The
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was a 10-year which war wreaked incredible havoc and destruction on
Afghanistan. The 'shooting' war is generally held to have started
December 24,
1979. Soviet troops ultimately withdrew from the area between
May 15,
1988 and
February 2,
1989. The
Soviet Union officially announced that all of its troops had left Afghanistan on
February 15.
The war was regarded by many as an unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country by another. However, others supported the Soviet Union, regarding it as coming to the rescue of an impoverished ally, or as a preemptive war against Islamist terrorists.
Timeline of the Invasion
Various dates are given for the beginning of the war, depending on what specific event is held to be the beginning. At the the beginning of 1978, when the Communist regime took power in Kabul. In October 1979, the Soviet Union began mobilization. In December 1979, the final airlift of combat troops in support of the assault against the government took place. The timeline below offers a list of significant events during this period.
Prelude to invasion
- April 27, 1978 - Hafizullah Amin stages of coup against, resulting in the death of the former head of state, Mohammed Daoud Khan. The communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) takes control. Nur Mohammed Taraki[?] is named President, Prime Minister, and General Secretary of the PDPA. Amin and Babrak Karmal are named deputy prime ministers. The country is renamed the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA).
- Spring 1978 - Traditional tribal resistance (insurgency) begins.
- Late Spring 1978 - Soviets begin discussions with Amin about possible removal of Taraki.
- December 5, 1978 - The PDPA signs a friendship treaty with the Soviet Union.
- February 15, 1979 - The U.S. Ambassador Adolph Dubs is abducted by insurgents and killed during a rescue attempt ordered by Amin. The U.S. accuses the Soviet Union of initiating the gunfight leading to his death. No replacement Ambassador is appointed.
- March 1979 - The Soviet Union begins massive military aid to Afghanistan, including 500 military advisors (with families, implying a long-term committment) arriving to provide assistance.
- March 10, 1979 - Afghan military units located in Herat mutiny, killing 350 Soviet citizens. By March 20, the mutiny is quelled, with great loss of life.
- May 1979 - Soviet advisors begin taking over operations at Bagram air base from Afghan government technicians. Diplomatic dispatches and articles in Pravda begin referring to Afghanistan as a “member of the socialist community”. Many take these public statements to mean that the Soviet Union now regards Afghanistan as falling under the Brezhnev Doctrine.
- August 1979 - General Ivan Pavloskiy, commander of Soviet ground forces arrives in Afghanistan with a staff of over 50 officers.
- September 1, 1979 - Taraki attends the Conference of Nonaligned Nations in Havana, Cuba.
- September 11, 1979 - Taraki returns to Kabul.
- September 12, 1979 - Taraki is forced from power by Amin and resigns his government and PDPA posts.
- September 14, 1979 - An assassination attempt on Amin in the Presidential palace, held to be directed by Taraki.
- September 16, 1979 - Amin assumes Taraki's offices in the government and the Afghan Communist Party.
- September 18, 1979 - Some elements of the previous government and military officers resist, and are killed by those loyal to Amin. Speculation abounds that Taraki has been killed in the fighting.
Preparation for Invasion
- October 1979 - General Pavloskiy and his staff depart from Afghanistan. The Soviet Union begins mobilization of Category 2 divisions in southern Soviet Socialist Republics (SSR[?]'s).
- October 10, 1979 - The Kabul Times[?] reports that Taraki has died due to an illness. Other reports suggest death in a shootout, by strangulation, or execution; none can be proven.
- November 7, 1979 - In an issue celebrating Soviet National Day, the Kabul Times[?] reports Afghanistan's role in the “continuation of the Great October Revolution”. Many view this statement as acceptance by the PDPA of the Brezhnev Doctrine in regards to Afghanistan.
- November 28, 1979 - Lt. General Viktor Paputin, the Soviet Union's deputy minister of interior, arrives in Kabul for a meeting concerning “mutual cooperation and other issues of interest”. Many speculate he is the top KGB official responsible for coordinating invasion.
- December 1979 - Several Tashkent based Soviet airborne battalions with heavy weapons are deployed to Bagram air base.
- December 17, 1979 - The head of the Afghan intelligence service, Assadullah Amin – Amin's nephew, is seriously wounded in an assassination attempt and leaves the country to receive medical aid in Tashkent.
- December 18, 1979- Airborne units stationed in Bagram move to cover the Salang Pass[?]. This move supports the upcoming border crossing of the 357th Motorized Rifle Division, based in Tashkent.
Start of Invasion
- December 21, 1979 - A reinforced Soviet airborne regiment is airlifted to Bagram.
