"The Bush Administration should seize the opportunity to make sure
that the tragedy in Vietnam is not repeated in Afghanistan."

from Thomas again.....

ALARMING DETAILS REGARDING AFGHANISTAN -- (BY RICHARD M. NIXON)
(Extension of Remarks - February 07, 1990)


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---

HON. DON RITTER

in the House of Representatives

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1990


Mr. RITTER. Mr. Speaker, I would like to discuss some alarming details
regarding Afghanistan .

I am disturbed that many people--including United States Government
officials--are blaming the Afghan resistance for stalemate and
infighting, now that the Soviets have pulled out of Afghanistan . This
is unfortunate, because in reality these problems have been largely
exacerbated by current United States policy implementation and the
role of Pakistan's military intelligence [ISI] in the distribution of
United States aid.

The faulty implementation of United States policy in Afghanistan , and
the manipulation of supplies to the Afghan resistance by Pakistan's
ISI, is the reason that strategic and moderate elements of the Afghan
resistance are being denied critical military supplies, and a major
reason for stalemate and factionalism in Afghanistan .

There is a rapidly growing discontent in Congress with ISI's policy of
providing very limited and inadequate supplies to hard fighting
elements of the Afghan resistance--like Commander Masood (Jamiat
Party), General Abdul Rahim Wardak (National Islamic Front of
Afghanistan ) and other Jamiat, NIFA, and Khalis commanders.

Mr. Speaker, I am sure many Members are asking themselves how we can
continue to consider sending large amounts of foreign aid to our good
friends in Pakistan--or provide sophisticated fighter planes or AH-1F
Cobra attack helicopters to our good friends in the Pakistani
military--when elements of Pakistani military intelligence [ISI] can
not be relied on to distribute supplies equitably and fairly to
important Afghan freedom fighters like Commander Masood, General
Wardak, and other strategic and important commanders?

Most of the Members here in Congress, including myself, supported a
large amount of foreign and military aid to Pakistan. But, now many
Members here are very disturbed by ISI's pressure on Commander
Masood's two brothers--forcing them to cancel their trip to the United
States. The reports of the harassment of Commander Masood's brothers,
and their families and friends, are also cause for great alarm here in
Congress.

Mr. Speaker, there is a second bit of disturbing news regarding
Afghanistan . There is growing concern in Congress that Secretary of
State James Baker may negotiate a defective political settlement on
Afghanistan with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze at their
meeting later this week. If these rumors are true they are very
disturbing.

Any settlement that allows Afghanistan's Communist regime--and their
notorious leader Najibullah--to remain in power, even transitionally,
will be staunchly opposed here in Congress, and by the Afghan people.

Mr. Speaker, I know that I speak for many supports of Afghanistan and
Pakistan here in Congress when I say that I hope that Secretary Baker
seizes the moment and avoids a settlement that betrays the people of
Afghanistan . America cannot afford to abandon the Afghan
resistance--in favor of a defective political settlement with
Najibullah and the Soviets. I hope that the following excellent piece
on Afghanistan , written recently by former President Nixon, will help
serve as blueprint for future United States efforts in Afghanistan .

[FROM THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, FEBRUARY 1, 1990]

(BY RICHARD M. NIXON)
When U.S. Secretary of State James A. Baker III and Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze meet in early February, their
discussions will almost certainly touch upon a major geopolitical
paradox: While Eastern Europe is slipping out of Moscow's grasp, the
chance to liberate Afghanistan from communism appears to be slipping
out of America's hands.

The Red Army's withdrawal from Afghanistan last February became the
opening round in the collapse of much of the Kremlin's empire. Yet
change in Eastern Europe has outpaced progress in Afghanistan . To
secure the Afghan people's right of self-determination, we need to
understand what's at stake, what's gone wrong and what needs to be
done.

Afghanistan remains a critical strategic issue. Ten years of support
to the resistance has been based on a bipartisan recognition that the
Soviet occupation threatened U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf. Yet
if Washington abandons the resistance, and thereby leaves the
Soviet-sponsored Kabul regime in power, Soviet troops will have left
but Moscow will still have what the Red Army was sent in to secure:
complete domination of Afghanistan .

The Kremlin not only will retain the Afghan air bases that allow
Soviet tactical aircraft to reach the Strait of Hormuz but will have
also seized the optimal position for long-term subversion of Pakistan
and Iran by exploiting the region's myriad rivalries.

Initial military progress made by the resistance after the Soviet
withdrawal has faltered. While the Afghan insurgents control 90% of
the countryside and half a dozen provincial capitals, they have been
unable to challenge communist control over the major cities.

Resistance forces have had some difficulty making the transition from
guerrilla combat to conventional warfare and have suffered from
infighting. But the main reason for the current stalemate has been the
failure of the United States and other supporters to equip the
resistance adequately.

Moreover, the United States and other supporters of the resistance
have failed to adjust our assistance to fit the new conventional phase
of the war. The equipment appropriate to hit-and-run attacks and
ambushes will not meet the requirements of set-piece battles and siege
warfare.

To overcome our failures, we must first be clear about our goals. We
have had two objectives: the removal of all Soviet forces and
self-determination for the Afghan people. The first goal has largely
been achieved. But the second depends on removing the Soviet-imposed
Najibullah government. To do so, the United States must launch a
political and military offensive.

Some observers claim that only a political solution is possible. I
disagree. If the United States wants to achieve a political solution
that safeguards our interests and those of the Afghan people, we must
give the resistance the capability to turn up the heat on the Kabul
regime.

To be acceptable, a political solution must measure up on three
counts. First, it must involve the decapitation of the Kabul regime.
There can be no compromise with the communists. Second, it must
provide for the creation of a broad-based transition government,
headed by former King Zahir Shah, who enjoys more popular
support than any other political figure, and staffed at the cabinet
level by prominent figures from the resistance, from the traditional
elites of Afghan society, and from the many patriotic non-communists
who remained in the communist-controlled cities during the war. Third,
it must stipulate that the transition government quickly call for a
national tribal council or elections for an assembly to draft a
constitution for the permanent government.

Ultimately, it is in Moscow's interest to settle the Afghan issue on
these terms. In view of the deepening economic crisis and the mounting
national problems within the Soviet Union, Mikhail S. Gorbachev can be
brought around.

Yet we cannot get from here to there without major military pressure.
For the coming fighting season, we must provide enough material for
the resistance to launch simultaneous offensives against all major
cities. It is particularly important that we provide better antitank
weapons, heavier mortars and artillery more mine field breaching
devices and higher altitude anti-aircraft weapons. In the past, we
have provided the resistance with enough to keep up the war. In the
coming year, we need to give them enough to win.

While we should continue to explore the possibilities for a political
settlement, we should not use negotiations simply to sweep the Afghan
issue under the rug. Instead, we should use them to achieve our
strategic objectives. If we snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, we
will have not only wasted $2 billion in assistance but also permitted
more than a million Afghans to die in vain.

Those who have called Afghanistan the Soviet Union's Vietnam
tragically misstate the case. South Vietnam was doomed when Congress
cut our aid by 80% from 1973 to 1975 and revoked the President's
powers to enforce the Paris peace accords of 1973, while Moscow poured
massive assistance into North Vietnam. One key lesson of Vietnam is
that the United States must do as much for its friends as the Kremlin
leaders do for theirs. The Bush Administration should seize the
opportunity to make sure that the tragedy in Vietnam is not repeated
in Afghanistan.


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