NSPG ON AFGHANISTAN

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CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1
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RIPPUB
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T
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36
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December 22, 2016
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August 12, 2010
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5
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Publication Date: 
March 25, 1985
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MEMO
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25 March 1985 NOTE FOR: Director of Central Intelligence SUBJECT : NSPG on Afghanistan 1. The purpose of this NSPG is to review a draft NSDD re US policy toward Afghanistan and hear various departments' and agencies' comments. (A copy of the NSDD is on the left side of this folder: the Aaencv has supported the draft as written.) 2. Attached you will find the following: TAB A Talking points from Fritz (partial) TAB B TAB C TAB D TAB E TAB F TAB G State Dept. review completed NESA/DI sitrep re current situation in Afghanistan. Memorandum from Fritz with some additional background on the NSDD and the NSPG. Copy of your 16 March memorandum to Bud on Gorbachev's comments on Afghanistan, etc. Copy of Monday's Washington Times front page article. SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 from Fritz Ermarth SECRET 25X1 25 March 1985 DCI TALKING POINTS FOR NSPG ON AFGHANISTAN POLICY (RESPONSIVE TO ADMIRAL POINDEXTER's QUESTIONS) We believe the Soviet campaign in Afghanistan is stalemated for sure, and probably losing ground. The resistance is growing in size and effectiveness. Soviet casualties and equipment losses are increasing. The territory over which the Soviet/Afghan government exercises control is shrinking. Resistance activity is penetrating further into the cities. Numerous sources show that the mid-level Soviet military perceive that they are not winning the conflict, and that their situation is deteriorating. Why are the Soviets not winning in Afghanistan despite their overwhelming physical power and great desire to win? Virtually the entire nation of Afghanistan is hostile to them. To a degree greater than any other people the Soviets have sought to subjugate, the Afghans are willing to fight them, long and hard. Traditionally warlike and armed, the Afghan resistance is increasingly better armed and skillful in fighting. Local factors of terrain and the primitive, fragmented organization of the resistance make it hard for the Soviets to bring their kind of armed forces to bear. National hostility to the Soviets and their quislings makes it very difficult for the Soviets to build any kind of political base or to broaden their social-political appeal So far, the Soviets have been unwilling to make the massive resource and manpower commitment necessary -- in their own assessments -- to put the war on a winning path. SECRET I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 SECRET Public reports to the contrary notwithstanding, the Soviets have not been willing nor had the resources to engage in truly nation-wide scorched-earth tactics to control the country by killing or driving out most of its people. How serious are the threats that the Soviets are now making toward Zia, and otherwise? , [Shall get this to you tomorrow AM; need additional data] SECRET .41..11J111,1.. 2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 TOP SECRET Afghanistan: Situation Update Talking Points for the DCI Prepared by Office of Near Eastern and South Asian Analysis 25 March 1985 Soviet and Afghan operational activity will increase this spring, and the insurgents will renew their pressure on the capitol, major lines of communication, and Soviet and Afghan posts. Increases in guerrilla arms supplies and improved training and cooperation should help them deal with the small-scale Soviet troop increases observed to date. Recent Insurgent Successes Insurgent activity appears to be increasing as the weather improves. In eastern Afghanistan resistance forces continue to put heavy pressure on regime and Soviet units: --On 11 March the guerrillas shot down a Soviet AN-30 turboprop reconnaissance aircraft near Bagram Airfield with 4 surface-to-air missile. the Soviets are speeding up the installation of infrared countermeasures equipment on all fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters because of concern about increases in insurgent firings of surface-to-air missiles. -- Insurgents put so much pressure on an Afghan division at Asadabad in Konarha Province in early March that Soviet advisers said the entire division was in danger of being annihilated. The Soviets sent in a battalion to reinforce the Afghan unit, but insurgent pressure is continuing. -- The insurgents captured at least three Afghan border posts in Nangarhar Province in mid-March. in the past week, the insurgents exploded three bombs in Soviet and regime shopping areas in Kabul. The bombings resulted in over 30 regime and Soviet casualties. -- Between 27 February and 10 March, the Soviets counted at least eleven incidents of