{"id":375,"date":"2010-02-22T22:54:23","date_gmt":"2010-02-22T21:54:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wydawnictwopodziemne.rohnka5.atthost24.pl\/?p=375"},"modified":"2012-04-14T19:20:06","modified_gmt":"2012-04-14T18:20:06","slug":"charlie-wilson-i-wojna-w-afganistanie-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/staging.wydawnictwopodziemne.com\/en\/2010\/02\/22\/charlie-wilson-i-wojna-w-afganistanie-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Charlie Wilson and War in Afghanistan"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>On the 10<sup>th<\/sup> February 2010 died Charlie Wilson, a colourful member of the House of Representatives, one of the very few American politicians who actively supported the struggle against communist aggression, first in the Seventies in Nicaragua, and then almost throughout the next decade, in Afghanistan.\u00a0 To honour this anticommunist, we are publishing again the article from March 2008 (in an extended version).\u00a0 This text was triggered by a film about Charlie Wilson.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Charlie Wilson\u2019s War <\/em>is an enjoyable film and, by Hollywood standards, historically accurate to an extent.\u00a0 Directed by Mike Nichols (of <em>The Graduate<\/em> fame) it tells the story of a democratic congressman from Texas who, in between rowdy parties, cocaine, alcohol, and <em>Playboy Bunnies<\/em>, thanks to exceptional determination and ingenuity, managed to gradually increase the CIA budget earmarked to help Afghan mujahidin.\u00a0 This in turn, was supposed to have led the soviet army in Afghanistan to such significant losses that there was nothing left for Gorbachev to do but withdraw with his tail between his legs.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Mike Nichols is a good director so we can forgive his left leaning tendencies.\u00a0 Nichols caught very well the relationship central to the story, the strange romance between the ultra-conservative and God-fearing anticommunist, Joanne Herring (Julia Roberts, wooden as always) and charming, left wing <em>bon vivant<\/em>, Charlie Wilson (Tom Hanks).\u00a0 In reality, Herring played a bigger part than that shown in the film.\u00a0 She went to Afghanistan in person in the spring of 1980 with professional film makers (including her own son) and brought back some shocking material, which, thanks to her wide contacts in the Republican party, attracted the eye of George Bush (senior) and Ronald Reagan who were at the time engaged in the race for the Republican presidential nomination.<\/p>\n<p>Herring, Wilson and the CIA agent by the name of Gust Avrakotos (Philip Seymour Hoffman, brilliant as always), ushered in a complicated secret scheme, whereby modern arms, shoulder launched <em>Stingers<\/em> in particular, would be delivered to the mujahidin via Israel, Egypt and Pakistan.\u00a0 Negotiations with the Israelis, Egyptians and general Zia are the best part of the film.<\/p>\n<p>Charlie won the war in Afghanistan, got his medal and today stands accused of creating the \u201cFrankenstein monster of terrorism\u201d, because the struggle of the mujahidin against infidels is supposed to have awoken Islamic extremism.\u00a0 It was in Afghanistan under the CIA\u2019s umbrella that one Osama bin-Laden allegedly met Ayman al-Zawahiri and thus al-Qaeda was born.\u00a0 As far as I know, there are no documents proving that the CIA trained both terrorists but it appears highly likely. \u00a0On the other hand, Alexander Litvinenko, poisoned by fsb agents in London, was adamant that al-Zawahiri was also trained by kgb.<\/p>\n<p>Let\u2019s go further back in time and let us look more closely at the causes of the soviet armed intervention.\u00a0 How did it happen that the soviets found their own Vietnam in Afghanistan?<\/p>\n<p>Communists took power in Afghanistan in a bloody coup in May 1978.\u00a0 In February 1979 American ambassador to Kabul, Adolph Dubs, was kidnapped.\u00a0 Kidnappers were tracked down to a hotel room and surrounded.\u00a0 They were about to give themselves in when a kgb adviser, Sergey Batrukhin, ordered an immediate attack.\u00a0 As a result, the unknown kidnappers and the ambassador were killed.\u00a0 What actually happened is unclear to this day and is likely to remain so, as one of the very few sources of our knowledge is the extremely suspicious so called <em>Mitrokhin Archive<\/em>.