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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) Steel Fist In Kabul
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 07296>
- <link 06941>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 7, 1980
- AFGHANISTAN
- Steel Fist in Kabul
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A Soviet Coup overthrows Amin and sets a fearsome precedent
- </p>
- <p> It was the most brutal blow from the Soviet Union's steel fist
- since the Red Army's invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. In a
- lightning series of events last week, Afghanistan's President
- Hafizullah Amin was overthrown, and subsequently executed, in
- a ruthless coup mounted by the Soviet Union and carried out with
- the firepower of Soviet combat troops. In Amin's place, Moscow
- installed Babrak Karmal, a former Deputy Prime Minister long
- considered to be a Soviet protege, but not before Russian troops
- were forced to fight a sporadic series of gun battles in the
- streets of Kabul, Afghanistan's capital.
- </p>
- <p> At week's end the Carter Administration charged that Moscow was
- launching an outright invasion of its neighbor, with two
- mechanized Soviet divisions crossing the border and heading for
- Kabul. U.S. intelligence estimates indicated that at least
- 20,000 troops were in Afghanistan. Said White House spokesman
- Jody Powell: "The magnitude of the Soviet invasion continues
- to grow."
- </p>
- <p> The Soviets obviously hoped that their brazen, perhaps
- desperate, action could help their puppet regime bring a
- stubborn Islamic insurgency in Afghanistan under control and
- thus stabilize a dangerous flash point on their southern border.
- But the coup, in fact, added a new dimension of uncertainty to
- an area of the world already deeply disturbed by the crisis in
- Iran. Moreover, the deployment of Soviet troops on foreign soil
- in Central Asia set a fearsome precedent that cast new shadows
- over international detente and Moscow-Washington relations. The
- SALT II accord, already in difficulty in the U.S. Senate, seemed
- even further jeopardized by the Soviet action.
- </p>
- <p> Outraged reaction came swiftly from the White House. In the
- strongest language he has ever directed against Moscow,
- President Carter, in a televised message, said: "Such gross
- interference in the internal affairs of Afghanistan is in
- blatant violation of accepted international rules of behavior."
- He conveyed the same harsh message to Leonid Brezhnev
- personally on the rarely used White House-Kremlin hot line. At
- the same time, the President got in touch directly with Western
- European leaders and President Mohammed Zia Ul-Haq of Pakistan,
- among others, in an attempt to obtain a collective condemnation
- of Moscow. All shared his concern. As a result, Deputy
- Secretary of State Warren Christopher was dispatched to London
- over the weekend to discuss the situation with U.S. allies.
- </p>
- <p> Other countries obviously were just as concerned about the
- Soviet military intervention. Peking fumed that "Afghanistan's
- independence and sovereignty have become toys in Moscow's
- hands." Iran's Revolutionary Council declared that the
- intervention in a neighboring country was "a hostile action"
- against "Muslims throughout the world." Interestingly, however,
- there were no attacks on Russian embassies.
- </p>
- <p> The first dramatic signs of the Soviet action appeared on
- Christmas morning. Moscow suddenly began a massive airlift of
- combat soldiers to Afghanistan. The suspected motive at the
- time: to help the Afghan regime put down the rebellion of
- conservative Muslim tribesmen. In full sight of arriving and
- departing passengers, wave after wave of Soviet An-12 and An-22
- transports landed at Kabul's international airport and unloaded
- not only combat troops but equipment ranging from field kitchens
- to armored vehicles.
- </p>
- <p> By Thursday the real motive of the intervention was clear:
- Radio Kabul suddenly announced that President Amin, a tough,
- repressive Communist who had seized power only last September
- from former President Noor Mohammed Taraki, had been deposed.
- The new President, the broadcast said, was former Deputy Prime
- Minister Karmal. A later announcement specified that Amin had
- been convicted of "crimes against the people" and executed,
- along with members of his family. Radio Kabul failed to mention
- that in the upheaval, Soviet military units had entered combat
- for the first time since their border clashes against China in
- 1969.