- December 22, 1979 - Soviet advisors to the Armed Forces of Afghanistan, advise the Afghan's to undergo maintenance cycles for tanks and other crucial equipment. Telecommunications links to areas outside of Kabul are severed, isolating the capital. Amin moves the offices of the president to the Dar-ul-aman Palace, believing this location to be more defensible during invasion.
- December 24, 1979 - Three Soviet division-sized units take control of all airfields in and around Kabul. Spetnaz[?] commandos seize control of the telecommunications complex in Kabul, controlling all intra-city communication.
- December 26, 1979 - Additional Soviet regiment and division-sized units move southward toward the Afghan border.
- December 27, 1979 - Soviet interior advisors host a party for Afghan government officials at the Intercontinental Hotel[?], at its conclusion all are arrested. Soviet military advisers host a party for their Afghan counterparts, at its conclusion all are imprisoned. Three Soviet battalions attack the palace where Amin is located; the palace is taken with heavy casualties.
- December 28, 1979 - Three additional Soviet motorized rifle divisions cross the Afghan border, supported by four reserve divisions in the Southern Soviet Union, just across the border.
- December 29, 1979 - Babrak Karmal, leader of the Parcham faction of the PDPA appoints himself President and Prime Minister of the DRA, and General Secretary of the PDPA. Over 50,000 Soviet troops occupy Afghanistan.
Political and Military Motivations
A number of theories have been advanced for the Soviet action. Some believe the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was intended to prevent constituent SSR's in the southern Soviet Union from breaking away. At the time of the invasion, Iran had recently staged an Islamic revolution, deposing a United States-supported government. The newly instituted government was no more friendly to the Soviet Union than to the United States. This signified an additional axis of power in Eurasian politics (along with the Soviet Union itself, the Peoples Republic of China, and NATO), much to the Soviets dismay.
After its revolution, Iran had sufficient religious, political, and economic motivations to expand revolution northward into the Soviet Union and/or eastward into Afghanistan. A similar Islamist revolution appeared to have been developing in Afghanistan. Iran (with a population of 65 million) was technologically sophisticated and well armed with Western (particularly American) military technology. Invasion of an impoverished, technologically unsophisticated Afghanistan that supplied an eastern flank to Iran was considered by most political and military strategists to be preferable for the Soviet Union to any overt action agsainst Iran.
Both theses are supported by public statements made by Leonid Brezhnev at the time declaring the Soviet Union had a right to come to the assistance of an endangered fellow socialist country (and presumably its own fellow SSR's). This assertion of a right is now known as the Brezhnev Doctrine.
Political and Military Goals
Afghanistan is primarily rural and agrarian. The political form of government at the time was tribalistic. Strong tribal held the social order together. The Soviet Union had 2 major options for successful control:
- Drive the resistance (mujahadeen) out of Afghanistan, depopulating the rural areas and providing control of the cities to the Soviet-backed government.
- Use the shock power of mechanized combat to break the will of the resistance, causing so much destruction and dislocation that the civilian population could no longer resist.
Either goal supported the Brezhnev Doctrine, solidified the southern frontier of the Soviet Union, and provided a strategic counter-point to a hostile Iran.
Summary
Soviet tactics utilized the following military and economic efforts.
- The deployment of the 40th Soviet Army (over 100,000 ground troops). With air support, logistics, MVD troops, and other miscellaneous troops, the total number is estimated by some observers at approximately 175,000 troops total. This represented almost 20% of the category 1 (front-line) divisions possessed by the Soviet Union at the time.
- There was wide-spread use of chemical weapons behind the front lines by the Soviet Union. This was accepted practice for Soviet military units as reported by Soviet military journals.
- More than 20 million anti-personnel mines were dropped by the Soviet Union. Some of these anti-personnel mines were shaped like pens, or dolls, or other shiny trinkets, known as 'dolly bombs', intended for children to attemt to pick up.
- Russian costs (in 1986 dollars) were approximately $20 Billion USD / yr.
These tactics accomplished the following results:
- Approximately 90,000 Afghan combatants killed (mujahadeen and government), and 90,000 wounded. Including civilian casualities, estimates are that 10% of the total population and 13.5% of the male population was killed, 1.5 million killed overall.
- Approximately 22,000 Soviets were killed and 75,000 wounded.
- Approximately 6 million refugees were driven into surrounding countries.
- Damages of approximately $50 Billion USD to Afghanistan, about 1/3 to 1/2 the net worth of the country.
- Agricultural production reduced by 50%, livestock losses of 50%.
- 70% of paved roads destroyed.
- Of 15,000 villages in the country, 5,000 were destroyed outright or made economically unsupportable by destruction of all economic resources such as fields, wells or roads.
Links
- Other sources (http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat2.htm#Afghanistan)
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