THE AFGHAN RESISTERS IN A HOLY WAR

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CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9
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RIPPUB
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K
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9
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 11, 2012
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4
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Publication Date: 
April 6, 1986
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OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Dr fn (-. I. Afir, 14 APR 1986 W-~~ YY-) Uilan~ 1Z~~.1,~'S . ~o~cr Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 ILaSk- ins. ~L(Z- fie.. ~~ ~ ~ ~C' C (L L Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Mrs. Elizabeth Graham Weymouth Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 OPINION orx At 1cs c imcs F-.Sunday, April 6.1986 The Afghan Resisters in a Holy War Testimonies of Battle, Torture By Laity Weymouth f.4LA.MASAq PAK TLN P it Syed Gailani used to be a religious leader in Afghanistan. That was before the Soviets invad- ed his country in 1979 to impose a regime led by Babrak Karrnal. Now Gailard is a leader of one of seven Afghan resistance groups that have been fighting the Sovi- eta for the last six yeah Although President Zia ul-Haq of Pakistanrecently told me that he believes the Soviets may be genuinely interested in reaching a political solution to the war in Afghani- stan and withdrawing their troop. Gallant doesn't believe the Soviets have such benign intentions. He explained. "We consider the rumors of Soviet interest in troop witbdrawal from Afghanistan a game to attract U.S. attention, so the U.S. might say, SOH? why all this assistance, if the Soviets will pull out?." Gailani met me in Islamabad, wearing a blue Western suit; his son Hamad sat at his side and helped with translation. His real base is the Pakistani town of Pesha- war, where moujahedeea resistance kad- ' ere and fighters gather when they are not inside Afghanistan. Gailani fled to Pakistan before the war, when the pro-Soviet forces began their campaign in advance of the 1979 Soviet invasion. At that point, he took up what he calls the "bdy jihad"-the war to oust the Soviets from Afghanistan. 'My rdigiou duty," be said, "is to save the nation from the yoke of communism. They we anti- Islam, and we are anti -communids." The only hope for Afghanistan. accord- ing to Gallant, is for the West to bcrease aid to the mot jahedeen. 'Zf saditary pressure were imposed on a broader scale against the Soviets." Gailani argued, "then they might seriously consider with- drawing. We see signs they are tied. By tncrmirig the aid the rime to a with- drawal might be shortened - Although Zia has argued against such escalation. some US analysts agree with GailanL Sen. Gordon J. Humphrey (R - NIL) is a lading advocate of iaerased assistance to Afghan resistance The main military problem for them. Gailani said, is the Soviet mastery of the stirs. allowing them to use their air force with devastating effec', killing s o - hedeen and bombing near the Pakistan: 'I've decided to stay and fight. I worked hard to become a doctor. I quit because I wanted freedom for my country.' border to prevent supplies from reaching Afghanistan. "Their supremacy is in the air," he said, and to counter it, "the West must increase the number of sophisticated weapons it gives to the moujahedeen-an- ti-aircraft and anti-tank weapons." Gailani doesn't believe Soviet-inspire propaganda claiming that the United States and the Soviet Union will strike a deal on Afghanistan over the heads of the moujahedeen. "We don't believe the Ad- ministration would exclude the freedom fighters or isolate them in a regional agreement with the U.S.S.R.," he said. If you isolate the moufahede+en today, you compromise Afghanistan. Tomorrow, the Soviets will step in somewhere else like Pakistan or Iran. We are not their final destination. Afghanistan is Not a bridge for their achievements." he warned. .It is our faith and our strong belief that have kept us fighting," Gailani said. He pointed out that the Soviets have used every means to break the will of the resistance -mines, chemical weapons, everything except the atomic bomb. He told of Afghans being buried alive with bulldozers brought in to cover them with dirt. He told of torture, of small children having their