THANKS, OBAMA: The secret story of how America lost the drug war with the Taliban.

As Afghanistan edged ever closer to becoming a narco-state five years ago, a team of veteran U.S. officials in Kabul presented the Obama administration with a detailed plan to use U.S. courts to prosecute the Taliban commanders and allied drug lords who supplied more than 90 percent of the world’s heroin — including a growing amount fueling the nascent opioid crisis in the United States.

The plan, according to its authors, was both a way of halting the ruinous spread of narcotics around the world and a new — and urgent — approach to confronting ongoing frustrations with the Taliban, whose drug profits were financing the growing insurgency and killing American troops. But the Obama administration’s deputy chief of mission in Kabul, citing political concerns, ordered the plan to be shelved, according to a POLITICO investigation.

Now, its authors — Drug Enforcement Administration agents and Justice Department legal advisers at the time — are expressing anger over the decision, and hope that the Trump administration, which has followed a path similar to former President Barack Obama’s in Afghanistan, will eventually adopt the plan as part of its evolving strategy.

On Twitter, Jerry Dunleavy notes that this would be the second time Obama did such a thing: “Wow. @JoshMeyerDC broke the story on Project Cassandra — how Obama turned a blind eye to Hezbollah’s drug trade to appease the mullahs & get the Iran Deal. Looks like Obama may have done the same w/ the Taliban opium trade — shelving Operation Reciprocity… Whether Hezbollah or the Taliban, it looks like Obama was soft on narco-terrorism.”