Preface
The bootlickers of the old and new imperialism are treacherously
struggling to nip our popular government in the bud. They think that since we took over
power in ten hours, they would, perhaps, capture it in fifteen hours. But they must know
that we are the children of history, and history has brought us here.
Nur Muhammad Taraki, President of the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, August 2, 1978
Woe to the children of history. Still exultant four months after
the coup d'etat that brought his Marxist party to power in Afghanistan, Nur Muhammad
Taraki could boast to an assembly of army officers that he and his comrades had been
raised to their position by transcendental historical forces. Fifteen months later, Taraki
was dead-assassinated by his own Portege Hafizullah Amin-and a month after that the Soviet
Union landed an invasion force in Kabul in a vain effort to try to resuscitate Taraki's
faltering revolution with an infusion of troops and military hardware. History, it would
seem, was a harsh and capricious parent. Or perhaps it was Taraki's Marxist vision of
history that was defective. With every passing year, it is more difficult to recall or
comprehend that as late as 1978 many people still believed that history had a motive
force, that it moved inexorably forward in progressive, dialectical, even sentient
fashion. Though many of his comrades, Hafizullah Amin included, may have had a more
cynical take on the Marxist vision of history, there is good reason to think that Taraki
at least believed this much to be true: that history was moving toward a resolution and
that he was part of the vanguard of that process.
Like all parents, history, in fact, did have lessons to teach, but they
were of a local nature and not the sort of universal lessons that Taraki had in mind when
he spoke in August 1978. There were many such lessons, including one about how Afghans
treat outsiders who try to control their homeland and another about how they feel when
people in authority interfere in their domestic affairs. And Taraki himself would have
benefited, if he had only listened, from the many tellings and retellings of the stories
of rulers who trusted too much in those around them. Afghan history is replete with moral
tales from which value can be gained. But Afghan children, like all children, often do not
want to listen, and this was certainly the case with the People's Democratic Party of
Afghanistan; but so too was it true of its enemies-the tribes and ethnic coalitions that
rose up in the first months against the new regime and the Islamic militants who
eventually succeeded in taking control of the anticommunist resistance until they too lost
out to the Taliban militia, which controls Kabul and much of Afghanistan today. This book
is about the Marxists and their enemies and about how they all came to ruin in part at
least because of their failure to heed the lessons of the past. As different as they were,
the factions that fought for supremacy in the first, pivotal years of the Afghan conflict
shared this in common: in their eagerness to seize the present and shape the future they
all forgot both about the past and what it might teach them and about their own
society-its contours, its potential, its limits.
My objective here is to place the history of the present against the
history of the past in order to gauge what happened in Afghanistan and why the forces that
in the first years of the war seemed between them to control the destiny of the country
have all been destroyed. The originative form of history for Afghans is the genealogy, and
I have framed my own exercise in historical understanding in genealogical terms. Through
genealogies Afghans figure not only relatedness but, more important, their moral
responsibilities in the world. Through scores of generations, people have learned how to
comport themselves on the basis of genealogies. Genealogies are the blueprint, the map,
the skeleton of relationships. Friendship, authority, love, even enmity are volatile until
they have been transmuted into genealogical form, which traditionally and in the first
instance is what Afghans-particularly tribal Afghans-"think with" and act
on. Likewise, in the world of Islam and the world of governance, genealogies have long
played the same central role. In mystical and clerical circles, genealogies are kept that
indicate the passing on of knowledge and the relationships of spiritual and scholarly
succession. In the calculations of rulers, would be and real, claims to authority have
historically had to have a genealogical basis to be given credence, and pretenders without
such credentials have tended to be short-lived.
My own claim to credence is also based on a genealogical approach to
Afghan history. This approach is premised on the belief that we can learn much that would
otherwise be obscure by looking at individual lives and trying to understand their
connection to larger historical and cultural processes. In all that has been written about
the war in Afghanistan, there has been little of note about individuals or about how the
war was seen from ground level. The lives that I look at are not those of"ordinary
people." Though attention to the experiences of noncombatants, women in particular,
is needed, I was not in a position to conduct the necessary research to produce such a
work. I was able to examine the war from the vantage of men who participated in it and who
sought to achieve through political and armed engagement goals that they viewed at the
time as transcendent.
As in my first book, Heroes of the Age: Moral Fault Lines on the
Afghan Frontier, which looked at three legendary figures from the turn of the previous
century, I am concerned with men in positions of authority to whom other men looked for
leadership. But few of the men involved in this war could be viewed as"heroes"
in the sense I used the term previously. This was a war of attrition, a war in which
relations of loyalty and enmity repeatedly shifted. It was also a war of changing purposes
and principles that were confusing and alienating to those viewing the war from a
distance, as they were for those directly affected. Even in Afghanistan, on the edge of
the global, this is an overexposed age of hype and bombast, of exaggerated promises and
deflated expectations. It is not a time conducive to the perpetuation of myth or the
growth of new legends. But the men of today have still had to contend with the myths and
legends of the past, and this book focuses on how three leaders who came to prominence in
the first years of the war sought to square with the past as they endeavored to shape the
future.
