Afghan communist party chief, Najibullah, left in charge by the Soviet Union after its troop pullout in 1989
by Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 8th Sept 13
On Nov 13, 1983, the Politburo of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union discussed how to extricate the Soviet Union from
Afghanistan. The only record of that meeting, a document classified Top Secret,
was published in the Cold War International History Project Bulletin. Three
decades later the echoes of that discussion can be heard from Washington today.
Mikhail Gorbachev chaired that meeting, which
was attended by Andrei Gromyko (Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet);
Eduard Shevardnadze (later foreign minister); Victor Chebrikov (KGB chief);
Anatoly Dobrynin (ambassador to Washington); Vitaly Vorotnikov (Chairman of the
Council of Ministers); and Sergey Akhrome’ev (Deputy Defence Minister).
Gorbachev: Have all comrades familiarized themselves with
the memorandum…?
Politburo Members: Yes, we have
Gorbachev: Then let us exchange opinions. I have an
intuition that we should not waste time. Najib (Afghan President Mohammad
Najibullah) needs our support…
We have been
fighting in Afghanistan for already six years. If the approach is not changed,
we will continue to fight for another 20-30 years. This would cast a shadow on
our abilities to affect the evolution of the situation. Our military should be
told that they are learning badly from this war….
Gromyko: It is necessary to establish a strategic
target. Too long ago we spoke on the fact that it is necessary to close off the
border of Afghanistan with Pakistan and Iran. Experience has shown that we were
unable to do this in view of the difficult terrain of the area and the
existence of hundreds of passes in the mountains….
Gorbachev: It is necessary to include in the resolution
the importance of ending the war in the course of one year --- at maximum two
years.
Gromyko: It should be concluded so Afghanistan becomes
a neutral country. Apparently, on our part there was an underestimation of the
difficulties, when we agreed with the Afghan government to give them our
military support. The social conditions in Afghanistan made the resolution of
the problem in a short amount of time impossible. We did not receive domestic
support there. In the Afghan army the number of conscripts equals the number of
deserters.
From the
point of view of evaluating the domestic situation in Afghanistan, we can sign
under practically everything that Najib suggests. But we should not sharply cut
off (Babrak Karmal, the head of the Communist Party’s Parcham faction), as he
serves as a symbol to his people….
Concerning
the Americans, they are not interested in the settlement of the situation in
Afghanistan. On the contrary, it is to their advantage for the war to drag out…
It should
be considered how to link India into the settlement…. Our strategic goal is to
make Afghanistan neutral, not to allow it to go over to the enemy camp….
Chebrikov: …(Gromyko) is partly right, speaking about the
difficulties of such a closing (of the border) due to geographic and other
conditions. But partly the failure in the closing is also tied to the fact that
not everything was done that could have been. Right now the enemy is changing
its tactics. He is going underground. It is necessary to look for the means to
a political solution of the problem. The military path for the past six years
has not given us a solution…
Shevardnadze: Right now we are reaping the fruit of
un-thought-out decisions of the past. Recently, much has been done to settle
the situation in Afghanistan and around it. Najib has taken up leadership. He
needs practical support, otherwise we will bear the political costs. It is
necessary to state precisely the period of withdrawal of Soviet troops from
Afghanistan. You, Mikhail Serge’evich (Gorbachev), said it correctly --- two
years. But neither our, nor Afghan comrades have mastered the questions of the
functioning of the government without our troops…
Dobrynin: We must give liberty to Najib. Two questions
arise here. First --- the idea of national reconciliation, and second --- the
political settlement of the situation around Afghanistan…
Akhrome’ev: No, it will not be possible to (achieve
reconciliation)… Military actions in Afghanistan will soon be seven years old.
There is no single piece of land in this country which has not been occupied by
a Soviet soldier. Nevertheless, the majority of the territory remains in the
hands of rebels. The government of Afghanistan has at its disposal a
significant military force: 160 thousand people in the army, 115 thousand in
Tsarando and 20 thousand in state security organs…
At the
center there is authority; in the provinces there is not. We control Kabul and
the provincial centers, but on occupied territory we cannot establish
authority. We have lost the battle for the Afghan people. The government is
supported by a minority of the population. Our army has fought for five years.
It is now in a position to maintain the situation on the level that it exists
now. But under such conditions the war will continue for a long time… (so) we
need to look for a way out and resolve the question, as [Gromyko] has said. We
must go to Pakistan.
Vorontsov: A few words to continue the thought, just
expressed by Comrade Akhrome’ev. Afghanistan is a peasant country (80 percent
of the population are peasants). But it is exactly they who have least
benefitted from the revolution. Over eight years of the revolution agricultural
production has increased by only 7 percent, and the standard of living of
peasants remains at pre-revolutionary levels…. When there are only 5 million
people out of a population of 18 million under the control of the government
(moreover, 3 million of them live in the cities and only 2 million in the
country --- this is no more than 300-400,000 families), the party and the
government have not inherited from the previous government precise plans on how
to quickly raise the standard of living of these 300-400,000 peasant households
which are under the sphere of influence of the government.
Gorbachev: In October of last year [1985] in a Politburo
meeting we determined upon a course of settling the Afghan question. The goal
which we raised was to expedite the withdrawal of our forces from Afghanistan
and simultaneously ensure a friendly Afghanistan for us. It was projected that
this should be realized through a combination of military and political
measures. But there is no movement in either of these directions…
We must
operate more actively, and with this guide ourselves with two questions. First
of all, in the course of two years affect the withdrawal of our troops from
Afghanistan. In 1987 withdraw 50 per cent of our troops, and in the following
[year] another 50 per cent.
Second of
all, we must pursue a widening of the social base of the regime, taking into
account the realistic arrangement of political forces. In connection with this,
it is necessary to meet with Comrade Najib, and, possibly, even with other
members of the (Afghanistan Communist Party) Politburo.
We must
start talks with Pakistan. Most importantly, [we must make sure] that the
Americans don’t get into Afghanistan. But I think that Americans will not go
into Afghanistan militarily.
Akhrome’ev: They
are not going to go into Afghanistan with armed forces.
Dobrynin: One can agree with USA on this question.
Interesting to note that the Soviets were thinking about the welfare of Afghan people, as against what the US, Saudi and Pakistani sponsored Jihadi fighters goals. Now with US, NATO and Pakistani occupation we are supposed to believe that they are the ones who are thinking of Afghan welfare, while Soviets were Monsters. So who is really Good vs Evil. Seems like nobody wants the other to take a lead in doing good. They blame each other as evil, how can then this world become good. This is the sad effect of monotheistic religions on societal behaviors. All this stalemate seems to be happening in lands ruled under monotheistic religions and societies. Diversity is the norm in this world, people who do not recognize this fact, are prone to make genocides.
ReplyDeleteBoth America and Pakistan actively helped the Taliban in the fight against the Soviets. It seems that the Soviets did not know??
ReplyDeleteThe book "The Bear Trap" written by a Pakistani Brigadier tells exactly what happened (or may have happened- especially the mysterious c-130 crash that killed Gen Zia-Ul-Haq on 17 August 1988, much after the Soviet Withdrawal began in May 1988)