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Afghanistan- Washington's Secret War PDF

287 Pages·2001·6.074 MB·English
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Phillip Bonosky Afghanistan — Washington’s S ecret War International Publishers, New York Also by PhiUip Bonosky Burning Valley (1952) Brother Bill McKie (1952) The Magic Fern (1960) Dragon Pink on Old White (1962) Beyond the Borders of Myth: from Vilnius to Hanoi (1967) Two Cultures (1978) Are Our Moscow Reporters Giving Us the Facts About the USSR (1981) A Bird in Her Hair (short stories) (1987) Devils in Amber—The Baltics (1992) Brother Bill McKie - 2nd Ed. (2000) © International Publishers, New York, 1985 All rights reserved. Text printed in the USSR Covers printed and bound in the USA © 2nd edition, 2001 Text and cover printed in USA All rights reserved For the 1st edition: Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Bonosky, Phillip. Afghanistan, Washington’s Secret War Against 1. Afghanistan—History—Current status,—1979 I. Title. II. Tide. DS371.2.B66 1984 958M044 84-19139 ISBN0 — 7178 — 0618 — 9 ISBN0 — 7178 — 0617 — 9 (pbk.) For the 2nd edition: Bonosky, Phillip. Afghanistan—Washington’s Secret War Includes bibliographical references and index Contents Preface to 2nd edition ............................................................................................... i A Word to the Reader................................................................................................. 5 Antique Land............................................................................................................... 6 Looking for a War ...................................................................................................... 11 Furnishing a W ar........................................................................................................ 15 Waiting for Karmal.......................... 20 The Battle for the Mike ............................................................................................. 23 lago to the Revolution ............................................................................................... 30 More on Amin............................................................................................................ 35 What Happened in December.................................................................................... 42 Amin Looks for an Escape........................................................................................ 50 Reasons........................................................................................................................ 59 How to Recognize a Real Revolution...................................................................... 68 Shopping on Chicken Street...................................................................................... 78 Ramadan ...................................................................................................................... 85 Self-Criticism............................................................................................................... 89 Unbinding Minds........................................................................................................ 95 Who Supports the Revolution?................................................................................. 105 Revolutionary Youth Reborn...................................................................................... 112 The End to Factions.................................................................................................... 117 Workers........................................................................................................................ 122 Problems ...................................................................................................................... 127 Trying to Sneak the Sunrise Past the Rooster............................................................134 War by Rumour.............................................................................................................138 Counterattack in February ........................................................................................ 143 Today I Will Tell You a Tale.........................................................................................152 The Strange Case of the Afghan Refugees: Now You See Them, Now You Don’t ...........................................................................................................156 More Sancho Panza Than Don Quixote .....................................................................166 Kings, Dukes and Low-Down Humbugs.....................................................................171 Uncloaked and Undaggered...................................................................................... 183 Pakistan’s Candle........................................................................................................ 191 Show-Biz Mujahiddin....................................................................................................203 Arms to the Rebels? No, Perhaps, and Then Reagan................................................208 The Saga of the Twig and the Leaf.............................................................................215 Smoking the Gun...........................................................................................................219 Gas!.................................................................................................................................224 Poisoning the U.S.A......................................................................................................229 Is the U.S.S.R. Also Imperialist?..................................................................................233 When Peace Comes ......................................................................................................244 The Prospects of Peace.......................................................................... 