THE AFGHAN RESISTANCE: STRUGGLING FOR UNITY

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CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2
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June 1, 1984
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Directorate of -Sftf"- Intelligence Struggling for Unity The Afghan Resistance: NESA 84-10200 June 1984 Copy 324 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Struggling for Unity The Afghan Resistance: Directorate of Operations. This paper was prepared byl I Office of Near Eastern and South Asian Analysis, with contributions from Office of Central Reference. It was coordinated with the Comments and queries are welcome and may be directed to the Chief, South Asia Division, NESA, Secret NESA 84-10200 June 1984 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 secret The Afghan Resistance: Struggling for Unity Key Judgments Lack of unity continues to hamper the Afghan resistance. We believe Information available disunity limits resistance efforts to influence international opinion, to have as of 31 May 1984 a voice in negotiations on an Afghan settlement, to ensure diplomatic was used in this report. support and the flow of money and weapons, and to coordinate military efforts. Initiatives for unity have come from the exile community in Europe, the re- sistance community in Peshawar, and local insurgent commanders in Afghanistan. In Rome, former Afghan King Zahir Shah is attempting to join all elements of the resistance and develop international support for a United Front of Afghanistan. The Front probably will attempt to form a government-in-exile: ? Zahir probably will fail to develop support from the USSR and Pakistan. The Soviets want to maintain control over Afghanistan, and the Paki- stanis want control over negotiations and fear that resistance unity could be a powerful force in domestic politics. ? Deep divisions among fundamentalist resistance leaders and insurgent commanders will prevent the United Front from achieving legitimacy. ? Many Afghans feel nostalgia for Zahir but probably not loyalty. A weak, unevenly supported Afghan government-in-exile could pose diplomatic recognition problems for Western nations and increase tensions within the resistance. We believe the Peshawar resistance groups will not develop more than temporary, loose alliances formed for financial advantage and because of outside pressure. In our view, the guerrilla commanders inside Afghanistan will gradually improve cooperation in military operations and maintaining supply lines. Major Soviet operations in spring 1984 prompted several such improve- ments. The insurgents, however, are unlikely to develop regular interre- gional cooperation because of ethnic and language barriers, political and religious differences, and communication problems. Over the long term, the resistance probably will draw only slightly closer than it is now. iii Secret NESA 84-10200 June 1984 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Figure 1 Secret iv Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 secret The Afghan Resistance: Struggling for Unity The Afghan resistance continues to be hampered by lack of overall unity, despite initiatives to achieve that objective. The absence of an organization able to speak for the resistance as a whole limits its efforts to influence international opinion, to have a voice in negotiations on an Afghan settlement, to ensure con- tinued diplomatic and material support, and to coordi- appendixes A and B). In our view, however, the common elements are insufficient to overcome rival- ries and grudges, social and ethnic differences, and conflicting religious views. Some commanders in Af- ghanistan have begun efforts toward unification. Al- though the insurgents have shown gradual improve- ments in military cooperation, the sort of unity that would permit significant interregional military coop- nate military efforts. The most publicized and ambitious of the initiatives for unity, that of former Afghan King Zahir Shah, envisions joining all Afghan elements opposing the Kabul regime. Zahir's backers have heavily lobbied Western governments to support the former Afghan King as he -moves toward forming a government-in-exile. We believe this initia- tive has mainly grown out of fear that the Afghan resistance may be left out of any political settlement on Afghanistan. Zahir's backers also fear loss of influence to rival resistance organizations unless the former King leads the cause. Initiatives in the resistance community in Peshawar primarily seek stable political coalitions to ensure the flow of funds and weapons. Initiatives among the insurgent commanders in Afghanistan have military cooperation as the main goal. We believe that pros- pects are dim for all these initiatives. The exile groups as well as the guerrillas inside Afghanistan tend to be fractious, and their alliances frequently shift. The common