intestines torn out. What political solution would satisfy the resistance? "We won't compromise," the Afghan leader said. "We won't be a second Finland. We were and will remain a nonaligned country. A Soviet-con- trolled country will not satisfy us." Gailani's perception is that while the they are more softly lki , ng Soviets are ta fighting more brutally and effectively. His view is shared by other moujahedeea leaders, including Dr. Shah Rukh Gran who met me in Peshawar. Peshawar is the last slop on the way from Pakistan to Afghanistan-the gate- way for both men and supplies. It's also the arrival point for Afghan refugees fleeing Soviet terror. Peshawar is the Beirut of the Afghan war-but the war is rlease see AFGHANS, rage Z Lolly Weymouth is a contributing editor to opinion. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Afghans: Resisters in a Holy War t ontinued from Page 1 being fought in another country and there 'is an absence of a world press corps to d cover the battles. Pakistan is remote an Peshawar is particularly remote; in this Islamic city a visitor rarely sees a woman. Gran, a military commander with the was taking a few weeks off Gailani group , from the war. He said the Soviets have been fighting harder during the last year. '?' They are able to replace their casualties li es. and get more troops. They have supp We're doing our best, but if they lose one tank, they can uru,a ui u..?w .. -- --- -apse one gun, we may not be able to replace it within a year." -, Although dedicated to the struggle, 'bran is worried about time being the side of the Soviets. The mou.$ahede `*be worn down, he cautioned, or the i h me to power m g co . - - a an.ow.. ..rr------ and cut off aid to the resistance. He 'dropped the bravado of most resistance fighters and said simply, "If you know -there is hope, you have morale. If you .*ttart hitting your head against a wall and find it's hopeless, you start morale." Echoing Callan, Gran said the mouja- :hedeen urgently need anti-aircraft weap- ""?' ilwnino Increased Western aid. he said, would at the very least mane uic w4u expensive for the Soviets. Gran practiced medicine in Kabul cul be- invaded. the Soviet troops 'f ore his practice after 1979 but worked a danger" After-hours for the resistance- ous pursuit. His house was once searched Be - capo o " n-- thlzer 1983 because of a tip from a sympa ?'tn the secret police and fled to Pakistan. d their minds through torture. He said he could go to the West an practice medicine, a profession he loves, ,end marry his fiancee, a woman who lives Atlanta. But, he explained,'Tve decid- to stay and fight. I worked hard to become a doctor. I quit because I wanted to gain freedom for my country-because couldn't see the Soviets inside Afghani- "If Russian soldiers started to h walk told arents r ll you p New York and ki , fight for fume, "then you would start to ~ freedom. I've seen people their d in n ;'prison-needles put nailS I've treated a person and theirr skin. tortured by electric shock as well as a girl d with something to cause pain in t ` e injec -her joints. I've seen people who've lost eiixture of the two, he said Is 0ationalism are mixed. They are comrnu- ? eta, so we fight them from a religious point of view. Moreover, they have Invaded our country. It's freedom and religious beliefs. It's also a revenge for Those who have been killed., for families who have suffered. They didn't have any light to take over our country " - ?It's a itrongly than political Idec and In the Afghan Surgical Hospital at Peshawar lay wounded members of an extremist resistance group with ties to Iran. One whose arm had been amputated told me he wanted to return to Afghani- . jean. Why should I not fight?" he asked. An injured 24-year-old put it this way: "I don't bother about my life. I want to offer aking in Farsi, he called for head .. Spe ply better arms, saying it is impossible to shoot down Soviet planes with rifles. Several days later the United States decided that anti-aircraft tedl r y epor stinger missiles would be made available to the Afghan resistance. Although such arms are welcome, the young fighter told me he saw no differ- ence between the Soviet Union and the United States. He claimed the freedo United States is supporting Muslim lighters only because they are anti-Soviet and he accused America of victimizing Muslims in other parts of the globe: "In Palestine, it is the U.S. which is support- ing the Jews to kill