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Published byCamron Fleming Modified over 9 years ago
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Afghanistan Case study in changing geopoliticsgeopolitics Monarchy until 1973 (Zahir Shah) –On top of ethnic and tribal structurestructure 1973-1978: Republic led by Muhammad Daud Khan 1978: Communist coup--People’s Democratic Party –Significant reforms (replace tribal structure, land reform, reduced power of Islamic clerics) –Instability (tribal, business, and Islamic resistance) –Possibility of government’s fall
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Soviet Occupation December 1979, 85,000 Soviet troops invade Afghanistan Install communist regime Disparate resistance groups –Islamic groups, tribal groups, business groups Mujihadeen—Islamic resistance Brutal, long struggle until 1989 –Soviets withdraw from Afghanistan beginning in 1988
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Proxy War During Soviet occupation (1979-1989) CIA joins Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to give significant aid to Islamic resistance –Largest covert aid program since Vietnam War –1980-1987 as much as $15 billion –Weapons (stinger missiles), supplies, training –Orchestrated out of Pakistan by ISI—Pakistan’s security agencyPakistan Why Islamic resistance? –Evidence of commitment of Islamic fighters –Incite Islamic unrest in Soviet UnionSoviet Union –Iran counterbalance Sunni groups vs. Iran’s Shi’i IslamShi’i
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Anatomy of Mujihadeen Several components: Afghani Islamic groups in Afghanistan Islamists recruited mostly from Arab countries (Algeria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, etc.)—the Afghanis Taliban (students) and similar groups –Afghani refugees in camps in Western Pakistan (mostly Pashtun)camps –Saudi aid and expertise—2500 madrassas Wahhabi Islam –CIA financial aid –Overseen by ISI, Pakistan’s security organization Looking to create an ally in the west
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Post-1988 Afghanistan Soviet withdrawal in 1988-9 Fall of Soviet Union, 1991 U.S. withdraws much funding and interest in Afghanistan –No longer of cold war importance Afghanistan’s Communist government falls in 1992 Mujihadeen and ethnic groups struggle to take power Rise of Taliban from 1994 with extensive ISI backing –1996 capture Kabul –Control ~90% of Afghanistan until recently –Recognized as legitimate only by Pakistan and Saudi Arabia
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bin Laden’s role During Soviet occupation (1979-1989): leader of Harakat ul-Ansar (volunteers movement) –Recruited non-Afghanis (mainly Arabs) to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan –Funding: his own fortune, CIA, ISI –CIA expertise, training through ISI –Engaged in guerrilla warfare, terrorism against Soviets with support of U.S., Pakistan, Saudi Arabia –Notion that Islamic resistance defeated the Soviet Union and brought about its collapse
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More bin Laden Soviets defeated; next threat to Islam: U.S. Bin Laden returns to Saudi Arabia –Has established new organization: al-Qa’ida (the base) –Many other Afghanis return to their home countries bin Laden critical of –U.S. air strikes and sanctions against Iraq –U.S. support of Israel –U.S. backing of pro-western autocrats in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Algeria –Saudi government allowing U.S. troops on the Arabian peninsula
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U.S. troops in peninsula Some 5,000 troops and equipment in Saudi Arabia –4,000 in Kuwait, 1,300 in Bahrain, 50 in QatarQatar To enforce no fly-zone in Iraq To protect against a coup in Saudi Arabia
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bin Laden moves His strident protests against Saudi government Leaves for Sudan in 1991 (taking ~$250 million in assets) 1993 first WTC bombing Saudi government strips him of Saudi citizenship in 1994 –1995 bomb at Saudi National Guard base in Riyadh 1996, Taliban gain control of Afghanistan 1996 U.S. and Saudi Arabia pressure Sudanese government, he is expelled Returns to Afghanistan under protection of Taliban and Mullah Omar (related by marriage) –1996 truck bomb near Dhahran air base (19 American soldiers killed)
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Further attacks 1998 embassy bombings in Tanzania, Kenya (212 killed, most Kenyan and Tanzanian) –Clinton launches cruise missile attacks against bin Laden camps in Afghanistan 2000, U.S.S. Cole bombing off Yemen (15 killed) 2001, WTC and Pentagon (thousands killed) U.S. begins war against Taliban regime and al-Qa’ida Returns its attention to Afghanistan as a strategic area –Except, now fighting bitterly against its former proxies (mujihadeen) –Russia and Putin now allies Further U.S. operations in Yemen, Sudan, Iraq?
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