\u00a0 With the murder of their ambassador, United States were cut off from any credible sources of information about the developments in Afghanistan.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, the highest echelons of Afghan party erupted into an open conflict, as often is the case among gangsters.\u00a0 Karmal and Najibullah, leaders of one of the factions, escaped to Moscow in fear of retaliations, whilst the two leaders of the victorious faction, Taraki and Amin, immediately entered into another power struggle, this time against each other.\u00a0 On the 20 March 1979, Taraki formally asked Moscow for help.\u00a0 First and foremost he needed military assistance for his regime but he also asked for support in getting rid of Amin.\u00a0 Kosygin warned him that soviet intervention was not a good idea but promised 500 advisers and 700 paratroopers \u201cto secure the Bagram airport\u201d, whilst Brezhnev warned Taraki that Amin was preparing an assassination attempt.\u00a0 On his return to Kabul, Taraki invited Amin to a meeting.\u00a0 Amin agreed but only on condition that his security would be guaranteed by the soviet ambassador.\u00a0 If it all sounds like a script for <em>The Godfather <\/em>movie than there is a good reason for that \u2013 it\u2019s all about gangsters.\u00a0 Negotiations dragged along until finally Amin received the guarantees he demanded. \u00a0Obviously, he did not believe one word of soviet assurances so during the arranged meeting between \u201cthe President and the Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan\u201d a full scale gunfight erupted \u2013 as is often the case between gangsters.\u00a0 There are many conflicting versions of these events but one thing is certain: on the 10<sup>th<\/sup> October 1979 it was announced that \u201cthe great teacher, great genius, great leader\u201d Taraki \u2013 was dead.<\/p>\n<p>As we can see, the events in Afghanistan followed a well known bolshevik pattern.\u00a0 Something very similar happened in Nazi occupied Warsaw during WWII, when one soviet agent, called Mo\u0142ojec, murdered another soviet agent, called Nowotko, and replaced him as first secretary of their party, only to be subsequently murdered.\u00a0 Nowotko inevitably entered the pantheon of communist saints martyred by \u201cfascists\u201d.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>In response to disturbances in Kabul, Amin executed 20 thousand prisoners without trial.\u00a0 The total number of victims of red terror <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">before<\/span> soviet intervention remains unknown but is estimated to be above 30 thousand in Kabul alone.\u00a0 Outside Kabul, though, neither Taraki nor Amin had much control.<\/p>\n<p>It is true to say that throughout the history of that troubled kingdom, every regime in Kabul had little control over far away provinces.\u00a0 The power of the King was based on a tacit acceptance of the elders of various quarrelsome tribes that it was better to have a monarch than perpetual conflict.\u00a0 The King\u2019s role was limited to that of an arbiter in never ending disputes rather than a governor.\u00a0 The former Prime Minister, Daud, who overthrew the monarchy, failed to instigate the promised reforms because he lacked backing outside Kabul and a few larger towns.\u00a0 One could say that, without the support of tribal elders, power in Afghanistan is by necessity limited to control of larger towns and strategic roads between them.\u00a0 That was exactly the kind of power the bolshevik gangsters in Kabul enjoyed in 1979.\u00a0 Why then, did soviets invade?<\/p>\n<p>On the night of Christmas Eve in 1979, 80 thousand red army soldiers crossed the border of \u201cfriendly\u201d Afghanistan, invited by \u201cpresident\u201d Amin, who was immediately murdered by a Spetsnaz unit codenamed <em>Zenit<\/em>.\u00a0 Soviets brought Karmal from Moscow and installed him as the new president.\u00a0 In the first phase of the conflict the red army destroyed every resistance but after a few months it was obvious that, regardless of the overwhelming military force, regardless of the total air domination, soviets only controlled 20% of the territory.\u00a0 Why did they invade then?\u00a0 When during talks in Moscow \u2013 I repeat, in March 1979 \u2013 Taraki asked for soviet military assistance for his government, Brezhnev replied: \u201cWe have examined this question from all sides, weighed the pros and cons, and I will tell you frankly: We must not do this. \u00a0It would only play into the hands of enemies \u2013 both yours and ours.