fuel pipeline damage in western Afghanistan and as many as four attacks on the eastern pipeline on the first two days of March. Increasing Soviet Interest in the Western Campaign The Soviets have made a number of changes in the past few months to try to improve their counterinsurgency capabilities in the west: the Soviets have completed a new ruei pipeline to Shindand and increased their fuel storage capacity near Herat. TOP SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 TOP SECRET -- The Soviets sent a new motorized rifle regiment from the USSR to Herat by late February, bringing the Soviet division stationed in western Afghanistan to full strength. -- The Soviets have also brought in additional self-propelled artillery from the USSR, probably for a tank regiment at Shindand and have completed a new addition to a transshipment and storage facility. Operations in the East The Soviets and Afghans have launched a number of operations in recent weeks in response to increases in insurgent activity in eastern Afghanistan: -- Soviet and Afghan units mounted a large sweep near Oandahar, the Soviets have had little success. Prior to the operation the regime controlled only about 20 percent of the city during the day and even less at night. the Soviets launched a multibattalion operation in the Shomali area, north of Kabul, in mid-March. Early last week Soviet airborne units were preparing for another operation in the same area. -- On 10 March Soviet and Afghan forces began a large operation in Nangarhar Province. Soviet units also swept the Ali Khel area in Paktia Province but encountered little resistance and were unsuccessful in finding the insurgent ammunition depot for which they were searching. TOP SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 SECRET The Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D.C. 20505 National Intelligence Council NIC #01612-85 25 March 1985 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence Deputy Director of Central Intelligence THROUGH: Chairman, National Intelligence Council FROM: Fritz W. Ermarth National Intelligence Officer for USSR SUBJECT: NSPG on Afghanistan 1. Following our conversation on Saturday morning, I've checked with the NSC staff about the agenda for the NSPG meeting on Tuesday 26 March, and have been told that the draft NSDD on policy toward Afghanistan is the main topic. I've also reviewed the draft NSDD and find it, on the whole, a good and actionable statement of policy. Some critics might argue that it should identify the point at which the risks and costs to us, as posed, say, by Soviet escalation against Pakistan, should cause us to shrink back. I believe we should not get into the business of setting hypothetical limits on our own goals and measures now because, compared with what the Soviets are doing, we are doing very little. If the actual threat of Soviet escalation should rise, we shall see it and be able to react. The NSDD might have been a bit stronger on "bringing the news of the war home to the Soviet people," but this is strong enough to guide important political action and propaganda policies. 2. The question arises as to what this NSDD argues we should be doing differently than we have been doing, especially on the political and diplomatic fronts. Mostly, it is a basis for continuing the present course of increasing support to the resistance. It also provides the policy basis for escalating if the Soviets do. SECRET 1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25X1 4. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 SECRET I believe it is worth considering a more forceful representation to the Soviets of our view of Afghanistan, along the lines of the "Policy Implications" paper I gave you last weekend (attached). 3. As useful background prior to the NSPG, also attached is an Embassy Moscow cable which reinforces our view of the current Soviet commitment to eventual victory, rejection of retreat options, and conviction that popular passivity is important in Moscow's ability to stay the course. The last factor is extremely important. The Soviet strategy really counts on it. Therefore we must do everything we can to make it less reliable. Increasing the cost of the war by increasing the effectiveness of the resistance is one necessary path. 4. But we must also increase the efforts to bring home the news and the pain. SECRET 2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 ,e//1/' /71(itz W. Ermarth , Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000206286005-1 1985 25)(1 bl 'Policy Implications - These Soviet probes will cause nervousness and perhaps ill-founded interest in the payoff of "restraint" on the US side, particularly in Congress. _ One would hope that some weak-kneed comments will be countered by strong ones from the Administration and others on the Hill. - We must keep going on the program. Now would be the worst possible time to ease off! -- The Soviets are feeling the heat and must continue to. -- The odds of some sort of escalation by them are high, but not catastrophic, because the most likely form is more of the same. The chances that things will break in the direction of some sort of Soviet retreat are not trivial; they're good enough for us to