-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Sept. 27, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

HOW U.S. DESTROYED PROGRESSIVE SECULAR FORCES IN AFGHANISTAN

By Deirdre Griswold

[The media are suddenly full of opinions about Afghanistan,
now that the Bush administration is accusing Osama bin Laden
and other Islamic fundamentalists of being behind the
attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.

In the 1980s, the reactionary political elements now ruling
Afghanistan were working with the CIA to overthrow a
progressive Afghani government supported by the Soviet
Union. After the spending of an ocean of blood and billions
of U.S. dollars, the reactionaries won.

Washington was happy and unconcerned as its prot�g�s went on
to butcher Afghani progressives, restore landlordism and
repress women while fighting among themselves.

The eventual triumph of the Taleban faction represented a
catastrophe for the Afghani people. Just in the last year
thousands of Afghani refugees have died of starvation and
exposure and Kabul, the capital, is such a wasteland that
the U.S., demanding vengeance, can't even find anything to
bomb.

On Oct. 10, 1996, Workers World printed the following
article about how the U.S. strangled a popular revolution
led by the Progressive Democratic Party of Afghanistan
(PDPA) against feudalism and imperialism.]

Not that long ago, the bourgeoisie could still feel pride in
their revolutionary history. They continued to celebrate the
1789 French Revolution and many other great victories in the
struggle against feudal oppression.

They even spoke approvingly of the 1917 overthrow of the
czarist autocracy in Russia. The problem, they said, was
that the Bolsheviks had spoiled that struggle for democracy
by going too far.

But capitalism in this rotten age of U.S. imperialist
conquest of the globe has degenerated so far from its
revolutionary roots that it is now, to borrow a phrase from
Henry Kissinger, to the right of the czar. And it is
celebrating the return of absolute feudal rule in
Afghanistan.

The powerful media engines, their reach multiplied by the
most modern technologies, are presenting the world with
instant photographic images of a lynching--that's all it was-
-of the few progressives left in Kabul. .

To make the deed more palatable, the media use adjectives
like "butcher" to describe former President Najibullah and
his aides. Dragged out of the United Nations compound where
they had sought asylum for the last four years, they were
beaten to death and then left hanging for all to see.

But among themselves, foreign-policy experts for the U.S.
establishment know that the Afghani progressives' real crime
was that they tried to carry out a social transformation in
their country in the direction of socialism.

What authority bears witness to this? None other than the
U.S. Department of the Army itself.

The Pentagon puts out what it calls country study books on
almost every country in the world. They are updated every
few years. These books contain basic information for the use
of U.S. personnel traveling or working abroad. There's
nothing classified in them. They're available in most
libraries.

"Afghanistan--a Country Study" for 1986 has of course the
anti-communist line expected of a Pentagon publication. But
it also contains much useful information about the changes
instituted by the Afghani Revolution of 1978.

FREEING WOMEN AND PEASANTS

Before the revolution, 5 percent of Afghanistan's rural
landowners owned more than 45 percent of the arable land. A
third of the rural people were landless laborers,
sharecroppers or tenants.

Debts to the landlords and to money lenders "were a regular
feature of rural life," says the U.S. Army report. An
indebted farmer turned over half his crop each year to the
money lender.

"When the PDPA took power, it quickly moved to remove both
landownership inequalities and usury," says the Pentagon
report. Decree number six of the revolution canceled
mortgage debts of agricultural laborers, tenants and small
landowners.

The revolutionary regime set up extensive literacy programs,
especially for women. It printed textbooks in many languages-
-Dari, Pashtu, Uzbek, Turkic and Baluchi. "The government
trained many more teachers, built additional schools and
kindergartens, and instituted nurseries for orphans," says
the country study.

Before the revolution, female illiteracy had been 96.3
percent in Afghanistan. Rural illiteracy of both sexes was
90.5 percent.

By 1985, despite a counter-revolutionary war financed by the
CIA, there had been an 80-percent increase in hospital beds.
The government initiated mobile medical units and brigades
of women and young people to go to the undeveloped
countryside and provide medical services to the peasants for
the first time.

Among the very first decrees of the revolutionary regime
were to prohibit bride-price and give women freedom of
choice in marriage. "Historically," said the U.S. manual,
"gender roles and women's status have been tied to property
relations. Women and children tend to be assimilated into
the concept of property and to belong to a male."

Also: "A bride who did not exhibit signs of virginity on the
wedding night could be murdered by her father and/or
brothers."

The revolution was challenging all this.

Young women in the cities, where the new government's
authority was strong, could tear off the veil, freely go out
in public, attend school and get a job. They were organized
in the Democratic Women's Organization of Afghanistan,
founded in 1965 by Dr. Anahita Ratebzada.

Ratebzada's companion, Babrak Karmal, was one of the young
revolutionaries who had formed the People's Democratic Party
of Afghanistan in that same year and would later become
president of the country.

REPRESSION AND REVOLUTION

A revolution was literally thrust upon this young party in
1978. The reactionary government of Mohammad Daoud, which
was close to both the shah of Iran and the United States,
arrested almost the entire leadership of the PDPA on April
26, 1978. There had been a huge funeral procession just a
week earlier for a murdered member of the party, and the
progressive masses in Kabul saw the new arrests as an
attempt to annihilate the party just as the military junta
had done to the workers' parties in Chile in 1973.

An uprising by the lower ranks of the military freed the
popular party leader, Nur Mohammad Taraki--the soldiers
actually broke down his prison walls with a tank. Within a
day, Daoud was overthrown and a revolutionary government
proclaimed, headed by Taraki.

This uprising of the soldiers and the city masses, many of
them low-paid civil servants in a country with very little
industry, was every bit as glorious as earlier revolutions
against feudal tyranny in Europe. It held the promise of
breaking down the old traditions based on oppression and
fear.

The leaders of the PDPA were educated, although some, like
Taraki, came from very poor families. But they had been to
Kabul University, some had studied abroad, and they yearned
to bring enlightenment and material progress to Afghanistan.

Had all this happened 150 years ago, the feudals would have
been overthrown and Afghanistan welcomed into the fold of
progressive bourgeois nations. But that was before the age
of imperialism, and especially before the era of proletarian
revolutions and the Cold War.

The U.S. CIA began building a mercenary army, recruiting
feudal warlords and their servants for a "holy war" against
the communists, who had liberated "their" women and "their"
peasants. Washington spent billions of dollars every year on
the war.

The only country in the area ready to help the Afghani
Revolution was the Soviet Union. The USSR intervened
militarily. But it could not defeat this well-armed counter-
revolutionary force.

Every battle was a test not only of Soviet military might
but of the political resolve of its leaders. They finally
withdrew the troops in 1989 as the shift to the right within
the USSR became critical.

The war in Afghanistan began some 18 years ago. It continued
long after the last progressive government in Kabul fell in
1992. The recent stage has been an orgy of destruction as
rival reactionary groups fought for control of the capital,
now mostly destroyed.

More than 2 million Afghanis have been killed in this
struggle, and millions more made refugees. Now half the
remaining population--the women--have been returned to the
status of property without a single human right. A poor man
unable to pay his debts can have his hand cut off for theft.

The schools and clinics built by the revolution are in
ruins. The Taleban--a fundamentalist group supported by
Pakistan that was trained and armed by the U.S. CIA--has
taken the capital and is pursuing the war northward, toward
the border with what were the Central Asian Soviet
republics.

This is the hideous face of counter-revolution. Afghanistan
has been dragged back more than 100 years. But it was the
most modern weapons and communications systems, made in the
USA, that killed the progressive dream of a generation of
Afghani social revolutionaries.

- END -

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