Everything about Ahmad Shah Massoud totally explained
Ahmad Shah Massoud (
September 2,
1953 –
September 9,
2001) was a
Tajik Kabul University engineering student turned military leader who played a leading role in driving the
Soviet army out of
Afghanistan, earning him the nickname "Lion of
Panjshir". His supporters call him "Amer Sahib e Shaheed", translating to "Our Martyred Commander". Massoud was the most pro-Western of the anti-Soviet resistance leaders.
He became Defense Minister of Afghanistan in 1992 under President
Burhanuddin Rabbani. Following the collapse of Rabbani's government and the rise of the
Taliban regime, Massoud became the military leader of the
United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan. In September 2001 Massoud was assassinated by
al-Qaeda agents, allegedly with the complicity of
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, and the following year he was named "National Hero" by the order of Afghanistan's President
Hamid Karzai.
Early life
Ahmad Shah Massoud, the son of police commander Dost Mohammad Khan and an ethnic
Tajik, was born on
September 2,
1953 in Jangalak,
Panjshir Valley. At the age of five, he started grammar school in
Bazarak and stayed there until second grade. Since his father was promoted to be police chief of
Herat, he attended 3rd and 4th grade at the Mowaffaq School in
Herat. He also received a religious education at the "Masjed-e Jame" mosque in Herat. Later his father was moved to Kabul so he attended intermediate and senior grades at the French
Lycee of Al Istiqlal in Kabul. Since his childhood, he was considered exceedingly talented; from 10th grade on, his school acknowledged him as a particularly gifted student. His native tongue was Persian (
Dari), but he was also fluent in French,,
Pashto, and
Urdu. Furthermore, he'd a good working knowledge of
Arabic.
When studying at Kabul, in 1972, he became involved with the
sazman-i jawanan-i musalman ("organisation of Muslim youth"), the student branch of the
Jamiat Islami ("islamic society"), whose chairman was professor
Burhanuddin Rabbani. This
islamist organisation opposed the rising
communist influence that became especially evident after the
coup d'état that brought
Mohammed Daoud Khan to power in 1973: the coup was orchestrated by the
Parcham faction of the
PDPA, the Afghan communist party.
As soon as Daoud came to power, he began a crackdown against the
Islamist movements, forcing those who were not arrested to flee to
Pakistan. From here they organised the resistance movement, aided by
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who feared Daoud's revival of the
Pashtunistan issue.
In July 1975,
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, then a Jamiat member, organised an uprising against Daoud's government. Massoud was in charge of stirring up the Panjshir, and had some success in this area, but the revolt was a failure, due to lack of support among the people and Gulbuddin's inability to entice officers of the
Afghan army to join the rebels. The ensuing repression greatly weakened the islamist movement, and forced the surviving militants back to Pakistan.
In 1976, the movement split between the supporters of Rabbani, who led the Jamiat, and those of Hekmatyar, who founded the
Hezbi Islami. Massoud, who blamed the failure of the insurrection on Hekmatyar, joined Rabbani's faction.
The Soviet war
The 1978 uprising
When, in 1978, the
People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan came to power, they began to reform the Afghan society along
Marxist lines. These reforms met with an important resistance, especially as the government attempted to enforce them by arresting or simply executing those who resisted. The next result was to plunge large parts of the country, especially the rural areas, into open revolt. Islamist intellectuals such as Massoud became natural leaders for these uprisings.
The first instance of open rebellion occurred in
Nuristan, in July 1978. Massoud joined the rebels, and was present when they wiped out an armoured battalion sent by the PDPA to suppress the revolt.
Having ascertained that an uprising against the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan would be backed by the people, Massoud made his way to the Panjshir, and started a new insurrection on July 6, 1979. The fight lasted 40 days, during which the whole Panjshir, Salang, and Bola Ghain were in open revolt against
Kabul. After these 40 days Massoud's leg was injured and the troops under his command had no more weapons and ammunition. Despite 600 relief fighters from Nuristan, the government troops finally defeated them. Drawing the lessons from this failure, Massoud decided to avoid direct confrontation with the enemy and to wage a
guerrilla war. He set about creating bases and giving his men adequate training.
