West quickly agreed to back Afghan resistance in 1980: Files

Release of secret papers after 30 years come as Western allies prepare another year of conflict in Afghanistan.


Afp December 30, 2010
West quickly agreed to back Afghan resistance in 1980: Files

LONDON: Western powers met in secret soon after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and formed plans to back mujahideen resistance, according to British files from 1980 released Thursday.

Senior officials from Britain, France, then West Germany and the United States met in Paris on January 15 that year to discuss the West's response to the December 24, 1979 invasion. The National Archives' release of the secret papers after 30 years in the vaults comes as Western allies prepare to enter another year of conflict in Afghanistan, battling insurgents.

US national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski was among those at the Paris meeting, as was Britain's cabinet secretary Robert Armstrong, the top civil servant. He said support for the mujahideen should be coordinated by "our friends" -- a euphemism for MI6, Britain's foreign intelligence agency, and its peers from the allies.

Armstrong reported from the Paris meeting that while they wanted to avoid sparking a border war with Pakistan in the volatile tribal region, there was still much they could do. He said that the powers at the meeting concluded "it would be in the interests of the West to encourage and support resistance".

As long as there were Afghans willing to continue resisting the Soviet invasion and as long as the Pakistanis were willing to see their territory used, resistance should be supported, said Armstrong.

"That would make more difficult the process of Soviet pacification of Afghanistan, and would make that process take much longer than it otherwise would," he said. Armstrong added that "the existence of a guerilla movement in Afghanistan would be the focus of Islamic resistance, which we should be wanting to continue".

He suggested that organising support for the resistance could best be done by "a representative of our friends" meeting officials from their US and French counterparts. The mujahideen resistance ultimately led to the growth of radical Islam in Afghanistan, which nurtured the growth of the al Qaeda network.

Following the September 2001 attacks in the United States, Nato forces overthrew the Taliban regime in Afghanistan but are still fighting an insurgency which has rear bases in Pakistan. 2010 has proved to be the deadliest year on record in the campaign with the deaths of more than 700 foreign soldiers, or an average of two a day.

COMMENTS (2)

G.Haider | 13 years ago | Reply Westerners always blamed Pakistan for the creation of Taliban. Whereas they are the one who created this monster. When Soviets invaded Afghanistan in early 80s, western powers created, swelled and supported the idea of Jihad against the invading infidels in world's Muslim community for the next decade. In fact, misinterpreted the Islamic terminology Jihad to put a tough resistance against Russians. They created, trained and provided arms and ammunition to mujahedeen with the help of a military dictator, whose rule was prolonged and protected by them against the wishes of the people of Pakistan. And after Soviet's withdrawal from Afghanistan they left the war Torne region just with armed jihadi militias, doctrine of strict Islamic law and hatred against the infidels. Pakistan already with instable economy was bearing the burden of 4 million Afghanis left to rot by the westerners. For next decade Pakistan was slapped with sanctions after sanctions while Afghanistan was left to see a bloody civil war and then the Taliban regime. What Pakistan received in return for supporting the Western allies during the last 30 years, first as an ally against Russians in Afghanistan and then in the war against terrorism is a totally ruptured very fabric of Pakistani society, economic loss of around US $ 50 billion and sacrifice of around 30000 lives of both security personnel and civilians in the war against terrorism and still Pakistan is bad guy!
Naz Ebr | 13 years ago | Reply All these 'secrets' have been told before. In a CNN report broadcasted few days before the US invasion in Afghanistan in 2001, the covert and publicaly known meetings of former US security adviser with key European officials were revealed. Long before the report, after a few months of the Mujahidden resistance in 1979, the US and its allies including Pakistan and Suidi Arabia could not keep their strategic support to the militants, a secret anymore! Every sane human of the world realized the western support for the militants who fought the Soviet invasion. The classic documents has nothing new to tell us. Whoever has made these files public has been probably inspired by the WikiLeaks.
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