keep the pressure on. Meanwhile, the objectives of making them pay a high price and denying them victory remain sound and very feasible. US hesitation or retreat now would hurt us with everybody whose perception of us is important, including the Soviets. The time may be approaching for some additional diplomatic initiative, however. - Especially now it is important to get the Soviets to understand how important Afghanistan is to us. -- We may have rather underplayed it in high-level contacts during the past year. -- One has the sense that the Soviets perceive our motives as (a) we're trying to take a cheap shot at them in retaliation for the growth of their power over the last 15 years, and (b) displaying a potentially fickle ideological pique at them. SECRET 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12: CIA-RDP87600342R000200280005-1 crrncy Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 -- They may not take our strategic and geopolitical interest seriously enough. They perceive it themselves, but rarely _ hear the US talking about it. We typically criticize them in moralistic terms, which they don't respect. - At a private but high diplomatic level we should get across the following messages, and try to get the Chinese to reinforce what they can: -- US interests and the security of the neighborhood cannot tolerate a Soviet victory in Afghanistan. -- This is because the Soviet invasion and the people's war it precipitated have all but destroyed options for moderate political solutions. -- Soviet success in suppressing the resistance and consolidating control would inevitably mean: - A satellite government in Kabul. - A large and indefinitely protracted Soviet military occupation of the country; otherwise the Kabul government would collapse. - The buildup of a Soviet military infrastructure in Afghanistan which would markedly raise the Soviet threat to the region (bases, pipelines, etc.). - But, given the nature of the terrain and the people, resistance activity across the borders would go on indefinitely which would constantly give the Soviets motives and pretexts to attack Pakistan and Iran from a stronger base. 2 SECRET I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 -- We are not going to accept this future under the guise of - a "political resolution," and we don't have to. -- The only alternative to a continuing and possibly wider war is for the USSR to recognize--as many of its officials do-- that it made a big mistake and to signal its firm intentions to pull out, not matter what happens to the Kabul regime. -- Then various means can be found to make the Soviet pullout reasonably smooth. - In addition to more blunt talk at the private diplomatic level, we might give some thought to the idea of an international conference on Afghanistan to include: The Soviets The DRA Representatives of the Mujahedin Paki stan India -- Iran -- China -- Saudi Arabia representing the Islamic World -- The US What we'd aim for is the kind of "peace process" that eventually got us out of Vietnam. To achieve this we'd have to maintain military heat on the Soviets and some political discipline among their adversaries. -- The Soviets would probably reject this because it would put them at a big disadvantage politically. 3 SECRET 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : ClIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 -- The danger would be, however, that they'd accept it and, as in arms control, try to persuade Congress to cut aid to the resistance, to "encourage progress," and also try to split their opponents. - But it's worth a thought. The time is approaching when we have to come up with some "theory of the outcome" other than eventual Soviet victory. The only one I can think of in practical terms is: The Soviets decide they have to pull out and look for the best deal. They concentrate on holding the cities and their LOCs. They start removing their most valued communist allies to the USSR. They put up a non-communist "reconciliation" government in Kabul which tries to negotiate ceasefires and a political settlement. They try to get the US and Pakistan to stop aiding the rebels, but fail. While continuing to put military pressure on them, the resistance lets the Soviets gradually pull out in good order. - There are all manners of thing that make this scenario unworkable or implausible. - Yet I can think of no persuasive alternative other than a war that goes on, a war that escalates to something much bigger which we could not stay out of, or eventual Soviet victory with all the global and regional consequences we must not and need not accept. 