From: James Tait <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Afghanistan: A War Thats Never Been Won - Guardian
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Afghanistan
http://www.guardian.co.uk/wtccrash/story/0,1300,553657,00.html


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A war that's never been won

US ground troops would face a long, brutish campaign

Special report: terrorism in the US

Special report: Afghanistan

Luke Harding in Islamabad
Tuesday September 18, 2001
The Guardian 

If George Bush manages to subdue Afghanistan, he will have succeeded where
many illustrious names have failed. Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, the
British, and finally the mighty Soviet Union all sent their armies into
Afghanistan, only to mount an inevitable retreat.
The problem, put simply, is geography: the landlocked country is dominated
by the rugged Hindu Kush mountains that sweep from the west to the east. The
range finally peters out near the northwestern city of Herat, and sinks into
the desert. 

Afghanistan's jagged scree-strewn mountains and rugged valleys provide an
ideal territory in which to fight a guerrilla war. They might almost have
been designed by a military commander on a shoestring budget.

Much of the debris from the last conflict with the Soviet Union more than a
decade ago has not been cleared away. The unmade road from Torkham to Kabul
winds past rusted Soviet tanks and the carcasses of armoured personnel
carriers, a grim reminder of the perils of foreign intervention. At Sarobi,
a strategic point 45 miles south of Kabul, field guns still litter the high
ground. 

Invading Afghanistan is comparatively easy. The problem is defending the
territory you have seized from determined groups of fighters armed with
rocket-launchers who occupy the high ground.

"Afghans are once again waiting for a foreign army to capture Kabul," one
Pakistani intelligence officer, speaking from Quetta, close to the Afghan
border, said yesterday. "In 1979 Russian tanks took two days to reach and
conquer Kabul, but it took them eight years with complete loss of Russian
military pride to start a return journey."

The fact that Afghanistan's civil war has gone on for so long is a testament
to how difficult it will be for the Americans to mop up all pockets of
resistance, should they invade.

With the prospect of an imminent US attack, the Taliban have sent their
fighters out of the cities to dusty hideouts in the countryside. Taliban
soldiers are busy renovating the network of bases in the mountains used by
the mojahedin to devastating effect in the 1980s in their guerrilla war with
the Soviet Union. 

Afghanistan's opposition Northern Alliance controls less than 5% of the
country. It has the beautiful Panjshir valley 65 miles to the northeast of
Kabul, and a small enclave around the far northern provinces of Badakhshan
and Takhar. There are also anti-Taliban fighters from the Hazara ethnic
minority who control parts of the exquisite, ravaged Bamiyan valley.

Suicide bombers


But it is not clear how much assistance Afghanistan's indigenous opposition
would be able to lend to an American attack on the Taliban. The one
commander who prevented the Taliban from completing their conquest of
Afghanistan, Ahmad Shah Masood, was buried on Sunday. He died of wounds
inflicted by two Algerian suicide bombers apparently sent by Osama bin
Laden. 

Masood controlled Kabul from 1992-1996. He eventually abandoned the city in
the face of a devastating Taliban offensive from three directions. Over the
past 18 months Masood's forces have received military help from Iran,
Russia, and India. But he has fewer fighters than the Taliban, whose numbers
are swollen by volunteers from the hardline Islamist madrassas or religious
schools just across the border in Pakistan.

Should the Americans advance towards Kabul, the Northern Alliance could be
counted on to surge southwards from their stronghold in the Panjshir valley
and across the Shomali plains, the gateway to the capital from the north.
They know the territory; and they could provide the Americans with
logistical advice. 

But even if a US force manages to capture Kabul with relative ease, this
would merely be the beginning of a nasty, brutish and protracted war.
Ex-Soviet commanders who fought against the mojahedin, the Taliban's
forerunners, have cautioned the US against sending in ground troops.

"If the Americans go to war, I pity those boys," Yuri Shamanov, a former
Soviet colonel, said last week. "I pity their mothers and sisters and
brothers. It will be 10 times worse than Vietnam. Vietnam will be a picnic
by comparison. Here they will get it in the teeth. Oh, they will get it
good." 

The impregnable terrain in Afghanistan made conventional warfare impossible,
he added. "Rockets won't save you: there's nothing out there to shoot at.
Blast away years' worth of ammo, the mountains will survive anything. My
soldiers would ask me why we were fighting in Afghanistan. I couldn't give
them an answer. We had no business being there."

Another factor also cautions against a US offensive involving ground troops:
the weather. In six weeks' time Afghanistan starts to become very cold. By
November swirling snow will have descended on the mountains, sealing off
many of the valleys and high plateaux.

The Taliban and the opposition rarely attack each other during the winter
months; it is too cold. The peak fighting months are August and September.
To start a ground campaign now would be to invite disaster.

Long haul


All the signs are, meanwhile, that the Taliban are digging in for the long
haul. Reports yesterday suggested that a unit of "foreign" militants has
been stationed at a former mojahedin camp 40 miles south of Kabul to repulse
any American attack. The fighters - Arab, Pakistani, Uzbek and Tajik
volunteers - have taken up positions in Kahki-I-Jabbar, in Darband village.
Bombing from the sky on its own will not be enough to dislodge them.

Every foreign invader of Afghanistan has left some kind of legacy. Alexander
the Great swept into Afghanistan with his armies in 329BC. En route to
India, he founded a handful of Greek settlements. They blossomed several
centuries later into Greek-influenced dynasties, among them the
pleasure-loving Kushans who produced exquisite works of art and sculpture
(including the Bamiyan Buddhas).

After that things went downhill: Genghis Khan and his Mongols left little
behind except destruction. It took three wars with the stubborn Afghans and
several chapters of colonial adventurism before the British finally granted
Afghanistan independence in 1921.

Nobody knows what Mr Bush's legacy in Afghanistan will be, except perhaps
further devastation in a country that has already been ruined.

Special reports
Terrorism in the US
Afghanistan



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