
[Footnote 7] counterinsurgency operations that target insurgents 
linked to the drug trade. The Joint Narcotics Analysis Center is an 
intelligence center jointly led by the United States and United 
Kingdom in London that provides strategic analysis and operational 
support to interdiction activities in Afghanistan. Officials involved 
in the Interagency Operations Coordination Center and Combined Joint 
Interagency Task Force-Nexus reported that they are exploring ways of 
formalizing their relationship for enhanced cooperation. Additionally, 
State recently created and filled a position for a Coordinating 
Director for Development and Economic Affairs at Embassy Kabul that 
oversees all U.S. assistance programs, including counternarcotics 
activities. State also hosts meetings of the interagency 
Counternarcotics Working Group in Washington, D.C. According to State, 
the latest revisions to the U.S. Counternarcotics Strategy were 
coordinated through these working-level meetings. 

U.S. Counternarcotics Strategy Changing Emphasis Across Program Areas 
to Support Overarching Counterinsurgency Campaign: 

The U.S. counternarcotics strategy for Afghanistan has become more 
integrated with the broader counterinsurgency effort over time, as 
depicted in figure 4. 

Figure 4: Time Line of Counternarcotics Strategies in Afghanistan: 

[Refer to PDF for image: timeline with background photograph of poppy 
field] 

2003: 
Afghanistan publishes National Drug Control Strategy concentrating on 
combating illicit narcotics production, consumption, and trafficking. 

2005: 
United States assumes larger role in and develops strategy for 
counternarcotics in Afghanistan, which introduces 
elimination/eradication to overall effort. 

2006: 
Afghanistan updates its National Drug Control Strategy to include 
elimination/eradication and other program areas. 

2007: 
United States refines strategy to, among other things, coordinate 
counternarcotics and counterinsurgency planning and operations. 
However, Defense policy at this time prohibited military from directly 
participating in drug interdiction missions. 

2008: 
Defense changes policy and rules of engagement to allow greater 
support for interdiction operations. 

2009: 
United States begins development of new strategy to align with 
counterinsurgency efforts. New approach de-emphasizes eradication, 
focuses on interdiction, increases assistance to farmers, and 
integrates alternative development programs into general agricultural 
assistance. 

Sources: United States and Afghanistan strategies and planning 
documents; State (photo). 

[End of figure] 

In 2003, Afghanistan adopted a National Drug Control Strategy with the 
goal of eliminating production, consumption, and trafficking of 
illicit drugs in Afghanistan. In 2005, the United States assumed a 
larger role in the counternarcotics effort after several years of 
increases in opium poppy cultivation and developed its first 
counternarcotics strategy for Afghanistan. This strategy concentrated 
on five program areas: elimination/eradication, interdiction, justice 
reform, public information, and alternative livelihoods. The 2005 U.S. 
strategy introduced elimination/eradication, which had not been a 
major focus of previous efforts. The government of Afghanistan added 
this and other program areas to its 2006 National Drug Control 
Strategy, which it updated and integrated into its National 
Development Strategy in 2008. 

In August 2007, the United States refined its counternarcotics 
strategy, seeking to: (1) increase development assistance to encourage 
licit economic development; (2) amplify the scope and intensity of 
interdiction and eradication operations; (3) encourage consistent, 
sustained political will for the counternarcotics effort among the 
Afghan government, coalition partners, and international civilian and 
military organizations; and (4) coordinate counternarcotics and 
counterinsurgency planning and operations with a particular emphasis 
on integrating drug interdiction into the counterinsurgency mission. 
At that time, however, Defense policy prohibited the military from 
directly participating in drug interdiction missions. 

According to Defense and DEA officials, this prohibition of military 
involvement in interdiction missions prevented or hampered the ability 
of some missions from occurring in insecure areas and made commanders 
reluctant to provide support to DEA. However, both Defense and DEA 
officials stated that this policy ignored a nexus between the 
narcotics trade and the insurgency. For example, DEA drug raids 
yielded weapons caches and explosives used by insurgents, as well as 
suspects listed on Defense military target lists, and military raids 
on insurgent compounds also yielded illicit narcotics and narcotics 
processing equipment. 

According to Defense, in November 2008 it changed its rules of 
engagement to permit the targeting of persons by the military 
(including drug traffickers, if appropriate) who provide material 
support to insurgent or terrorist groups. Additionally, Defense 
clarified its policy, in December 2008, to allow the military to 
accompany and provide force protection to U.S. and host nation law 
enforcement personnel on counternarcotics field operations, so long as 
Defense personnel do not directly participate in arrests. According to 
Defense, these changes are also mirrored in North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization doctrine, allowing members to participate in interdiction 
operations. Defense and DEA officials stated that these changes have 
benefited interdiction-related programs in Afghanistan. 

In 2009, the U.S. approach shifted again to align more closely with 
counterinsurgency efforts. This programmatic shift de-emphasized 
eradication by ending support for the Afghan central eradication 
force. According to the Special Representative for Afghanistan and 
Pakistan, eradication unduly punished and alienated farmers for making 
a "rational economic decision"[Footnote 8] while ignoring the profits 
gleaned by traffickers and insurgents from the sale of processed opium 
and heroin. Therefore, based on the reasoning that going after drug 
labs and traffickers would more precisely target the drug-insurgency 
nexus, the United States is focusing more on interdiction efforts. 
According to the Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, 
Defense and DEA will continue to lead in the interdiction program 
area, with State playing the role of coordinator. In addition, this 
strategic shift increased assistance to farmers and integrated 
alternative development programs into general agricultural assistance. 
According to the Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, 
the U.S. counternarcotics strategy will be a subcomponent of the 
broader counterinsurgency campaign. 

Although Counternarcotics Programs Reported Some Progress, They Remain 
Challenged by Lack of Security, Political Will, and Afghan Government 
Capacity: 

The United States' use of total poppy cultivation as a primary measure 
of overall counternarcotics success has limitations in that it does 
not capture all aspects of U.S. counternarcotics efforts. In 
recognition of this, the administration is attempting to develop 
measures that better capture overall counternarcotics success. U.S. 
agencies reported some progress within each of the counternarcotics 
program areas by collecting information on program-specific 
performance measures; however, it is difficult to fully assess 
progress in some areas due to a lack of interim performance targets, 
which can be used to provide decision makers with an indication of the 
incremental progress toward achieving results. In addition, 
challenges, such as lack of security, political will, and Afghan 
government capacity affect progress in all program areas. 

Current Measure of Overall Counternarcotics Success Has Limitations: 

Since 2005, the United States has measured overall success through 
total hectares under opium poppy cultivation. Each counternarcotics 
program area has its own program-specific performance measures--which 
we address later in this section. However, opium poppy cultivation 
continues to be tracked by the United States and UNODC as an aggregate 
measure of counternarcotics success.[Footnote 9] Evidence based on 
annual UNODC surveys indicates a peak in production during 2007 with 
declines in subsequent years. As opium poppy cultivation has declined 
and more provinces have become poppy-free,[Footnote 10] it has become 
more concentrated in the largely insecure south and west of 
Afghanistan. Changes in poppy cultivation since 2005 are shown in 
figure 5.[Footnote 11] 

Figure 5: Total Opium Poppy Cultivation in Afghanistan, 2005-2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Year: 2005; 
Hectares: 104,000; 
90% Confidence, Upper: 113,000; 
90% Confidence, Lower: 95,000. 

Year: 2006; 
Hectares: 165,000; 
90% Confidence, Upper: 180,000; 
90% Confidence, Lower: 150,000. 

Year: 2007; 
Hectares: 193,000; 
90% Confidence, Upper: 209,000; 
90% Confidence, Lower: 177,000. 

Year: 2008; 
Hectares: 157,000; 
90% Confidence, Upper: 190,000; 
90% Confidence, Lower: 130,000. 

Year: 2009; 
Hectares: 123,000; 
90% Confidence, Upper: 137,000; 
90% Confidence, Lower: 102,000. 

Sources: UNODC Afghanistan Opium Survey for 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 
and 2009. 

[End of figure] 

However, U.S. officials pointed out that poppy cultivation fails to 
capture all aspects of counternarcotics success. For example, although 
20 of the 34 Afghan provinces are now poppy-free, some of these 
provinces may still contain high levels of drug trafficking or 
processing. Additionally, according to the Special Representative for 
Afghanistan and Pakistan, the use of opium poppy cultivation as the 
primary measure of overall success led to an over-emphasis on 
eradication activities, which due to their focus on farmers, could 
undermine the larger counterinsurgency campaign. Officials from the 
Office of National Drug Control Policy also criticized using total 
opium poppy cultivation as the sole measure of success, stating that 
measures of success should relate to security, such as public safety 
and terrorist attacks. Moreover, previous GAO work on U.S. 
counternarcotics efforts in Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia indicates that 
government control of drug-growing areas and project sites is 
essential for counternarcotics success.[Footnote 12] 

According to preliminary documents, the administration is attempting 
to develop measures that better capture overall counternarcotics 
success. Potential measures being considered include interdiction of 
drugs, volume and value of narcotics in Afghanistan, and successful 
interdiction and prosecution of narcotics traffickers. However, at the 
time of our review, no such measures had been finalized. 