- </p>
- <p> The fighting began at 7:30 in the evening, according to the
- U.S. State Department, with Soviet troops and weapons deployed
- in key locations of Kabul. In a 3 1/2-hour battle for the radio
- station, Soviet troops using armored personnel carriers knocked
- out two Afghan tanks and took a number of prisoners. At one
- point a U.S. official reported with some relish, "The Soviets
- are getting shot up pretty well." Soviet-built MiG-21 jets flew
- overhead in repeated passes. By midnight the city was reported
- quiet.
- </p>
- <p> The next day, however, diehard supports of Amin resumed the
- fighting in Kabul. THe coup, scoffed the rebel command,
- represented nothing more than "a change in pawns." The Japanese
- embassy said that gunfire could still be heard along the road
- leading from the Soviet embassy to the old royal palace.
- Nonetheless, as soon as word reached Moscow that the coup was
- successful, the Soviets quickly broadcast Karmal's denunciation
- of the Amin dictatorship as an agent of "American imperialism."
- </p>
- <p> The move against Afghanistan was the first time since
- World War II that Moscow had used significant numbers of its own
- armed forces in a state outside the Warsaw Pact. It seemed an
- ominous extension into Asia of the Brezhnev Doctrine, which
- asserts that Moscow has the right to assist any social state in
- trouble. Moscow, of course, claimed that it intervened only at
- the request of the Karmal government under the terms of a 20-year
- friendship treaty signed in December 1978. The Russians made no
- attempt to disguise the fact that the airlift began two days
- before the coup that brought Karmal to power, thus making a
- mockery of their rationale.
- </p>
- <p> The military buildup had, in fact, begun several weeks before
- the airlift. The best analysis of U.S. intelligence at that
- time was that the Soviets were matching Washington's naval and
- air buildup in the Middle East. It later seemed, however, that
- apart from any U.S. buildup, Moscow acted primarily to meet a
- situation in Afghanistan it could no longer effectively control.
- The Russians apparently decided to make their show of force in
- the shadow of the Iranian problem, much as they had intervened
- in Hungary in 1956, while the West was preoccupied with the Suez
- crisis. Moscow made a Realpolitik decision: Amin would have
- to go.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet choice to replace him was a Marxist intellectual
- little known in the West (see below). Karmal thus became the
- third Afghan leader to seize control of the government in the
- 20 months since the Communists first came to power in April
- 1978. As the new strongman, following the April coup, Taraki
- at first denied there had been a Communist takeover. But in the
- months that followed, internal struggles dangerously narrowed
- the government's base. As he attempted to keep the revolution
- on course, Taraki turned increasingly to Russian advisers to
- fill a shortage of trained manpower. The number of Soviets soon
- grew to more than 3,000.
- </p>
- <p> Ominously for Taraki and the Soviets, however, there were
- already rumblings of revolt among conservative Muslim tribesmen
- unhappy at the prospect of radical social and economic reforms.
- AS the Marxists in Kabul pressed their case, the opposition
- gradually developed into a full-scale religious insurgency. In
- March, thousands of Afghans in Herat (pop. 150,000), a
- provincial capital 400 miles west of Kabul, rose in a revolt
- that lasted for several days. An estimated 20,000 civilians
- lost their lives; so did at least 20 Soviet advisers and their
- families in a series of brutal rebel attacks.
- </p>
- <p> By last fall, some 22 of the country's 28 provinces were said
- to be in rebel hands. Amin, by now Taraki's Prime Minister,
- cracked down with repressive measures, including the execution
- of some 2,000 political detainees and the imprisonment of some
- 30,000 others. By the time Amin toppled Taraki and took over
- completely, the Afghan armed forces themselves were demoralized
- by purges and defections to the rebels, and clearly were hard
- put to contain the rebellion.
- </p>
- <p> After General Ivan Pavlovsky, head of Soviet ground forces,
- toured Afghanistan last fall and assessed the Afghan
- government's predicament as close to hopeless, the Soviets
- became convinced of the need for drastic steps. According to
- former Ambassador to Kabul Robert Neumann, the Russians had
- three choices: 1) "To let Afghanistan go, in which case the
- government would have fallen within a week." That would have
- cost the Russians credibility in Eastern Europe and elsewhere.
