INSURGENCIES: TWO OF A KIND

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000100270003-2
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 28, 2011
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3
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Publication Date: 
March 23, 1987
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OPEN SOURCE
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ST Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100270003-2 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE. G 11 Insurgencies: Two ol a Kind The U.S.-backed rebels in Afghanistan are having almost as much trouble as the woebegone contras For the guerrillas, the war is an uphill struggle. Despite the support they receive from the United States. the anticommunist insurgents can never hope to defeat their better-equipped adversaries. The rebels are hounded relentlessly. their camps and sup- ply lines in constant danger of attack. As guerrilla leaders squabble among them- selves. discussions are under way f br a poli t- ieal settlement of the war. But any foresee- able agreement is likely to leave a pro-Soviet government firmly in charge of the country. Meantime. word is beginning to get out in Washington that millions of dollars worth of aid intended for the freedom fighters cannot be accounted for. What sounds like an indictment of the Nicaraguan contras ac- tually applies to the mujahe- 1W din, the anticommunist rebels in Afghanistan. In Washing- ton the conventional wisdom has it that the Afghan guerrillas are a splendid success, despite the 118,000 Soviet troops arrayed against them. Moscow seems to want out of Afghanistan, and proponents of the Rea- gan Doctrine-the program of support for anticommunist insurgencies around the world-only wish that the contras could fight half as effectively as the mujahedin. But there is growing evidence that the con- ventional wisdom is wrong, that the muja- hedin are having almost as much trouble as the contras. Even though the rebels, inflamed by religious zeal, have a broad base of popu- lar support, the Soviets and their proteges in the Afghan government are slowly grinding the insurgency down. During the past seven years nearly 1 million Afghans have been killed in this war of attrition, and perhaps another 7 million-nearly half the entire population-have been driven from their homes, many to refugee camps in Pakistan. Countless villages are deserted, and three-quarters of the culti- vated land has been abandoned. Peace talks sponsored by the United Nations have made some progress, but there is no reason to believe that the Soviet Union is ready to withdraw from Afghanistan without first guaranteeing the survival of a government acceptable to the Kremlin. So far, the stalemate in Afghanistan has soaked up $1.35 billion in covert U.S. aid since 1980. Now it seems that much of the money has been wasted. Congressional sources charge that 30 percent or more of the aid has been skimmed off, apparently by middlemen in Pakistan. With the Iran-contra scandal simmering NEWSWEEK 23 March 1987 along, Washington isn't eager to acknowl- ery of the Stingers, the Pakistanis gave the edge that its surrogate war in Afghanistan missiles to the other three guerrilla groups. may not be going much better than the one "The message the Pakistanis have sent to in Nicaragua. The State Department de- the mujahedin is clear: 'Don't try to go over nies that the mujahedin are losing ground our heads'," says a U.S. official. or that large amounts of money are miss- Because the Pakistanis control most of ing. But a reappraisal of U.S. support for the supply operation, the CIA has never the rebels is getting under way. Frank Car- been able to conduct a proper audit oft the lucci, President Reagan's new national- arms and ammunition reac ing t e muja- security adviser, has ordered a review of hedin according to a former administra- the administration's Afghan program. tion official. But sources say that some of And last week an investigator from the the money seems to have been diverted in General Accounting Office, the auditing -Pakistan. t loo s as if the CIA is willing to arm of Congress, began to look into the accept a leakage of allegations that aid meant for the mujahe- t e price o oing business there," says one din had been diverted on a scale that could well-informed congressman. Staffers on make Ollie North look like a piker. t e Senate oretgn e ations Committee, Unlike the contras, the mujahedin are a who also have access to classified informa- genuinely indigenous movement. Their tion on the leakage, put the diversion at fundamentalist Islamic faith has made a perhaps 50 percent. As a result, Congress holy war out of the resistance to Soviet may decide to make cuts in the $670 million invasion. Despite the overwhelming odds aid package for Pakistan requested by the against them, they have managed to avoid administration for fiscal 1988. The GAO defeat, an accomplishment in itself. In investigation also will try to find out some respects they have even made head- whether any U.S. money was diverted from way Last fall the Central Intelligence the mujahedin to the contras. The CIA has k enc began to supply the rebels with admitted that, early last yer, some of the shout er- re Stinger antiaircraft mis- profits from the arms sales to Iran were siles, and in recent months the mu ahedtn lodged in a Swiss bank account that han- havebeen shooting down oviet aircraft at dled CIA funds for A~hanistan. It says the mingling of funds was a mistake and was an average rate o more t an one a ay. quickly rectified. But some American conservatives com- Closing a gap: The prospect of a negotiated plain that the Afghan resistance fighters haven't been as successful as their press settlement may make it even easier for Congress to cut U.S. aid. Last week the clippings suggest. Republican Sen. Orrin U.N.-sponsored talks between Pakistan Hatch of Utah, who visited the refugee and the pro-Soviet Afghan regime ad- camps in Pakistan in 1985 and 1986, ac- journed after both sides offered concessions cuses the rebels of "strategic ineffective- on a key issue: how long Soviet troops ness," including a failure to attack major would remain in the country after a peace Soviet military bases and headquarters. agreement. The Soviets, who earlier pro- "They are courageous fighters," he says of posed to stay on for three years, cut the the mujahedin. "but they will have to raise period to 22 months and then allowed their the cost to Moscow a lot before the Soviets Afghan allies to reduce it to 18 months. The will withdraw and give them back their Pakistanis extended their proposed dead- country." line from four months to seven, giving rise The government of Pakistan. which pro- to fears among conservatives in Washing- vides the rebels with sanctuary, exercises ton that Pakistan might sell out the more control over them than their Ameri- mujahedin. can benefactors do. Pakistani President There was no agreement yet, however, Mohammad Zia ul-Haq will not allow U.S. on exactly what sort of government would government personnel to operate in the exist once the Soviets leave. That subject mujahedin camps along the Afghan bor- will be discussed directly between the Unit- der. Pakistan manages to keep the mujahe- ed States and the Soviet Union when Un- din on a tight leash. A large portion of the der Secretary of State Michael Armacost arms purchased for the rebels with Ameri- visits Moscow this week. The Soviets have can money are actually ordered by a com- softened their rhetoric; they say they want mittee of Pakistani generals, according to a government of"national reconciliation," Andrew Eiva, a private Washington ana- and they do not insist that Afghanistan is lyst. Pakistani officials acknowledge that part of the "socialist camp." But there is no they do not allow the guerrillas enough assurance yet that Moscow is prepared to firepower to significantly harm the Sovi- allow the mujahedin a significant role in ets, for fear that Moscow will carry the war the government-or a chance to overthrow into Pakistan. "Certainly we control the Najib, the Kremlin's man in Kabul. The tap, and we turn it on and off," admits one Soviets will have to bleed a lot more before Pakistani diplomat, they allow the rebels to win at the negotiat- Most of the rebels' weapons come from ing table a victory that is far beyond their China, but last year the leaders of four of reach on the battlefield. the seven main Afghan resistance groups went to Washington to plead for additional arms. When Washington authorized deliv- \ RUSSELL WATSON u'!th JOHN BARRY in Washington and hureau repnrtsti Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100270003-2