253 Afghanistan revisited—1986 .................................................................................... 265 1996 ............................................................................................................................... 276 INDEX.............................................................................................................................279 Preface Since the horrific events of Sept. 11, 2001, much has been said about the des­ perate situation of the Afghani people now crushed under the heel of the theocrat­ ic, dictatorial Taliban, and about the role of the Northern Alliance and other Taliban opponents who now figure in Washington’s plans for the region. There has been talk, most of it distorted, about the role of the Soviet Union in the years from 1978 to 1989. There has been talk, most of it understated, about the role of the U.S. in building up the Mujahadeen forces, including the Taliban. But almost no one talks about the effort the Afghan people made in the late 1970s and ‘80s to pull fiee of the legacy of incessantly warring tribes and feudal fiefdoms and start to build a modem democratic state. Or about the Soviet Union’s role long before 1978. Some background helps shed light on the current crisis. Afghanistan was a geopolitical prize for 19th century empire builders, contested by both czarist Russia and the British Empire. It was finally forced by the British into semi-dependency. When he came to power in 1921, Amanullah Khan—sometimes referred to as “Afghanistan’s Kemal Ataturk”—sought to reassert his country’s sovereignty and move it toward the modem world. As part of this effort, he approached the new rev­ olutionary government in Moscow, which responded by recognizing Afghanistan’s independence, and concluding the first Afghan-Soviet friendship treaty. From 1921 until 1929—when reactionary elements, aided by the British, forced Amanullah to abdicate—the Soviet union helped launch the beginnings of eco­ nomic infrastructure projects such as power plants, water resources, transport and communications. Thousands of Afghani students attended Soviet technical schools and universities. After Amanullah’s forced departure, the projects languished, but the relationship between the Soviet and Afghan people would later re-emerge. In the 1960s, a resurgence of joint Afghan-Soviet projects included the Kabul Polytechnic Institute—the country’s prime educational resource for engineers, geologists and other specialists. Nor was Afghanistan immune from the political and social ferment that charac­ terized the developing world in the last century. From the 1920s on, many pro­ gressive currents of struggle took note of the experiences of the USSR, where a new, more equitable society was emerging on die lands of the former Russian empire. Afghanistan was no exception. By the mid ‘60s, national democratic revo­ lutionary currents had coalesced to form the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). In 1973, local bourgeois forces, aided by some PDP elements, overthrew the 40- year reign of Mohammad Zahir Shah—the man who now, at age 86, is being pro­ moted by U.S. right-wing Republicans as the personage around which Afghanis can unite. When the PDP assumed power in 1978, they started to work for a more equitable distribution of economic and social resources. Among their goals were the contin­ uing emancipation of women and girls from the age-old tribal bondage (a process begun under Zahir Shah), equal rights for minority nationalities, including the country’s most oppressed group, the Hazara, and increasing access for ordinary people to education, medical care, decent housing and sanitation. During two vis­ its in 1980-81,1 saw the beginnings of progress: women working together in hand­ icraft co-ops, where for the first time they could be paid decently for their work and control the money they earned. Adults, both women and men, learning to read. Women working as professionals and holding leading government positions, including Minister of Education. Poor working families able to afford a doctor, and to send their children—girls and boys—to school. The cancellation of peasant debt and the start of land reform. Fledgling peasant cooperatives. Price controls and price reductions on some key foods. Aid to nomads interested in a settled life. I also saw the bitter results of Mujahadeen attacks by the same groups that now make up the “Northern Alliance”—in those years aimed especially at schools and teachers in rural areas. The post-1978 developments also included Soviet aid to economic and social projects on a much larger scale, with a new Afghan-Soviet Friendship Treaty and a variety of new projects, including infrastructure, resource prospecting and mining, health services, education and agricultural demonstration projects. After December 1978 that role also came to include the limited presence of Soviet troops, at the request of a PDP government increasingly beset by the displaced feudal and tribal warlords who were aided and oiganized by