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Surprise! The Soviets Nearly Won Afghan War
articles.latimes.com ^ | December 26, 2004 | Mark Kramer

Posted on 10/06/2015 6:59:21 AM PDT by Trumpinator

Surprise! The Soviets Nearly Won Afghan War

December 26, 2004|Mark Kramer | Mark Kramer is director of the Harvard Cold War studies program and a senior fellow at the university's Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian studies.

Twenty-five years ago, on Christmas Eve, Soviet troops marched into Afghanistan with the aim of restoring order in a few months. Nine years later they withdrew amid continued violence. In their wake, civil war erupted and the Taliban rose to power, providing a haven to Al Qaeda.

Critics of the U.S. military effort in Iraq often cite the Soviet experience in Afghanistan as evidence that using foreign troops to put down an insurgency is bound to fail. But that "lesson" is misleading because it depends on a depiction of the Soviet-Afghan war that is downright inaccurate.

When Soviet forces invaded Afghanistan, they initially failed to protect their logistical and communications lines. But Soviet commanders quickly corrected these mistakes and brought in better troops, including helicopter pilots trained for mountain warfare. From mid-1980 on, the Afghan guerrillas never seized any major Soviet facilities or prevented major troop deployments and movements.

When Soviet generals shifted, in mid-1983, to a counterinsurgency strategy of scorched-earth tactics and the use of heavily armed special operations forces, their progress against the guerrillas accelerated. Over the next few years, the Soviets increased their control of Afghanistan, inflicting many casualties -- guerrilla and civilian. Had it not been for the immense support -- weapons, training, materials -- provided to the Afghan guerrillas by the United States, Saudi Arabia, China and Pakistan, Soviet troops would have achieved outright victory.

Even with all the outside military assistance, Afghan guerrillas were often helpless when facing the Soviet military machine. Raids conducted by Soviet airborne and helicopter forces were especially effective.

(Excerpt) Read more at articles.latimes.com ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Russia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; russoafghanwar; scorchedearth
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Figures it might have some relevance for Syria and beyond.....
1 posted on 10/06/2015 6:59:21 AM PDT by Trumpinator
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To: Trumpinator

This is rewriting history.
The Soviets got their ass kicked in Afghanistan.


2 posted on 10/06/2015 7:03:05 AM PDT by Artemis Webb (I will not worship at the alter of Diversity.)
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To: Trumpinator

Our State department was sending the Mujahedeen junk (WWI rifles, etc.) at first. Occasionally, they’d get lucky from a mountain. Eventually Reagan, or someone close enough to him, found out what was going on. Once the Afghanis got their mitts on Stingers, the Soviets were losing about one chopper a day. Very asymmetrical warfare.

Reagan’s genius was giving the Afghanis the means to fight their own war, to protect their own land and people.


3 posted on 10/06/2015 7:03:17 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics)
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To: Trumpinator

“almost won” = lost


4 posted on 10/06/2015 7:03:20 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: Trumpinator

Then the soviets never had to fight a war under Obama’s ridiculous Rules of Engagement.


5 posted on 10/06/2015 7:03:31 AM PDT by skeeter
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To: Trumpinator

If you take what the writer says at face value, the Russians “lost” Afghanistan pretty much in the same way we “lost” Vietnam. Won most every battle. Decimated the enemy. Lost the political/propaganda war.


6 posted on 10/06/2015 7:06:33 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (Polling: The art of determining how effectively the people were fooled by your last poll.)
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To: thackney

yes almost won = lost. But the lesson here is that in the absence of outside support, scorched earth tactics are effective. Think back to the end of our own civil war. Scorched earth tactics were adopted because it was recognized that the civilian population were an important component to the war effort. Sherman may have been hated, but he also made it impossible for many civilians to support the Confederate Army.


7 posted on 10/06/2015 7:07:21 AM PDT by BJ1
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To: Trumpinator

We nearly won Vietnam too.


8 posted on 10/06/2015 7:08:40 AM PDT by ImJustAnotherOkie
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To: Trumpinator

And we almost won Vietnam if we hadn’t decided to lose it. Soooo, the authors point is what, exactly? Is it that if the Soviets had more time they would have been able to kill every man, woman and child in Afghanistan leaving nothing but earth? Or is it that somehow the Soviets were going to be able to ramp up operations in Afghanistan while trying to keep up with the Reagan military buildup of the U.S.?