4 crropr Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 25X1 -16 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 T- / / CONF1UENTIAL tqu 25X1 FRP: r 13, STATE PP RUEAII5 ZNY CCCCC ZOC STATE ZZH UTS8398 PP RUEHC DE RUEHMO 03646/01 0811543 ZNY CCCCC ZZH P 221531Z MAR 85 FM AmEmBASSY MOSCOW TO RUEHC/SECS1ATE mASHDC PRIORITY 8577 INFO RUFHLG/AmCONSUL LENINGRAD 1699 RUEHSJ/AmEmbASSY bEIJING 7417 RuFHOL/AmEm8ASSY BONN 8809 RUEHLD/AMEmBASSY LONDON 0073 RUFHFR/AmEMbASSY PARIS 7478 RUF1NA/USMISS1UN USNATO 8257 RuEHDT/USmISSION USUN NE.. YORK 4756 RUDKFMQ/AmEMbASSY STOCKHOLM 3250 RUDKR8/AmEmbASSY BELGRADE 1136 RUFHE8/AmEmbASSY BERLIN 7546 RUDKAR/AMEmbASSy BUCHAREST 1878 RUOKDA/AmEmBASSY BUDAPEST 0926 RUFRMU/AmCONSUL MUNICH 9871 RUDKRP/AmEmbASSy PRAGUE 1625 RUDKSA/AmEmBASSY SOFIA 0873 RUDKRm/AMEMbASSy wARSAm 3133 RUEHIL/AmEmeASSY ISLAmAbAD 2045 RUS8LK/AMEMbASSY KAHUL 1370 RoEHNE/AmEmBASSY NEV DELHI 3046 RUEHKO/AmEmbASsY TOKYO 7902 coNPlUENTIAL _ Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 CONFIDENTIAL STATE RUFtimB/uSDEL mBFR VIENNA 3022 RUFHGV/USDEL NST GENEVA 0044 BT CONFIDENTIAL MOSCOW 03646 E.O. 12356: DECL: OADR TAGS: PREL, AF, OR SUBJECT: SOVIET ATTITUDES ON AFGHANISTAN: HOLDING STEADY AS. GORBACHEv TAKES OVER WWI REF: MOSCOW 3241 (NOTAL) 1. (C ? ENTIRE TEXT). 2, SUMMARY: EMBOFF RECENTLY HAD Two UNUSUAL OPPORTUNI- TIES TO ASSESS SOVIET ATTITUDES ON Tkt WAR IN AFGHAN- ISTAN. THE FIRST WAS A CONVERSATION WITH ORIENTAL INSTITUTE SPECIALIST YURIY VLADImIRoVICH GANKOVSKIY, THE SECOND WAS A VISIT TO AN UNUSUAL, OfFICIALLY- SPONSORED ExHIBIT OF PAINTINGS DEPICIiNG THE STRUGGLE IN AFGHANISTAN, BOTH EXPERIENCES COfif1RmED OUR IMPRESSION OF A HIGH DEGREE OF CONTINUITY IN SOVIET ATTITUDES ON THE WAR, WHILE THERE 15 LITTLE OVERT POPULAR ENTHUSIASM FOR THE wAR, THE kt6ImE CAN DOUBTLESS CONTINUE TO COUNT ON THE PATRIOTISM *NO POLITICAL PASSIVITY OF MOST SOVIET CITIZENS. ALIHOUGH A TURNING POINT IS NOT YET IN SIGHT, SOVIET COSTS ARE MANAGEABLE AND IT REMAINS PLAUSIBLE 10 ARGUE THAT TIME IS ON MOSCOW'S SIDE, FACED WITH THE-ALlERNATIvES OF MASSIVE ESCALATION OR IGNOMINIOUS wiltiORAwAL, MOST POLITICALLY LITERATE SOVIETS SEEM PREPARED TO STAY WITH THE CURRENT COURSE: SUSTAINED MILITARY PRESSURE COMBINED WITH A LONG-TERM EFFORT To soILD SOVIET-STYLE AFGHAN INSTIloTIONs. 3, THE ONE NEW FACTOR IN THE AFGHANISTAN EUUATION IS GORBACHEV'S ACCESSION TO THE GENERAL-sEcRETARySHIP. WE SEE NO EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, THAT HE IS NOW PREPARED TO SET A NL w COURSE IN AFGHANISTAN,- MOREOVER, THERE ARE NO INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL PRESSURES POWERFUL ENOUGH TO FORCE THE GENERAL SECRETARY'S NAND UN THIS ISSUE IN CoNfIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 coNF1DENTIAL STATE 11 THE INITIAL STAGE OF HIS TENURE, IT REmAINS TO bE SEEN WHETHER GORBACHEV'S REPUTED ImPATIENCE WITH TEMPORIZING AND ImmObILISm WILL AT SOME FUTURE KOINT DICTATE A DECISIVE SHIFT IN mOSCOPOS AFGHANISTAN STRATEGY, END SUMMARY, 4, EMBOFF RECENTLY CALLED AT MOSCOW'S PRESTIGIOUS 11 ORIENTAL INSTITUTE TO DISCUSS AFGHANUSTAN WITH THE DIRECTOR OF THE INSTITUTE'S DEPARTMENT FOR AFGHANISTAN, PAKISTAN, AND IRAN YURIY VLADImIROVICA GANKOVSKIY, 11 ALTHOUGH GANKOVSKIY HAS IN THE PAST EJEEN A WILLING AND INTERESTING INTERLOCUTOR FOR EMBASSY ii10ScOw EMBOFFS, WE HAD NOT SEEN HIM IN MORE THAN A YLAR BECAUSE OF A 11 GENERAL TIGHTENING ON CONTACTS WITH IHL EMBASSY REPORTEDLY IMPOSED BY INSTITUTE DIRECTOR PRImAK0v, HAVING AT LAST AGREED TO AN APPOINTMENT, GANKOVSKIY RECEIVED EmBOFF 11 CORDIALLY AND SEEMED GENUINELY TO APPRECIATE RECEIVING GREETINGS FROM EMBASSY MOSCOW ALUmN1-AND OTHER LONG-TIME 11 FRIENDS IN THE US, GANKOVSKIY ASKED iHAT HIS COMMENTS ON AFGHANISTAN BE KEPT "BETWEEN US," AND WE URGE THAT HE BE STRICTLY PROTECTED AS THE SOURCE OF THIS MATERIAL. 11 GANKOVSKIY ON AFGHANISTAN INTERVENTION MAY HAVE BEEN ILL-CONSIDERED?, 5, AFTER INITIAL PLEASANTRIES, GANKuvsK IY TURNED TO AFGHANISTAN AND APPEARED TO WARM oulcKLY To HIS SUBJECT. HE ASSERTED THAT THOSE IN THE *HEST who SA w EVENTS SINCE THE APRIL 1978 COUP AS A SOV1ET?INSPIREU EFFORT TO INSTALL A COMMUNIST REGIME IN KABUL HAD MISREAD THE E.0, 12356: DECL: OADR TAGS: PREL, AF, UR SUBJECT: SOVIET ATTITUDES ON AFGHANISTAN; HOLDING SITUATION, ACCORDING 10 GANKovSKIY, SU LITTLE AS KNOhN IN MOSCOW ABOUT TARAKI AND AmIN, THAI; wHEN THE COUP . OCCURRED, FRIENDS IN MFA TELEPHONE? AIM URGENTLY TO FIND OUT wHO THE NEW LEADERS WERE, As AN EXPERT UN CoNl'IDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 CONFIDENTIAL STATE AFGHAN POLIilLS, bANKuVSKlY KNEW BOTH TAPAKI AND AMIN AND DISCOUNTED ENTIRELY THEIR mARxISi PRETENSIONS. ACCORDING TO GANKOVSKIY, NEITHER oF THESE LUMINARIES COULD HAVE PASSED AN ELEMENTARY EXAMINATION ON SOCIALIST IDEOLOGY, AND THEIR MAIN PULITICAL ATTRIBUTES WERE STRUNG PUSHTuN NATIONALISM AND A.LARGE MEASURE OF PERSONAL OPPORTUNISM. 6. GANKOVSKIY MADE NO SECRET OF HIS CONVICTION THAT THE NEW "REVOLUTIONARY" REGIME HAD FROM [FIE BEGINNING PURSUED A DISASTROUS COURSE OF REPRESSION AND PSEUDO- SOCIALIST SCHEMES FOR OVERNIGHT TRAr6FORmATION OF AFGHAN SOCIETY. IN GANKOVSKIY'S VIEW, THESE-ILL.ADvISED POLICIES HAD SUCCEEDED ONLY IN CREATING FUR THE FIRST TIME A LARGE-SCALE FOLLOwING FUR THOSE REACTIONARY, ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALIST LEADERS WHO NUW DIRECT "EXTERNAL INTERVENTION" AGAINST AFGHANISTAN Fmum THEIR SANCTUARY IN PESHAwAR. BY MID-1979, THE SOVIET LEADERSHIP WAS FACED wITH MAJOR UNCERTAINTIES ALONG-1HOuSANDS OF MILES OF ITS SOUTHERN BORDER AS AFGHANISTAN LURCHED TOWARD A VIRTUAL CIVIL wAR AND THE IRANIAN REvuLuTION BEGAN ITS UNPREDICTABLE COURSE. ACCORDING TO bANKovSKIY, THE OLD MEN IN THE KREMLIN FOUND THIS uNCERTAINIY INTOLERABLE AND ULTIMATELY DECIDED TO INTERVENE ON THE SIDE OF THE AFGHAN FACTION WHICH AT LEAST CLAImEu AN IDEOLOGICAL AFFINITY FOR THE SOVIET