The Soviet intervention
By late 1979, various rebel groups controlled most of the country, and the communist government was nearing collapse. This led the Afghan president
Hafizullah Amin to call for help from his Soviet patrons, but when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, on
December 27,
1979, they killed Amin and replaced him with
Babrak Karmal.
Massoud devised a strategic plan for expelling the invaders and overthrowing the communist regime:
The first phase, or "starting point", consisted in the establishment of a guerilla force, supported by the people. The second phase would be one of "active defense" of the Panjshir stronghold, while carrying out irregular warfare. The third phase, the "strategic offensive", would see Massoud's forces taking control of large parts of Northern Afghanistan. The fourth phase was the "general application" of Massoud's principles to the whole country, and the final demise of the Afghan communist government.
From the start of the war Massoud's mujahideen proved to be a thorn in the side for the occupying Soviet forces, by ambushing Soviet and Afghan convoys travelling through the
Salang pass, causing fuel shortages in Kabul. To relieve the pressure on their supply lines the Soviets were forced to mount a
series of offensives against the Panjshir. Between 1980 and 1985, these offensives were conducted twice a year, yet despite engaging more men and hardware on each occasion, the Soviets were not able to defeat Massoud's forces. When, in 1982, the Soviets began deploying major combat units in the Panjshir numbering up to 12,000 men, Massoud pulled his troops back into subsidiary valleys, where they occupied fortified positions. When the Soviet columns advanced onto these positions they fell into ambushes and suffered heavy casualties. When the Soviets withdrew, they handed over their positions to Afghan army garrisons, that the Mujahideen attacked and recaptured one by one.
In 1983, the Soviets offered Massoud a truce, which he accepted. He put this respite to good use, extending his influence to areas outside Panjshir, mostly in
Takhar and
Baghlan Provinces.
This expansion prompted Babrak Karmal to demand that the Red Army resume their offensives, in order to crush the Panjshir groups definitively. However, Massoud had received advanced warning of the attack through his agents in the DRA government, and he evacuated all 30,000 inhabitants out of the valley, leaving the Soviet bombings to fall on empty ground. Eventually, after 1985, no more offensives were carried out against the Panjshir.
With the end of the Soviet-Afghan attacks, Massoud was able to carry out the next phase of his strategic plan: to expand the resistance movement and liberate the northern provinces of Afghanistan. In August 1986 he captured Farkhar in Takhar Province, and in November, his forces overran the headquarters of the DRA 20th division at Nahrin in Baghlan province, scoring an important victory for the resistance. This expansion was also carried out through diplomatic means, as more mujahideen commanders were persuaded to adopt the Panjshir military system.
The Soviet army and the Afghan Army were defeated in numerous small engagements between 1984 and 1988, but many of them remain either undocumented or unknown to outside sources. However, the strength of the Afghan resistance caused the last Soviet soldier to leave Afghanistan on February 2nd, 1989 after
Mikhail Gorbachev decided to put an end to the Soviet military presence.
Guerrilla Warfare
Despite almost constant attacks by the Red army and the Afghan army, Massoud was able to increase his military strength. Starting in 1980 with a force of less than 1,000 ill-equipped guerillas, the Panjshir valley mujahideen grew to a 5,000-strong force by 1984. These forces were divided into different types of units: the locals (
mahalli) were tasked with static defense of villages and fortified positions. The best of the
mahalli were formed into units called
grup-i zarbati (shock troops), semi-mobile groups that acted as
reserve forces for the defense of several strongholds.
A different type of unit was the mobile group (
grup-i-mutaharek), a lightly equipped
commando-like formation numbering 33 men, whose mission was to carry out
hit-and-run attacks outside the Panjshir, sometimes as far as 100 km from their base. These men were professional soldiers, well-paid and trained, and, from 1983, they could provide an effective strike force to attack government outposts. Uniquely among the mujahideen, these groups wore uniforms, and their use of the
pakul made this headwear emblematic of the Afghan resistance.
