Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 16 – The ruling United Russia Party wants to revise the negative views
many Russians have about the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and show them
that it was a positive move, something important, Duma deputy Dmitry Sablin
says, “not only for veterans of the Afghan war but for all of us, for our common
memory.”
Such
a revision, Moscow commentator Yevgeny Trifonov says, would be entirely
consistent with Vladimir Putin’s efforts to promote Russian history as a string
of unalloyed successes, but it would be both absurd and downright dangerous for
the government to decide to do so (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5BED8FE880553).
Such a step would be absurd because,
in his words, “the Afghan war of 1979-1989 was unique in that the introduction of
Soviet forces was absolutely senseless, absolutely unjustified from any point
of view, and absolutely inexplicable” even for those who have studied it in any
detail.
And it would be dangerous, Trifonov
suggests, because it could easily become a precedent for recognizing as “just”
de-kulakization during collectivization, the terror famine and the terror of
1937 because some would argue “this is important for the veterans of the NKVD”
and its officers.
The seizure of Afghanistan did not
have any military importance, the commentator continues. Nor did it have any
political significance. And attempts to justify it ideologically at the time as
assistance to “a fraternal Marxist-Leninist regime” only called attention to
how absurd and internally consistent that idea was in this case.
That regime asked Moscow to
intervene and for months Moscow refused; but finally, it gave in, invaded and
killed the Afghan leader who asked for assistance, Trifonov says. “Such crimes
in the 20th century were committed only by putschists in underdeveloped
countries, but they killed their own presidents and not foreign ones.”
According to the Moscow commentator,
“it is impossible to understand why the Soviet leadership threw forces into
Afghanistan to support an absolutely unpopular regime,” especially since the Soviet
Union “did not have the resources to secure the construction int his backward
country of anything like a contemporary economy and social milieu.”
After ten years, the loss of more
than 15,000 of its own troops, and the deaths and forced migration of hundreds
of thousands of Afghans, the Soviet forces left “without having achieved
anything.” Now, however, the Putin
regime wants all this to be recognized as “a just war” and something Russians
should be proud of, a position as absurd and dangerous as the original idea.
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