UNION. IMPLICIT IN GANKOVSKIY'S VERSION OF THESE OFTEN?ANALYZED EVENTS IS THE NOTION THAT SOVIET LEADERS HAD LITTLE APPRECIATION OF THE THICKET THEY WERE PLUNGING INTO AS SovIET FORCES LANDED IN KABUL. (COMMENT: GANKOVSKIY'S DOWNPLAYING oF SOCIALIST 'SOLIDARITY AS A FACTOR IN MOSCOW'S DECISION TO INTERVENE IS bOTH UNUSUAL FOR A wELL=PLACED SOVIET ACADEMIC AND OPEN TO CHALLENGE ON HISioRICAL GROUNDS. IT IS HIS READINESS TO STATE HIS uNukiHuDoX VIEWS BLUNTLY THAT MAKES GANKOvSKIY AN INTOILSTING AND VALUABLE INTERLOCUTOR ON THIS SUBJECT. HE REPORT HIS VERSION OF AN OLD STORY BECAUSE It SETS THE STAGE FOR HIS ANALYSIS OF MOSCOW'S CURRENT DILEmNA IN AFGHANISTAN. END COMMENT) CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 CONtIDENTIAL STATE I 'SWW.../OW4. W/ ...BUT "THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR V1LTURYN 7, WHETHER OR NOT INTERVENTION HAD SEEN THE BEST COURSE IN 1979, GANKOVSKIY ASSERTED THAT AFTER FIVE YEARS OF WAR, MOSCOW HAD LITTLE CHOICE BUT 10-PERSEVERE IN THE EFFORT TO ACHIEVE ITS OBJECTIVES. GANKOVSKIY NOTED THAT IN SUCH THIRD WORLD CONFLICTS, GREAT -POWERS CANNOT ACCEPT DEFEAT WITH IMPUNITY, NOR ARE THEY OFTEN FORCED BY EXTERNAL PRESSURES TO THROW IN THE-TOWEL, POINTING TO THE FRENCH EXPERIENCE IN ALGERIAl'uANKuVSKIY ASSERTED THAT IT WAS EROSION OF WILL WITHIN FwAwCE, NOT EXTERNAL PRESSURE, WHICH FORCED PARIS TO WITHDRAW. IT WAS MUCH LESS LIKELY THAT THE SOVIET UNIONWOULD, EVEN IMPLICITLY, ACKNOWLEDGE DEFEAT-1(4 AFGHANISTAN, GIVEN THE ABSENCE OF AmY SUBSIANTIAL-IN1ERNAL PRESSURE FOR WITHDRAwAL AND THE WELL-KNOWN FUR1ITUDE OF THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE. AS TO AFGHANISTAN'S FUTURE, GANKOVSKIY SAID THAI FUR A PERIOD FOLLOWING THE 1918 COUP, IT E.O. 12356: DECL: OADR TAGS: PREL, AF, OR SUBJECT: SOVIET ATTITUDES ON AFGHANISTAN: HOLDING MIGHT HAVE BEEN POSSIBLE TO MOVE TOwARO "FINLANDIZATION" OF KABUL'S RELATIONS WITH MOSCOW. AP ILK FIVE YEARS OF WAR, THE ONLY OPTION NOW AVAILABLE 1U-AFGHANISTAN IS "MuNGOLIZATION," 8, EMBOFF RESPONDED WITH TWO GUESTIoNs, HOW COULD ONE SPEAK OF "MONGOLIZATION" OF AFGHANIS-1AN GIVEN ITS TRADITION OF INDEPENDENCE AND THE SiRtNGTH OF THE RESIS- TANCE ON THE BATTLEFIELD? SECOND, WAS IT NOT POSSIBLE THAT OUT OF THE CURRENT STRUGGLE, THERE MIGHT EMERGE NEW AFGHAN LEADERS WHO COULD MORE SUCCESSFULLY PROMOTE NATIONAL RECONCILIATION THAN TMOSE-AEREADY ON THE SCENE? GANKOVSKIY ANSWERED THE SECOND QUESTION FIRST, THERE WAS NO USE IN SPEAKING OF POLITICAL -ALTERNATIVES TO THE DRA; THE SOVIET UNION WOULD NEVER AGRtt-TO TURN OVER PowER TO THE CROWD IN PESHAWAR AND NO-OTHER ALTEPATIVES CONFIDENTIAL 1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 CONF 'DENT IAL STATE WERE IN SIGHT. AS TO A SOVIET STRATEGY FOR THE "MONGOLIZATION" OF AFGHANISTAN, GANKOifSKIY CLAIMED CAS HE HAD IN MEETINGS WITH EMBOFFS MORE IhAN A YEAR AGO) THAT MOSCOW RETAINED THE OPTION OF SEALING THE PAK/AFGHAN BORDER BY FIELDING A FORCE OF A HALF-MILLION SOVIET TROOPS. AS IF TO DISCOUNT THE MILITARY OPTION HE HAD JUST RAISED, GANKOVSKIY SAID THAT THE REAL WORKOF PACIFYING AFGHANISTAN WOULD BE ACCOMPLISHED THkuUGH A SLOW BUT STEADY STRENGTHENING OF SOVIET-STYLE AFGHAN INSTITUTIONS. THIS, COMBINED wITH A PROPER SUCIALISI EDUCATION FOR - YOUNGER AFGHANS, MANY OF wHOM *ERE ALFILADY STUDYING IN THE SOVIET UNION, WOULD EVENTUALLY TORN THE TIDE. IMPLICIT IN GANKOVSKIY'S LINE wAS THE NOTION THAT, DESPITE THE OBVIOUS IMPORTANCE OF THE MILITARY DIMENSION, THE SOVIET UNION OOLD IN THE END FlAt. TO WIN A POLITICAL AND SOCIAL VICTORY IN AFGHANISTAN. - ? ART ON AFGHANISTAN: "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" ? 9. MANY OF GANKUVSKIY'S THEMES ARE GRAPHICALLY PRESENTED TO A RIDER AUDIENCE IN AN UNUSUAL MOSCOW EXHIBIT OF PAINTINGS ON THE STRUGGLE IN AFGHANISiAN, THE EXHIBIT IS TUCKED AwAY IN ONE ALCOVE OF AN ERORmOUS COLLECTION OF PAINTINGS ON THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY UF THE SOVIET VICTORY IN WORLD *AR II DISPLAYED IN IME SARN*LIKE MANEZH HALL ADJACENT TO THE KREMLIN. -1HE THOUSANDS OF PAINTINGS, POSTERS, AND MEMORABILIA OF THE SOVIET UNION'S "GOOD WAR" PREDICTABLY., BUJ ALSO POWERFULLY, EVOKE THE IMAGES OF HEROSIM, SACRIFICE, AND THE HORROR OF wAR WHICH DOMINATE SOVIET PUPOLAR-AT1ITUDES ON WORLD WAR 11. (a) TEN TO FIFTEEN PAINTINGS ON AFGHANISTAN ARE DIFFERENT. THERE ARE NO PORTRAYALS UF COMBAT, AND THE ONLY TWO PAINTINGS WHICH ACTUALLY DEPICT SOVIET SOLDIERS IN AFGHANISTAN SHOW THEM AS DISTANT,-HA2Y FIGURES AGAINST THE MOUNTAINOUS DESERT BACKDROP OF CENTRAL ASIA. ONE OF THE TWO PAINTINGS, A PUkiRAYAL OF A BARELY DISCERNIBLE COLUMN OF SOVIET MILITARY VEHICLES DRAWN UP IN A SUNRISE ON SUNSET FORMAIIUN, IS TITLtD CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 CONFIDENTIAL STATE "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" (PRIKAZ VPOLNEN). THIS SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN THE GENERAL THEME UF THOSE PAINTINGS WHICH DEPICTED THE SOVIET MILITARY ROLE IN AFGHANISTAN, INCLUDING THE POTRAIT OF A "HERO OF THE SOVIET UNION" CAREFULLY PLACED AT THE CENTER OF IHt-SmALL EXHIBIT. ? 