USSR AND EASTERN EUROPE REVIEW

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP96R01136R002605290040-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
4
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 20, 2010
Sequence Number: 
40
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 10, 1980
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP96R01136R002605290040-2.pdf310.14 KB
Body: 
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96RO1136R002605290040-2 National R Foreign Assessment Secret ILL LL, IU Pe 1-2 ILLEGIB Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96R01136R002605290040-2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96R01136R002605290040-2 A Soviet Decision To "Muddle Through"? Moscow's recent troop withdrawal from Afghanistan does not represent a significant overall reduction in Soviet combat capability or overall military posture, and sheds little light on long-term Soviet military in- tentions. The TASS announcement of the withdrawal did not address the possibility of further withdrawals and did not rule out the possibility of future increases in the number of Soviet forces in Afghanistan. Neverthe- less, the use of the announcement as a broad political gesture does make it somewhat less likely that the Soviets will decide in favor of a substantial augmenta- tion of their presence in Afghanistan in the near term. President Brezhnev's optimistic justification for the withdrawal, which was expressed at the Central Com- mittee's first foreign policy plenum in five years, also suggests that the Soviets are not planning an imminent buildup in their military presence in Afghanistan. Brezhnev contended on 23 June that "life is gradually returning to normal" in Afghanistan and gave the impres- sion that Soviet forces had control over the situation. Barring a major reversal or humiliation in Afghanistan, any sudden augmentation of Soviet forces would undermine the party leader's credibility. The withdrawal was designed in part to deflect West- ern efforts to arrange a more substantial Soviet pullout from Afghanistan and to contribute to perceived differ- ences within the Western alliance on the appropriate strategy for handling the Afghan crisis. In view of the political timetable between East and West for the rest of the year, the Soviets may find it awkward to engage in any significant increase in their military presence before next year. -- Moscow presumably would not endorse a major military increase before the end of the Olympics in early August. 10 July 1980 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96R01136R002605290040-2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96RO1136R002605290040-2 -- The start of the CSCE review conference in September, which culminates in the Madrid meeting in November, might also inhibit a Soviet reinforcement decision before the onset of winter in Afghanistan. Just as the Soviet party tried to put the best face pos- sible on events in Afghanistan before the plenum meeting in June, it may similarly want to avoid any difficult decision on augmentation of forces before the next party congress in February. It is no more certain the Soviets would decide to augment their presence in Afghanistan during the winter months in order to prepare for a spring offensive in 1981. There is no clear evidence, for example, that either Soviet field commanders in Afghanistan or polit- ical-military leaders in Moscow favor a drastic escala- tion of their militar resence. Moscow underesti- mated the Western an Islamic response to the invasion, which would inhibit a future decision in favor of serious augmentation. Such Politburo members as Brezhnev, Kosygin, and Chernenko might argue that the Soviets have had some limited success in stabilizing the military situation in several key provinces and in improving the security conditions along key roads to Kabul and that current force levels and tactics should continue to be tested. The current tug of war over the next five-year plan, which would be affected by any additional economic sanctions against the USSR, might also inhibit discus- sion of a decision in favor of significant military re- inforcement. Indeed, it is also possible that certain Soviet leaders would argue that the Soviets have faced the worst of both international reaction and insurgent resistance and that current force levels in Afghanistan are suffi- cient. Their position would be that the USSR had already had a certain amount of success in Afghanistan in terms of obtaining Moscow's basic goal--to wit, preventing the collapse of the political and military institutions that the Soviets had helped to mold. Such a collapse would have made an Amin regime or its successor susceptible to transformation into another militantly Islamic state or vulnerable to Chinese or Western influence. These 10 July 1980 2 SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96R01136R002605290040-2 gE it by S( t fl fi O. 25X1 i. p A t T t f 25X1 t 25X1 i i Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96RO1136R002605290040-2 SECRET geopolitical and strategic calculations were uppermost in Moscow's mind in deciding to intervene and, on that basis, any consideration of a massive reinforcement of Soviet forces would be premature. Such a Soviet faction would argue that the cost of the military intervention in Afghanistan. at current force levels is acceptable and the absence of leadership for the popular opposition to the Babrak government obviates the need for additional Soviet forces. Con- versely, it would be difficult to obtain a new consensus in favor of augmentation in view of possible Soviet op- position to taking on even greater responsibilities in Afghanistan for internal security, operations against the insurgency, and increased administrative duties. Therefore, the Soviet leadership could very well decide to muddle through in the foreseeable future with current force levels or modest reinforcements rather than create the impression both at home and abroad that a significant increase in the Soviet presence in Afghanistan meant that the situation was getting out of hand. 10 July 1980 SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/10/20: CIA-RDP96RO1136R002605290040-2