U.S.S.R and the UNITED STATES of AMERICAN
IN AFGHANISTAN: POLICY ANALYSIS
This work makes an examination of Soviet policy in Afghanistan as well as U.S. Policy in Afghanistan and how these two have affected and been affected by each other. The country of Afghanistan is one characterized by impassable land and yet, this land is the home to the most ancient of trade routes, specifically the Silk Road. Furthermore, Afghanistan is geopolitically important in terms of the oil market. It is easy to understand why the Soviet Union and the United States hold such great an interest in the future of the county of Afghanistan. Policy decision in the United States relating to Afghanistan has been historically affected by Soviet presence in the country and will continue to be in the future whether it be due to the presence of the Taliban, or the geopolitical strategy of the United States relating to Afghanistan.
THE U.S.S.R and the UNITED STATES of AMERICAN
IN AFGHANISTAN: POLICY ANALYSIS
OBJECTIVE
The objective of this work is to describe the geopolitical significance of Afghanistan before and during the Cold War and to analyze Russian and Soviet policy in Afghanistan. Finally, this work will look to the nature and limits of the United States role in the Afghan war.
INTRODUCTION
Afghanistan is a region characterized by mountains and desert terrain that are practically impassable and is a country that has been dominated by the culture of Islam since 882 a.D. The Soviet war that occurred in Afghanistan lasted approximately nine years and was a conflict that centered upon the Soviet military support of the Marxist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), the government of Afghanistan and the Mujahideen insurgents that were trying to overthrow the government in Afghanistan. The work of Singleton (1981) relates "Soviet-Afghan contacts began when Amir Amanullah Khan expelled British control during the Third Afghan War.
The work of Dr. Seth Singleton entitled: "The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan" relates that the: "...foreign policy of the Brezhnev Politburo, consistent since 1965, has four major interconnected elements: detente with the West, defined as the pursuit of mutually beneficial trade and strategic arms control; consolidation and coordination of the Socialist community of communist nations under Soviet leadership; military growth of all types of forces; and expansion of Soviet and allied Socialist influence and presence in Asia and Africa as opportunity allows." (1981) Singleton explains that while the view of Americans does not acknowledge it to be so:...the first three elements have been considerably more successful than the last." (1981) the Soviet Union has led in Afghanistan since 1979 with the Taliban maintaining rule since 1996 until "its collapse in December 2001 at the hands of the U.S.-led military campaign."
I. GEOPOLITICAL SIGNIFICANCE of AFGHANISTAN
Hermann Kreutzmann writes in his work "Paper 2: The Significance of Geopolitical Issues for Development of Mountainous Areas of Central Asia" which was presented at an International Workshop in Dushanbe, Tajikistan during June 2005: "In the Central Asian context geopolitics have played a major role for socioeconomic development in the arena between different spheres of influence." (2005) Kreutzmann goes on to relate that at the turning of the 19th into the 20th century Lord Curzon, the British Viceroy in India, "identified the Central Asian countries and territories in his famous statement as 'pawns on a chessboard." (2005) the specific countries in question at this time were those of: "Transcapian, Transoxania, Persia and Afghanistan all located in what is described as the "landlocked are of Central Asia." (Kreutzmann, 2005) it is noted in this work as well that competition between Great Britain and Russia involved competition between both of these superpowers "for dominance on the valuable markets in the urban oases of the Silk Road such as Kashgar and Yarkand. The geopolitical of importance lies in the fact that Afghanistan is the "...crossroads of trade and energy routes." (Democratization and Security in Central Eurasia, 2007)
II. SOVIET POLICY in AFGHANISTAN
The work of Fred Halliday, an expert in dispelling myths surrounding the Cold War states that the "Soviet Union played no instigatory role" in the "decline and eventual overthrow of the feudal regimes which were governed by Haile Selassie and the Shah." According to the work of Andre Kuczewski entitled: "Threat from the East? Soviet Policy from Afghanistan and Iran to the Horn of Africa-Book Reviews" relates the belief that the actions of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan have been: "...erroneously understood. Moscow's decision to install a pro-Soviet regime in Kabul by sheer force of arms, while clearly not laudable, was undertaken for perceived security reasons, principally to neutralize the possible growth of Chinese influence along its southern border. It was not intended as a springboard from which the Kremlin could easily pounce on the Middle East oil producers." (1984)
The location of Afghanistan has historically denied the country the needed resources for political and economic stability. This resulted in Afghanistan seeking the aid of the Soviet Union in defending the country against the insurgents. The intervention that was provided by the Soviet Union negatively affected domestic politics in the Soviet Union and is stated to be "one of the key factors in the delegitimization of the Communist Party rule."(Savranskaya, 2001) the intervention of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan was requested by the government in Afghanistan repeatedly. There are however differing opinions such as the one expressed in the work of Johnston (1991)
In a report entitled: "U.S. Policy in Afghanistan: Time for a Change" which states that: "The U.S.S.R. has been a major aid donor for Afghanistan since the 1950s and probably approved in advance the April 1978 coup by the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan. (1991) According to the work of Halliday: "...the move not only backfired in Moscow's face, it also 'seriously worsened the international and regional climates.'" the study of Halliday is stated to be: "...bitterly critical of the United States for inventing false saber-rattling images of Soviet intentions in the general proximity of the Middle East" while at the same time Halliday also relates that the Soviet Union has provided: "...strong encouragement to anti-communist sentiment in the Islamic world at a time of growing Islamic militancy, and provided the West with the perfect issue upon which to orchestrate an international campaign against the U.S.S.R."
III. NATURE and LIMITS of the ROLE of the U.S. AFGHANISTAN
The role of the United States in Afghanistan has clearly been one of a proactive nature, which some researchers believe to be even in the nature of an 'alarmist'. For example, the work of Kuczewski (1984) relates that: "President Ronald Reagan's strongly worded statement that the U.S.S.R. is solely responsible for detonating the rockslide of revolution and turmoil throughout the Near East (Moscow "underlies all the unrest that is going on," is his exact comment) is the logical continuation of a Cold War stock-in-trade mentality which obsessively prefers "to concentrate upon the simplest explanatory factor, the Soviet threat." (Halliday, 1984; p. 23). In the period between 1999 and 2003 the United States provided $1 billion (U.S.) dollars in aid to Afghanistan. Kuczewski relates that the work of Halliday: "...finds no available evidence for this alarmist signal and contends that these scare tactics are merely clever devices aimed at subtly persuading a cost-conscious congress into reluctantly accepting increased public funds for military expenditure." Kuczewski (1984) does acknowledge that while the Soviet Union has not failed to take advantage of the developments this is still: "...quite different from claiming that the Soviet Union has stage-managed events...It also overstates the degree of current Soviet control over these countries and the benefit that Moscow derives from its alliances with them." (Halliday, 1984)
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