- 2) A "massive Russian military infusion," in which the Soviets
- would try to squelch the rebellion. Commented Neumann: "This
- option opens up the real possibility of a Soviet View Nam." 3)
- A coup to install a puppet at the head of the government in the
- hope that he could bring things under control.
- </p>
- <p> According to Neumann, the Soviets decided on a combination of
- the last two options. In the event of a failure by Karmal,
- Neumann has no doubt that the Soviets will be prepared to deploy
- their own forces. Indeed, the large Soviet buildup of perhaps
- 50,000 troops on Afghanistan's borders was a clear indication
- of the Soviets' own uncertainty about Karmal's chances.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. officials are concerned that the Soviet move will further
- destabilize the region. The most direct impact will probably
- fall on Pakistan, whose territory has provided refuge for an
- estimated 350,000 Afghan rebels. There was the prospect that
- in wake of the coup, another 150,000 might cross the border.
- State Department analysts fear that the Soviets might even go
- so far as to make military forays into Pakistan. Says one
- expert: "The border between these two countries has never
- really been agreed upon, and the potential for increased
- conflict has dramatically heightened since the Soviet actions."
- U.S. officials hesitate to speculate about the effect on Iran,
- though there is some hope that the Soviet's intervention will
- lessen the Ayatullah Khomeini's strident anti-Americanism.
- Saudi Arabia and Iraq, meanwhile, both see the coup as an
- indirect threat to themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Operating from within their own borders and with no domestic
- public opinion to consider, the Soviets seem almost impervious
- to criticism. Moscow, after all, knows there is not much the
- U.S. can actually do. Says Richard Helms, a former Ambassador
- to Iran and former director of the CIA: "It's no gamble at all.
- What are we going to do about it? We have no forces there, no
- bases. What can we do for the time being but remonstrate?"
- </p>
- <p>Moscow's New Stand-in
- </p>
- <p> To Afghanistan's new Soviet-sponsored strongman, Barak
- Karmal, toppling governments is old hat. In 1973, as
- parliamentary leader of the pro-Moscow Parcham wing of the
- Communist People's Democratic Party, he helped to plot the
- overthrow of King Mohammed Zahir Shah by Mohammed Daoud. Five
- years later, he blithely joined in the subsequent plot that
- ousted Daoud's regime. For that purpose, Karmal had aligned
- himself with his bitter political rival, Noor Mohammed Taraki,
- leader of the more radical Khalq faction of the P.D.P., who set
- himself up as President. But the alliance between the two
- Marxists soon broke down. After only two months as Deputy Prime
- Minister under Taraki, Karmal was sent into virtual exile as
- Ambassador to Czechoslovakia. When Taraki stripped him of his
- citizenship and tried to call him home, Karmal refused to obey
- the summons. Had he returned to Kabul, Karmal almost certainly
- would have been executed.
- </p>
- <p> Instead, Karamal, a 50-year-old bachelor, went into hiding
- with other members of the Parcham group. Among them was his
- longtime mistress, Anahita Ratebzad, who had been packed off as
- Ambassador to Yugoslavia. When Taraki was overthrown--and
- killed by Hafizullah Amin last September, Karmal was still
- underground. Diplomats speculated that the Soviets stashed him
- away in an Eastern European capital as a sort of strongman-in-
- reserve. As one expert puts it, "The Russians were keeping [him]
- on ice until [he was] needed."
- </p>
- <p> The well-born son of a general, Karmal has been a Marxist ever
- since his days as a student at Kabul University; his graduation
- was delayed by a stint in prison for left-wing agitation. His
- Parcham Party always leaned more dependably toward Moscow than
- Taraki's more broadly based faction, which sometimes espoused
- a Maoist-flavored brand of Marxism. Says former U.S. Ambassador
- to Afghanistan Robert Neumann: "Karmal is the original Communist,
- a dyed-in-the-wool article."
- </p>
- <p> His record suggests that Karamal will continue to be Moscow's
- man, a custom-tailored partisan, as it were. But no matter how
- slavishly he follows the policies of his Soviet mentors, Karmal
- does not appear to have the agility necessary to reconcile the
- tribal, religious and ideological disputes that divide his
- volatile country. Concludes Neumann: "He is not a very flexible
- fellow."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-