Elimination/Eradication: Efforts Challenged by Political Will, 
Security, and Afghan Capacity: 

The goal of elimination/eradication programs is to reduce opium poppy 
cultivation through forced eradication and economic incentives. State 
assisted the Afghan government in selecting, training, and fielding a 
central eradication force[Footnote 13] of Afghan police to destroy 
poppy crops and serve as a deterrent to continued poppy cultivation. 
The governor-led eradication program reimburses governors that self- 
initiate eradication of poppy in their provinces. After the 
eradication is verified by UNODC, the U.S. government transfers funds 
to the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics, which in turn reimburses 
governors at the rate of $135 per hectare eradicated.[Footnote 14] As 
the elimination component of this program area, the Good Performers 
Initiative annually provides political recognition and direct 
financial incentives to provinces that reduce or eliminate opium poppy 
cultivation. 

Central Eradication Force Consistently Hindered by Political Will and 
Security Challenges That Limited Effectiveness and Mobility: 

State and the Afghan government established annual performance targets 
for central eradication by setting a specific amount of hectares to be 
eradicated. Central eradication did not meet its specific targets, as 
shown in figure 6. 

Figure 6: Central Eradication Performance Targets and Results, 2005- 
2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Year: 2005-2006; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 2,250. 

Year: 2006-2007; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 3,149; 
Target: 7,000-10,000. 

Year: 2007-2008; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 1,174; 
Target: 3,000-7,000. 

Year: 2008-2009; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 2,663; 
Target: 5,000. 

Sources: GAO analysis of State and UNODC data. 

[End of figure] 

State originally intended a central eradication force comprised of 
Afghan Counternarcotics Police to be augmented by aerial herbicide 
spraying, a method the U.S. government has historically used and 
supported in Colombia.[Footnote 15] However, the proposed aerial spray 
eradication met heavy Afghan and international political resistance 
and was never authorized by the Afghan government. This forced central 
eradicators to destroy poppy crops with such equipment as tractors, 
all-terrain vehicles, and sticks. In 2005, State aircraft began 
supporting the program by transporting personnel and equipment and 
providing reconnaissance and protection for the central eradicators. 

This force was heavily dependent on large ground convoys for its 
deployment. For example, during its last eradication season, the 
central eradicators deployed from Kabul to Helmand in an 80 kilometer- 
long convoy. According to State officials, the ground convoys were 
expensive, made the force vulnerable to attack, and caused central 
eradicators to spend more time deploying and less time eradicating. 
Maintenance and readiness of vital equipment proved to be a persistent 
challenge. Additionally, U.S. agency officials and contractors 
reported incidents of equipment sabotage and dismantling for parts. 
Opium poppy eradication is illustrated in figure 7. 

Figure 7: Opium Poppy Being Eradicated: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: State. 

Another factor that hampered central eradicators was the delay in 
gaining permission to manually eradicate from Afghan governors. 
[Footnote 16] In 2008, the concept for the central eradication force 
was changed so that central eradicators could operate without governor 
permission in areas where governors either would not or could not 
launch eradication efforts themselves. State officials at the time 
recognized that this forced eradication mission would require greater 
protection for the central eradication force, which faced growing 
resistance as poppy growth became more concentrated in less-secure 
areas. A counternarcotics infantry unit from the Afghan National Army 
deployed with the central eradication force during the 2009 season 
and, although more hectares were eradicated than in 2008, State 
officials reported that this unit was unable to provide sufficient 
force protection. 

As a result of these challenges, State officials in Afghanistan said 
that the central eradication force was not very effective as a large-
scale crop elimination tool but maintained that it provided a 
deterrent against poppy cultivation. However, in 2009, UNODC surveyed 
Afghan farmers who had stopped growing poppy, and 1 percent of 
respondents cited fear of eradication as a reason for stopping opium 
poppy cultivation.[Footnote 17] 

Continued Governor-Led Eradication Success Contingent Upon Adequate 
Security, Political Will, and Afghan Capacity: 

Separate targets were established for governor-led eradication. 
Governor-led eradication met its performance target in 2006-2007, but 
did not in other years, as shown in figure 8. 

Figure 8: Governor-Led Eradication Performance Targets and Results, 
2005-2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Year: 2005-2006; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 13,050. 

Year: 2006-2007; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 15,898; 
Target: 15,000-25,000. 

Year: 2007-2008; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 4,306; 
Target: 15,000-25,000. 

Year: 2008-2009; 
Actual hectares eradicated: 2,687; 
Target: 15,000. 

Sources: GAO analysis of State and UNODC data. 

[End of figure] 

Comparisons of both central and governor-led eradication show that 
substantially more hectares of poppy were eradicated through governor- 
led efforts in years prior to 2009 (see figs. 6 and 8). However, 
according to State, as cultivation becomes more concentrated in areas 
of poor security, and more stable provinces become poppy-free, the 
opportunities to use governor-led eradication have become more 
limited. In particular, U.S. officials note that adequate force 
protection is essential for eradication in the south. Some governors 
are willing to eradicate, but are constrained by poor security, as in 
insurgency-dominated Helmand in 2009. Protection for governor-led 
eradicators relies upon agreements made between governors and local 
security forces. 

In addition, U.S. officials stated that governor-led eradication 
efforts were challenged by lack of political will among governors. 
Each autumn, U.S. officials and Afghan governors collectively set 
targets for the upcoming year's eradication work. Nevertheless, even 
after agreement is ostensibly reached with all governors, some 
governors do not take action in their provinces. A State official 
noted the case of one governor who was unwilling to eradicate even 
after receiving 10 tractors for this purpose. The UNODC recently 
reported that timely eradication could have caused seven more 
provinces to become poppy-free and directly attributed the absence of 
eradication in two of these provinces to a lack of planning and will 
to eradicate. 

A State official also noted that while political will exists in some 
cases, many governors do not have the capacity or resources to 
initiate eradication. To assist governors with the start-up costs of 
eradication (rental of equipment, hiring of labor, provision of fuel), 
the United States and United Kingdom provide advanced payments to 
governors against future eradication achievements. 

Thirty-three of 34 Afghan Provinces Rewarded through Good Performers 
Initiative: 

Under the Good Performers Initiative,[Footnote 18] provinces 
determined by UNODC to be poppy-free receive $1 million in development 
assistance. Provinces that reduce poppy cultivation by 10 percent 
receive $1,000 per each additional hectare of reduction up to a 
maximum reward of $10 million.[Footnote 19] Annual special recognition 
awards of $500,000 are also given to provinces that have taken 
extraordinary steps to fight narcotics, but which may not qualify 
under the previous criteria. Projects--such as the construction of 
irrigation systems or provision of tractors--are selected and funded 
through a process that includes oversight by both the Afghan Ministry 
of Counter Narcotics and State. To date, the U.S. government has 
allotted over $80 million[Footnote 20] to 33 provinces through the 
Good Performers Initiative, while the United Kingdom has provided 
approximately $12 million.[Footnote 21] In 2009, State pledged nearly 
$39 million to the initiative. As of September 2009, 7 of 43 projects 
initiated through Good Performers Initiative were complete. 

Determining the precise effect of this program on poppy cultivation in 
any given province is a challenge. A State review of the Good 
Performers Initiative found that a combination of variables, including 
political will and security, as well as incentives like development 
projects, ultimately contribute to poppy cultivation reductions across 
provinces. Afghan officials expressed favorable views of the Good 
Performers Initiative, for example identifying it as a main factor in 
the rising number of poppy-free provinces. According to State, the 
efficiency of disbursements has improved with the transfer of the Good 
Performers Initiative fund and administrative responsibilities from 
the United Nations Development Programme-administered Counternarcotics 
Trust Fund to the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics. Inefficiencies 
at the fund frustrated governors with delays in approving and 
implementing projects, leading the Afghan government to recommend a 
different funding arrangement. Due to the slowness of delivery and the 
high administrative costs of funding projects through the trust fund, 
the United States created a joint bank account with the Afghan 
Ministry of Counter Narcotics to administer program moneys more 
rapidly. 

Interdiction: United States Conducting More Operations, but Afghan 
Capacity Limited: 

U.S. interdiction programs aim to decrease narcotics trafficking and 
processing by conducting operations, as well as increasing the 
capability of Afghan law enforcement to disrupt and dismantle drug 
trafficking organizations. DEA is the lead agency for conducting 
narcotics interdiction operations in Afghanistan, and its presence 
expanded from 13 to 81 permanently assigned agents during fiscal year 
2009.[Footnote 22] DEA agents in Kabul and at forward operating bases 
in Afghan provinces work with specialized units of the CNPA to conduct 
investigations, build cases, and arrest drug traffickers. These 
specialized and vetted units include the National Interdiction Unit, a 
tactical unit intended to conduct raids and seizures; the Sensitive 
Investigative Unit, intended to gather evidence and develop cases for 
narcotics investigations;[Footnote 23] the Technical Investigation 
Unit, a subunit of the Sensitive Investigative Unit intended to 
collect evidence through wiretaps; and the Air Interdiction Unit, a 
force of eight MI-17 helicopters used to transport DEA and National 
Interdiction Unit personnel on air assault operations. DEA Foreign-
deployed Advisory Support Teams identify, target, and disrupt drug 
trafficking organizations, and conduct affiliated counterinsurgency 
operations in concert with the Afghan National Interdiction Unit, Air 
Interdiction Unit, and the British-trained Afghan Special Narcotics 
Force.[Footnote 24] Additionally, State's Air Wing in Afghanistan 
supports interdiction activities on an as-needed and as-available 
basis.[Footnote 25] 

DEA also plays a role in building Afghan law enforcement capacity by 
mentoring CNPA specialized units and deploying with specialized unit 
platoons at forward operating bases. Defense supports the construction 
of these forward operating bases, as well as other infrastructure 
projects such as CNPA training and basing facilities in Kabul. State 
supports the operation and maintenance costs of some of these Defense- 
built infrastructure projects, as well as vetting (through urinalysis 
and polygraphs) of Sensitive Investigative Unit and Technical 
Investigation Unit officers. Defense trains, equips, and sustains the 
CNPA specialized units, including logistics and maintenance support to 
the Air Interdiction Unit helicopter fleet intended to establish an 
air interdiction capacity for the Ministry of Interior. 