11. THE PAINTINGS OF AFGHANS IN THE EXHIBIT LOOKED E.O. 12356: DECL: OADR TAGS: PREL, AF, UR It SUBJECT: SOVIET ATTITUDES ON AFGHANISTAN; HOLDING AS IF THEY MIGHT HAVE BEEN CHOSEN BY 6ANKOVSKIY TO ILLUSTRATE MIS POINT ABOUT THE FUTURE (if THEIR COUNTRY. IN ONE, A GROUP OF AFGHAN YOUTHS PARAUE UNDER A SEA OF RED BANNERS OBVIOUSLY EXTOLLING THE VIRTUES OF THE NEn 111 ORDER IN KABUL. OTHER VIEWS OF YOUNGAFGHANS SHOW THEM WORKING OR STUDYING WITH LITTLE HINT-IHAT THEY LIVE IN A COUNTRY AT WAR; IN ONE PORTRAIT, A iOUNG AFGHAN ARMY OFFICER IS EVEN SHOWN AT LEISURE IN CIVILIAN DRESS, PERHAPS THE MOST STRIKING, If ARTISTICALLY ORDINARY, PAINTING IN THE EXHIBIT DEPICTS AN AFGHAN BAZAAR THROUGH WHICH A LINE OF DOWNCAST.MUJAHADIN MOVES UNDER THE WATCHFUL EYE OF A SINGLE DRA SOLDIER. THE AFGHAN SOLDIER, WITH RIFLE (MUZZLE DONN) AT SLING ARMS, WATCHES AS EACH MUJAHADIN LAYS 0OwN HIS RIFLE, OR ROCKET LAUNCHER, OR GRENADES ON 'A GROWING PILE OF WEAPONS OF OBVIOUSLY FOREIGN MANUFACIoRE, THE PORTRAYAL OF THIS SIMPLE SURRENDER CEREMONY IS-NUT SURPRISINGLY TITLED "TRANSFORMATION (PREVRASHCHENYE) IN AFGHANISTAN." E? .12. SOVIET VISITORS APPEARED TO ACCEPT WITH EQUANIMITY THE INCLUSION OF PAINTINGS ON AFGHANISTAN IN AN EXHIBIT E DEVOTED TO THE SOVIET VICTORY IN WURLD 'AR II. AT THE SAME TIME, FE h SOVIETS LINGERED IN THIS ALCOVE, AND EVEN THE MANY UNIFORMED MILITARY VISITuRS SEEMED TO TAKE ONLY PASSING INTEREST IN Tmou-14.144 PAINTINGS WHICH ACTUALLY PORIRAYED SOVIET SOLDIERS IFI THEFIELD, UNLIKE THE SCENES OFTEN REPEATED ELSEWHERE IN THE EXHIBIT, OLDER VISITORS RARELY PUT THEIR ARMS AROUNDCHILDREN TO EXPLAIN TO THEM THE SIGNIFICANCEUi THE AFGHANISTAN CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 COM'IDENTIAL STATE PAINTINGS, WHILE REVERENT TONES ANO HUSHED CONVERSATIONS PREVAILED THROUGHOUT THE MASSIVE EXHIBIT HALL, VISITORS TO 1HE AFGHAN ALCOVE SEEMED UNIMPRESSED BY THE EVIDENCE THAT FORTY YEARS AFTER V?E OAT, THE SOVIET UNION IS AGAIN AT WAR, COMMENT 13. THESE TWO VERY DIFFERENT EXPERIENCES UNDERSCORE OUR IMPRESSION OF A HIGH DEGREE OF CONTINUITY IN SOVIET ATTITUDES ON AFGHANISTAN, DESPITE THE -HIGHER MEDIA PROFILE GIVEN THE CONFLICT OVER THE-PAS1 YEAR, THERE STILL SEEMS TO BE LITTLE POPULAR ENTHUSIASM FOR THE WAR, AT THE SAME TIME, MOST SOVIETS ?? WHETHER SCHOLARS LIKE GANKOVSKIY OR LESS SOPHISTICATEO VISITORS TO THE MANEZH EXHIBIT es. APPEAR 10 TAKE FOR bRANTED THE KREMLIN'S DETERMINATION TO PERSEVERE UNTIL "VICTORY" IS WON, GIVEN THE RELATIVELY LOW NUmbER OF SOVIET CASUALTIES THUS FAR, WE BELIEVE THAT IHE REGIME CAN CONTINUE TO CUUNT ON THE PATRIOTISM ANOPOLITICAL PASSIVITY OF MOST SOVIET CITIZENS TO COMPENSATE FOR THEIR LACK OF OVERT COMMITMENT TO THL-wAR EFFORT. 14, DESPITE RECENT SIGNS OF GROWING SOVIET FRUSTRATION OVER AFGHANISTAN, GANKOVSKIY'S LINE AEMUST CERTAINLY REMAINS THE PIILVAILING WISDOM AMONG POLITICALLY ACTIVE SOVIETS, ALTHOUGH A TURNING POINT IN THE WAR IS NUT YET IN SIGHT, SOVIET COSTS ARE.MANAOLABLE AND IT REMAINS POSSIBLE PLAUSIBLY TO ARGUE THAT TIM-CIS ON MOSCOW'S - SIDE. IN ANY EVENT, WITHURAwAL NOW WOULD INEVITABLY LEAD TO A RESUMPTION OF TME INSTABILI1Y WHICH, IN GANKOVSKIY'S VIEW. DREW MOSCOW INTO tilE WAR IN THE FIRST PLACE, WHILE WE THINK IT PLAuS1BLE THAT THERE ARE ADHEMENTS OF A NEW ALL?OUT EFFURI TO ACHIEVE A E.O. 12356: OECL: OAOR TAGS: PkEL, AF, OR SUBJECT: SOVIET ATTITUDES ON AFGHANISTAN: HOLDING MILITARY VICTORY IN THE SOVIET ESTAbLISHMENT, PARTICULARLY CONI*IOLNTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 C. C. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 CONFIDENTIAL STATE AMONG THE MILITARY, THE POTENTIAL RISKS AND COSTS OF SUCH A STRATEGY PROBABLY STILL APPEAR PROHIBITIVE TO MOST SEGMENTS OF THE SOVIET ELITE. PACED WITH THESE UNPLEASANT ALTERNATIVES, MOST POLITICALLY LITERATE SOVIETS WOULD, LIKE GANKOVSKIY, TEMPORIZE BY COMBINING MILITARY PRESSURE WITH A LONG?TERM EFPORT TO BUILD UP USOVIET?STYLE AFGHAN INSTITUTIONS. --- * iS, THE ONE NEW FACTOR IN THE AFGHANISIAN EQUATION IS, OF COURSE, GORBACHEV'S ACCESSION TO IHE GENERAL SECRETARY.. OSHIP, WITH APOLOGIES TO WINSTON CHURCHILL, WE THINK IT INCONCEIVABLE THAT GORBACHEV SEES HIMSELF AS HAVING BECOME GENERAL SECRETARY 70 PRESIDE UVER A SOVIET C) DEBACLE IN AFGHANISTAN, THAT SAID, DETERMINATION TO SUCCEED IS NOT A POLICY, AND GORBACHEVMAY AT SOME POINT O DECIDE THAT A REVIEW OF SOVIET OPTIONS IN AFGHANISTAN IS NECESSARY, FOR THE PRESENT, HOWEVER, WE SEE NO EVIDENCE TO SUGGEST THAT GORBACHEV IS-PREPARED TO SET A (7' NEW DIRECTION OR EVEN TO MOVE THE AFGHANISTAN ISSUE TO THE TOP OF AN ALREADY CROWDED FOREIGN-POLICY AGENDA. MOREOVER, WE SEE NO INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL PRESSURES POWERFUL ENOUGH TO FORCE THE GENERAL-SECRETARY'S HAND ON AFGHANISTAN DURING THE INITIAL STAGE OF HIS TENURE, IN VIEW OF THESE FACTORS, IT MUST FUR Till. PRESENT REMAIN O AN OPEN QUESTION WHETHER GORBACHEV'S REPUTED IMPATIENCE WITH TEMPORIZING AND IMMOBILISM WILL AT SOME FUTURE POINT DICTATE A DECISIVE SHIFT IN MUSLOW'S AFGHANISTAN STRATEGY, HARTMAN END OF MESSAGE CONT'IVENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 R Next 3 Page(s) In Document Denied Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 tv.,..b.rilion (WS . ? -------- E x ec u `. E; y 16 March 1985_, The Honorable Robert C. McFarlane Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs The White House Washington, D. C. 20500 Dear Bud, I think this interpretation of Gorbachev's comments