Muslims." The Nasir Bagh Refugee Camp on the outskirts of Peshawar is where some of the 3 million Afghan refugees are housed. Afghan determination s being taught there to the young. About 30 children, ages six to eight, stood in a classroom. Their teacher said she was teaching them "that they came to Pakistan due to the atrocities of Soviet forces. The Soviets are irreligious-their enemy." A young girl stood in front of the class and led the others in singing: "Give me my gun. I'm going to the jihad. Children of martyrs that have many hopes. Let's win our objectives by going into the field." To meet Gallant and his allies is to encounter a kind of fanatical determine- = Lion - almost impossible to imagine by -Western standards. For the last six years this resolve has enabled the take on on the and ill-clad moujahedeen -Soviet army with considerable success. 'How it will end is impossible to predict. Burhannuddin Rabbani, an Afghan po- litical leader, says the Afghans will fight to the last man. On the other hand, Syed Bahaouddin Majrooh, director of the Af- ghan Information Center and a knowl- edgeable observer of the war, warns that with the recent Soviet escalation in the field, "unless Western assistance is in- creased, the resistance is doomed to go down." Hamad Gailani told me that Gran would soon return "inside." Did Gailani worry about Gran's safety? No, he replied; a who dies, dies for millions - mou jahedeen and lives on in the minds of the others. Yet Hamad himself confessed that he had cried for friends who had been killed: "Wee have hearts, you know." 0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 F2 SU DA't. MARCH 23. 1986 U Commentary and Opinion lia Says Moscow Is Ready to Talk Pakistani's Leader Wants Negotiations Over Afghanistan, Not More Covert Aid By Lally Weymouth I SLAMABAD- President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq of Pakistan says that the So- viet Union is seriously interested in ex- ploring a political settlement to the six- year-old war in Afghanistan. "We are in touch with them directly and indirectly, and from all counts, the signals we are receiving are' that the Soviet Union wishes to with- draw," Zia said in an interview at his palace here last week. The Pakistani leader explained Moscow's Afghanistan problem this way: "Inside Af- ghanistan, if you look at it from the Russian point of view, things are not going so well. I'm sure they can't afford to suffer as many casualties as they are suffering today. So, from that point of view, they also appear to he keen to r ? ~ ?lve the issue of Afghanis:an, l n: talk~n} t; om my own personal kr-ow;- edge, at,' f .:r, the r Kcl 3nge of views di- ; .?c s . ar , ectly tha' we "ave berm r-- trig ing to S:... , a,itno., t of rnse'ves Presteeu ' :';~'s hopeful view of Soviet -k,, a change in his previous n Though h.s tone was cau- interview, he seemed to be V. ingtor, that he thinks its. rots t:?: ?':ations over Afghanutar r: t r er ar, escalation of the cover v. --a. ?- t' S. officials are urging. Mam - 'icials question Zia's (,p,,.- the Soviet peace feet, -k . :he Soviets, far from i:,., v all. are digging in for a icing war Av. ,redict that rather than a n?goticted i lent, the most likely pros pect in Vg' tan is a protracted i:.,':? +rv stalemate. C ? ?: ntagor, analyst describes talk of .. thdrawai as 'a lot of hog- wash. A to star. Even some P: kistents are skeptical of 7;a'> :,.ent "Let's be sery frank. The kus>.ans dui :'t , ome in tc withdraw." said Fdklstar,'s -,rtive new prime minister, MQ7tamn-,ec Khan Juneio, in an interview hire last wee k fie added: "I agree with the perjpk who say the Soviets will not with- " -Zia views the Afghanistan conflict in stra- tegic terms. He reached for a well-worn atlas to explain why he believes the Soviets ortginaliy invaded Afghanistan. Pointing to LI1i H c mouth u rites regularly about feign affairs for The Los Angeles Times S jmdirate. PRESIDENT ZIA The inyLrgenc1 it a tactic." '' :kistan. he ;aid: "I: here over the bone; of Pakistani - they are at the mouth of the Gul: and i controls the Strait r' H, nru cu Gulf. In one move uses h ve thre u, st-, ure the Strai? mu:.. ei,.:: au;. tell the ~iur? ~` ; are on r ?.' v, held b,; ais tnat the L'.S >r;ouid ir. r its aid to the Afghar resistance fighters, the mujahed- dine, to force the Soviets to accept a polit- .,; tlemen:. "To expect that the c-f :+,::r the insurgen- cy, the less the time the Soviets will spend in Afghanistan. is