U.S. Defense Policy Change Allowing More Interdiction Missions: 

As noted earlier, in late 2008, Defense and the North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization changed their policies to allow the U.S. military and 
ISAF forces to participate in interdiction operations in Afghanistan. 
DEA and Defense officials stated that these changes have enabled 
higher levels of interdiction operations in areas previously 
inaccessible due to security problems. DEA conducted 82 interdiction 
operations in Afghanistan during fiscal year 2009 (compared with 42 in 
fiscal year 2008), often with support from U.S. military and other 
coalition forces. These operations include, among other things, 
raiding drug laboratories; destroying storage sites; arresting drug 
traffickers; conducting roadblock operations; seizing chemicals and 
drugs; and conducting undercover drug purchases. The U.S. military and 
ISAF are also targeting narcotics trafficking and processing as part 
of regular counterinsurgency operations. For example, ISAF Regional 
Commands are expected to submit a counternarcotics campaign plan for 
2010, and Defense has established a Combined Joint Interagency Task 
Force-Nexus in Kandahar intended to provide coordination support, 
intelligence, and target packages for DEA interdiction missions as 
well as ISAF counterinsurgency operations that target insurgents 
linked to the drug trade.[Footnote 26] 

One way for U.S. agencies to measure progress in this area is by 
tracking and reporting the results of interdiction operations, as 
shown in table 2. 

Table 2: DEA Interdiction Data for Afghanistan Fiscal Year 2005 
through Fiscal Year 2009: 

Interdiction operations; 
2005[A]: 33; 
2006: 48; 
2007: 37; 
2008: 42; 
2009: 82. 

Opium seized (metric tons)[B]; 
2005[A]: 42.9; 
2006: 7.5; 
2007: 0.892; 
2008: 2.442; 
2009: 25. 

Heroin seized (metric tons); 
2005[A]: 5.5; 
2006: 1; 
2007: 0.124; 
2008: 4.083; 
2009: 0.593. 

Hashish seized (metric tons); 
2005[A]: 142.4; 
2006: 1.3; 
2007: 0.434; 
2008: 238.935; 
2009: 53.133. 

Clandestine conversion labs destroyed; 
2005[A]: 247; 
2006: 31; 
2007: 1; 
2008: 13; 
2009: 25. 

Drug-related arrests; 
2005[A]: 32; 
2006: 79; 
2007: 33; 
2008: 48; 
2009: 56. 

Source: DEA. 

[A] According to DEA officials, during 2005 the Foreign-deployed 
Advisory Support Teams primarily engaged in search-and-destroy 
missions, resulting in extensive narcotics seizures and destruction of 
processing labs. Today, the Foreign-deployed Advisory Support Teams 
are building evidentiary cases for eventual trial at the Criminal 
Justice Task Force. 

[B] One metric ton equals 1,000 kilograms or approximately 2,205 
pounds. 

[End of table] 

Agreements between the United States and Afghanistan contain interim 
performance targets for interdiction operations. For example, for 2008-
2009, the agreed upon goal was to produce a 10 percent increase from 
2008 of drug and precursor chemical seizures or interception of drug 
traffickers, with 25 percent of drug seizures resulting in arrests. 
However, DEA officials in Afghanistan cautioned that seizure and 
arrest figures alone are not sufficient to show that interdiction 
operations are having an impact on the Afghan narcotics industry. 
Furthermore, measuring the results of drug-control actions is 
difficult because data on illegal drug movements are more difficult to 
collect than data on most legal commodities. Without knowing how much 
was shipped or what got through, the amount of narcotics seized does 
not yield a meaningful measure of effectiveness. As a result, DEA also 
measures its performance through its investigative and enforcement 
efforts against High Value Targets designated by the DEA Kabul Country 
Office, as well as significant Afghan drug organizations identified by 
the interagency Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force program. 
According to DEA, if one of these organizations is disrupted or 
dismantled, it is reflected in the yearly evaluation of the region. 
Additionally, DEA officials in the field stated that they attempt to 
gauge impact of operations on narcotics networks through intelligence 
information. 

Capacity of Afghan Counternarcotics Police to Carry Out Interdiction 
Efforts Limited: 

With regard to increasing Afghan law enforcement capacity to disrupt 
and dismantle drug trafficking organizations, CSTC-A[Footnote 27] uses 
capability milestones (CM), ranging from CM1 (fully capable) to CM4 
(not yet capable), as criteria to assess army and police progress in 
manning, training, and equipping. According to U.S. officials, these 
ratings incorporate input from DEA and Defense mentors working with 
the CNPA specialized units. These criteria are summarized in table 3. 

Table 3: Capability Milestone Criteria: 

Capability milestone: CM1; 
Description: Unit is capable of independently planning, executing, and 
sustaining counterinsurgency operations at the battalion level with no 
operational coalition support for organic functions. 

Capability milestone: CM2; 
Description: Unit is capable of planning, executing, and sustaining 
counterinsurgency operations at the battalion level with coalition 
support. 

Capability milestone: CM3; 
Description: Unit is partially capable of conducting counterinsurgency 
operations at the company level with coalition support. 

Capability milestone: CM4; 
Description: Unit formed but not yet capable of conducting primary 
operational missions. 

Source: Defense. 

[End of table] 

As of June 2009, CSTC-A rated the CNPA's specialized units at CM3 
(partially capable) with the exception of the Air Interdiction Unit, 
which along with the provincial CNPA, was rated at CM4 (not capable). 
[Footnote 28] State also reports on the capability levels of the CNPA 
specialized units in its yearly International Narcotics Control 
Strategy Report but does not report details that would allow a more 
accurate assessment of the units' capability. For example, in its 
January 2009 report, State reported that the National Interdiction 
Unit was capable of conducting its own operations, including 
requesting and executing search and arrest warrants, while the 
Sensitive Investigative Unit was able to independently initiate and 
complete investigative and undercover cases. 

Although U.S. agencies did assess the capabilities of the CNPA and its 
specialized units, we found that these assessments lacked interim 
performance targets, which can enable decision makers to more readily 
understand incremental progress made toward program goals. For 
example, while Defense officials did provide informal performance 
targets for the Air Interdiction Unit, such as Afghan pilots and crews 
being able to conduct transport flights, or flying interdiction 
missions with mixed Afghan/U.S. crews, these targets were not 
formalized in an overall training plan or time line that would allow a 
program manager to judge whether training was on, ahead, or behind 
schedule. Similarly, while CSTC-A's CM-ratings of the CNPA and its 
specialized units provided a snapshot of operational capability, there 
were no interim performance targets to assess what this snapshot means 
in terms of overall progress. Furthermore, the CM ratings do not 
assess the CNPA's institutional capability to provide logistics and 
administrative support. A recent interagency evaluation identified 
organizational capacity as a critical weakness of the CNPA, and 
Defense officials stated that Defense is working to develop subratings 
to measure CNPA support functions such as logistics support, financial 
management, administration, and training. 

U.S. and Afghan officials noted the continued development and 
increased operational capacity of the CNPA's specialized units. For 
example, DEA officials cited the National Interdiction Unit's ability 
to conduct smaller ground-based interdiction operations on its own, 
the Sensitive Investigative Unit's ability to conduct simple 
counternarcotics investigations, and the execution of 180 wiretaps by 
the Technical Investigation Unit between October 2008 and June 2009, 
stating that this would not have been possible 2 years ago. 

However, a July 2009 interagency evaluation, as well as U.S. and 
Afghan officials we interviewed, identified weaknesses in broader CNPA 
capacity and its training program, including the following: 

* Lack of a comprehensive strategy for CNPA development and no U.S. 
agency with clear responsibility for training, leading to "neglect of 
the force" beyond the specialized units. 

* Lack of structure and integrity of operation in CNPA personnel 
system, causing the exact number of current CNPA personnel, their 
locations, training and equipping status, and current support to be 
unclear. 

* No institutional capacity within the CNPA to provide daily 
administrative, logistics, finance, and training support to its 
various components, leading to dependency of the specialized units on 
U.S. support. 

* No institutional plan for equipping or recruitment to the CNPA. 

* Greater lack of priority and logistics support affecting the 
provincial CNPA, along with questions of ownership and authority with 
provincial Afghan National Police. 

According to Defense officials, Defense is refocusing its efforts to 
train and equip the CNPA based on this assessment's findings and 
recommendations. Since December 2009, Defense has supported the 
deployment of four advisors from the Department of Justice's 
International Criminal Investigative Training Assistance Program to 
CSTC-A, where they are assessing CNPA training needs, exploring ways 
to reform, and seeking to coordinate CNPA training requirements with 
the larger police training mission. Defense officials characterized 
this as a first step, and the CNPA assessment estimated that it will 
take at least 3 years before the CNPA, beyond the specialized units, 
is able to conduct targeted and coordinated investigations at the 
national level. 

