Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 16 – Now that
Vladimir Putin has opened the way for the use of Central Asian gastarbeiters in
Russian forces fighting in Syria and perhaps elsewhere (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/10/moscow-to-send-central-asian.html), Central Asians
are recalling the last time Moscow established and used “Muslim battalions” in
this way.
Most historians talk about the use
of national or even Muslim units in the Soviet military only during the Russian
Civil War or World War II. At all other
times, it is almost universally assumed, Moscow did what it could to prevent
the formation of any unit, no matter how small, dominated by non-Russians in
general and Muslims in particular.
But in fact, the Soviet government
created precisely such a unit in 1979 to fight in Afghanistan. A rare discussion
of that unit was posted online several months ago (russian7.ru/post/gde-voevali-musulmanskie-batalony/), but it has been
given new prominence today by the CentrAsia portal (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1508140380).
(This Russian discussion is based on
a 2012 article by Jiayi Zhou, a RAND research,
entitled “The Muslim Battalions: Soviet Central Asians in the Soviet-Afghan
War,” The Journal of Slavic Military Studies, 25:3 (2012): 302-328.)
On March 18, 1979, Nur Mohammed
Taraqi, the Afghan strongman, telephoned Aleksey Kosygin, the chairman of the
Council of Ministers of the USSR, and asked him to send soldiers of the
indigenous nationalities of the Central Asian republics of the Soviet Union to
defeat a 400-man unit of Iranian soldiers dressed in civilian clothes who had
penetrated Herat.
“We want,” Taraqi said, “that you
send to us Tajiks, Uzbeks, and Turkmens … since all of these nationalities
exist in Afghanistan. Let them put on Afghan clothes, Afghan insignia, and no
one will recognize them. This will be very easy work, in our view. The
experience of Iran and Pakistan shows that this work is easy. It serves as a
model.”
The Soviet prime minister reportedly
wasn’t enthusiastic about this idea, but five weeks later, on April 26, 1979,
the Soviet general staff issued special directive No. 314/2/0061 about the
formation of just such a special detachment of the GRU “which later received
the name, the Muslim battalion.”
This unit, the 154th
separate detachment for special assignment within the GRU consisted of 538
Uzbeks, Tajiks, and Turkmens. To recruit it, Soviet officers interviewed more
than 5,000 soldiers, a possible indication of the difficulty of finding
soldiers from Muslim nationalities to fight against their co-religionists in
Afghanistan.
After its formation, the special
Muslim detachment was give training quite typical for the Soviet forces at that
time, the sources say. Eduard Belyaev, a
Russian author who has studied this unit, says that its members do not
correspond to the stereotypes about Muslim troops as portrayed in the Soviet
film, “The Ninth Company.”
The battalion’s training and
enthusiasm are said to have been good, but Moscow did not hurry to send them to
Afghanistan. Finally, by a decision of the Politburo, they were sent from a
base near Tashkent to the Bagram field in Afghanistan on the night of December
9-10, 1979, shortly before the full Soviet invasion began.
A little more than two weeks after
arriving in Afghanistan, the Soviet Muslim battalion took part in the storming
of the Taj-Bek palace where Afghan leader Amin was living. Initially, that task
had been assigned to the KGB, but it was unable to achieve the goal – and
Moscow sent in the Muslim battalion. It then became a regular GRU unit and was joined by a second Muslim battalion.
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