wrong." he said. "You've got to find a political sc,',rtion to the prob- lem. The insurgency is a t:.r tic. It will help find a political solution. boot rt will not bring about a solution. So, if ail, body's thinking that the greater the heat 4 the insurgency, the easier the solution, he is wrong The freedom fighters must c,,nt,nue their effort at the present level." Zia didn't hide his concern that an esca- lation of Western aid to the resistance could bring attendant dangers for Pakistan. Pak- istan now is home for more than 3 million Afghan refugees. Moreover. Pakistan pro- and a route for supplies and arms to enters t ' - into Afghanistan. Thus far, said Zia, Sovie But if further provoked, the Soviets could cause more trouble. To date, Pakistan's president has played the political game with considerable skill, minimizing the East-West aspects of the Afghan struggle, while enabling the resis- tance to receive covert aid. The strongest evidence of his success is the most recent United Nations vote on Afghanistan, where 122 out of 159 members voted to condemn the Soviet invasion. He summed up the del- icate Pakistani dilemma by saying, "The question is at what temperature does the kettle boil? If it's too high, the lid will fly off w Zia outlined what kind of political solution would be acceptable to Pakistan. "The So- viet Union must withdraw," he said. "The refugees must return and it would be left to the people of Afghanistan to decide what kind of a government they want. We grant the Soviet Union that a superpower cannot tolerate a hostile neighbor." But Zia noted ironically that Afghanistan was pro-Soviet and hostile to Pakistan long before Soviet troops marched in. Pakistanis are especially fearful of a two- front war: Afghanistan, a battleground for the last six years. is on one border, and In- dia, Paks':.an's traditional enemy, is ,n the other. The Inr?._ problem has eased slightly. Zia regards Rajiv Gandhi as a major improve- ment over his late mother, Indira. "We have found a g:. ?-,' difference," he said. "We have already .,al-Ile good progress, and I hope it continues " But he cautioned that Rajiv isn't likely to alter India's close relations with the &,vet Union. "It's not possible." he said, if you analyze the Indian position., you will see that their entire military is depen- dent on the resources of the Soviet U -'iion .... Even if the leadership desires to change, it's impossible." Zia continues to regard the United Sates as an ally, but he is pi agmatic. "One roust not expect too much, even from one's wife," he said. "Then you're not disappointed. If Pakistan starts expecting that the U.S. will bring American troops and fight both against India and the Russians, the Pakis- tanis are expecting too much. If the Pakis- tanis are expecting that the U.S. will open the gates of Fort Knox and throw all the gold for Pakistan, it's also expecting too Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807340004-9 much. We should expect from the U.S. only what we think is necessary and essential and then we will not be disappointed." Zia is now preoccupied with events in his own country where, after nine years, mar- tial law has been lifted and democracy is coming in stages. First, there has been an election of a national assembly, which has begun to function like a parliament. Zia has also appointed the new prime minister, Junejo, spreading executive power slightly while keeping for himself the posts of pres- ident and army chief of staff. Analysts here and in Washington de- bate whether Zia can control the pro- cess of democratization he has begun. Despite widespread speculation that his recent power-sharing moves came un- der pressure from the U.S. Congress, Zia asserts that he came up with the plan him- self. Others are now saying that Zia initially may have thought he could limit the powers of the assembly. Once the process was launched, they say, Zia found he couldn't stop it short of reimposing martial law-a trump card he still holds. Today, much day-to-day government business has already shifted to the new prime minister. The fact that Junejo, rather than Zia, i d Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme's ?. ,viral was : ead here as a 5?gn that he ts. a ?.-umulating more and more power. T :?_, . rr rumors that Zia will step down as army chief of staff by the end of the year, and `?- ---me a civilian president. He insisted. h,,,-ver. that he isn't yet ready to dc- this. Junejc o