Limited Air Assets Force Trade-off between Interdiction Missions and 
Training of Afghans: 

The objectives of the Air Interdiction Unit[Footnote 29] are to 
provide operational airlift for DEA and National Interdiction Unit-led 
interdiction missions, as well as to build Afghan capacity to conduct 
such missions autonomously. According to DEA officials, airlift 
support from the Air Interdiction Unit allows DEA and the National 
Interdiction Unit to act swiftly on intelligence information and 
perform air assault operations on targets across Afghanistan, 
including areas that would otherwise be inaccessible by ground due to 
security concerns. According to Defense officials, only contractor 
pilots currently fly during actual interdiction operations due to a 
lack of proficient Afghan pilots. 

One key challenge facing the Air Interdiction Unit, in light of 
limited air assets, is meeting the growing demand for interdiction 
missions while also training Afghan pilots, flight engineers, and crew 
chiefs to conduct such missions themselves. Defense officials training 
the Air Interdiction Unit told us that, because interdiction missions 
must be flown by contractor pilots, this forces a trade-off between 
conducting interdiction missions and training Afghan pilots. According 
to Defense and DEA officials, operations should always take priority 
over training. Defense is addressing this issue by attempting to 
procure six additional helicopters in fiscal year 2010 and utilizing 
flight simulators in Kabul and at its training center in the United 
States.[Footnote 30] Additionally, the United Kingdom has contributed 
four helicopters to the Air Interdiction Unit with plans to contribute 
two more.[Footnote 31] Germany has also provided two helicopters for 
general Ministry of Interior use. 

Defense and DEA officials stated that airlift requirements have grown 
beyond what was originally envisaged for the Air Interdiction Unit, 
and they also stated they expected these requirements to grow further 
as DEA expands into forward operating bases.[Footnote 32] Defense 
officials told us that they expected growing interdiction requirements 
to continue to compete with efforts to train Afghans over the next 
year. To address limited air assets, DEA officials stated that DEA is 
attempting to procure medium-lift helicopters in fiscal year 2011. 

Justice Reform: While Some Progress Reported, Extent Is Unclear, and 
Broader Justice Sector-Related Challenges Impede Efforts: 

[Side bar: 
2009 Status of Afghan Extradition Law: 
International extradition is the formal process by which a person 
found in one country is surrendered to another country for trial or 
punishment. This process is regulated by treaty between the U.S. 
government and the government of a foreign country and has been used 
by DEA in countries such as Colombia and Mexico to extradite high-
level drug figures that DEA has determined would be more reliably 
prosecuted and incarcerated through the U.S. judicial system. U.S. 
Department of Justice attorneys assisted Afghan counterparts in 
drafting an extradition law, which, according to Department of Justice 
officials, is still pending final decision with the Afghan parliament. 
According to Department of Justice officials, when the Afghan 
parliament ended session in June 2009, the extradition law remained in 
draft form and contained three concerns:(1) a requirement for third 
party consent for the extradition of third party nationals–e.g., 
Pakistan would have to consent to the extradition of one of its 
citizens from Afghanistan to the United States; (2) the law would not 
apply to women; and (3) the law sets up reciprocity in extradition. 
End of side bar] 

As noted earlier, the goal of the justice reform program area is to 
support the Afghan government's efforts to establish counternarcotics- 
specific criminal justice institutions and increase the Afghan 
government's capacity to arrest, prosecute, and punish traffickers. 
According to DEA officials, the absence of a bilateral U.S.-Afghan 
extradition agreement that includes narcotics offenses removes a 
valuable channel for prosecuting higher profile drug traffickers. 
Without a formal extradition option, DEA generally must rely on the 
Afghan justice system to prosecute and incarcerate drug violators, 
which U.S. officials characterized as "embryonic" and often subject to 
political will.[Footnote 33] 

State provides funding for Department of Justice-led mentoring 
programs with the Afghan investigators and prosecutors on the Criminal 
Justice Task Force and Afghan judges on the Central Narcotics 
Tribunal, as well as Department of Justice-led advising activities 
regarding the development of Afghan laws and procedures.[Footnote 34] 
The 32 Afghan prosecutors and 35 investigators on the Task Force and 
14 Afghan judges on the Tribunal are working out of the completed 
Counternarcotics Justice Center, which opened in May 2009 after a 
multiyear delay.[Footnote 35] 

While the Task Force and Tribunal are now operating within the Justice 
Center, and laws are being developed as previously noted, the extent 
of progress in U.S. agency programs cannot be fully assessed due to a 
lack of interim performance targets. For example, the fiscal year 2009 
work plan does not outline interim performance targets that provide 
specific levels of results to be achieved within an explicit time 
frame. 

In addition, a lack of defined criteria makes it difficult for State 
and Department of Justice officials to ensure that the Task Force, 
Tribunal, and Justice Center are achieving their intended purposes. 
The Task Force and Tribunal are responsible for narcotics and 
narcotics-related corruption cases against mid-and high-level drug 
traffickers, and the Justice Center was constructed to assist the 
Afghan government in prosecuting and detaining significant or mid-to 
high-level narcotics offenders. Since 2005, the Task Force and the 
Tribunal have tried and convicted approximately 1,550 drug 
traffickers. However, both State and Department of Justice officials 
acknowledged that the definitions of a low-, mid-, or high-level 
trafficker are not based on any clear criteria. Instead, according to 
a State official, subjective judgments are made based on the amount of 
drugs seized, the extent of a trafficker's political connections, or 
whether the trafficker is a government official. Additionally, 
according to the Department of Justice, more appropriate measures than 
the current low-, mid-, and high-level traffickers may exist. 

Provincial-Level Capacity and Corruption Hinder Successful Prosecution 
of Counternarcotics Cases: 

According to U.S. and Afghan officials, deficiencies in CNPA training 
result in inconsistent crime scene investigation, poor evidence 
gathering, and weakened cases brought before the Task Force. For 
example, a senior Afghan Ministry of Interior official stated that 
provincial CNPA personnel often do not correctly follow arrest, 
reporting, and transfer procedures for suspects referred to the 
Justice Center. Department of Justice officials also noted that the 
widespread illiteracy among the CNPA contributes to the poor quality 
of case documentation. In addition, U.S. and Afghan officials observed 
that CNPA personnel are generally not arresting high-level traffickers. 

State has reported that narcotics-related corruption is particularly 
pervasive at the provincial and district levels of government, where 
officials have been known to facilitate drug activities and benefit 
from revenue streams produced by the drug trade. For example, an 
Afghan Ministry of Justice official noted that police and prosecutors 
are easy targets for bribery because they are reportedly not paid 
sufficiently. A recent Defense-led interagency evaluation also found 
that CNPA personnel are more susceptible to corruption than regular 
Afghan National Police officers due to the lucrative nature of the 
narcotics trade. For example, Department of Justice and Afghan 
officials noted that, in about one-third of cases from provinces, 
provincial CNPA personnel have submitted drugs as evidence to the 
Justice Center but did not arrest the criminal suspect or suspects. 

Counternarcotics Justice Center Encounters Operational and Security 
Challenges: 

Operational and security challenges continue to hinder the 
effectiveness of the Justice Center, including the following: 

* Sustainment of operations and maintenance costs. The Justice Center 
is challenged by high operations and maintenance costs of $3 million 
per year, which State will fund through May 31, 2011. While State 
officials are currently working to develop a transition plan, no 
documented transition plan yet exists that addresses how the Justice 
Center will be handed over to the Afghan government in 2011. According 
to State and Department of Justice officials, the Afghan government 
will not be able to pay for these costs after the United States 
withdraws its support in May 2011. We have previously noted that 
Afghanistan continues to lack the ability to cover its government 
expenditure plans without foreign assistance.[Footnote 36] 

* Retaining Afghan protective personnel. The Justice Center suffers 
from low retention of trained and vetted marshals who provide judicial 
security for the Tribunal. According to Department of Justice and 
State officials, conditions continue to be extremely unsafe for Afghan 
judges; the chief appellate judge was assassinated in September 2008. 
We have previously reported that trained Afghan staff often leave 
government or other public agencies to work with donors and 
contractors who can offer better-paying jobs, and U.S. Marshals 
Service officials noted that trained personnel are often recruited to 
Afghan agencies that pay more, resulting in a shortage in vetted staff 
that can provide protection for prisoners, prosecutors, and judges. 

Public Information: Activities Difficult to Measure and Challenged by 
Lack of Security and Political Will: 

As previously noted, the goals of the U.S. public information program 
are to discourage poppy cultivation and build the capacity of the 
Afghan government to conduct public information activities on its own. 
However, according to State officials, measuring the effectiveness of 
public information campaigns is inherently difficult, as it is 
impossible to know exactly how much opium poppy was not planted due to 
public information efforts. State collects information on the number 
and type of public information activities conducted by 
Counternarcotics Advisory Teams in the provinces and materials 
produced by public information contractors. In 2008, advisory teams 
worked with local leaders and provincial authorities to conduct a 
total of 413 public information events,[Footnote 37] reaching an 
estimated 79,723 people. From January to June 2009, State's contractor 
produced more than 80,000 print materials containing counternarcotics 
messages, from billboards and posters to children's booklets. These 
were augmented by radio and television programs, news stories, and 
other products that were broadcast nationwide thousands of times. 
Examples of counternarcotics public information materials are shown in 
figure 9. 