the U.S. and Pakistan. The rest, as they say, is history. But it is significant that after Soviet troops were withdrawn in 1989, the PDP government continued to function, though increasing­ ly beleaguered, for nearly three more years. Somewhere, beneath the ruins of today’s tom and bloodied Afghanistan, are the seeds that remain even in the direst times within the hearts of people who know there is a better future for humanity. In a world struggling for economic and social justice—not revenge—those seeds will sprout again. The publication of this updated edition of Phillip Bonosky s book is much need­ ed now. It is a serious, valuable study of Afghanistan’s history as well as a well- documented, persuasive exposure of the role of the CIA and the Pentagon serving the aims of U.S. imperialism. Marilyn Bechtel* * Marilyn Bechtel is a writer on international issues for the People’s Weekly World and for­ mer editor of New World Review Afghanistan — Washington’s Seaiet War NOTE: The dates cited for news stories are taken, up to mid-1981, from the International Herald-Tribune, which is jointly owned by the New York Times and the Washington Post, but is published in Paris. It is the only daily newspaper available to English-speaking Europeans and to Americans living abroad, including those corre­ spondents stationed in Moscow. Because of time differences and editorial reasons, the date­ lines in some news stories in the IHT differ by a day or two from the date of publication in the NYT or the WP. There is a wider gap in dates for feature stories and editorial comment. Thus the dates cited, unless otherwise noted, are the IHT dates. A Word to the Reader 1985 Although this is a book about Afghanistan, it is inevitably as much a book about Soviet-American relations. There is no question for our times that looms larger than that and all other questions ultimately defer to it. In taking up the question of Afghanistan, I have chosen to deal with a problem that, from the official American point of view, seems to be an open* and-shut case. Whatever other issues divide Americans, most seem agreed— or at least the media seems to agree for them—that there is no difference of opinion there. And yet, as an eyewitness to those events, a close observer of what took place in Afghanistan before and after December, 1979, I saw an entirely different Afghanistan than the one most Americans believe they saw» And there is the crux of the matter. What precisely is involved here? How can perceptions of the same phe­ nomena vary so widely? As William Blake had noted in his day: Both read the Bible day and night, But thou read’st black where I read white. Does an objective reality reign over conflicting forces anyhow? And is it possible to find what it is, even in the middle of the storm as the winds howl and the heavens rage?. On what rock can you stand that does not itself shake? In this book I have attempted to seek that reality that survives the storm, to find that rock on which to stand, not away from the storm, but inside the storm itself: there only to rest on judgment. ANTIQUE LAND They are the nameless poor who have been marching Out of the dark, to that exact moment when history Crosses the tracks of our time. Thomas McGrath, Nocturne Militaire There are several hundred secret passageways (one account puts it) through the mountain range dividing (with the help of the Durand Line) but not separating Afghanistan from Pakistan. Every Fall, through these an­ cient passageways, which curl upon each other like veins in an old cheese, tens of thousands of nomads, mainly Pushtun, but including Baluchi, follow the ghosts of their ancestors to the grazing grounds of what is known to us as Pakistan, and the following Spring, back to what is known to us as Afghanistan. But if you were to ask them who they are—Afghans or Pakistanis—they •would look blankly at you, shaking their heads, for to them, whose allegiance today, as it had been for centuries, is to a tribal leader, neither Afghanistan nor Pakistan is a clear reality. They have no state. They recognize no Dur­ and Line. Their “state” is where the grass grows green. So it was when Marco Polo found them over 700 years ago: “The moun­ tains afford pasture for an innumerable quantity of sheep, which ramble about in flocks...” So it still was to Karl Marx in 1857 who said that Afghanistan was a mere poetical term for various tribes and states... Pushing their herds before them—sheep, horses, camels, cattle—they go from pasture to pasture, and on their way they are waylaid by history, which comes to them as a violent and alien intrusion. Out of those mysterious spaces beyond the mountains, strange monsters periodically leap at them: an Alexander of Greece, who admired their horses; a Tamerlane, a Genghis Khan from far-off Mongolia—tormented them for a time and then were gone. They resumed, then, their timeless caravanserai during which infants of every variety were dropped from humans, sheep and camels without stop­ ping the motion of their lives. All they knew of history was that it came to them as an interruption in this back-and-forth shuttling between green and green. In the 19th century other historic monsters from British India leaped out on them—this time their names were Lord Palmerston, Disraeli, Winston Churchill, Lord Curzon, Sir Mortimer Durand; and after these had been shaken off again they went their way, anxious to get out of the mountains and to pasture before the first snows fell. €

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