elements among the resistance groups are Islam and a desire to oust the Soviets and replace the Kabul regime (see box and eration has remained elusive. The Afghan resistance is divided into hundreds of different groups. Significant disagreements exist even about what it means to defend Islam and to free Afghanistan from the Soviets. Most bands probably are poorly acquainted with the goals of the fundamen- talists or the moderates. In northeastern Hazarehjat, for example, several bands routinely switch allegiance from one Peshawar-based group to another hose bands seek considerable autonomy for their regions or ethnic groups and prefer minimal interference in local affairs from Kabul. Other groups, such as Maoists and social democrats, have little power and are unlikely to influence the resistance much. Another factor that hampers intergroup ties is that the leadership structure is in flux in Afghanistan and among the refugees who provide the guerrillas' man- power pool. According to Western journalists, young men with automatic weapons have replaced village 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 elders as the highest authority in areas hard hit by the war. Only traditional leaders who are combatants retain their influence. In the refugee camps, rival groups have formed over distribution of food and arms and the issue of religion. As they have for centuries, tribal and ethnic ties continue to divide as well as unite Afghans. A Pakistani refugee official told West- ern journalists that it is impossible, for example, to put Ghilzai tribesmen into a Durrani camp, since 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret neither side would accept such a situation, though both are ethnically Pushtun. Similar divisions persist inside Afghanistan, including among the rural inhab- itants who have sought refuge in Kabul, Control over distribution of food and weapons, however, can sometimes cause tribal and ethnic ties to loosen. regime. most fighting among themselves, also have the great- est access to the world press. Instead of promoting a common program, however, insurgents provide the media primarily with fragmentary, exaggerated claims of successes against the Soviets and the Kabul without adequate backing. Zahir's effort to unify the resistance is ambitious and extensive. Backed by the Peshawar moderate alliance, Zahir publicly opened his campaign in summer 1983. His principal goal is to create a United Front of Afghanistan that can participate in negotiations lead- ing to a Soviet withdrawal. In summer 1983 an aide to Zahir said that creation of a government-in-exile would depend on the will of a national assembly, which Zahir's supporters hope to convene when suffi- cient backing has developed. Professing a desire to serve as a personage around whom the Afghan resist- ance can coalesce, Zahir in press conferences has portrayed himself as a conciliator rather than a leader, disavowing personal ambitions or any attempt to restore the monarchy (see box and appendix Q. The former King and his supporters apparently be- lieve that international support will make him influen- tial enough to bring the major resistance leaders to his side. Some observers believe that ambitious advisers will push Zahir into forming a government-in-exile The Soviet Position We believe Zahir is not likely to get Soviet support, though he realizes the need for it. In a press interview in June 1983, Zahir indicated that he considers friendly relations between Afghanistan and the USSR a necessity, though he harshly condemns the Soviets and the Kabul regime. The Soviets have not taken a public position on Zahir Shah's initiative. In January 1984 limited attacks on Zahir by Afghan Government media-which are controlled by the Soviets-testified to Soviet concern about Zahir's unity effort. The Soviets probably fear Insurgent efforts to influence international opinion continue to be hindered by an inability to decide on a common program. The Peshawar groups, who do the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret Fundamentalist and Moderate Resistance Groups The fundamentalists are anti-Western as well as anti- Communist and seek to reorder Afghan society on Islamic principles, The most extreme group is the Hizbi Islami faction led by Gulbuddin Hikmatyar, who favors an Iranian-style government and society in Afghanistan. The Hizbi faction led by Yunus Khalis is more open to compro- mise, and the Jamiat-i-Islami, led by Burhanuddin Rabbani, is even less doctrinaire. Like the moderates, Rabbani acknowledges the need for coexistence with the USSR and has ties with some Afghan exiles in the West. The moderates also cover a wide political spectrum. They acknowledge the need for compromise and coexistence with the Soviet Union. They have good connections with the educated refugees in the West, the former landowners, and the Afghan communities in the United States and Europe. The Harakat, led by Muhammad Nabi Muhammadi, is the most con- servative. The group in the center of the moderate spectrum is that of Sibghatullah Mojadedi, and the most nearly Western and closest to the exiled royal family is the group led by Sayyid Ahmad Gailani. 