Figure 9: Counternarcotics Public Information Materials for Schools: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photographic display of materials] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

Despite obtaining information on the number and type of public 
information activities, we were unable to assess the full extent of 
progress since State did not establish performance targets for its 
public information activities. A 2009 Inspector General assessment of 
State's counternarcotics program in Afghanistan found a lack of 
meaningful performance measures to evaluate public information program 
effectiveness. While acknowledging this lack of performance targets, 
State officials told us that they make qualitative judgments of the 
program based on the number and type of public information events 
conducted. They also stated that public information's success is tied 
to the success of other counternarcotics program areas. For example, 
if governors and the central government cannot present a credible 
threat of eradication, previous messages, which warned farmers to 
switch to wheat or risk destruction of their opium poppy crops, lose 
credibility. Such messaging also loses effectiveness if alternative 
crops are not available. 

State has established a goal of ensuring that the Afghan government is 
able to conduct its own effective public information campaign. 
Although public information campaigns are publicized as originating 
from the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics, a State official stated 
that advisory teams and State's contractor actually carry out most 
operational activities of the public information campaign. Attempts to 
extend advisory teams' regional reach have been limited by both poor 
security and the absence of qualified Ministry of Counter Narcotics 
officials in the provinces. 

We were unable to assess Afghan capacity to conduct its own public 
information campaigns due to a lack of capability measures or interim 
performance targets. While advisory teams record the number of working 
group meetings and training sessions they conduct to build Afghan 
capacity, they do not keep records of who attends that would allow 
follow-up on the results of this training. Additionally, although 
State has established a benchmark for turning advisory teams over to 
the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics, this benchmark is tied only 
to poppy cultivation levels and does not take Afghan capacity to 
conduct public information into account.[Footnote 38] It is not clear 
how advisory teams intend to phase out as poppy cultivation levels 
decrease, or how the Ministry of Counter Narcotics will be able to 
sustain public information efforts without advisory team assistance. 

Poor security, lack of political will, and significant variances 
between provinces challenge efforts to develop and spread appropriate 
counternarcotics messages across Afghanistan. Security concerns 
largely dictate how often and how far advisory teams can travel 
outside their base of operations. For example, in the relatively 
secure northern regions, advisory teams are able to travel regularly 
to neighboring provinces to conduct public information events and 
other outreach. In less secure southern areas, like Kandahar, advisory 
teams' movements have been limited, while some other teams have been 
compelled to retreat to military bases for protection. The advisory 
team in the western Farah province reported its main problem is the 
lack of security, which restricts it to daylight operations in the 
provincial capital. Any team travel outside the city must be under 
heavy armed protection and with advance permission from program 
officers in Kabul. 

Alongside security, political will has been consistently reported as a 
factor challenging the implementation of public information. In 
general, State officials maintain that the stronger and more active a 
provincial governor is in combating narcotics, the more active the 
local advisory team will be. Currently, the advisory teams in Helmand 
and Nangarhar are the most active since they receive substantial 
backing from their respective governors. State officials further noted 
that some governors are indifferent and at times hostile to public 
information efforts, making it difficult for advisory teams to 
coordinate official events, access audiences, and get buy-in from 
other government officials. 

According to a State official, public information constitutes its own 
program area due to the difficulty of conducting such activities in 
Afghanistan. This official describes Afghan culture as very 
interpersonal, requiring sustained contact in order for messaging to 
be fully effective. Public information has largely become a substitute 
for not being physically and continuously present in many areas. To 
account for the lack of physical presence, and for some of the 
variances in language, security, and levels of involvement in the 
narcotics industry, the public information program is tailoring 
messages to specific provinces. Advisory teams work with provincial 
leaders to create public information messages that will resonate most 
in their particular provinces. Messages are translated into 
appropriate local languages and are tailored to be geographically and 
seasonally appropriate as well. Tailoring counternarcotics messages 
has been cited as more effective than blanket messaging throughout the 
country, but it is also more costly and time-consuming. 

Drug Demand Reduction: United States Increasing Efforts to Address 
Drug Addiction: 

The United States has funded drug demand reduction efforts since 2006 
and, in 2009, State increased its funding from $2 million to $11 
million to support 26 drug treatment clinics, further develop 
protocols for the treatment of addicts, and train Afghan prevention 
providers and counselors. The UNODC and the United Kingdom no longer 
fund drug demand reduction programs, and State and Afghan officials 
reported that other coalition partners are not supporting such efforts 
with funding or personnel. 

UNODC recently approached State in an effort to fund community-based 
mobile treatment teams that address both drug demand and HIV 
prevention, similar to the type of programming that UNODC discontinued 
2 years ago. State is exploring the possibility of supporting UNODC's 
village-based treatment model for Afghanistan as one of several 
modalities of treatment in an effort to support comprehensive 
rehabilitation services. 

State has indicated that the demand for treatment services is 
increasing. A 2005 UNODC survey documented approximately 1 million 
drug users in Afghanistan, and the 2010 UNODC National Drug Use Survey 
is expected to report 2 million drug users. According to the Afghan 
government, drug demand reduction activities encounter several 
challenges that impede progress, including the following: 

* A dearth of treatment subcenters in the districts and facilities for 
district outreach programs. 

* A shortage of health professional staff in the treatment centers 
with the capacity to practice addictive and behavioral psychotherapy. 

* A lack of vocational training courses in the treatment centers and 
work opportunities for addicts after the rehabilitation process. 

According to State officials, 12 to 41 percent of Afghan police 
recruits at Regional Training Centers test positive for drugs, 
depending on the province. A State official noted that this percentage 
likely understates the number of opium users because opiates leave the 
system quickly; many recruits who tested negative for drugs have shown 
opium withdrawal symptoms later in their training. A State official 
also reported that the drug demand reduction program is considering 
the establishment of dedicated rehabilitation clinics at the regional 
police training centers; however, because the police recruits leave 
once they finish their training, these clinics will not be able to 
provide the same long-term inpatient services that exist at the 26 
clinics. While State recognizes that police addiction problems are an 
issue, a State official said that due to limited State financial 
resources, its U.S. drug demand reduction programs do not specifically 
target police forces. 

Although no U.S. drug demand reduction programs specifically for 
Afghan police existed at the time of our field work, after sending a 
draft of our report to the agencies for comment in February 2010, 
State and Defense informed us of recent efforts by the Afghan 
Ministries of Interior and Public Health to establish a drug 
rehabilitation center in Kabul for priority use by Afghan National 
Police. Additionally, according to CSTC-A, the Ministries of Interior 
and Public Health signed a memorandum of agreement in December 2009 
that authorizes Afghan National Police access to Ministry of Public 
Health drug rehabilitation facilities nationwide. 

Monitoring and Evaluation of Most U.S. Counternarcotics Programs Under 
Way: 

As a component of effective program management, monitoring is 
essential to ensuring that U.S. counternarcotics programs are 
implemented as intended. In addition, evaluation uses routine data 
collection and analysis to provide evidence that can be used to 
compare alternative programs, guide program development and decision 
making, and reveal effective practices.[Footnote 39] As shown in table 
4, U.S. agencies monitored counternarcotics program progress through 
direct U.S. agency involvement, contractor reporting, and/or third-
party verification. Program evaluations were completed or under way in 
four of the five program areas (elimination/eradication, interdiction, 
public information, and drug demand reduction), but not for the 
justice reform program. 

Table 4: Monitoring and Evaluation Activities by Program Area: 

Program area: Elimination/eradication; 
Monitoring: State program officers deployed with central eradication 
force and performed site visits of Good Performers Initiative projects; 
U.S. contractor deployed with central eradication force and routinely 
reported on activities to State. UNODC verified number of hectares 
eradicated by central and governor-led eradication programs; 
Evaluation: State completed Good Performers Initiative program 
evaluation in March 2009. No documented evaluations for central and 
governor-led eradication programs. 

Program area: Interdiction; 
Monitoring: Defense conducted oversight of building construction and 
monitored development of CNPA and its specialized units through 
training program and logistical support. DEA agents monitored CNPA 
specialized units through direct mentoring and joint operations; 
Evaluation: U.S. government completed interagency evaluation of CNPA 
capacity and overall training program in July 2009. 

Program area: Justice reform; 
Monitoring: Department of Justice attorneys monitored justice sector 
activities through direct mentoring of Afghan prosecutors, judges, and 
investigators on the Criminal Justice Task Force and also reported 
routinely to State; 
Evaluation: None documented. 

Program area: Public information; 
Monitoring: State program officers conducted site visits of 
Counternarcotics Advisory Team activities. U.S. contractor worked 
directly with Afghans on advisory teams to conduct public information 
activities and reported routinely to State; 
Evaluation: Contractor conducted and documented results of provincial 
focus groups to assess effectiveness of public information messages. 
UNODC evaluated various counternarcotics media campaigns in October 
2008. 

Program area: Drug demand reduction; 
Monitoring: State program officers conducted site visits of Afghan 
drug treatment clinics. U.S. contractor visited clinics to monitor the 
implementation and administration of drug treatment centers and 
prevention programs. Contractor also routinely reported on activities 
to State; 
Evaluation: State conducting an evaluation of drug demand reduction 
projects to assess progress and impact. 