Massoud's military organisation was an effective compromise between the traditional Afghan method of warfare and the modern principles of guerilla warfare that he'd learned from the works of
Mao Zedong and
Che Guevara. It was considered as the most effective of all the resistance movements.
In July 1983, Massoud created the
Shura-ye-nazar (council of supervision), a military council that would eventually coordinate the actions of 130 mujahideen commanders from seven provinces of northern Afghanistan:
Parwan,
Laghman,
Kapisa,
Kunar,
Badakshan, Takhar,
Baghlan and
Kunduz . This council existed outside the fold of the Peshawar parties that were prone to internecine rivalry and bickering, and served to smooth out differences between resistance groups, due to political and ethnic divisions. It was the predecessor of the future "Northern Alliance".
Relations with the party headquarters in
Peshawar were often strained, as Rabbani insisted on giving Massoud no more weapons and supplies than to other Jamiat commanders, even those who fought little. To compensate for this deficiency, Massoud could rely on the revenue drawn from exports of
emeralds and
lapis lazuli, that are traditionally exploited in Northern Afghanistan.
To organise the support for the mujahideen, he established an administrative system that enforced law and order(
nazm) in areas under his control. The Panjshir was divided into 22 bases(
qarargah) that were governed by a military commander and a civilian administrator and each had a
judge, a
prosecutor and a
public defender.
Massouds policies were implemented by different committees: an economic committee was charged with funding the war effort. The health committee provided health services, assisted by volunteers from foreign
humanitarian non-governmental organizations, such as
Aide médicale internationale. An education committee was charged with the training of the military and administrative
cadre. A culture and propaganda committee and a judiciary committee were also created.
The Fall of Kabul, April 1992
After the
departure of Soviet troops in 1989, the PDPA regime now headed by
Mohammad Najibullah, proved unexpectedly capable holding its own against the mujahideen. Backed by a massive influx of weapons from the Soviet Union, the Afghan armed forces reached a level of performance they'd never reached under direct Soviet tutelage, and were able to prevent all major cities from falling.
By 1992 however, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the regime began to crumble. Food and fuel shortages undermined the capacities of the Army, and a resurgence of factionalism split the regime between
Khalq and
Parcham supporters.
A few days after it was clear that Najibullah had lost control, his army commanders and governors arranged to turn over authority to resistance commanders and local notables throughout the country. Joint councils or shuras were immediately established for local government in which civil and military officials of the former government were usually included. In many cases prior arrangements for transferring regional and local authority had been made between foes. and killed many civilians. After a series of negotiations in
Kabul and in
Peshawar, arranged by the power players of the
Afghan Civil War - Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Iran - the warring factions failed to find a peaceful solution. Massoud was one of the most important figures in the Afghan Civil War.
Massoud ordered a retreat from Kabul on April 7th, 1996 after another round of intense bombardment from the Taliban and its Pakistani supporters in the ISI.
Resistance against the Taliban
As the Taliban took control of around 90% of Afghanistan, the warring factions had no choice but to form an alliance called the '
United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan'. Because most factions were from the north of Afghanistan, the Western media called them the 'Northern Alliance'. The alliance consisted of warlords and tribal leaders like Haji Rahim, Commander Piram Qol,
Haji Mohammad Mohaqiq, General Dostum, Qazi Kabir Marzban, Commander Ata Mohammad and General
Malik. From the east were Haji
Abdul Qadir, Commander Hazrat Ali, Commander Jaan Daad Khan and Abdullah Wahedi. From the northeast areas, Commander Qatrah and Commander Najmuddin participated. From the southern provinces, there were Commander Qari Baba, Noorzai, and Hotak. From the western and southwest provinces came General Ismail Khan, Doctor Ibrahim, and Fazlkarim Aimaq. From central Afghanistan Commander Anwari, Said Hussein Aalemi Balkhi, Said Mustafa Kazemi, Akbari, Mohammad Ali Jawed, Karim Khaili, Commander Sher Alam, and Abdur Rassul Sayyaf were members of this union. The alliance consisted of warlords who had been ousted by the locals from all regions of Afghanistan. The alliance was supported by
India because of their rivalry with
Pakistan,
Iran because of their opposition to a strong
Sunni Taliban government,
Russia and
Tajikistan because of the growing Islamic movements in
Chechnya and
Central Asia.
