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Soviet invasion of Afghanistan

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Cold War series
1947-1953
1953-1962
1962-1991
Military History of Soviet Union
Military History of Afghanistan
Conflict Soviet-Afghan War
Date 1979-1989
Place Afghanistan
Result Afghan/Mujahadeen victory
Combatants
Soviet Union Afghanistan
Strength
175,000 Soldiers Unknown
Casualties
•15,000 Killed,
•53,000 Wounded
•90,000 Killed,
•90,000 Wounded,
•Roughly 1.3 Million Civilian deaths
Total Military Losses
68,000 180,000
The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was a 10-year war fought between the Soviet Red Army, Afghan, and foreign fighters in Afghanistan. The 'shooting' war is generally held to have started December 24, 1979. Soviet troops ultimately withdrew from the area between May 15, 1988 and February 2, 1989. The Soviet Union officially announced that all of its troops had left Afghanistan on February 15.

The war was regarded by many as an unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country by another. The United Nations General Assembly passed United Nations Resolution 37/37 on November 29, 1983, which stated that the Soviet Union forces should withdraw from Afghanistan. However, others supported the Soviet Union, regarding it as coming to the rescue of an impoverished ally, or as a pre-emptive war against Islamist terrorists. The CIA invested US$2.1 billion over a 10-year period to create an anti-Soviet resistance.

For the history of the Soviet Union's presence in the country, see: Democratic Republic of Afghanistan

Table of contents
1 Timeline of the intervention
2 Political and military motivations
3 Political and military goals
4 War tactics and history
5 Summary
6 Cinema
7 See also
8 Further reading
9 External links

Timeline of the intervention

Various dates are given for the beginning of the war, depending on what specific event is held to be the beginning. At the beginning of 1978 the Communist regime took power in Kabul. In October 1979, the Soviet Union began mobilization. In December 1979, the final airlift of combat troops in support of the assault against the government took place. The timeline below offers a list of significant events during this period.

Prelude to intervention

Preparation for intervention

Start of Intervention

Political and military motivations

A number of theories have been advanced for the Soviet action. Some believe the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was intended to prevent constituent SSRs in the southern Soviet Union from breaking away. At the time of the invasion, Iran had recently staged an Islamic revolution, deposing a United States-supported government. The newly instituted government was no more friendly to the Soviet Union than to the United States. This signified an additional axis of power in Eurasian politics (along with the Soviet Union itself, the People's Republic of China, and NATO), much to the Soviets' dismay.

After its revolution, Iran had sufficient religious, political, and economic motivations to expand revolution northward into the Soviet Union and/or eastward into Afghanistan. A similar Islamist revolution appeared to have been developing in Afghanistan. Iran (with a population of 65 million) was technologically sophisticated and well armed with Western (particularly American) military technology. Invasion of an impoverished, technologically unsophisticated Afghanistan that supplied an eastern flank to Iran was considered by most political and military strategists to be preferable for the Soviet Union to any overt action against Iran.

Both theories are supported by public statements made by Leonid Brezhnev at the time declaring the Soviet Union had a right to come to the assistance of an endangered fellow socialist country (and presumably its own fellow SSRs). This assertion of a right is now known as the Brezhnev Doctrine.

Western analysts at the time also believed that the Soviet Union's presence in Afghanistan was motivated by a desire to bring its forces closer to a strategic choke-point: the mouth of the Persian gulf, the conduit for most of the world's oil supertankers. Afghanistan is separated from the Arabian Sea by the sparsely populated Pakistani province of Baluchistan. Had there been a breakup of Pakistan or a favorable regime change, Soviet forces would have access to Baluchi or Pakistani ports. This is consistent with accounts from the Mitrokhin archive, according to which the KGB had supported seccessionist/nationalist groups in Pakistan, and intensified its support after the invasion.

Political and military goals

Afghanistan is primarily rural and agrarian. The political form of government at the time was tribalistic. Strong tribal ties held the social order together. The Soviet Union had two major options for successful control: Either goal supported the Brezhnev Doctrine, solidified the southern frontier of the Soviet Union, and provided a strategic counter-point to a hostile Iran.

It is also important to look at the Soviet presence in Afghanistan as encompassing a larger historical Russian goal of obtaining access to a deep-water port that is accessible year-round and is not strategically isolated, as are all other Russian ports such as Vladivostok and Arkhangelisk which are frozen a good portion of the year and the Baltic and Black Seas which are easily blockaded via Jutland and the Bosporous respectively. Had the Soviets succeeded in securing Afghanistan and perhaps created another Central Asian SSR, Karachi would be only a little over 200 miles away, allowing for virtually unrestricted access into the Indian Ocean.

War tactics and history

Afghans used the heliograph as a secure low-tech communication method. Afghans also used Stinger missiles in order to take down helicopters, which proved effective. The first one was shot down in this way on December 16, 1982.

Summary

Soviet tactics utilized the following military and economic efforts. These tactics, among other things, resulted in some of the following:

Cinema

See also

Further reading

External links



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... about and ephemera from the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Also a virtual "recreation" of the Soviet Union. Information about and ephemera from the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Also a virtual "recreation" of the Soviet Union.
... Russian military were originally developed to face the Soviet Union's Cold War enemies. Discusses Soviet naval, land, and air armaments. The weapons of ... Russian military were originally developed to face the Soviet Union's Cold War enemies. Discusses Soviet naval, land, and air armaments.
... awards, titles, and other distinctions of the former Soviet Union. Histories, images, and sales information. Information about ... awards, titles, and other distinctions of the former Soviet Union. Histories, images, and sales information.
A historical look at the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, 1979-1989. A historical look at the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, 1979-1989.
... the military and labor awards of the former Soviet Union...." "Dedicated to providing quality information about the military and labor awards of the former Soviet Union...."
This collection of Soviet and Russian television at the Library of Congress features an eclectic amalgam of Soviet programming since 1986 which provides a record of the glasnost era's dynamic effects on Soviet society and television. This collection of Soviet and Russian television at the Library of Congress features an eclectic amalgam of Soviet programming since 1986 which provides a record ...
Includes collection of soviet, transdniestrian and some mongolian awards with descriptions, images ... materials of interest to phalerists and collections of soviet memorabilia. Includes collection of soviet, transdniestrian and some mongolian awards with descriptions, images ... materials of interest to phalerists and collections of soviet memorabilia.
An online exhibit on how Soviet-American relations were conducted between the two governments ... two societies. Also discusses inner workings of the Soviet system of government. An online exhibit on how Soviet-American relations were conducted between the two governments ... two societies. Also discusses inner workings of the Soviet system of government.
The Soviet Communist party evolved from the Russian Social Democratic ... wing formed by Vladimir Lenin in 1903. The Soviet Communist party evolved from the Russian Social Democratic ...
Transcript of the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev's enunciation of the doctrine that no Soviet satellite state would be allowed to separate from the East Bloc. Transcript of the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev's enunciation of the doctrine that no Soviet satellite state would be allowed to separate from ...

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