Sources: GAO analysis of State, Defense, Department of Justice, DEA, 
and UNODC program documents. 

[End of table] 

Defense and DEA directly monitored interdiction program activities 
through their training, mentoring, and logistical support efforts for 
the CNPA specialized units. For example, Defense monitored the Air 
Interdiction Unit's performance by tracking operational readiness 
rates and the number of interdiction operations conducted against 
missions requested. In addition to State's efforts to directly monitor 
its counternarcotics activities through site visits, State also used 
contractors to directly monitor counternarcotics activities within the 
elimination/eradication, public information, and drug demand reduction 
programs. For example, a State official noted that the agency's 
relationship with its contractor allows the United States to 
effectively monitor and oversee public information campaigns and drug 
rehabilitation programs in remote areas. In the justice reform area, 
Department of Justice attorneys routinely reported on their mentoring 
of Afghan judges and prosecutors to State. Additionally, State program 
officers at Embassy Kabul routinely documented State's 
counternarcotics activities and those of its contractors. For example, 
a June 2009 embassy report detailed a visit by State program officers 
to a public event jointly organized by the central eradication force 
and a Counternarcotics Advisory Team. 

U.S. agencies documented evaluations to improve program effectiveness 
in the elimination/eradication, interdiction, and public information: 

program areas but not for the justice reform program.[Footnote 40] 
Within the elimination/eradication program area, State conducted a 
March 2009 evaluation of the Good Performers Initiative that included 
short-, medium-, and long-term recommendations to improve program 
performance. Additionally, State officials told us that central and 
governor-led eradication program performance is evaluated through the 
annual UNODC Afghanistan Opium Survey. However, while UNODC verifies 
and reports the number of hectares eradicated, its surveys do not 
evaluate or make recommendations to improve U.S. program performance. 
State officials stated that eradication program performance was 
continually reviewed and assessed but were unable to provide any 
documented evaluations of eradication programs. 

Within the interdiction program area, State, Defense, DEA, Department 
of Justice, and others completed an interagency evaluation of the CNPA 
in July 2009 that contained judgments and recommendations regarding 
overall capability and the training and equipping effort. According to 
U.S. officials, this evaluation and its recommendations will inform 
efforts to refocus the training program onto the broader CNPA beyond 
its specialized units. For public information, State officials 
reported that evaluating progress in this program area is a persistent 
challenge. They stated that normally some idea of public information 
effectiveness can be gathered from nationwide polling, but poor 
security prevents extensive outreach and the implementation of 
accurate polling methodology. In the absence of a nationwide polling 
capability, State is relying on provincial focus groups conducted by 
its contractor to assess the effectiveness of counternarcotics 
messaging. An October 2008 UNODC evaluation also attempted to measure 
the effects of public information messaging through provincial focus 
groups. 

Within the drug demand reduction program area, State is currently 
evaluating the long-term impact of the State-funded drug treatment 
assistance programs. This 2009-2011 evaluation is designed to measure 
long-term impact relating to behavior (e.g., reduction in drug use/ 
relapse rates, reduction in criminal activity and recidivism rates, 
reduction in intravenous drug use, increase in employment, and mental 
health). This evaluation will also provide critical information on 
treatment success with opium and heroin-addicted women and their 
children. According to State, the results of this evaluation will be 
used to further improve substance abuse treatment services throughout 
Afghanistan. 

Within the justice reform program area, neither State nor Department 
of Justice was able to provide us with a documented program 
evaluation. While a State official noted that program officers 
conducted informal evaluations of program activities, they did not 
document any of these evaluations. Therefore, we are unable to 
validate their completion or determine whether these informal 
evaluations informed decisions about current and future justice reform 
programming. 

Conclusions: 

Despite ongoing challenges, including falling short of poppy 
eradication goals, the United States has reported some reductions in 
poppy cultivation, increases in interdiction operations, the 
destruction of drug labs, and the conviction of drug traffickers in 
Afghanistan. While these are reasonable output measures, absent 
specific performance targets against which to assess them, they do not 
sufficiently indicate the success of U.S. efforts to reduce the threat 
of illicit drugs to the stability, reconstruction, and governance of 
Afghanistan. As we have previously reported, clearly defined 
performance targets would enable decision makers to more readily 
understand the extent of progress made, as well as which program 
elements are effective and which could be improved. In addition, the 
development of capable Afghan security forces is essential to the U.S. 
counternarcotics effort, as well as the larger counterinsurgency 
campaign in Afghanistan. While capability performance goals have been 
established, the U.S. government lacks interim performance targets for 
the Counternarcotics Police of Afghanistan. Such performance targets 
would better enable program managers to assess whether the U.S. effort 
is on track or determine if adjustments need to be made. This is 
particularly important given the U.S. ultimate goal is to build Afghan 
capacity to independently carry out counternarcotics efforts. 

Additionally, best management practices have demonstrated that 
documentation of routine evaluations enables program managers to 
identify program vulnerabilities and implement lessons learned, which 
we found were lacking in some of the U.S. led counternarcotics 
programs. These routine evaluations can help program managers 
understand program weaknesses and make needed improvements. 

As the United States moves forward with implementing its strategy and 
measuring success in Afghanistan, we believe the U.S. government has 
an opportunity to improve its performance measurement and evaluation 
efforts. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To improve the U.S. government's ability to assess progress toward 
counternarcotics goals, we are making the following four 
recommendations: 

* The Secretary of Defense develop performance targets to measure 
interim results of efforts to train the CNPA. 

* The Secretary of State develop performance measures and interim 
targets to assess Afghan capacity to independently conduct public 
information activities. 

* The Secretary of State, in consultation with the Administrator of 
DEA and the Attorney General, establish clear definitions for low-, 
mid-, and high-level traffickers that would improve the ability of the 
U.S. and Afghan governments to track the level of drug traffickers 
arrested and convicted. 

* The Secretary of State perform an evaluation of the justice reform 
program. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

The Departments of State and Defense provided written comments on a 
draft of this report, which are reproduced in appendixes II and III, 
respectively. The Departments of State, Defense, Justice, and the 
Office of National Drug Control Policy also provided technical 
comments and updates that we have incorporated throughout the report 
as appropriate. 

Defense concurred with our recommendation to develop performance 
targets to measure interim results of efforts to train the CNPA and 
noted that it is in the process of establishing initial and interim 
program performance metrics in accordance with the U.S. 
Counternarcotics Strategy for Afghanistan. 

State concurred with our recommendation to develop performance 
measures and interim targets to assess Afghan capacity to 
independently conduct public information activities, and noted that it 
is in the process of developing an assessment tool for its 
counternarcotics public information campaign. 

State deferred to DEA and the Department of Justice concerning our 
recommendation that it establish clear definitions for low-, mid-, and 
high-level traffickers in consultation with DEA and Justice to enhance 
the ability of the U.S. and Afghan governments to track the level of 
drug traffickers arrested and convicted. While we acknowledge DEA and 
the Department of Justice's expertise in this area, we believe 
nonetheless because of State's role in funding and managing the 
justice reform program in Afghanistan, State holds the primary 
responsibility for ensuring that measures to gauge progress exist. 
Therefore, State should remain engaged in the development of more 
precise definitions for these measures. If State or the Department of 
Justice develops or identifies measures that are determined to be more 
appropriate for measuring justice reform progress, then we believe 
that these would fulfill the spirit of our recommendation. 

State concurred with our recommendation to perform an evaluation of 
the justice reform program, and noted that it is an ideal time to 
evaluate this program's progress using an outside partner. 

We are sending copies of this report to interested congressional 
committees; the Departments of State, Defense, and Justice; and the 
Office of National Drug Control Policy. The report also is available 
at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-7331 or johnsoncm@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

Charles Michael Johnson Jr. 
Director, International Affairs and Trade: 

List of Congressional Addressees: 

The Honorable Carl Levin: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John McCain: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable John F. Kerry: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard G. Lugar: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Foreign Relations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Ike Skelton: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Howard P. McKeon: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Howard L. Berman: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Ileana Ros-Lehtinen: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Foreign Affairs: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable John F. Tierney: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Jeff Flake: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs: 
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Russ Feingold: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Michael Honda: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To review U.S. counternarcotics activities in Afghanistan, we obtained 
information from pertinent planning, funding, and reporting documents 
for U.S. counternarcotics programs and interviewed relevant officials 
from the Departments of State (State), Defense (Defense), and Justice, 
including Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in Washington, D.C., 
and Afghanistan. The Federal Bureau of Investigation indicated that it 
had no involvement in U.S. counternarcotics efforts in Afghanistan and 
is, therefore, not a part of our review. Additionally, this review 
focused specifically on the elimination/eradication, interdiction, 
justice reform, public information, and drug demand reduction program 
areas, leaving alternative development to be addressed by a later 
product on broader agricultural assistance to Afghanistan. State and 
Defense were unable to provide us with programmatic breakouts of 
counternarcotics funding linked to expenditures within our audit time 
frames. 