\u201d\u00a0 What had changed between March and December 1979?<\/p>\n<p>The most popular answer to the question of the causes of soviet invasion is this: Brezhnev wished to place his man on the seat of power in Kabul because he could not trust Amin (there is also a more fanciful version of this, i.e. Amin was a CIA agent&#8230;).\u00a0 I can easily believe that no one trusted Amin in Moscow but why didn\u2019t they simply order 700 elite paratroopers at the airport to arrest him?\u00a0 Especially so since Amin actually repeated the same demands for military assistance as Taraki did before him.\u00a0 One does not invade a neighbouring country to get rid of a friendly despot, even if one does not trust him; but one surely does not take such a step when one thinks that \u201cit would only play into the hands of enemies.\u201d\u00a0 \u201cEnemies\u201d, or simply the West, had no interest in Afghanistan whatsoever.\u00a0 When in March 1979 soviet air force bombed Herat in retaliation for the massacre of 20 soviet military advisers, President Carter did not bat an eyelid, even though 24 thousand people died in Herat raids.\u00a0 In other words, there were no reasons to invade, when soviets could easily continue to \u201chelp the brotherly Afghani nation\u201d from a distance.<\/p>\n<p>One often hears another hypothesis attempting to explain the causes of the invasion, the one that presupposes that Amin\u2019s regime would have been overthrown without the brotherly soviet assistance because the mujahidin forces were growing day by day.\u00a0 The best answer to that was given by Kosygin during the same Kremlin talks with Taraki:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cWe believe it would be a fatal mistake to commit ground troops.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cThe entry of our troops into Afghanistan would outrage the international community, triggering a string of extremely negative consequences in many different areas.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cOur common enemies are just waiting for the moment when Soviet troops appear in Afghanistan. This will give them the excuse they need to send armed bands into the country.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cIf our troops went in, the situation in your country would not improve. \u00a0On the contrary, it would get worse. \u00a0Our troops would have to struggle not only with an external aggressor, but with a significant part of your own people.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Could this be more unequivocal?\u00a0 So once again, what happened between March and Christmas of 1979?<\/p>\n<p>As late as in the beginning of December, Yuri Andropov wrote a letter to Brezhnev to express his unease about the situation in Afghanistan and proposed overthrowing Amin\u2019s regime by using paratroopers stationed in Bagram airport.\u00a0 However, when by the 11 December the decision to invade has already been made and the chief of staff, Ogarkov, tried to convince the politburo that intervention is not necessary and could prove counterproductive, the same Yuri Andropov interrupted him rudely: \u201cStick to military affairs! \u00a0We, the Party, and Leonid Ilich [Brezhnev] will handle policy! \u00a0You have been invited here not to express your opinions but to note down the instructions of the politburo and make sure that they are implemented.\u201d\u00a0 These are the words of the famously cold, controlled and calculating Andropov who, only a few days earlier, presented exactly the same views as Ogarkov dared to express now.<\/p>\n<p>We can see that both the military and the political leaders were fully aware that the invasion was unnecessary and could prove very costly (I\u2019d say that Kosygin\u2019s predictions rank among the most accurate I have ever heard).\u00a0 The usual explanation to this puzzle is that they were old fools who were losing grip on reality in their drunken decrepitude; that Brezhnev, who saw the Prague intervention in 1968 as a great success, wanted to have his \u201clast hurrah\u201d, and such like nonsense.\u00a0 The trouble with such elucidations is that the words of the top soviet brass betray a very good grasp of the situation and yet, regardless of their judgment, they were ready to accept the \u201cnegative consequences in many different areas\u201d.\u00a0 But why?