on Afghanistan at the funeral, together with Gromyko's discussions with the French Foreign Minister and Zia's reaction to all this, may be of interest to the President. Enclosure Yours, /s/ William J. Casey Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Soviet Stance on Afghanistan a la Gorbachev According to TASS, Gorbachev took a hard line with Zia on Afghanistan, charging aggressive acts against the DRA and stressing "most unfavorable effect" on Soviet-Pakistan relations. The Washington Post carries this story coupled with insinuations from Soviet officials to Dusko Doder that the Soviets might "link" Afghanistan and Nicaragua. - - If the US goes after Nicaragua, the Soviets could, supposedly, go after Pakistan by arming the Baluch and otherwise trying to destabilize Zia's regime. - Zia characterized the meeting publicly as "pleasant and businesslike," focused on Afghanistan, and including agreement that a "political solution" through the UN indirect talks must be found. Further Relevant Information - The Soviets did not raise Afghanistan with the Vice President. He alluded to it in a passing list of regional issues, but Gorbachev did not respond. - What we have on other Gorbachev meetings with Western delegations shows little or no attention to Afghanistan. Gromyko did discuss it with French Foreign Minister Dumas. He took a "hard line," said Moscow intervened reluctantly at DRA request, and would remain until stability is restored. - There wasn't much discussion of Afghanistan when Shcherbitskiy was here. But what there was displayed a defensive, frustrated mood. SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12: CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 -- In response to the President's challenge, Shcherbitskiy repeated the line that the Soviets intervened reluctantly. -- In conjuction with Soviet charges about the US in Grenada, Shcherbitskiy said Afghanistan is a "more difficult" military problem. -- On the margins of another discussion, General Cherov (The General Staff man on arms control) muttered that Afghanistan was the USSR's biggest post-war mistake. - Zia's public comments on the Soviet pitch suggests he wasn't much rattled. Interpretation - The Soviets have raised the rhetorical ante, but not too dramatically. The charges are familiar. Note they don't go to the point, as some diplomatic messages have, of characterizing Pak actions as attacks on the USSR and its forces. - The most important thing is that, while just short of a public speech, Gorbachev has personally and publicly associated himself now with the Soviet strategy and policy in Afghanistan. - This is probably the opening of a somewhat more vigorous political/ propaganda effort to spook Zia and the US. Even this the Soviets want to apply cautiously, however, listening for what resonance they get before trying more. 2 SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 25X1 ? ctr?ICT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12: CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 - The "linkage" to Nicaragua is a bit surprising only in how long it's taken them to get to this point. - But the "threat" seems somewhat hollow. Arming Baluch groups and seeking to destabilize Zia are options for which the Soviets have had strong motives all along, but weak practical means of effecting and controlling. They can't just turn this on at will, although they could try harder and thereby make more trouble. The real Soviet motive for destabilizing Pakistan is not Nicaragua but Afghanistan. For the Soviets, however, to say so admits how much trouble they are having. The Soviets probably want the US to start thinking about some sort of a tradeoff between Afghanistan and Central America. They know that, by showing even mild interest in this, the US could pull the political rug out from under Zia and demoralize the Mujahedin, plus all other freedom fighters who look to us, without getting anything solid in Nicaragua. - I don't see anything yet that would oblige us to change the analysis in the forthcoming SNIE on the military side (more of the same but more), although we can forecast more vigorous propaganda action now. - The net effect of all reporting in the last week is to heighten the impression of Soviet frustration and basic unhappiness with their Afghan strategy, their interest in some better approach, but their lack of good options. 3 SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12: CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 The Washington Times, Monday, 25 March 1985 Pakistan-U.S S.R. showdown By Mahn Strmecki SPECIAL TO THE PASHINOTON TIMES "PESHAWAR, Pakistan ? Mos- cow's new campaign of intimidation against Pakistan has produced its first tangible success, forcing Afghan resistance forces to abandon a string of military posts along the Afghan-Paldstani border overrun just 10 days ago. ? The Afghans yielded, and the Soviet Union re-established its con- trol over a 15-kilometer stretch of the strategic lbur Itham Highway running from the Khyber Pass toward Kabul after threatening to bomb populated border Areas in ? Pakistan. In addition, an Afghan resistance group said yesterday that two of its leading guerrilla commanders were killed by mines