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret that the former King may succeed where the Pesha- war-based resistance leaders have failed, yet Moscow does not want to improve his prospects by mounting a major propaganda campaign against him. The Soviets may also still hope that Zahir will ultimately help the Afghan Communists consolidate their control of Afghanistan. Members of his entou- rage have told US academic experts there have been periodic contacts between the Soviets and emissaries of the former King, although he denies it. Moscow's preference could be for Zahir to return to Afghani- stan as a figurehead like Souvanna Phouma in Laos after the Communist takeover there. We doubt that Moscow would ever permit the King real power.? The Pakistani Position Zahir's backers claim to have the support of President Zia, but that is not likely. In our view, Pakistan would have several reasons for opposing the former Afghan King. A unified resistance would diminish Pakistan's authority in negotiations toward a political settlement of the Afghanistan issue. In late autumn 1983, Pakistan wanted to increase its influence over the resistance by establish- ing direct ties with insurgents in the field and circum- venting the Peshawar parties. the Pakistani Government wanted to sponsor the formation of an Afghan exile political council in Peshawar that could negotiate, under Pakistani guid- ance, with the Soviets to pursue a peace settlement. In December 1982 Pakistani officials expressed strong Afghanistan reservations about promoting Afghan resistance uni- ty, claiming that the resistance had sufficient coher- ence to sustain military operations in Afghanistan. The Pakistanis feared that resistance unity could be a powerful force in domestic politics should the refu- gees' hope of returning to a free Afghanistan fade. Finally, the Pakistanis disliked Zahir when he was in power because of his association with the Pushtunis- tan issue. We believe, however, that Pakistan will not obstruct Zahir Shah's efforts. Obstruction could invite interna- tional criticism and jeopardize relations with Muslim states that support the resistance. In October 1983 a Pakistani Foreign Ministry official said that Pakistan had not formulated any policy in regard to Zahir Shah. He made clear, however, that Pakistan is not opposed to a government on good terms with the Soviets. Recently, Pakistan quietly provided courte- sies to Zahir's backers. the Pakistani Government provided facilities and se- curity for Zahir's representatives in fall 1983 when they tried to develop support for the former King among refugees in the North-West Frontier Province and adjoining tribal areas. 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 2.5X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret The Fundamentalists' Position We believe the opposition of the fundamentalist resistance groups will prevent Zahir and his backers from achieving any legitimacy that the planned Unit- ed Front may eventually claim. Fundamentalists' reaction to Zahir's program has ranged from passive opposition to outright hostility. fundamentalists in Peshawar wi not suppo~tional assembly planned by Zahir's back- ers. Programs approved by such an assembly would be meaningless without participation by most fundamen- wish to head such an organization. We believe his opposition to Zahir Shah is more personal than ideological. Rabbani believes the former King's plan to develop a united front is unrealistic. In a Western press interview, Rabbani said the front would have to be built on Islamic principles, free from foreign domination. He sees Zahir as having close ties with the West and not the Afghan people. The front, said Rabbani, "may not be led by persons whose relations with the people are weak and loose." In an interview with a fundamental- ist publication in early 1984, Rabbani labeled Zahir's 25X1 25X1 talist leaders, because they influence the most effec- tive insurgent groups. the fundamentalists believe Zahir is morally bankrupt and has ignored the insurgency while living in comfort in exile. Some fundamentalists also suspect the mod- erates are manipulating Zahir and find that sufficient reason to distrust him The Jamiat. Jamiat leader Rabbani apparently con- siders a united resistance desirable for dealing with the Soviets and Kabul regime, but he would probably efforts as "impracticable expectations." some other Jamiat officials also oppose the return of Zahir. They blame his policies for leading the Soviets to invade and believe he would be unfit as spokesman for the resistance because he lacks influence among the popu- lace inside Afghanistan. 