<\/p>\n<p>And what has the other side got to say?\u00a0 The closest to the \u201cofficial\u201d American version of events is the opinion expressed by Zbigniew Brzezinski in 1998:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cWe didn&#8217;t push the Russians to intervene, but we knowingly increased the probability that they would&#8230;\u00a0 That secret operation was an excellent idea.\u00a0 It had the effect of drawing the Russians into the Afghan trap and you want me to regret it?\u00a0 The day that the Soviets officially crossed the border, I wrote to President Carter: we now have the opportunity of giving to the USSR its Vietnam war.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Hold on a moment.\u00a0 Didn\u2019t I just watch a film about Charlie Wilson and his persistent struggle to organise help for the mujahidin?\u00a0 Didn\u2019t they show that no American assistance reached Afghanistan; that general Zia ul-Haq wanted to support the mujahidin but Americans blocked his initiatives?\u00a0 So was Nichols wrong and was there a \u201csecret operation\u201d mentioned by Brzezinski, which provoked soviet invasion?\u00a0 That would be surprisingly clever manoeuvring, not what I would expect from the Carter-Brzezinski team.\u00a0 But when we look a little closer, we can see that Brzezinski could only mean the presidential directive of 3 July 1979, authorising covert propaganda operations against the communist regime in Kabul. \u00a0So what did they do?\u00a0 Dropped leaflets?\u00a0 I am puzzled as to how this was of assistance to the fighting Pushtuns&#8230;\u00a0 In Nichols\u2019s film we have a following exchange on the subject:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Charlie Wilson: You mean to tell me that the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan is to have the Afghans keep walking into machine gun fire &#8217;til the Russians run out of bullets?<br \/>\nGust Avrakotos: That&#8217;s Harold Holt&#8217;s strategy, it&#8217;s not U.S. strategy.<br \/>\nCharlie Wilson: What is U.S. strategy?<br \/>\nGust Avrakotos: Well, strictly speaking, we don&#8217;t have one. But we&#8217;re working hard on that.<br \/>\nCharlie Wilson: Who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;?<br \/>\nGust Avrakotos: Me and three other guys.<\/p>\n<p>Hollywood fiction is probably closer to the truth in this instance than fiction served by Zbigniew Brzezinski, so let\u2019s return to reality.\u00a0 And the reality is that all soviet leaders, from Brezhnev and Kosygin to Andropov and Ogarkov, did not want the intervention but decided to go for it anyway.\u00a0 Why?<\/p>\n<p>According to Anatoly Golitsyn, the long term strategy initiated by Shelepin and Mironov, and continued by Andropov, was supposed to create over a period of many years a false opposition movement, and then trigger off a series of dramatic events to create an impression of decline and fall of communism, when power could be safely transferred to the \u201copposition\u201d.\u00a0 But would a collapse of communism be credible without a military disaster?\u00a0 Moreover, should communism begin to \u201cfall\u201d in the presence of politicians such as Jimmy Carter or Zbigniew Brzezinski, they were likely to drop everything to ensure its survival.\u00a0 It is therefore possible that Andropov changed his mind because he realized the enormous potential of such action in the context of the long term strategy, to which he was clearly committed.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>First of all, invading Afghanistan during the presidential campaign in America must have been calculated to strengthen the antisoviet voices in the States.\u00a0 In 1979 Ronald Reagan was already a well known figure, he had two successful stints as Governor of California under his belt and was standing for presidency for the third time, but he wasn\u2019t standing as a favourite.\u00a0 His anticommunist rhetoric could not escape Andropov\u2019s attention, though.\u00a0 From Carter\u2019s administration he could only expect empty gestures like boycotting the Moscow Olympics.\u00a0 (At the time, that boycott was seen as political miscalculation on Carter\u2019s part, as he inadvertently antagonised his left wing constituency.\u00a0 I\u2019m not sure this analysis was correct; lefties like nothing better than a good boycott.)<\/p>\n<p>Secondly, prolonged, festering conflict \u2013 and only that kind of war can be fought in Afghanistan \u2013 is an ideal background to demonstrate one\u2019s weakness.