Once again we see the revisionist exercise of “history in a vacuum.”


9 posted on 10/06/2015 7:09:41 AM PDT by FlipWilson
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To: Trumpinator
Most important, the Soviet war demonstrated that the Afghan guerrillas were not invincible and that well-designed counterinsurgency operations can inflict grave damage on, and spread turmoil among, the enemy.

Nonsense. No people are labeled "not invincible" until they are actually "vinced". Close REALLY doesn't count in warfare (unless we are discussing the use of hand grenades and large bomb payloads).
10 posted on 10/06/2015 7:09:55 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics)
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To: thackney

Almost . . .

Horseshoes . . .

Hand grenades . . .

I almost married Michelle Malkin, too.


11 posted on 10/06/2015 7:10:46 AM PDT by Arm_Bears (Biology is biology. Everything else is imagination.)
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To: Trumpinator

LA Times is engaging in revisionist history. It’s well documented and accepted that shoulder fired anti-aircraft missiles provided by the CIA to the Mujahideen enabled the precision for shooting down Soviet transport helicopters in mountainous terrain. Because the Mujahideen could exist indefinitely and plan attacks on villages and towns where Soviet forces camped, and then run back to mountainous regions for cover, there was no way the Soviets could ever win the peace.


12 posted on 10/06/2015 7:11:27 AM PDT by Hostage (ARTICLE V)
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To: EternalVigilance

That is how I take it. And as someone else pointed out above, “almost won” = LOST.


13 posted on 10/06/2015 7:11:34 AM PDT by Psalm 144 (Obamacons: The degenerate and venomous issue born of intimacies between Obama and neocons.)
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To: Artemis Webb; thackney; skeeter; EternalVigilance
This article was from 9/18/2001 - by the man who was responsible for the project of arming the Afghans and the author of the Reagan doctrine Dr Wheeler,written shortly after 9/11 saying the same thing. So this is not re-writing history at all. It is correcting historical forgotten details.

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.sufi/SikrHjmi4oU

How the Soviets Won in Afghanistan And how the U.S. will win

By Dr. Jack Wheeler

Article at:

http://www.politicalusa.com/columnists/guest_columns/wheeler_006.htm

Won? Huh? The Soviets lost in Afghanistan, didn't they? They were humiliated and defeated in the Afghan quagmire that the US would helplessly sink into if it invaded now, right?

Nope - the Soviets won in Afghanistan. The famed Mujahaddin had slunk back to the refugee camps in Pakistan, demoralized, dejected, and defeated. I was there, I saw it. It was August, 1986, and the Mujhaddin had given up. The Soviets had won.

But then, the Stinger missiles that Ronald Reagan had promised them finally arrived. On September 26, 1986, the first three Stingers were fired by the Muj and three Soviet aircraft were shot down out of the sky. The refugee camps erupted, the Muj poured back into Afghanistan aflame with renewed passion. Over the next 28 months, Stingers would shoot down hundreds of Soviet Hind helicopter gunships and MiG fighter jets. The skies cleared, the Muj fought with fury, and on February 15, 1989, the Soviets retreated back to the Soviet Union.

Ronald Reagan's Stinger missiles defeated the Soviets in Afghanistan, not the vaunted Mujahaddin. Before the Stingers, the Soviets had won. After the Stingers, they lost. So the question for the US military, as it contemplates sending ground forces into the "Afghan quagmire," is: what tactics did the Soviets use to demoralize and defeat the Afghan guerrillas as of August 1986?

The short answer is one word: Speznaz. Speznaz were the small commando teams of Red Army Special Forces. As long as the Soviets fought the Muj with infantry tactics - tanks and lots of ground troops - the Muj picked them off and cut them up. The early years of the war in Afghanistan were heroic - guys with single shot, bolt action, World War I (or before - I saw many Lee Enfields with dates stamped on the barrel like "1909") going straight up against the Red Army of the Soviet Union. By 1985, Egyptian and Chinese copies of Soviet weapons (like the AK-47 and RPG-7) were pouring into the Mujahaddin's hands via a US covert operation, and the Muj were confident of victory. But in the spring of 1986, I noticed a change. The Soviets had gotten smart. They switched their focus from infantry fighting to parachuting Speznaz commando teams into areas where bribed informers located Muj encampments. They would then hunt the target camp down, attacking and killing in the darkness of night. For months, the Speznaz teams did this relentlessly, so by the summer the Muj were flooding out of Afghanistan and giving up.

