The last time Abdul Karim saw Soviet forces he was a teenage mujahideen
fighter shivering on an Afghan mountainside, clutching his Kalashnikov
and wondering if winter or the Russians would bring death first.
“But then I heard (mujahideen commander) Ahmad Shah Massoud over the
walkie talkie saying the Russians had withdrawn, and we could come
down,” Karim told AFP in Afghanistan’s legendary Panjshir Valley, where
the Red Army was bled into retreat.
It would be several more years before the Soviets left Afghanistan for
good on February 15, 1989 having suffered the loss of 15,000 men — many
in the unforgiving mountain passes of Panjshir.
But for Karim, peace was short-lived — Afghanistan fractured into a
ruinous civil war, and the young fighter was back on the frontlines.
Thirty years later, Afghans who experienced the bloody aftermath of the
Soviet withdrawal fear a repeat of that chaos as another invader — the
United States — negotiates an exit from its longest war.
The parallels are not lost on veterans whose dogged resistance brought a superpower to its knees.
It was in the stronghold of Panjshir, north of Kabul, that Massoud lured
the Soviets into high, narrow mountain passes where his loyal
mujahideen lay in wait.
Massoud, dubbed the “The Lion of Panjshir,” is venerated not just in the
valley — where his mujahideen rebuffed nine Soviet offensives — but
across Afghanistan, where he is a celebrated national hero.
His death at the hands of Al-Qaeda assassins, two days before September
11, 2001, is mourned every year and is marked by an official holiday.
The road through Panjshir is punctuated by towering images of his
likeness and the rusted skeletons of Soviet tanks, helicopters and heavy
guns — “a graveyard of empires,” another former mujahideen, Mohammad
Mirza, told AFP.
Three decades on, talk of Massoud’s military cunning — outmaneuvring
tanks and fighter helicopters through ambush and attrition — still
evokes immense pride from his devoted foot soldiers.
“Nine times they tried (to take the valley), and nine times they
failed,” boasted another former mujahideen, who asked not to be named
because he is now an Afghan police commander.
Flicking open his phone, he scrolled through grainy photographs of his
younger self at a feast with fellow mujahideen after the Red Army’s
capitulation.
“Of course we celebrated, like all countries celebrate their great victories,” he said, gazing wistfully at the photos.
“But always I remember those we lost. I cannot forget.”
Wali Mohammad was 14 when he joined the mujahideen. He said every
anniversary was “a reminder that anyone who invades this country will
face the same fate.”
But the victory was bittersweet: it failed to deliver the lasting peace that has eluded Afghanistan for four grinding decades.
“After the Russians left, we were sure peace was coming. But our
neighbors, and regional powers, had their own agendas,” the 52-year-old
told AFP.
Karim, today burly and with a snowy beard, was also circumspect about
the mujahideen’s fabled victory, even before a crowd of admiring young
Panjshiris reared on tales of their invincibility.
“We were happy that one enemy had left, but we also knew that war was
not over,” Karim said, twirling prayer beads and dressed in a
traditional wool ‘pakol’ hat and heavy scarf to shield him from the
cold.
Overlooking a sweeping ravine, the corroded hulk of a Russian troop
carrier lies semi-submerged in snow, spray-painted with a rousing
slogan: “Long live Afghanistan. Death to the Taliban.”
Panjshir, with its fierce warriors and natural defenses, was largely
spared the violence that plagued Afghanistan after the Soviet expulsion,
and remains one of its most peaceful provinces.
But the looming prospect of a US withdrawal and Kabul riven with
infighting and uncertainty as the Taliban takes center stage, has stoked
worry that history could repeat itself.
Massoud’s son, Ahmad, said his father “had his doubts” about the haste
of the Soviet withdrawal, fearing the country was too divided and the
government too weak to keep Afghanistan together.
“He was concerned that this might actually lead Afghanistan into a
greater chaos, which is exactly what happened,” 29-year-old Massoud told
AFP via WhatsApp.
“He strongly believed that the Russians were leaving Afghanistan too soon.”
Graeme Smith, from the International Crisis Group, said the mujahideen
understood that without a solid plan once the enemy leaves “the inferno
of violence that follows might be much worse.”
“They remember the brutal civil war of the early 1990s, and they don’t want to repeat that,” he told AFP.
Sitting atop a Russian tank abandoned on the roadside, Mirza bitterly
recalled the violent legacy that trailed the vanquished Soviets.
“The day they left was both a sad and happy day for us,” the softly-spoken former mujahideen said.
“Now that the US has decided to leave, we fear the same thing could happen again.”
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