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret The Kabul Regime's Position We believe the Kabul regime has carefully limited its attacks on the King, fearing the publicity might promote Zahir's cause among regime opponents. US Embassy reports indicate the regime has attacked Zahir Shah in Afghanistan's English-language press but not the vernacular press. A commentary in Janu- ary 1984 entitled "Mad Fantasies of Zahir Shah" played up charges that the King is backed by the United States, that he is living in luxury, that his feudal tenure caused starvation and poverty, and that he ruled by exploiting conflicts among tribes and ethnic groups. In autumn 1983, Kabul television implied criticism of Zahir by briefly showing a photo- graph of him that was propped against weapons allegedly captured from insurgents Hizbi (Khalis). A spokesman for Yunus Khalis in January 1984 denied that his leader contemplated cooperating with supporters of Zahir in forming a united resistance front, asserting that Zahir has not gathered the necessary public support. Khalis would be willing to cooperate with moderate resistance groups, but not under Zahir's aegis, because that would risk loss of support by his insurgent followers. Khalis, like Rabbani, according to the spokesman, blames Zahir for creating condi- tions that led to the Soviet invasion. US Embassy officials in Pakistan in January 1984 found no evi- dence that Khalis was willing to support Zahir-only speculation by the moderates that he eventually may. Hizbi (Gulbuddin) and Sayyaf: The most radical fundamentalists are the most strongly opposed to the King. In August 1983, Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, head of the fundamentalist alliance, publicly threatened to kill Zahir and accused him of having opened Afghanistan to strong Soviet influence in the 1950s and 1960s by accepting large amounts of Soviet aid. At a press conference in Peshawar in August 1983, Gulbuddin asserted that plans by moderate Afghan leaders to form a government-in-exile represent a Soviet-US plot against the Islamic revolution in Afghanistan. Gul- buddin claimed that the King was a Soviet pawn and linked the "conspiracy" with the Geneva talks. Afghan Popular Views The Afghan people, in our judgment, have little more than a nostalgic affection for Zahir. That good will, however, could develop into active support should the former King receive widespread backing by other resistance leaders. According to US Embassy reports, Western reports of Zahir's press interviews aroused warm memories in Kabul's bazaars of the days before the Soviet invasion and prompted hope that the Soviets would soon leave Afghanistan and the King would return. Western observers note, however, that the public showed little dismay when the King was overthrown and regarded some of the King's advisers with considerable hostility. Other Initiatives for Unity The Peshawar Resistance Groups In our view, the Peshawar resistance groups are capable of only temporary, loose-knit alliances. The alliances, we believe, have usually developed for fi- nancial advantage rather than from common goals and have existed more on paper than in reality. the Afghan insurgents have never been interested in the formation of a common front (see box). The principal leaders have long resisted unifying, fearing curbs on their powers 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret merge in May 1983 to improve finances. According to press reports, the seven major funda- mentalist resistance groups based in Peshawar formed a loose coalition in 1981 and decided to the parties continued to function sepa- and pulled his group out of the alliance. rately, however, and that bickering in the leadership caused the alliance to lose influence within Afghani- stan. In December 1983, Yunus Khalis publicly charged alliance leader Sayyaf with misusing funds the fundamentalist alliancefunc- lis's departure. affairs. In our view, one indication of the depth of the divisions among the Peshawar groups is that major moves toward unity have not arisen from within. pressure on the funda- mentalists in spring 1983 to form an alliance came from members of the Muslim Brotherhood in several Persian Gulf states and from the Pakistan Jamaat Islami Party. The outsiders urged an end to quarrel- ing, disbanding individual parties, election of officers, and tighter financial control. The inducement was as much as $40 million in aid to the alliance but not to an individual. 25X1 25X1 25X1 We believe differences between the moderates and 7r-,X1 fundamentalists are irreconcilable. 