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<text>
<title>
(1988) Careful Exit From An Endless War
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
</history>
<link 00229><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
August 29, 1988
AFGHANISTAN
Careful Exit from An Endless War
</hdr>
<body>
<p>As the Soviets split, the government and rebels take over the
battlefield
</p>
<p> Skimming over the bone-dry terrain of northwestern Afghanistan
at 150 m.p.h., the Soviet pilot of the Mi-8 helicopter gunship
hugs the ground, popping over hills and swooping through narrow
ravines in the hope of surprising rebel units in his path. The
strain of contour flying less than 100 ft. off the ground shows
on the faces of the intent three-man crew as they scan the
hostile terrain for an enemy who could turn up anywhere: behind
the mud walls of a sprawling village, among goatherds whose
flock scatters at the deafening beat of the rotors, in a rocky
defile just over the next rise. The gunner, edgy, fires a burst
from a nose-mounted gun into an arid hillside. As the chopper
passes through a likely ambush site, the pilot releases a string
of flares to divert heat-seeking Stinger anti-aircraft missiles.
The only time the men's faces relax is when they pass over
homeward-bound Soviet troops, who wave to their airborne
protectors.
</p>
<p> The Soviet troops who withdrew from Afghanistan last week spent
their final hours in the war zone rolling along potholed roads
through regions still under the control of the mujahedin. With
half of Moscow's 115,000-man invasion army now gone, complying
with the Aug. 15 deadline, the Islamic insurgents remain a force
to be reckoned with despite the more than eight-year Soviet
campaign to wipe them out.
</p>
<p> The Soviets took no chances two weeks ago when a column of 1,500
men in 300 armored personnel carriers and trucks made its bumpy
way 400 miles from Kandahar, a ruin of a city in the southwest,
through Herat, where the Soviets retain a major base, to the
Soviet border. Though officers explained that they had agreed
to an informal truce with Ismael Khan, the most powerful rebel
chieftain in the Herat area, they plainly did not place much
stock in the understanding. The two-mile-long column rarely left
the cover of Soviet artillery set high on ridges or the
protection of clattering helicopter gunships. The precautions
served their purpose: over a period of two weeks, the
withdrawal convoys suffered no casualties.
</p>
<p> Days before the column set out, Fazl Haq Khaleqiar, the governor
of Herat province, told a group of Western journalists that he
had made peace with most of the rebel groups in his region. But
as the column rolled toward the provincial capital, it became
clear that there was a threat. Tanks and artillery dug in every
few hundred yards covered the approaches to the city. Hostile
Afghans greeted the soldiers, and a rock thrown by someone in
the crowd caromed off a vehicle. When journalists tried to walk
around the city, armed teenage Afghan members of the Communist
Party youth organization blocked the way. Just then an
embarrassed Governor Fazl Haq appeared to tell the reporters
that they were free to stroll around. When the newsmen tried
to take him up on his offer, the Afghans rounded them up at
gunpoint. Their explanation: rebels prowling the city might
mistake Western journalists for Soviets and kill them.
</p>
<p> The next morning the column left Herat for the remaining 3 1/2
-hour ride to the frontier. As soon as the vehicles rumbled
across the Soviet border into Kushka, broad smiles spread across
the faces of troopers who had been tense through much of the
journey; a few jumped off their vehicles to dance with local
Turkmen women. For the men in the convoy and an additional
10,000 withdrawn during the past two weeks, the war was over.
Asked what the pullback meant to them, the soldiers generally
repeated the official line of having "fulfilled their
internationalist duty," though one lieutenant was more candid.
Said he: "Obviously, it is time to leave. Gorbachev himself
said that Afghanistan was something of a mistake."
</p>
<p> A mistake? A cause unworthy of more Soviet blood? Certainly.
But Moscow is still determined to stand by its Communist allies
in Afghanistan--at least until a suitable alternative emerges.
In an interview with TIME, Nikolai Yegorychev, the Soviet
Ambassador in Kabul, reiterated that Moscow saw the only
solution as a compromise government involving both Communists
and the mujahedin. Said he: "The problems facing Afghanistan
cannot be solved militarily. A political settlement is
essential."
</p>
<p> Translated, that means Moscow will continue to help the
Najibullah government avoid military defeat. Earlier this month
the regime's forces lost two provincial capitals in the
northeast: Taliqan, a relatively insignificant small city, and
Kunduz, a strategic strong point. Though Afghan troops,
supported by Soviet air power, subsequently recaptured Kunduz,
Moscow apparently regarded the setbacks as serious enough to
quash earlier suggestions that the 50,000 troops still in
Afghanistan might be home by the end of the year, well ahead of
the Feb. 14, 1989 deadline established under the Geneva accords
signed by Afghanistan, the Soviet Foreign Ministry Spokesman
Gennadi Gerasimov: "The situation in Afghanistan does not give
grounds to accelerate the withdrawal of Soviet troops."
