-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/2002/02/kgb-afgh.html

>>>Between the American side and the Russian side are the human apparatuses;
like checkers, who wins depends on how many "pieces" are left on which side(s).
A<>E<>R<<<

}}}>Begin
NEWS RELEASE
Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Sharon Coleman Jones
Phone: 202-691-4013

February 25, 2002

THE KGB IN AFGHANISTAN:
DEFECTOR'S DOCUMENTS SHED NEW LIGHT ON SOVIET WAR

Washington, D.C. -Previously secret KGB materials on the Soviet war in Afghanistan
reveal the determined efforts of a great power trying desperately to keep on top of
events in a client state-- and failing miserably to do so. The materials were released
today by Cold War International History Project (CWIHP) at the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars, the leading clearinghouse and research project on
the former Communist world archives.

The materials, provided to CWIHP by defected KGB archivist Vasiliy Mitrokhin,
present the first behind-the-scene account at the three communist coups in
Afghanistan in April 1978 and in September and December 1979. They also provide
the first-ever inside account of the 1979 kidnapping and murder of the last US
ambassador in Kabul, Adolph Dubs; chilling reports on the violent guerrilla deception
campaigns, assassinations, sabotage and bribery carried out by the KGB in
Afghanistan between 1978 and 1983; as well as new information on clandestine US-
Soviet political contacts on Afghanistan in the 1980 presidential election campaign.
The document also reveals KGB and Afghan intelligence cooperation with Murtaza
Bhutto, the brother of later Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto; as well as links
with Murtaza Bhutto, a leftist terrorist involved in organizing and supervising the
hijacking of a Pakistani civilian airliner in 1981.

The 178-page paper proves that the KGB was deeply involved in Afghanistan even
before the Communist take-over in 1978 and the Soviet invasion in 1979. The
number of active agents in the country ran into the hundreds and served a role not
only in Afghanistan but also in neighboring countries such as Pakistan and Iran. The
government of Prince Muhammad Daud (1973-1978) worked closely with the
Soviets, and several of Daud's ministers had contacts with the KGB. Mitrokhin also
shows that the Soviet Union was not involved with the Afghan Communists'
overthrow of Daud's government in April 1978, although the KGB had received
advance warning of the plot against Daud. The KGB spent enormous sums to rapidly
build up indigenous Afghan communist intelligence services, of which the main one,
the KHAD, became feared and hated for its use of torture and assassination. KGB-
trained agents, the records make clear, substantially penetrated CIA-backed
mujaheddin groups, their training camps, and their headquarters.

More importantly, the KGB files present, according to Christian Ostermann, the
director of the Cold War International History Project, "the inside story of the 
growing
split between Afghan Communist Party leaders Babrak Karmal, Mohammad Taraki
and Hafizullah Amin-and the rather frantic Soviet efforts to keep it under control"-
advising the Afghans, for example, after Taraki's guards had machine gunned
Amin's, that 'in the present circumstances it was particularly important to be
restrained and controlled.' The Mitrokhin materials reflect the rivalry among the main
Soviet agencies operating in Afghanistan-the embassy, the military, the KGB, and the
party advisers, often at cross-purposes. Examples include the KGB surveillance of
the messenger whom General Zaplatin, the Soviet chief political adviser to the
Afghan army, sent to Moscow in December 1979 in a desperate attempt at
preventing a Soviet invasion; and the failed attempt at removing Amin from power in
September 1979, in which Soviet ambassador Puzanov became a hapless
diplomatic victim of a KGB-hatched plot. Among the many new details on KGB
operations in Afghanistan and other countries are the accounts of the September
1979 Operation "Raduga," the KGB's high-risk scheme to usher three Afghan cabinet
ministers out of the country, and "Operation Agat," the storming of the presidential
palace and the killing of Amin in December 1979, at the onset of the Soviet invasion.

What is most striking about Mitrokhin's materials is the pervasive sense it gives of
the distrust that the KGB fomented and spread among Afghan and Soviets alike.
While it is clear that Moscow's interest in the critical year 1979 lay in finding ways 
for
the two main Communist Party factions to cooperate against their increasingly
efficient Islamist enemies, the KGB's operations achieved exactly the opposite. By
concocting rumors and slander, the KGB contributed significantly to the destruction
of the Afghan Communist Party and to the dysfunctionality of Soviet policies. It is
therefore fitting that it was the local KGB bosses who-sensing their chief Yuri
Andropov's willingness to use force to remove Amin from power-dredged up old,
faction- driven accusations of Amin being an American agent that in the last resort
convinced many in Moscow, who should have known better, that it was necessary to
invade. The KGB ran scores of secret "false flag" military operations inside
Afghanistan during the 1980s. In these, Soviet-trained Afghan guerrilla units posed
as CIA-supported, anti-Soviet mujaheddin rebels to create confusion and flush out
genuine rebels for counterattacking. By January 1983, there were, according to
Mitrokhin, 86 armed, KGB-trained "false bands," as they were called, operating
throughout Afghanistan. These disclosures also throw new light on the chronic
mujaheddin infighting during the 1980s. A perhaps significant number of the clashes
among mujaheddin groups during the 1980s, which set the stage for the catastrophic
civil war in the 1990s, apparently were carried out deliberately by paid KGB agents.

A KGB operative but increasingly disaffected following the bloody suppression of the
Prague Spring in 1968 and the dissident movement, Vasiliy Mitrokhin decided to
compile his own account of the KGB's foreign operations when he was put in charge
in 1972 of the transfer of the foreign operations archives from the KGB's
headquarters at Lubyanka in Moscow to Yasenevo southwest of the capital. Working
in complete secrecy for over ten years, Mitrokhin first took notes in longhand while
working in the archives and later, once safely in his dacha, sorted and transcribed
them. They are now being made available at no charge by the CWIHP at
http://cwihp.si.edu. For further information, contact the CWIHP at (202) 691-4110.
End<{{{~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Believe only after careful observation and analysis, when you find that it
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A merely fallen enemy may rise again, but the reconciled
one is truly vanquished. -Johann Christoph Schiller,
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