25X1 abbani has said that, if he is not 25X1 Alliance members' differences sometimes have led to bloodshed. in October 1983, Gulbuddin's forces attacked Sayyaf's forces in Wardak Province, and Gulbuddin claimed the attack was in response to Savvaf's interference in Hizbi wide divisions exist between the Jamiat and most other fundamentalists. US Embassy sources recently speculated that Khalis and Rabbani may ignore the other fundamentalists elected resistance head, he and the Jamiat will follow no other leadership even if 25X1 Zahir succeeded in convening a nationa assembly as a step toward founding a United Front, there would still be a split between the moderates and fundamen- talists. Should Zahir be elected leader, Rabbani be- lieves, most of the moderates would come over to the Jamiat. Rabbani indicated that he would in any case continue to try to unite elements of the Afghan resistance within Afghanistan under the Jamiat.F_ fundamentalists in maintaining cooperation. o likelihood exists ofthe provinces. ative missionaries supported by Sayyof have prompted armed clashes within the resistance in three and criticism of their activities and decisions, In spring 1984 the fundamen- talists and moderates made an unprecedented call for unity and for assistance to the Panjsher Valley insur- gents, who became the target of a large-scale Soviet offensive. cooperation among insurgent groups in the Panjsher Valley area has improved, but internecine fighting has continued in several Afghan provinces. three moderate parties orming a consolidated front. the three-party moder- ate alliance holds together because of strong pressure 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 I 25X1 25X1 25X1 from "elements in Europe," presumably the Afghan 25X1 exile community. We believe that the moderates' European backing and dealings with Zahir Shah will 25X1 prevent reconciliation between them and the funda- mentalists. even 25X1 the moderates' ostensibly common goal of setting up 25X1 Zahir Shah as resistance spokesman has created tension. ojadedi and 25X1 Nabi may have reservations about the initiative, which they see primarily as a Gailani move. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret Major Peshawar Resistance Organizations Ethnic Composition Political/ Religious Composition Area of Strength Harakat-i-Inqilab-i-Islami (Islamic Revolutionary Movement) Muhammad Nabi Muhammadi Pushtun Hizbi Islami (Islamic Party) (Gulbuddin) Gulbuddin Hikmatyar Pushtun Hizbi Islami (Islamic Party) (Khalis) Muhammad Yunus Khalis Pushtun Islamic Union for the Liber- ation of Afghanistan Abdul Rasul Sayyaf Pushtun Islamic fundamentalist Eastern Afghanistan (mainly Kabul City) Jabha-i-Najat-i-Milli Afghanistan (Afghanistan National Liberation Front) Sibghatullah Mojadedi Pushtun Moderate Islamic Eastern Afghanistan Jamiat-i-Islami (Islamic Society) Burhanuddin Rabbani Tajik Islamic fundamentalist Northern and Western Afghanistan (National Islamic Front) The Insurgent Commanders Inside Afghanistan Factors Hampering Unity. Several insurgent com- manders in Afghanistan have promoted guerrilla uni- ty, but poor communica- tions are a major barrier to unification. Ethnic, cultural, political, and religious differences deter co- operation as do mountainous terrain, great distances, and hostile troops between district commanders and their various headquarters. Most commanders also lack local and regional politi- cal ties. Even if the Peshawar exile groups unified, the effect on the insurgents in Afghanistan would be slight. the number of insurgent bands having nominal ties with exile organi- zations has increased in the past three years. The exiles, however, do not appear to have any greater control over the fighting, and most exile leaders have only limited influence even with the bands that ac- knowledge their authority. We believe that many commanders lack political skills and care about little but their own small areas of Efforts Toward Unity. In our view, of all the insurgent commanders in Afghanistan, Panjsher commander Masood has made the most ambitious effort to build alliances. Masood strengthened his standing with the local populace and with insurgent commanders outside the Panjsher Val- ley following a cease-fire arrangement with the Sovi- ets in early 1983. In December 1983, Masood held a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 UCLA OI Probably far more typical than Masood is the Shura commander of the Hazarehjat, Sayyid Muhammad Hassan Jaglan. observer, Jaglan has concluded a cooperative arrange- ment with Jamiat forces in Ghowr Province. Under the arrangement, Jaglan prevents rival Hizbi convoys from passing through the Hazarehjat to Ghowr. In return, Jamiat forces block the movement of Iranian arms to a group that rivals Jaglan's in the Hazarehjat. Throughout 1983, Jaglan was so preoccupied with fighting rival insur- gent groups that he had neither the time nor the manpower to initiate actions against the Soviets Panfsher Valley insurgent com- mander Ahmad Shah Masood conference of Jamiat commanders from eight prov- commanders from other par- Masood hoped to win allies without alienating other groups. His approach involves being unemotional and carefully balanced, finding capable aides, and having sufficient military supplies to dis- tribute to new groups or groups whose support is needed. By