scattered by Soviet Marin Strmecki has been in Paki- stan for two months and has spent the last three weeks on the Afghan- Pakistani border. Earlier, he worked for three years as a research assis- tant for former President Richard M. Nixon on his books. In addition, an Afghan resistance group said yesterday that two of its leading guerrilla commanders were killed by mines scattered by Soviet troops during the sweep through rebel bases near the Pakistani border troops during the sweep through rebel bases near the Pakistani bor- der. At the same time, according to analysts in Washington, a 5,000- member Afghan army force assisted by Soviet special forces is chewing up permanent Afghan resistance bases stretching from the highway to the Khyber Pass. "They're obviously going for the kill," an analyst said. The Soviet campaign of intimida- tion against Pakistan was signaled less than two weeks ago, when Paki- stani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq traveled to Moscow to attend the funeral of the late Soviet Pres- ident Konstantin Chernenko. According to a report from the Soviet news agency Tass, Mikhail Gorbachev, the new Soviet leader, castigated President Zia for support- ing "aggression" against Afghan- istan from Pakistani soil, and warned that Soviet-Pakistani ties could be affected in a "most neg- ative" way. President Zia referred to that stern warning from Mr. Gorbachev when he addressed the new Parlia- ment last week and pledged anew his support for the Afghan resistance. Moreover, in Soviet academic cir- cles, a major theme recently is the artificiality of Pakistan's borders, characterized as a "colonial cre- ation." The implication of such argu- ments is that in any overall settlement of Central Asia, there may be no place for Pakistan as a state. There has been speculation recently that the Soviet Union, under an aggressive new leader, may be using threats against a U.S. ally in an attempt to encourage the United States to reduce its pressure on Nicaragua. An analogous maneuver was attempted during the Cuban missile crisis, when Moscow demanded that Washington pull its nuclear missiles out of llirkey, a Soviet neighbor, in exchange for the removal of newly placed missiles in Cuba. According to sources in the Peshawar-based Afghan political parties, the Soviet Union claimed that Pakistan was assisting the resis- tance forces holding the highway and that bombardment on the Paki- stani side of the border would be Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1 undertaken if the roadside posts were not evacuated. In the past year, Afghan air force jets and helicopters have flown over 70 sorties across the border, killing more than 250 people. Sources said that Pakistani authorities informed leaders of the Afghan resistance of the Soviet demand and insisted that their ,forces comply immediately. At the same time, border troops also began stopping supply trucks traveling toward the area and arresting resis- tance commanders who were returning to the front after consult- ing with military leaders. in Pes- hawar. As a result of ammunition shortages and in accordance with the orders of their parties' military committees, the resistance fighters withdrew from their positions on the highway within 48 hours. The next day a major Soviet- Afghan government force, which witnesses said included some 200 tanks, reoccupied the area and assaulted resistance positions in nearby mountains for two days. The crisis was precipitated 10 days ago, when resistance com- manders in the field decided to mount a systematic attack on gov- ernment posts along the highway in retaliation for recent heavy artillery bombardment. Sources said that offensive, launched without consulting leaders in Peshawar, violated an informal agreement beween Islamabad and resistance organizations not to attack Kabul government posts near the border to avoid giving the Soviet Union a ?pretext to strike directly against Pakistan. Sayed Mohammed, a commander from the area whose units are affili- ated with the National Islamic Profit of Afghanstan (NIFA), said local military leaders chose unanimously to ignore the agreement with Paki- stan. "We were being bombed by artil- lery fire from those posts, and so it was out of the duty of self-defense that we retaliated. Can the Pakistani authorities secure our lives?" he said. After two days of sporadic but heavy fighting, resistance units had overrun 10 government posts ? including positions on. strategic Sham Shat Mountain that control the Afghan end of the Khyber Pass. Sayed Mohammed said 300 resis- tance troops were involved in the attacks. He said that more than 100 Afghan government troops were killed and that another ISO were cap- tured. He also reported that casual- ties to the resistance forces included only five killed and about 20 wounded, Lal Mohammed, another NIFA commander who returned from the area yesterday, said intelligence reports 'were" received indicating that Llarge armored column was. preparing to retake the area. As a result,' resistance forces planted dozens of mines along the road. Gus 'Constantine contributed to. this report from Washington. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/12 : CIA-RDP87B00342R000200280005-1