To examine how the U.S. counternarcotics strategy in Afghanistan has 
changed, we reviewed available U.S. and Afghan strategy and planning 
documents, including the August 2007 U.S. Counternarcotics Strategy 
for Afghanistan and the July 2009 Counternarcotics Action Plan for 
Afghanistan. Although the latest U.S. counternarcotics strategy was 
not finalized at the time of our review, we discussed the upcoming 
strategic shifts and their programmatic implications with relevant 
U.S. officials, including the Special Representative for Afghanistan 
and Pakistan and officials at the Office of National Drug Control 
Policy. Additionally, to understand the resource impact of this 
strategic shift, we examined Congressional Notifications from State's 
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement and U.S. 
agencies' fiscal year 2010 funding requests. 

To assess counternarcotics progress, we reviewed relevant planning and 
reporting documentation to identify program goals, performance 
measures, and interim performance targets. We based our analysis of 
performance targets on best management practices identified in 
previous GAO work, which states that interim performance targets can 
be used to provide information on interim results when it may take 
years before an agency sees the results of its programs. Such 
information can also provide congressional and other decision makers 
with an indication of the incremental progress the agency expects to 
make in achieving results.[Footnote 41] We also examined Letters of 
Agreement between the U.S. and Afghan governments, contractor reports, 
agency performance plans and reports, and programmatic documentation. 
In addition, we spoke with State, Defense, Department of Justice, DEA, 
and contractor officials implementing U.S. projects in Afghanistan, as 
well as with officials from the United Kingdom and the Afghan 
Ministries of Counter Narcotics, Interior, and Justice to discuss 
progress made and ongoing challenges to counternarcotics activities. 
This included site visits to the State Air Wing Headquarters, the 
National Interdiction Unit/Sensitive Investigative Unit complex, the 
Air Interdiction Unit headquarters, the Counternarcotics Training 
Academy, and the Counternarcotics Justice Center in Kabul, as well as 
the border crossing at Islam Qalah in Herat province. We also reviewed 
relevant studies and assessments by the United Nations Office on Drugs 
and Crime (UNODC) and relevant think tanks. 

To assess the reliability of UNODC data, we reviewed the statistical 
estimation and survey data methods detailed in UNODC's annual 
Afghanistan Opium Surveys. Additionally, we did not independently 
assess the reliability of the Afghanistan interdiction data provided 
by DEA, but we considered these data generally acceptable to provide 
an overall indication of the magnitude and nature of interdiction 
operations from fiscal year 2005 to fiscal year 2009. We also reviewed 
key reports by agency inspector generals and the Special Inspector 
General for Afghanistan Reconstruction. 

To assess U.S. monitoring and evaluation of counternarcotics programs, 
we first utilized, as a framework, the Government Performance and 
Results Act, which outlines good management practices such as 
establishing strategic, long-term goals and planning and reporting 
progress toward these goals on an annual basis. We also referenced 
good management practices outlined within previous GAO reports and 
considered monitoring and evaluation principles established by the 
American Evaluation Association.[Footnote 42] We then examined 
contractor reports, agency documentation, and available evaluations 
conducted by U.S agencies and third parties such as UNODC. 
Additionally, we discussed these monitoring and evaluation activities 
with officials from State, Defense, Department of Justice, DEA, and 
the Office of National Drug Control Policy. 

The information on foreign law in this report is not the product of 
GAO's original analysis, but it is derived from interviews and 
secondary sources. 

We conducted this performance audit from January 2009 to March 2010, 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State: 

United States Department of State: 
Chief Financial Officer: 
Washington, DC 20520: 

March 2, 2010: 

Ms. Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers: 
Managing Director: 
International Affairs and Trade: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548-0001: 

Dear Ms. Williams-Bridgers: 

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, 
"Afghanistan Drug Control: Strategy Evolving and Progress Reported, 
but Interim Performance Targets and Evaluation of Justice Reform 
Efforts Needed," GAO Job Code 320657. 

The enclosed Department of State comments arc provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report. 

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact 
Sabrina Bahir, Foreign Affairs Officer, Bureau of International 
Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs at (202) 776-8523. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

James L. Millette: 

cc: 
GAO — Ilvnek Kalkus: 
INL — David Johnson: 
State/OIG — Tracy Burnett: 

[End of letter] 

Department Of State Comments To GAO Draft Report: 

Afghanistan Drug Control: Strategy Evolving and Progress Reported, but 
Interim Performance Targets And Evaluation of Justice Reform Efforts 
Needed (GAO-10-291, GAO Code 320657): 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on your draft report entitled 
"Afghanistan Drug Control: Strategy Evolving and Progress Reported, 
but Interim Performance Targets and Evaluation of Justice Reform 
Efforts Needed." 

The State Department welcomes the draft GAO report and considers it 
thorough and its recommendations generally sound. State agrees with 
the statement that monitoring and evaluation are key components of 
effective program management, and shares the view that interim 
performance targets and benchmarks can assist decision-makers in 
understanding the extent of progress made in fulfilling objectives. 
State is leading an inter-agency effort to produce implementation 
plans (1Ps) keyed to objectives in the 2009-11 Counternarcotics 
Strategy that will help to track progress on meeting those objectives. 
The IPs include descriptions of desired end-states, measures of 
effectiveness, and — as appropriate — benchmarks against the 2009-11 
calendar. 

Recommendation: 

The Secretary of State develop performance measures and interim 
targets to assess Afghan capacity to independently conduct public 
information activities. 

State welcomes this recommendation and is in the process of developing 
an assessment tool for the Counternarcotics Public Information (CNPI) 
campaign, which is administered by the Colombo Plan, an international 
organization, in partnership with the Afghan Ministry of Counter 
Narcotics (MCN). The Colombo Plan monitors the CNPI campaign in 26 
provinces where a regional MCN office is present and engaged, and 
provides administrative support and skills training for MCN officials. 

Recommendation: 

The Secretary of State, in consultation with the Administrator of DEA 
and the Attorney General, establish clear definitions for low-, mid-, 
and high-level traffickers that would improve the ability of the U.S. 
and Afghan governments to track the level of drug traffickers arrested 
and convicted. 

The Department of State defers to the Department of Justice, including 
DEA, to establish clear definitions of low-, mid-, and high-level 
traffickers. 

Recommendation: 

The Secretary of State perform an evaluation of the justice reform 
program. 

State concurs with this recommendation. INL has conducted periodic 
reviews of the bureau's programs in Afghanistan, as well as receiving 
periodic updates from our implementers in Afghanistan on their 
progress towards goals set out in our various statements of work and 
inter-agency agreements. This includes a 2008 INL study. However, we 
concur that now that all of our programs are mature; it is an ideal 
time to evaluate their progress using an outside partner. 

INL will shortly seek an organization or institution with significant 
prior experience in research, evaluation, and statistical analysis to 
evaluate the effectiveness of the Embassy's justice sector programs 
and provide recommendations for further changes and modifications to 
our office. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at 
the end of this appendix. 

Assistant Secretary Of Defense: 
Special Operations/Low-Intensity Conflict & Interdisciplinary 
Capabilities: 	
2500 Defense Pentagon: 
Washington, D.C. 20301-2500: 

March 3, 2010: 
	
Mr. Charles Johnson Jr. 
Director, Director International Affairs and Trade: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Johnson: 

The following are Department of Defense (DoD) comments on the GAO 
draft report (GAO-10-291), "Afghanistan Drug Control: Strategy 
Evolving and Progress Reported, but Interim Performance Targets and 
Evaluation of Justice Reform Efforts Needed," dated January 29, 2010 
(GAO Code 320657). DoD comments refer to two recommendations in the 
draft report. 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
develop performance targets to measure interim results of efforts to 
train the Counternarcotics Police of Afghanistan (CNPA). (See page 
54/GAO Draft Report.) 

DoD Response: DoD concurs with the recommendation that the Department 
should develop performance targets to measure interim results of 
efforts to train the CNPA. In accordance with the U.S. 
Counternarcotics Strategy for Afghanistan and its associated 
Implementation Plans, the Department is establishing initial and 
interim program performance metrics to enable managers to assess CNPA 
training efforts. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of State, in 
consultation with the Secretary of Defense, develop a drug 
rehabilitation program or other approach to specifically target the 
drug addiction problem within the Afghan National Police. (See page 
55/GAO Draft Report.) [See comment 1] 

DoD Response: DoD concurs because the DoD role is limited to 
consultation. Since 2005, DoD has been the lead agency on manning, 
training, and equipping the Afghan National Police. In regards to the 
ANP, DoD currently works with the Afghan Ministry of Interior (MOI) to 
provide mandatory drug awareness courses for all basic recruits, 
conduct drug testing, identify drug users, and recommend identified 
drug users for treatment. DoD will also continue to work with MOI to 
help it enforce its counter-drug policy. DoD's scope of mission does 
not include branching into drug rehabilitation programs, nor do we 
believe that we have the expertise in DoD to take on such an
additional mission. We believe that if this mission is addressed, it 
should be addressed by the Executive Branch departments with the 
necessary expertise in drug rehabilitation. 

My point of contact is CDR Jennifer Whereatt, (703) 692-4182, or email 
jeffifer.whereatt@osd.mil. 

Signed by: 

Michael Vickers: 

The following is GAO's comment on the Department of Defense's comment 
letter dated March 3, 2010. 