December 1983, Masood had expanded his ties to both Jamiat and non-Jamiat commanders, establishing links with ma- jor groups in Balkh, Herat, and the Hazarehjat. He was also seeking close links with Jalaluddin, a po ful Hizbi (Khalil) commander in Paktia Province. Masood believes a further political move now-such as setting up an Afghan political council-would be remature and would lack popular support. no merger is possible because of traditional rivalries as well as Masood's distrust of the hardliners and the hardliners' suspicion of Masood for his willingness to negotiate. Jaglan is trying to improve cooperation with other groups that share his enmities, but his attempts seem inept. in early 1983, for 25X1 examp e, Jag an sent a tests as emissaries to a conservative Jamiat group in Faryab Province.= Jaglan wants self-rule in the azare ,fat and has little interest in who governs in Kabul so long as the Hazarehjat retains its autonomy. Over the long term, the resistance probably will not draw much closer together than it is now because of political and religious differences. Outside pressure is unlikely to bring the resistance politically closer to- gether. Various Saudi groups provided the impetus for the fundamentalist alliance, but it has never devel- oped more than nominally and now seems to be disintegrating. More funds from Saudi sources will not keep the alliance from breaking up. Afghan exiles in Europe have persuaded the moderates to maintain a loose alliance but can do little more. Iran's influence is limited to the extreme fundamentalists. Pakistan, because of its own concerns for control, has little desire to see a truly unified resistance. No other nations have sufficient influence with major resistance elements to be able to affect moves toward unity. 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret We believe an even chance exists that Zahir Shah and his backers-with exaggerated claims of support- will convene a national assembly and set up a govern- ment-in-exile. Any Afghan government-in-exile will lack solid support from the insurgents and various resistance organizations because political, religious, and ethnic differences are likely to remain very strong. A weak, unevenly supported government-in- exile would be worse than none at all because it would increase tensions among resistance factions. We see little hope, moreover, that the Soviets will seek a negotiated settlement that would result in an Afghan regime acceptable to all major parties (see box). We believe the Peshawar parties will continue quar- reling and that their control over insurgent command- ers will remain quite limited. Inside Afghanistan, the commanders will probably continue to increase coop- eration gradually, with Jamiat forces in particular growing more cohesive. We believe, however, that unity will elude both the political and military ele- ments of the Afghan resistance. Implications for the United States A weak, unevenly supported Afghan government-in- exile would present several problems for the United States and its allies. Its establishment could embar- rass the host country and give rise to Soviet counter- measures and pressure. It would also pose diplomatic In spite of the optimism of some resistance figures, we believe it is highly unlikely that the Soviets will pull out of Afghanistan without a pro-Soviet government firmly in place. recognition problems for Western nations that main- tain embassies in Kabul. Were the United States or other Western governments to recognize the govern- ment-in-exile, little justification would exist for main- taining embassies in Kabul. Were the embassies to close, an international window on the war would close. Western ties to a government-in-exile formed by Zahir and the moderates would generate greater anti- Western feeling among the fundamentalist insurgents. Soviet countermeasures could include military pres- sure on Pakistan or aid to opposition elements in any country serving as host for the government-in-exile. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85TOO314ROO0100150004-2 Appendix A Selected Major Insurgent Groups Abdul Hai 11,000 men Jamiat-i-Islami Baghlan Province Abdul Haq 6,000 to 7,000 men Hizbi Islami (Khalis) Kabol Province Abdullah 300 to 360 men Jamiat-i-Islami Badakhshan Province Amin Wardak 1,500 to 3,000 men Mahaz-i-Milli-Islami Ghazni and Vardak Provinces Din Muhammad Khan 5,000 men Harakat-i-Inqilab-i-Islami Balkh Province Turan Muhammad Ismail Khan 600 men Jamiat-i-Islami Herat Province Jamiatullah Jalal 500 to 1,500 men Independent front Honarha Province Ahmad Shah Masood 7,000 men Jamiat-i-Islami Parvan and Kapisa Provinces Amir Ostat Abdulai 4,000 men Jamiat-i-Islami Baghlan Province Haji Anwar Pilot 2,000 men Harakat-i-Inqilab-i-Islami Farah Province Sayyid Muhammad Hassan Jaglan 15,000 to 20,000 men Shura-Inqilab-i-Itafaq-i-Islami Hazarehjat Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85TOO314ROO0100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 