This provides an obvious lesson instructive for any US military assault on OBL (Osama Bin Laden) forces and their Taliban supporters. Massive Gulf War-type assaults are not the way to go. Swarm the country with teams of Navy SEALs, Green Berets, and other Special Forces. The Afghan people as a whole have been tyrannized by the Taliban worse than the Soviets, so legions of informers should be willing to provide accurate intelligence. It must be assumed that part of the deal Pakistan made with the US is the cooperation of the ISI, Inter-Services Intelligence, the Pak CIA. The Taliban were placed and kept in power through the support of the ISI, as a business arrangement between them to operate a billion dollar heroin smuggling operation. No folks know more about the Taliban than the ISI, who will now have to fork the info over. So the intel the Special Forces need will be available.

The country of Afghanistan is described as being one- quarter of an inch above the ground. No country in the world has been more smashed and beat up. The Afghan people have suffered unimaginably over the last quarter century. We do not need to add to their misery with some massive and massively destructive military attack. The Soviets' use of their Speznaz provide the blueprint for how to destroy OBL, his operation, the Taliban regime, and liberate Afghanistan from the hell it has been through.

Dr. Wheeler has been called the "real Indiana Jones" by the Wall St. Journal, the "creator of the Reagan Doctrine" by the Washington Post, and an "ideological gangster" by the Soviet press. He has traveled to 180 countries and all seven continents, and leads 3 to 4 expeditions a year.

14 posted on 10/06/2015 7:13:08 AM PDT by Trumpinator (You are all fired!!! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP!)
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To: Dr. Sivana
Reagan’s genius was giving the Afghanis the means to fight their own war, to protect their own land and people.

An unintended consequence was the formation of a global radical jihadist movement that spawned the Taliban, AQ, and now ISIS.

15 posted on 10/06/2015 7:14:08 AM PDT by kabar
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To: Trumpinator
The Soviets did almost win Afghanistan.

And this was cost.

During the nine years of fighting, more than 2.5 million Afghans (mostly civilians) were killed or maimed; millions more were displaced or forced into exile. By contrast, 14,453 Soviet troops were killed, an average of 1,600 a year.

16 posted on 10/06/2015 7:14:24 AM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: Artemis Webb
The Soviets got their ass kicked in Afghanistan.

Not until we outfitted the Mujahedin with Stingers and other weaponry. The Soviets' gunships were decimating the Afghans.

17 posted on 10/06/2015 7:16:43 AM PDT by ScottinVA (If you're not enraged...why?)
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To: Psalm 144; EternalVigilance; BJ1; ImJustAnotherOkie; FlipWilson; Dr. Sivana; Arm_Bears; Hostage
Read Dr Wheeler's article also:

Won? Huh? The Soviets lost in Afghanistan, didn't they? They were humiliated and defeated in the Afghan quagmire that the US would helplessly sink into if it invaded now, right?

Nope - the Soviets won in Afghanistan. The famed Mujahaddin had slunk back to the refugee camps in Pakistan, demoralized, dejected, and defeated. I was there, I saw it. It was August, 1986, and the Mujhaddin had given up. The Soviets had won.

So in the modern sense, these ISIS and Taliban can be beaten - as long as they don't have anti-aircraft capabilities. The USA is not into the game of scorched earth and dirty warfare (SEALS tying up Afgahns rather than shooting them dead, etc).

18 posted on 10/06/2015 7:17:33 AM PDT by Trumpinator (You are all fired!!! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP!)
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To: Trumpinator

INteresting post. Of the almost-wons of history, the most intriguing for me is that the colonials not only almost won but (if it hadn’t been for desertions on one side and a very experienced British commander on the other) should have won the Battle of Bunker Hill.

One of my two favorite books of military history:

http://www.amazon.com/Now-We-Are-Enemies-Bunker/dp/0984225668


19 posted on 10/06/2015 7:18:18 AM PDT by edwinland
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To: ScottinVA
"Not until we outfitted the Mujahedin with Stingers and other weaponry. The Soviets' gunships were decimating the Afghans." Yes. And we got our ass kicked at Pearl Harbor. Does that mean the Japanese won WW2?
20 posted on 10/06/2015 7:19:51 AM PDT by Artemis Webb (I will not worship at the alter of Diversity.)
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