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- <text id=89TT0369>
- <title>
- Feb. 06, 1989: Afghanistan:Waiting For The End
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 06, 1989 Armed America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- AFGHANISTAN
- Waiting for the End
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As the last Soviets leave Kabul, the embattled capital shudders
- at the prospect of the bloody siege that is certain to come
- </p>
- <p>By Edward W. Desmond/Kabul
- </p>
- <p> The front is just outside Kabul. From the center of the
- city, it is easy to spot a series of outposts -- small,
- mud-walled fortresses -- on the snowy mountaintops that ring the
- capital. Soviet and Afghan troops man the redoubts around the
- clock, watching for guerrilla movement in the valleys beyond.
- As soon as mujahedin activity is spotted, Soviet artillery goes
- into action, and the boom of outgoing fire echoes through the
- city.
- </p>
- <p> The defense of Kabul, however, is undergoing its biggest
- change since the Soviets invaded Afghanistan a decade ago.
- Having already withdrawn most of its 115,000-strong invasion
- force, Moscow has now begun pulling out the last of the
- estimated 15,000 troops who form the Kabul garrison and defend
- the corridor north to the Soviet border. By Feb. 15, the last
- Soviet soldier is scheduled to be gone from Afghanistan, and the
- Afghan military will bear sole responsibility for the security
- of the capital as well as the rest of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Then the question will be when, not if, the Soviet-backed
- regime of President Najibullah will fall. Though all the
- country's major cities are still under government control,
- Kandahar and Jalalabad, two of the five largest, have seen their
- defenses crumble under mujahedin attacks. Moscow insists it is
- determined to ensure the survival of Najibullah's government,
- but nearly all diplomats in Kabul believe the regime will
- collapse within months, perhaps even weeks, of Feb. 15. As the
- prospect of a bloody siege grew last week, U.S. Secretary of
- State James Baker ordered the closing of the American embassy
- in Kabul and told the eight U.S. diplomats still in Afghanistan
- to leave the country. The British, French, Italians and Japanese
- decided to follow suit and announced that they would be
- withdrawing their diplomats from Afghanistan.
- </p>
- <p> Though Kabul has not yet come under consistent, heavy
- military barrage, the city is vulnerable to attacks that may cut
- the Salang Highway, the 264-mile road that climbs the towering
- Hindu Kush and crosses long stretches of mujahedin-controlled
- territory to the Soviet border. In a move to push the guerrilla
- forces back from the highway, Soviet and Afghan troops last week
- shelled villages south of the Salang Tunnel, killing hundreds
- of civilians and refugees.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet pullback from the capital began about three
- weeks ago, even as Yuli Vorontsov, the Soviet Ambassador to
- Afghanistan and a Deputy Foreign Minister, threatened that
- Moscow would halt the withdrawal if the mujahedin leadership did
- not accept some participation by Najibullah's People's
- Democratic Party of Afghanistan (P.D.P.A.) in a shura, or
- council of leaders, that would choose a new government. The
- mujahedin, smelling a bluff, would not budge, and the pullout
- from Kabul continued.
- </p>
- <p> Ilyushin-76 transport flights in and out of the capital are
- running at a dozen a day, many carrying Soviet soldiers home.
- Two large Soviet bases north of the city are deserted. The main
- Soviet hospital has been turned over to Afghans, and Moscow has
- reduced its embassy staff by two-thirds, to about 100 people.
- Soviet infantrymen still patrol Kabul's streets, but they expect
- to be home within days. "It was a mistake to come here," says
- a trooper in the central shopping area. "And we are never coming
- back. It is up to the Afghan people to find a solution to their
- problems."
- </p>
- <p> Political solutions are not uppermost in the minds of most
- of the 2.2 million residents of Kabul. They are worrying about
- day-to-day survival. The winter has been unusually harsh. With
- the exception of the Salang Highway, roads into the city are
- cut, resulting in shortages of bread, diesel fuel, sugar,
- kerosene and other basics; electricity is available only part
- of the time. The Kabul grain silo, which usually holds a stock
- of 20,000 tons, has been empty at several points in the past few
- weeks. The poor are especially vulnerable because they cannot
- afford to shop at relatively well-stocked black-market outlets
- where bread is sold for more than a dollar a loaf, ten times the
- official price.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, hundreds of people, many with no more than
- a cotton wrap to protect them against sub-zero cold, queued up
- outside stores and gas stations to try to buy food, as well as
- fuel for their space heaters. As early as 3 a.m., young children
- were out in the freezing night, waiting outside bakeries that
- would not open for several hours and then might have only a few
- undersize loaves for sale. In Khair Khana, a residential area,
- a thousand women and children pushed and shoved for flour and
- fuel provided by the Soviets. Afghan soldiers thrashed the crowd
- with blankets and sticks to keep order. Last week an emergency
- Soviet airlift, along with the arrival of large convoys on the
- Salang, greatly alleviated the food shortages,, but despite
- Moscow's promises, it was unclear how long that aid could
- continue.