</p>
<p> According to U.S. intelligence sources, in fact, the regime
regained Kunduz only after Soviet fighter-bombers based in the
Soviet Union blasted and strafed rebel positions, reducing
portions of the city to rubble. Washington considers the
sorties a violation of the Geneva accords, as well as a serious
threat to the mujahedin's efforts on the battlefield. If the
Soviets fear that their Afghan comrades are not tough enough to
fend off the mujahedin, Western analysts and rebel leaders have
quite the opposite concern: so far, Najibullah's troops have
been showing more gumption than expected. Around Jalalabad, a
city the Soviets left three months ago, Afghan troops have
thrown back repeated rebel assaults. So far, the mujahedin are
holding only two dozen small towns. Concedes a senior aide to
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, leader of a rebel Hezb-e-Islami faction:
"They [Najibullah's forces] have fought much better than
expected."
</p>
<p> Nor are their Soviet allies willing to see them beaten in a
major engagement, as they nearly were at Kunduz. The city of
about 40,000, straddling a main road to the Soviet border 37
miles away, fell to units of Jamiat-i-Islami and Gulbuddin's
Hezb-e-Islami six days after the 10,000-man Soviet garrison
pulled out. The guerrillas overran the government defenders and
freed the prisoners at the local jail, but failed to capture the
heavily defended airport. Within two days government
reinforcements closed in, and Soviet aircraft went to work.
After three days of fighting, the mujahedin withdrew; according
to TASS, twelve Afghan troops and 173 insurgents died (the
latter figure possibly includes civilian casualties). The
Kunduz affair apparently triggered a shake-up in the Afghan
military. TASS reported that Najibullah had appointed a new
Defense Minister and army chief of staff.
</p>
<p> In the wake of Kunduz and other rebel setbacks, Western
analysts' predictions that major Afghan cities would fall
quickly once the Soviets pulled out look overly optimistic.
Says a Western diplomat in Kabul: "The mujahedin are not
capable of waging large-scale conventional warfare. The regime
still has superior fire-power and transport capacity.
</p>
<p> The guerrillas learned that lesson the hard way at Kandahar last
week when insurgents of Jamiat-i-Islami broke off attacks on
strategic high ground around Baba Wali, a heavily fortified
point overlooking the city, after coming under the air and
artillery barrages from entrenched government forces. An
assault by fighters of Yunis Khalis' Hezb-e-Islami last month
on outposts screening Jalalabad was similarly thrown back at the
cost of as many as 50 mujahedin lives. Such large-scale attacks
under heavy fire are something new for the guerrilla forces.
Says Abdul Qadir, a senior rebel commander with Khalis: "The
mujahedin are not ready to risk high causalities."
</p>
<p> Instead, the resistance has been adopting the Maoist strategy
of controlling the countryside, isolating towns and cities, and
gradually wearing down government morale through rocket
barrages. Earlier this month, a huge munitions dump near Kalagay
was blown up, reportedly claiming hundreds of Soviet lives.
Last week Najibullah's enemies scored a propaganda coup when his
brother Sediqullah Rahi, 37, turned up in Washington to announce
his defection and call his brother "mentally deranged." Though
heavy combat has not touched the capital, Kabul, the sights and
sounds of war intrude almost daily. At the airport planes follow
a narrow corkscrew flight path down to the runway rather than
risk flying in low over hostile territory. Day in and day out,
the crump of outgoing artillery echoes through the city as
government forces try to keep the mujahedin off balance.
</p>
<p> Moscow and Kabul's answer to the emerging rebel strategy of
slow strangulation is to dig in at a few strongholds--Kabul,
Jalalabad, Herat, Faizabad, Ghazni, Kandahar and
Mazar-i-Sharif--and await a change in the military or political
equation that could give them an advantage. Most of the
remaining 50,000 Soviet troops are garrisoned in Kabul and
Shindand, the huge air base in western Afghanistan, as well as
in Herat and a few other cities along the main roads to the
Soviet border. As many as 100,000 Afghan troops are deployed
in the same areas and at dozens of smaller outposts.
</p>
<p> If most of the Soviet forces remain in place until late this
year or early 1989, as the Kremlin indicated last week, they
will almost certainly guarantee Najibullah's survival through
next winter. Moscow continues to supply the regime with a
bountiful flow of weapons and ammunition, and has announced
long-term aid and economic agreements.
</p>
<p> The Soviets hope to prop up Najibullah long enough to allow a
transition to a more broadly based regime friendly to the
Soviet Union. Whatever the stripes of the new regime, Moscow
aims to have it seeded with friends open to continued Soviet
access to gas fields and copper and oil deposits that it has
developed in the North. Says Ambassador Yegorychev: "There is
no doubt that we have our national interests here. Our main
interest is that Afghanistan be a good neighbor of the Soviet
Union."
</p>
<p>-- By Edward W. Desmond. Reported by T.A. Davis/Peshawar, Ross
H. Munro/Kabul and Ken Olsen/Moscow </p>
</body>
</article>
</text>