AFGHANISTAN'S LEADER QUITS AS PARTY CHIEF

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000706580006-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 21, 2011
Sequence Number: 
6
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 5, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000706580006-3.pdf101.06 KB
Body: 
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/21: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706580006-3 = ri WPEAREB Ti Wig Afghanistan's Leader Quits as Party Chief By RONE TEMPEST, Times Staff Writer NEW DELHI-Afghan Presi- dent Babrak Karmal resigned as head of the Afghan Communist Party on Sunday amid reports that he had fallen out of favor with the Soviet Union. In a broadcast from Kabul, Af- ghanistan's capital, the govern- ment radio said Karmal has been replaced as party general secretary by the Afghan security chief, iden- tified by the single name of Naji- bullah. Karmal will remain as pres- ident and also as chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Council, a Kabul radio broadcast said. Karmal, 57, has reportedly been suffering from poor health, and the broadcast said he was replaced at his own request because of health reasons. Rumors of his fall from grace began circulating when he failed to attend an April 27 parade marking the eighth anniversary of the Com- munist takeover of Afghanistan, in 1978. The parade is considered the country's most important political event, and Karmal's failure to ap- pear prompted speculation that he was very ill or would soon be ousted. His replacement as party leader is expected to have little effect on the policy of the government, since both Karmal and Najibullah, 39, are members of the same Parcham (Flag) faction of the party, formal - ly known as the People's Demo- cratic Party. Afghanistan has been described as a country of "two-party commu- nism" and there have been bitter, often violent, rivalries between two factions-Parcham and the rival Khalq (Masses). U.S. reaction to the leadership change was terse. "We will not attach undue importance to the changeover in leadership in Ka- bul," State Department spokes- woman Anita Stockman said in Washington. LOS ANGELES TIMES 5 May 1986 tant factor in the Kabul regime's efforts to win over Pushtun border tribes to its side. He is reported to have turned the secret police into an effective force to infiltrate rebel ranks and per- suade or bribe border tribes to block rebels coming in from Paki- stan. The Kabul government army, which according to Western diplo- mats has dwindled from its pre- 1978 level of 80,000 to about 30,000, has failed to achieve a decisive turn in the war against the rebels. Criticism In Pravda The day before the April 27 parade commemorating the revo- lution, the Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda criticised the pace of reforms in Afghanistan under Karmal. Karmal, meanwhile, had dropped from sight after going to the Soviet Union a month ago, ostensibly for medical treatment. Western diplo- mats report that he may be suffer- ing from leukemia. He finally re- turned to Kabul last Thursday and was greeted by most senior gov- ernment officials and the Soviet ambassador. Because the latest round of Unit- ed Nations-sponsored peace talks on Afghanistan are scheduled to begin today in Geneva. no m*r changes in the Afghan government had been expected However, when rumors of Kar- mal's departure were at their height, a Western diplomat com- mented from Islamabad, the Paki- stani capital: "Remember that the Pakistan government has always said that it will not negotiate directly with the 'Karmal government' in Kabul. Presumably, then, if the Afghans changed their leadership and it became someone else's govern- ment, the Pakistanis might be prepared to talk." "T?e identities of those who hold leadership positions are of less significance than the continued presence of 120,000 Soviet troops in Afghanistan." Beyond Afghan government pol- icy, the elevation of Najibullah to the top party post may have signif- icance in Afghanistan's important tribal political arena, possibly as a move aimed at winning key sup- port of the Pushtun people for the Soviet-installed regime. In the Afghan tribal scheme, Najibullah is a member of the large Pushtun tribe in Paktia province. An estimated 55% (8 million) of Afghanistan's people is Pushtun. Even more important, most Push- tuns live in the border areas where the bulk of fighting is taking place between Soviet-supported Afghan troops and U.S.-supported rebels, known as moujahedeen. Karmal was installed in power as the result of the Soviet military invasion of Afghanistan in Decem- ber, 1979, which replaced a second, failed Marxist government-that of Hafizullah Amin, who was execut- ed. Karmal, although sometimes claiming Pushtun ethnic ties, is generally viewed in Afghanistan as a member of the Dari-speaking urban elite, as are most of the members of his Parcham faction of the party. Until last year, Najibullah, who was trained as a medical doctor, served as head of the Afghan secret police. His title until Sunday has been Central Committee secretary in charge of security. He holds the rank of major general. According to Anthony Arnold, a former U.S. intelligence officer in su who has written a Afghan party politics, Najibullah has been n a consistent a y o ar- m . P-u-shtun nationalism has long been an important political factor on both sides of the border, and Najibullah is considered an impor- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/21: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706580006-3