3ecrer Appendix B Religion, like tribal ties, divides as well as unites Afghans. Approximately 75 percent of Afghans are Sunni Muslims and 25 percent are Shia. Within each of the two communities, =a wide range of opinion separates numerous factions. In our view, no sect can become influential enough to unite the resistance, though one group, in particular, may be working to do so. Sufism-an ascetic, mystical form of Islam that has both Sunni and Shia adherents in Afghanistan-provides cohe- sion in certain areas. Sufis have recently begun attempts to spread their beliefs among Afghan refugees in Pakistan. In some places Sufism is both a religious and a political force, serving to bind together adherents from different ethnic groups and insurgent organizations. Sufism as a politi- cal-religious force is most influential in northwestern Afghanistan, where spiritual guides arbitrate differ- ences between insurgent groups resulting from ethnic frictions or partisan rivalry. In Faryab Province, one Sufi leader has been very successful in controlling internecine feuding. Where their influence is strong, Sufi religious leaders can determine who becomes a resistance organization province chief. Herat is the largest Sufi stronghold in Afghanistan. In the insur- gent organizations based around Herat City, most local commanders and their followers are members of a single Sufi organization. In eastern Afghanistan, Sufi political leaders such as Gailani seldom spend time on religious responsibilities, devoting themselves instead to resistance politics. in autumn 1983 that a Sufi insur- gent organization, the Madrasa-i-Koran, is working to unite the various Afghan resistance organizations. The group's leader claims to have 10,000 members dispersed throughout other insurgent organizations in Afghanistan and 70,000 civilian members. Mirajan Saheeqi, leader of the Madrasa, claims that his members have infiltrated major resistance organi- zations and are moving into senior positions. They believe they will have to fight the Soviets for years and are preparing for the struggle by providing political and religious indoctrination to all members, insurgents and civilians. The leaders are working on a representative form of government for Afghanistan that would bear no resemblance to the authoritarian government in Iran. The organization has published in Dari several books and manuals for its member- ship. Some are doctrinal and political, and others are military training manuals Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 necrea Appendix C The United Front of Afghanistan According to a document from Zahir Shah's organi- zation, the United Front is to be governed by a council that will follow Islamic principles and will represent all elements of Afghan society. The council is to consist of representatives from each province and district, from the nomadic tribes in the various regions of the country, from each resistance organization, from refugees in Pakistan and Iran, from European Afghan exiles, and from immigrants to the United States, India, and other countries. Religious figures, spiritual leaders, prominent civil and military person- alities, intellectuals, and tribal chieftains will also be included. The most important of Zahir's supporters are the three moderate resistance leaders, since they are the only ones who retain any influence among the insur- gent commanders within Afghanistan. The person- ages who approved the plan for the United Front of Afghanistan at meetings in Rome in August 1983, include: Former Afghan Ambassador to the UN. Muhammad Nabi Head of the Harakat. Muhammadi The publicly announced principles for the United Front are based on UN resolutions that: ? Afghanistan be a neutral, nonaligned Islamic state. ? All Soviet forces be withdrawn. ? Afghanistan's territorial integrity be respected. ? Afghanistan has the right to self-determination with no foreign interference. ? Afghanistan's spiritual and national values be re- stored. plans for forming the front involve following the traditional Afghan pattern of calling a national assembly to ratify a charter for the United Front. the front will act as an official voice theistance, not as a movement to restore the monarchy. A document on the arrangements for establishing the front indicates that the alliance of moderate resistance groups, the Islamic Unity, will perform the functions of the United Front until it can be established. Sayyid Abroad Gailani Head of the National Islamic Front. Sibghatullah Mojadedi Head of the Afghan National Liberation Front. Muhammad Yussuf Former Afghan Prime Minister. Abdullah Malikyar Former Afghan Ambassador to the United States. Abdul Wali Former head of the Afghan Army, Zahir's son-in-law. 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2 Secret Secret Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/10: CIA-RDP85T00314R000100150004-2