In 1998, the CIA offered Afghanistan's anti-Taliban opposition leader a substantial bounty for the capture of Osama bin Laden, dead or alive.
(External Link
) The claim was further supported by former US president
Bill Clinton in an interview with New York Times in 2001. Clinton said, "At the time, we did everything we can do ... I authorized the arrest and, if necessary, the killing of Osama bin Laden, and we actually made contact with a group in Afghanistan to do it."
In April 2001,
Nicole Fontaine invited Massoud to address the
European Parliament. In his speech, he warned that the Taliban had connections with Al-Qaeda, and that an important terrorist attack was imminent. The US and European governments paid no attention to these warnings.
Death
Massoud was the target of a suicide attack which occurred at Khwaja Bahauddin on
September 9,
2001. The attackers were two Arabs, Dahmane Abd al-Sattar and Bouraoui el-Ouaer, who claimed to be Belgians originally from Morocco. However, their passports turned out to be stolen and their nationality Tunisian. The assassins claimed to want to interview Massoud and set off a bomb in a belt worn by the cameraman while asking Massoud questions. The explosion also killed Mohammed Asim Suhail, a Northern Alliance official, while Mohammad Fahim Dashty and
Massoud Khalili were injured. The assassins may have intended to attack several Northern Alliance council members simultaneously. Bouraoui was killed by the explosion and Dahmane was captured and shot while trying to escape. Massoud was rushed after the attack to the
Indian Military hospital at Farkhor, Tajikistan which is now
Farkhor Air Base. The news of Massoud's death was reported almost immediately, appearing in
BBC, European and North American newspapers on
10 September 2001. It was quickly overshadowed by the
September 11, 2001 attacks, which proved to be the terrorist attack that Massoud had warned against.
The timing of the assassination, two days before the
September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, is considered significant by commentators who believe
Osama bin Laden ordered the assassination to help his Taliban protectors and ensure he'd have their protection and cooperation in Afghanistan. The assassins are also reported to have shown support for bin Laden in their questions of Massoud. The Pakistan
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and Mujahideen leader
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, an Afghan
Wahhabi Islamist, have also been mentioned as a possible organizers or assisters of the assassins. Massoud was a strong opponent of
Pakistani involvement in Afghanistan. The assassins are said to have entered Northern Alliance territory under the auspices of the
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf and had his assistance in bypassing "normal security procedures."
The French secret service revealed
October 16,
2003 that the camera used by Massoud's assassins had been stolen in December 2000 in Grenoble, France from a photojournalist, Jean-Pierre Vincendet, who was then working on a story on that city's Christmas store window displays. By tracing the serial number that appeared in the camera, the FBI was able to determine Vincendet as the original owner. The French secret service and the FBI then began working on tracing the route that the camera took between the time it was taken from Vincendet and the Massoud assassination.
After death
In 2001, the Afghan Interim Government under president
Hamid Karzai awarded him the title of "Hero of the Afghan Nation". Massoud is the subject of
Ken Follett's
Lie Down With Lions, a novel about the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Many documentaries, books and movies have been made about Ahmad Shah Massoud.
Massoud was married with four daughters and a son, and the family has a great deal of prestige in the politics of Afghanistan. Of his six brothers,
Ahmad Zia Massoud is the current vice-president of Afghanistan and Ahmad Wali Massoud is the ambassador to the
United Kingdom.
A bigger mausoleum is being built in Panjsher to replace the smaller one.
The myth of a lion
Massoud's nickname, the "Lion of Panjshir" is a rhyme and play on words in
Persian, which alludes to the strength of his resistance against the Soviet Union, the mythological exaltation of the lion in
Persian literature, and finally, the place name of the
Panjshir Valley, where Massoud was born. The place name of "Panjshir" Valley in
Persian means (Valley of the) Five Lions. Thus, the phrase "Lion of Panjshir" which in
Persian is "Shir-e-Panjshir," is a rhyming play on words.
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