ټيت می مه بوله غورځنګ راباندی مه کړه
زه په دی افتادګی کی لوی ګړنګ يم
Soviet Invasion on
our Motherland
1978–92
Conflict
between anti-Communist Muslim Afghan guerrillas (mujahidin) and Afghan
government and Soviet forces. The conflict had its origins in the 1978 coup
that overthrew Afghan president Muhammad Daud Khan, who had come to power by
ousting the king in 1973. The president was assassinated and a pro-Soviet
Communist government under Nur Mohammad Taraki was established. In 1979
another coup, which brought Hafizullah Amin to power, provoked an invasion
(Dec., 1979) by Soviet forces and the installation of Babrak Karmal as
president.
The
Soviet invasion, which sparked Afghan resistance, intially involved an
estimated 30,000 troops, a force that ultimately grew to 100,000. The
mujahidin were supported by aid from the United States, China, and Saudi
Arabia, channeled through Pakistan, and from Iran. Although the USSR had
superior weapons and complete air control, the rebels successfully eluded
them. The conflict largely settled into a stalemate, with Soviet and
government forces controlling the urban areas, and the Afghan guerrillas
operating fairly freely in mountainous rural regions. As the war progressed,
the rebels improved their organization and tactics and began using imported
and captured weapons, including U.S. antiaircraft missiles, to neutralize the
technological advantages of the USSR.
In
1986, Karmal resigned and Mohammad Najibullah became head of a collective
leadership. In
Feb., 1988, President Mikhail Gorbachev
announced the withdrawal of USSR troops, which was completed one year later.
Soviet citizens had become increasingly discontented with the war, which
dragged on without success but with continuing casualties. In the spring of
1992, Najibullah's government collapsed and, after 14 years of rule by the
People's Democratic party, Kabul fell to a coalition of mujahidin under the
military leadership of Ahmed Shah Massoud.
The
war left Afghanistan with severe political, economic, and ecological problems.
More than 1 million Afghans died in the war and 5 million became refugees in
neighboring countries. In addition, 15,000 Soviet soldiers were killed and
37,000 wounded. Economic production was drastically curtailed, and much of the
land laid waste. At the end of the war more than 5 million mines saturated
approximately 2% of the country, where they will pose a threat to human and
animal life well into the 21st cent. The disparate guerrilla forces that had
triumphed proved unable to unite, and Afghanistan became divided into spheres
of control. These political divisions set the stage for the rise of the
Taliban later in the decade.