\u00a0 Afghanistan, with its ethnic mosaic of mutual hatred, with its history of internal strife, with its inaccessible valleys and lofty mountain passes, well hidden caves, severe and unforgiving climate and unguarded borders, is an ideal ground for guerrilla warfare.\u00a0 As far as I know, no one has ever managed to claim control over territories making up modern Afghanistan.\u00a0 I guess the soviet strategists knew that; well, even Brezhnev and Kosygin seem to have known that and God knows they weren\u2019t the brightest of sparks.<\/p>\n<p>Were Anatoly Golitsyn right in his assertion that the long term strategy leading to the \u201ccollapse of communism\u201d was instigated as early as 1958, an event as momentous as the bloody war in Afghanistan must have been a very important part of that plan.<\/p>\n<p>But is it really possible?\u00a0 Could responsible adults embark on a project of such magnitude with that degree of callousness?\u00a0 Is it possible that experienced, elderly leaders could decide to send thousands of their compatriots to death with the specific intention of suffering a spectacular defeat so that they could create an image of decline and weakness?\u00a0 I must say I find it very difficult to believe.\u00a0 And yet, I can see no other conceivable explanation for this bizarre invasion.\u00a0 I can see no other plausible reason for this peculiar intervention, which was flying in the face of political logic, which was directed against own interests and undertaken in spite of better judgment.\u00a0 The most popular explanation, that commies are political fools, seems to me inadequate and unsatisfactory.\u00a0 Intelligence is not a necessary precondition for being effective in politics.\u00a0 If it were so, than Khrushchev, who was a moron, would never have managed to outmanoeuvre Kennedy, who was extremely bright and quick witted.\u00a0 Communists certainly are fools \u2013 and thank God for that! what would it be like if they were intellectuals? \u2013 but they are equipped with a Method, a tried and tested Method of winning power and maintaining it at any cost.\u00a0 Their stupidity can often be attested in the somewhat less than perfect execution of their complex schemes but, unfortunately for the remaining free people in the world, this very rarely impedes their progress because of the regrettable but universal \u201cwish to be deceived\u201d, which is prevalent among their opponents.<\/p>\n<p>And what about \u201cGood Time Charlie\u201d?\u00a0 He would have had nothing to do with the \u201cwish to be deceived\u201d, of course not.\u00a0 Wilson, Herring, Avrakotos \u2013 all acted in the way that honest and honourable people ought to act: they fought the enemy.\u00a0 Does the hypothesis formulated above imply that they were puppets in the hands of bolsheviks?\u00a0 No, it doesn\u2019t and they weren\u2019t.\u00a0 Just like President Ronald Reagan, who surely was never a puppet in anyone\u2019s hands but was also the best President of the United States in the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century.\u00a0 I would suggest a rather different conclusion.\u00a0 The Method allows communists to achieve an incredible feat of imperceptibly harnessing their sworn enemies to their own chariot, as J\u00f3zef Mackiewicz demonstrated on the example of Alexander Solzhenitsyn. \u00a0Should this demoralise us, anticommunists?\u00a0 I don\u2019t think so.\u00a0 Perhaps because I don\u2019t feel demoralised; because I believe strongly that an accurate description and deep understanding of the enemy is a necessary condition for formulating any successful policy.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On the 10th February 2010 died Charlie Wilson, a colourful member of the House of Representatives, one of the very few American politicians who actively supported the struggle against communist aggression, first in the Seventies in Nicaragua, and then almost throughout the next decade, in Afghanistan.\u00a0 To honour this anticommunist, we are publishing again the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[58,3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-375","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-golicyn-i-inni","category-michal-bakowski"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Wydawnictwo Podziemne - Charlie Wilson and War in Afghanistan - Golicyn i 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