The Soviet Victory That Never Was (3)

Summary – The Soviet Union came closer than many think to achieving its objectives in Afghanistan. How it almost managed to win — and why it ultimately did not — should serve as a lesson for U.S. policymakers today.

Could the Soviet Union have won its war in Afghanistan? Today, the victory of the anti-Soviet mujahideen seems preordained as part of the West’s ultimate triumph in the Cold War. To suggest that an alternative outcome was possible — and that the United States has something to learn from the Soviet Union’s experience in Afghanistan — may be controversial. But to avoid being similarly frustrated by the infamous “graveyard of empires,” U.S. military planners would be wise to study how the Soviet Union nearly emerged triumphant from its decade-long war.

There are, of course, some fundamental differences between the Soviets’ war in the 1980s and the U.S.-led mission today. First, the Soviet Union intervened to save a communist regime which was in danger of collapsing due to resistance to its comprehensive and often traumatic social-engineering programs. Unlike the Soviets and their client regime, the United States is not interested in forcibly removing the burkas from Afghan women, shooting large numbers of mullahs for resisting secularization, or reprogramming the political and social mores of Afghans. Instead, Washington has a far more limited objective: namely, ensuring that Afghanistan remains an inhospitable base for extremist groups hoping to attack the West.

Second, the Soviet army was prepared to fight a total war in Afghanistan, taking heavy losses in men and machinery and inflicting sweeping violence on the Afghan people. No U.S. commander would be willing to wage such a war today; the U.S. military realizes that making a desert and calling it peace is no way to curtail an insurgency.

But the Soviet experience should not be entirely ignored. When Soviet troops pulled out of Afghanistan in February 1989, many in the United States expected to see the mujahideen quickly topple the pro-Moscow government in Kabul. This did not happen. The regime led by Mohammad Najibullah, whom Moscow installed as president in 1987, remained in control of the country. For a moment, it appeared as if the Kremlin had successfully left in power an Afghan government and army that could withstand the Soviet withdrawal.

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See Also:

Colvin’s tale not full Afghanistan story

Our soldiers could teach MPs a thing or two about duty and honour

Notes:

This is an excellent column and explains in detail why Afghanistan is such a problem for the west.  It’s a “must read” if you truly want to have some new ideas regarding how we can bail our troops and prevent bloodshed when we do so.  Read it all.

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One Response to The Soviet Victory That Never Was (3)

  1. Mac says:

    An excellent article, indeed. Another difference between the UN sanctioned counter-insurgency in Afghanistan and the Soviet campaign is the tactics and equipment of the Soviets were WWII vintage whereas the NATO forces are more adaptive and using techniques and technologies which simply didn’t exist in the 1980s.

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