USSR AND AFGHANS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000402760021-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 26, 2012
Sequence Number: 
21
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 1, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000402760021-3.pdf84.58 KB
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402760021-3 ARTICLE ON PAGERp 1 October 1985 JOSEPH C. HARSCH USSR and Afghans mute through Khost has been the main avenue into Afghanistan for rebel forces receiving American help. During the summer rebels surrounded Khost. In mid-September the Soviets reinforced the Khost garri- son by air and than. launched a counter offensive from it against the surrounding guerrillas. It is called the heaviest fighting so far in the civil wac The Soviets have been attempting to pacify Af- ghanistan since they invaded it late in 1979, and they Are still a long way from their goal. Resistance is as vi- gorous as ever and more successful this year than last. The Soviets could, if they chose, increase their physical fare in Afghanistan immensely and prob- ably decisively, if they were willing to spend the effort, funds, and manpower. Why have they not greatly in- creased the forces committed tothe operation? At the time of the invasion they were estimated to have put about 100,000 men into Afghanistan. The latent estimate by the International Institute of Strate- gic Studies is 115,000. That represents a small in- crease, but nothing to what the Soviets could do. Their total nulitary strength is over 5 mullion. A permissible deduction from the known facts is that they have a basic policy of attempting to handle forces their Afghan problem exclusively with military from their southern command. They apparently have not drawn down any other commands to reinforce the deployment in Afghanistan. declared the fro idw was "closed forever against the enemy like an unbreakable wall." But a lively battle has been going on ever since around Khost. Khost is a town held by Soviet and puppet Afghan troops, south of the main road from Peshawar in Pakistan to Kabul in Afghanistan. The THE interesting thing about the latest news from Afghanistan is that the Russians would apparently rather risk losing than spend more on their venture. Russian troops and their local Afghan clients set out in mid-August to close off their southern border once and for all to lion of guerrillas and weep- one from neighboring Pakistan. The m.litary operation most have gone reasonably well from the Russians' point of view in the beginning. On Sept 16 Afghan puppet President Babrak Karmal ALE ONLY This policy is in contrast to American policy in Vietnam. President Lyndon Johnson sent half a mil- lion Americans to that theater by withdrawing forces from all other areas, including the vital European the- ater The Russians have not weakened their strength in Europe or Asia for the sake of Afghanistan. This in turn makes it relatively any for the US and China - the main providers of aid to the Afghan re- sistance forces -to feed in enough weapons, supplies, and ammunition to keep the resistance alive. A resis- tance movement that has survived through nearly six years of often bitter fighting against a vastly better aimed Soviet Army is vigorous and alive. Have the Russians learned something from the American experience in Vietnam? They have limited their spending on the Afghan venture. They have never put enough into it to weaken them on any other front. They can afford what they are spending. They are not weakening their strategic position elsewhere. The US spent beyond its home- front tolerance in Vietnam and had to get out. The same will not happen to the Russians in Afghanistan. The other side of the coin is that it continues to look like a "no win" situation for them. Americans and Chinese keep feeding enough help to the resistance to keep it alive and fighting. Moscow does not raise the stakes. This can go on indefinitely. Six years of fighting in Afghanistan has led the Russians into a stalemate. It could be broken in two ways; either by a big increase in the Soviet invest- ment, or by a big increase in US and Chinese aid to the Afghan loyalists. Neither is likely because each side could escalate to balance off what the other does. In effect Washington and Peking, working in silent and unavowed partnership, have produced a situation from which Moscow can escape only through negotia- tion and compromise. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402760021-3