- </p>
- <p> Conflicts within the leadership of Najibullah's P.D.P.A.
- are so pronounced that since last fall the Soviets have retired,
- jailed or shipped to Moscow three members of the Afghan
- Politburo and several from the Central Committee. The regime
- claims to have 500,000 men under arms, but the figure appears
- to be grossly inflated. Though the Afghan army includes some
- well-trained and experienced units, like the 37th Commando
- Brigade, it is made up mostly of conscripts, many of whom are
- less than eager to fight for the regime. Apparently aware that
- a number of units are unreliable, the President has created an
- elite guard drawn from various security forces.
- </p>
- <p> In line with its pledge to keep the regime well armed,
- Moscow has in recent weeks been sending into Kabul large
- shipments of weapons and ammunition, including such advanced
- hardware as the BTR-70 armored car and the BM-22 rocket
- launcher. Western diplomats in Kabul believe that in the end the
- resupply effort will make little difference. Says one: "They can
- have all the fancy hardware they like, but it is the morale of
- the troops that's critical."
- </p>
- <p> The government's most immediate military concern focuses on
- the Salang. The Soviets have been able to keep the route open
- by combining military muscle with diplomacy. Outposts dot the
- way. Soviet officers had an informal understanding with Ahmad
- Shah Massoud, the powerful mujahedin commander in the Panjshir
- Valley, north of Kabul: safe passage for Soviet vehicles as long
- as Moscow keeps up the withdrawal. After last week's offensive
- by Soviet and Afghan troops, that arrangement may be finished.
- </p>
- <p> After Feb. 15, the Soviets will have few options. Under the
- U.N.-brokered peace accord signed in Geneva last year, they
- cannot leave troops behind to guard the Salang, and Western
- analysts rule out resupply exclusively by air. Still, Moscow is
- doing its best to counter the impression that mujahedin pressure
- on the Salang road amounts to checkmating Soviet moves to keep
- the Najibullah regime alive and well. Soviet officials, for
- example, have refused to rule out the possibility that aircraft
- based inside the U.S.S.R. may bomb targets in Afghanistan after
- Feb. 15.
- </p>
- <p> Though the Soviets are not using the terms, they are
- struggling to replace an unconditional surrender with a
- negotiated one. The effort is not going well. Moscow's latest
- disappointment was the decision three weeks ago by the
- seven-party mujahedin alliance to break off talks with the
- Soviets over the issue of P.D.P.A. participation in the shura
- that would precede a new government. Pakistan is putting intense
- pressure on the mujahedin to break the deadlock by accepting
- at least a small P.D.P.A. representation in the shura. Convinced
- that a military victory is in the cards, the rebels see little
- po,int in compromising. Abdul Haq, a commander whose men are
- deployed outside Kabul, asks derisively, "We are supposed to sit
- down and share the government with people responsible for the
- death of so many of our countrymen?" The alternative will be
- continued bloodshed. As a Soviet journalist puts it, "Unless
- there is some agreement, thousands more will die before this war
- is over."
- </p>
- <p> The mujahedin face problems of their own. Last week the
- seven parties, based in Peshawar, Pakistan, were still arguing
- about the composition of the proposed shura and what it should
- aim to do: name a new government or endorse a predominantly
- fundamentalist Muslim regime already designated by the alliance
- last July. The political infighting in Peshawar will not
- encourage cooperation among rebel field commanders. The
- mujahedin claim to have 40,000 men around Kabul, representing
- all the main parties. In response to U.S. pressure, the
- guerrillas have been lying back, allowing the Soviets to
- continue their withdrawal. For the past three months, the
- capital has suffered comparatively few rocket attacks. That may
- change after Feb. 15. Powerful commanders like Abdul Haq and
- Ahmad Massoud have drawn up plans to take the city and keep
- order once it is in their hands, but neither claims to have the
- support of the dozens of commanders in the area.
- </p>
- <p> Everyone's worst fear is that Kabul will be consumed by
- chaos, with government troops and the mujahedin fighting it out
- house to house, street to street. Those who can abandon Kabul
- at a few hours' notice are preparing to do so. The Soviets have
- completed a new wall around their embassy compound and
- constructed bunkers for staffers staying behind. Outside the
- compound, work crews are cutting down trees and widening
- Darulaman Road, an arrow-straight three-mile stretch that
- diplomats believe could be used as an emergency airstrip. But
- most of Kabul's citizens cannot escape or even take shelter from
- the looming storm. Asked what the future holds, Aziza, a mother
- of nine, responds as many people in Kabul do. "It is in God's
- hands," she says.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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