GAO Comments: 

1. The draft report we provided the agencies for comment included a 
recommendation that State, in consultation with Defense, develop a 
drug rehabilitation program or other approach to specifically target 
the drug addiction problem within the Afghan National Police. During 
the agency comment period, State and Defense informed us of recent 
efforts by the Afghan Ministries of Interior and Public Health to 
establish a drug rehabilitation center in Kabul for priority use by 
Afghan National Police. Additionally, according to CSTC-A, the 
Ministries of Interior and Public Health signed a memorandum of 
agreement in December 2009 that authorizes Afghan National Police 
access to Ministry of Public Health drug rehabilitation facilities 
nationwide. We, therefore, dropped this recommendation from our final 
report, as these actions fulfilled the spirit of our recommendation. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Charles Michael Johnson Jr., (202) 512-7331, or johnsoncm@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Hynek Kalkus, Assistant 
Director; David W. Hancock; Steven J. Banovac; Christina Bruff; 
Virginia Chanley; Carl Barden; Joseph Carney; and Mark Dowling made 
key contributions to this report. Technical assistance was provided by 
Jena Sinkfield, Joyce Evans, and Cynthia Taylor. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] We will address alternative development, another significant U.S. 
counternarcotics effort, in a subsequent report due out in spring 
2010. As part of the recent strategy shift, alternative development 
programs are now classified broadly as agriculture programs. 

[2] GAO previously reported on DEA's overseas activities in 2009, see 
GAO, Drug Control: Better Coordination with the Department of Homeland 
Security and an Updated Accountability Framework Can Further Enhance 
DEA's Efforts to Meet Post-9/11 Responsibilities, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-63] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 20, 
2009). 

[3] State funds the operation and maintenance of many of these 
infrastructure projects, as well as some training and vetting of the 
CNPA specialized units. 

[4] State plans to continue funding the Counternarcotics Justice 
Center's operation and maintenance costs, estimated at $3 million per 
year, until 2011. 

[5] Defense was involved in public information activities prior to 
State taking the lead in 2006. 

[6] Advisory teams are located in Badakhshan, Balkh, Farah, Helmand, 
Kandahar, Nangarhar, and Oruzgan provinces. 

[7] Since 2001, the United States has worked with international 
partners under a United Nations mandate to assist Afghanistan in 
creating a safe and secure environment, in part through the ISAF. U.S. 
forces in Afghanistan are deployed either as part of the North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization-led ISAF or Operation Enduring Freedom, 
which includes the Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan 
(CSTC-A), in efforts to secure and stabilize Afghanistan. 

[8] Opium poppy generally yields greater profits per hectare than 
licit crops such as wheat. 

[9] Other high-level indicators tracked by the United States included 
provinces reducing cultivation and poppy-free provinces. The United 
States also collected program-level performance indicators and targets. 

[10] In 2006, 6 provinces were poppy-free. In 2009, 20 provinces were 
poppy-free. 

[11] The United States uses UNODC data to inform programmatic 
decisions, such as determining Good Performers Initiative rewards. 
However, the U.S. government also independently estimates total opium 
poppy cultivation to inform policy decisions. U.S. government-
estimated totals in hectares are as follows: 107,400 (2005); 172,600 
(2006); 202,000 (2007); 157,000 (2008); 131,000 (2009). 

[12] GAO, Drug Control: Efforts to Develop Alternatives to Cultivating 
Illicit Crops in Colombia Have Made Little Progress and Face Serious 
Obstacles, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-291] 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 8, 2002). 

[13] The central eradication force was known as the Central Poppy 
Eradication Force between 2004 and 2005, the Afghan Eradication Force 
between 2005 and 2007, and the Poppy Eradication Force between 2007 
and 2009. 

[14] The United Kingdom also contributes to governor-led eradication 
reimbursements. 

[15] GAO, Plan Colombia: Drug Reduction Goals Were Not Fully Met, but 
Security Has Improved; U.S. Agencies Need More Detailed Plans for 
Reducing Assistance, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-71] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 6, 
2008). 

[16] Prior to 2008, the central eradicators were dependent on 
governors to approve eradication plans and lead them to poppy fields. 

[17] Farmers reported the following additional reasons why they 
stopped growing poppy in 2009. The most significant reasons cited 
included the Afghan government's ban on opium cultivation (33 
percent), low sale price of opium (18 percent), and opium cultivation 
being against Islam (16 percent). No other reason amounted to greater 
than 6 percent of respondents. 

[18] The Good Performers Initiative began with the U.S. Agency for 
International Development (USAID) and other donors channeling funding 
for the program through a trust fund administered by the United 
Nations Development Programme. 

[19] Nangarhar received the maximum $10 million reward in 2008, and 
Helmand is projected to receive the maximum reward as a result of its 
2009 cultivation reduction. 

[20] USAID allocated $10 million to the Good Performers Initiative 
prior to State taking over funding of the program in 2008. 

[21] Oruzgan province did not receive Good Performers Initiative 
funding between 2006 and 2008. It also does not qualify for 2009 
funding. Although UNODC reports that poppy cultivation in Oruzgan 
dropped 7 percent in 2009, this is below the 10 percent reduction 
threshold required by Good Performers Initiative criteria. 

[22] As of December 2009, DEA had filled 65 of these 81 positions. 

[23] Sensitive Investigative Units are groups of host-nation 
investigators that DEA polygraphs, trains, equips, and mentors to 
conduct bilateral drug investigations and collect counternarcotics 
intelligence. 

[24] The Afghan Special Narcotics Force is a British-supported CNPA 
paramilitary unit tasked with carrying out raids against high-value 
targets and drug infrastructure, e.g., bazaars, and laboratories, with 
a view to injecting risk into the illicit drugs trade. 

[25] From November 1, 2008, through August 18, 2009, the Air Wing's 10 
Huey II helicopters spent about 20 percent of their flight-time 
providing overwatch, close air support, and casualty evacuation 
support to DEA-led interdiction operations. 

[26] At the time of our review, plans called for the Combined Joint 
Interagency Task Force-Nexus to include, in addition to military 
personnel, representatives from DEA, State, and other government 
agencies, including analysts attached to the Interagency Operations 
Coordination Center in Kabul. 

[27] Defense's CSTC-A, in partnership with State, the government of 
Afghanistan, and international partners, trains and equips the Afghan 
National Security Forces. CSTC-A works with the international 
community to develop a capable Afghan National Army and Afghan 
National Police intended to enhance the security and stabilization of 
Afghanistan. 

[28] CSTC-A rated the overall CNPA at CM3 (partially capable). 

[29] The Air Interdiction Unit consists of eight MI-17 helicopters in 
Afghanistan and, until recently, was supported by another four MI-17s 
used for training pilots, flight engineers, and crew chiefs in the 
United States. 

[30] Defense sent Afghan pilots, flight engineers, and crew chiefs to 
the United States as part of the Air Interdiction Unit's training 
program. 

[31] With the inclusion of these helicopters, the Air Interdiction 
Unit also assumes responsibility for supporting interdiction missions 
of the British-trained Afghan Special Narcotics Force. 

[32] DEA officials expected future air support needs of the expanded 
DEA presence to grow to include medical evacuation services, 
logistical lift, and convoy support, all of which they judged would 
outstrip the air assets currently available to the Air Interdiction 
Unit. 

[33] The Afghan constitution permits extradition of individuals if 
pursuant to a multilateral convention which allows for extradition, 
and to which Afghanistan is a party. Afghanistan is a party to the 
U.N. Convention Against Illicit Trafficking in Narcotic Drugs and 
Psychotropic Substances which it has cited to justify a limited number 
of extraditions the United States has requested. Nevertheless, 
according to State and Department of Justice officials, this process 
may not be efficient or reliable. 

[34] The arrangement is formalized in an interagency agreement, where 
Department of Justice provides State with a work plan that outlines 
programmatic goals and objectives, performance measures, and 
activities. 

[35] Plans to expand the Justice Center have also been delayed because 
of insufficient funding and inadequate utilities. Defense's U.S. Army 
Corps of Engineers has indicated it would work closely with State to 
ensure completion of the Justice Center's expansion. 

[36] See GAO, Afghanistan: Key Issues for Congressional Oversight, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-473SP] (Washington, 
D.C.: April 2009). 

[37] These events included councils with influential community 
members, sporting events, and others held for women, youth, and 
farmers. 

[38] The benchmark states that advisory teams will be phased out as 
poppy cultivation levels decrease and will be completely turned over 
to the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics when levels reach 25 
percent of 2007 levels, or 50,000 hectares. 

[39] We utilized as a framework the Government Performance and Results 
Act, which outlines good management practices such as establishing 
strategic, long-term goals and planning and reporting progress toward 
these goals on an annual basis. We also referenced good management 
practices outlined in previous GAO reports and guidance and considered 
monitoring and evaluation principles established by the American 
Evaluation Association. See Appendix I: Scope and Methodology for more 
information. 

[40] An evaluation of the drug demand reduction program was under way 
at the time of our review. 

[41] GAO, Agency Performance Plans: Examples of Practices That Can 
Improve Usefulness to Decisionmakers, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD/AIMD-99-69] (Washington, D.C.: 
February 1999). 

[42] For a previous GAO discussion of monitoring and evaluation, see 
GAO, International Food Assistance: USAID Is Taking Action to Improve 
Monitoring and Evaluation of Nonemergency Food Aid, but Weaknesses in 
Planning Could Impede Efforts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-980] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 28, 
2009). See also An Evaluation Roadmap for a More Effective Government 
(Washington, D.C.: February 2009) issued by the American Evaluation 
Association's Task Force on Evaluation Policy. 

[End of section] 

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