AFGHANS 'CELEBRATE' SEVEN YEARS OF OCCUPATION

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000706950004-2
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 27, 2010
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 8, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000706950004-2.pdf89.07 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/27 :CIA-RDP90-005528000706950004-2 HUMAN EVENTS 8 March 1986 Afghans `Celebrate' Seven Years of Occupation By SEN. MALCOLM WALLOP (R.-Wyo.) l he scene ~~us the Hotel hahul, Roorn 117, un l~eb. IS, 1979. Inside, U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Spike Dubs sat in :tn armchair, the hostage of two Muslim gunmen who demanded the release err cheer ur their leaders hcing held by the Marvitit Afghan regime. outside the hotel, Afghan police and snipers had taken up positions. Ameri- c:ut Ernbassy ulficials pleaded for a negotiated relea}e and a patient response in dealing with the terrorists. When the Afghan police had arrived four hours earlier, Soviet security ad- ~isrrs had come with them. Now one ur the Soviets, wearing a flak jacket and carrying a rifle, :tssunted a prone firing position in front of the door of Room 117. A backup squad also took aim. Outside, three other Soviets stepped out onto the balcony next to Room 1 17 and when one raised his hand, a hail of hullers resulted, lasting 40 seconds. When the Kussian waved his hand again, the Firing ceased. Inside Rootn 117, the kidnappers lay dead. Su did Ambassador Ihths. Ten month` later the Soviet lJnion invaded and hegan its official orcu- patiun ul' ~\rghanistan. What has followed is ;t ~~ar between the Soviets and the ~tuj:thcdrrn, who are freedom tiehters seeking to rid their country of its Soviet nuntrn. ~'ith the beginning of 1986, the Sup in Afghan conflict has uuw entered its sc~enth year. Experts ulv they srr nu end in sight. There are no.. 118,1)110 Svc iet troops suctioned and righting in AfKh:tnistan, with another ~10,1)1>tl troops along its border. The yeah of conflict have taken a heavy cull. Over a million Afghans have died Another four million are rerugcrs in either Pakistan ur Iran. And yet, despite the impossible odds ul being outmanned and desper- ately undereyuipped, the Mujahedeen fight t,n in an unrelenting quest to preserve their freedom and culture. What makes this example t-f Soviet imperialism so intolerable is not only the fact that a war of aggression and expansion is being waged, but further, that the Soviets are carrying out a policy of systematic genocide against the Afghan population, frequently in- cluding the death of innocent women and children and the des- truction of entire communities. During the six years of the Afghan war, the Soviets have dropped or planted more than two million mines, some of which have been in the shape of toys su as to attract children. Moscow's methods have gone as far as to include the use of chemical weapons, incen- diary bombs and napalm. In one in- stance, when troops from the Marxist Afghan army defected, the people of an entire village were tied, stacked like wood, drenched with gasoline and set on tier to be burned alive. In his New Year television address to the American people, Soviet leader Mikhail Ciurbachev said: "As I face you today, 1 want to say that the Soviet people are dedicated to peace -that supreme value equal to the gift of life. For the Soviet people, the year 1986 marks the beginning of a new stage in carrying out our constructive plans. Those are peaceful plans; we have made them known ut the whole world." II the Soviets arc as dedicated to peace as they say, their actions speak louder than their word.. Let them with- draw from Afghanistan as a sign of good faith. Let them at least allow the International Red Cross to enter Afghanistan so that the innocent vic- tims, wounded and hungry, may be treated. Let the Soviets allow outside medical assistance so that the infant mortality rate, which reached 85 per cent last winter, can be reduced. On the first anniversary of Ambas- sador Dubs' murder, Moscow-spun- _ cured Radio Kabul broadcast a mess:~e in English that said: "It is now known that the killing of Am assador Duhs w,as carried out by the CIA." The. an- , nouncer went on to exp ain that the kill- ing was merely to give the United States the excuse to rea o re atT eons with Afghanistan and halt aid. The truth of the matter was that Dubs had made significant progress in weaning the Afghan government away from Moscow. His actions had become a threat to the Soviet direction and pur- pose for Afghanistan. Small wonder that his safety was of little consequence to his "rescuers." As Americans, living in peace, we would do well [o remember the struggle of the people of Afghanistan. Our lead- ers would do well to keep that struggle firmly in mind as they begin to build new lines of communication with a So- viet regime which initiated and perpetu- ates total war in Afghanistan. And we must all realize, as we look, with hope, to a new year in which the prospects for peace might be improved that, in the final analysis, governments and people alike must be judged by their deeds and not simply by their rhetoric. ^ Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/27 :CIA-RDP90-005528000706950004-2