Genealogies are also about origins, about how things got to be the way
they are based on the way they"originally" were. In this book, I use a
genealogical method to try to uncover the origins of the jihad. The war in
Afghanistan went through a number of phases, and to understand those phases one must also
understand what came before. The starting point for this book is the inqilab-i saur,
the Saur Revolution of 1978, which brought Taraki and his allies to power. But in order to
understand the significance of this event and the demise of its revolutionary promise, it
is important to consider prior understandings of the role of rulers in Afghan society and
their relationship to those they ruled. The second phase involved the first tribal and
regional insurrections (qiyyam) against the Marxist state, from late 1978 through
early 1980, which were precipitated by a variety of factors and organized on different
social bases in different areas. This period was brief, as Islamic political parties took
control of the local rebellions and provided their organizational and ideological stamp to
the scattered purposes of insurrection. This period of party control is the phase of
jihad, of"struggle in the path of Islam." But, far from the implication of that
term, there was little unanimity as to what the struggle was about or how it should be
directed. To the contrary, this period was characterized by internecine struggle as much
as it was by conflict with the government in Kabul, and the final objective of this book
is to make sense of how and why jihad proved as inadequate a conceptual framework for
unifying the Afghan people as"revolution" and"insurrection" had
previously shown themselves to be.
Before Taliban is in many respects a sequel to my first book,
and so it is only natural that the people I thanked in the acknowledgments of that book
deserve thanks here as well. Rather than list all these names a second time, I will simply
express my gratitude to those people again for their various and sundry acts of kindness
and assistance, while singling out several whose names have come up before but who had a
special impact on this book. These include Nancy Hatch Dupree, who has been a friend and
inspiration for more than twenty-five years and who generously made available to me
photographs from the Khalilullah Enayat Seraj collection. Nasim Stanazai introduced me to
Qazi Muhammad Amin, the party leader whose life forms the principal focus of Chapter Six,
and made it possible for the interviews with Qazi Amin to take place. I also want to thank
once again Sayyid Shahmahmood Miakhel, my longtime friend and collaborator, who has
assisted me from the start of my Afghan research in 1982 to the present and who helped
arrange a trip through eastern Afghanistan in 1995, which is described in the first note
in Chapter Eight.
In addition to those people I acknowledged before, additional friends
and relations have provided help more recently, and I would like to take the opportunity
to mention them. In particular, I want to thank Samiullah Safi, who shared with me the
stories from his youth and war years that are the foundation of Chapters Four and Five,
and the aforementioned Qazi Muhammad Amin. Neither of these men had to take time to talk
with me, and I believe that each did so because he honestly wanted the story of the war in
Afghanistan told with some sensitivity and accuracy. In trusting in me, an American whose
personal agenda and political orientation they could only guess at, these two men took a
leap of faith. I cannot guarantee that I have told the story the way they would have
wanted it told, but I can say that I have done my best to minimize my personal biases and
have tried to relate their histories faithfully.
In addition to these men, without whom this book would not have been
possible, I also want to acknowledge other Afghans who agreed to shorter interviews and
whose testimony has helped flesh out historical aspects of this work. These include, for
their help on the situation in Pech and Kunar, Aman ul-Mulk, Dr. Delawar Sahre, Commander
Abdur Rauf Khan, Commander Abdul Wahhab, Yusuf Nuristani, Ghazi Chopan, and Hashim Zamani;
for their assistance on various aspects of Islamic belief and practice in Afghanistan,
Agha Jan Senator, Hazrat Abdul Shokur, Muhammad "Ali and Sayyid Muhammad
Sahibzadgan, Maulavi Abdul Hakim Zhobul, Dr. Abdul Qader Suleimankhel, Wasil Nur, Mirajan
Saheqi, Maulavi Fazel Hadi Shinwari, Sayyid Hakim Kamal Shinwari, Maulavi Abdul Ahad
Yaqubi, Maulavi Muhammad Gul Rohani and Maulavi Ahmad Gul Rohani, Shams-ul Haq Pirzada,
Sayyid Hissam, Muhammad Qayem Agha, Maulavi Amirzada, Fazel "Ali Mujadiddi,
Engineer Ahmad Shah, Abdul Sabur Azizi, Sayyid Isaq Gailani, Nur Agha Gailani, Sayyid
Mahmud Gailani, Rohullah, Qari Taj Muhammad, Sayyid Abdullah Tora, Maulavi Abdul Aziz,
Maulana Qiyammuddin Qashaf, Sayyid Mahmud Hasrat, Maulavi Habibullah from Logar, Abdul
Bari Ghairat, Maulavi Wula Jan Wasseq, Maulavi Jalaluddin Haqqani, and Dr. Inayatullah
Eblagh; and, for their assistance on Afghan matters generally, Dr. Zahir Ghazi Alam, Qasim
Baz Mangal, Sayyid Shamsuddin Majrooh, Sayyid Bahauddin Majrooh, Ustad Khalilullah
Khalili, Abdul Jabar Sabet, Rasul Amin, Hakim Taniwal, and Haji Zaman. I also want to
thank the party leaders who granted interviews to me, including Hazrat Sibghatullah
Mujadiddi, Maulavi Muhammad Nabi Muhammadi, Engineer Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, and Maulavi
Yunus Khales. I apologize to anyone whom I have left out and for any errors of omission or
commission that might be present in this work.
During the writing of this book, I have benefited from being able to
spend a year in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at the School of American Research. Doug Schwartz
and his staff provided a wonderful setting to complete this work, and I offer my thanks to
them and to my fellow scholars who shared the year in Santa Fe with me: Alan Goodman,
Roberta Haines, Nathan Sayer, Frank Salomon, and Ana Celia Zentella. In the final stage of
manuscript preparations, I was able to incorporate useful comments and advice from various
anonymous reviewers and especially from Margaret Mills, whom I met in Kabul while
searching for a used bicycle to buy and who has remained a friend and valued colleague
ever since. My first exposure to Afghan oral history was at a talk given by Margaret in
Kabul in 1976 on Herati versions of the Cupid and Psyche myth. Ever since that time,
Margaret has provided inspiration through her own work and her insightful editorial
comments.
I also want to acknowledge the financial assistance of the National
Endowment for the Humanities, which provided the fellowship that allowed me to spend the
year at the School of American Research; Williams College, for its sabbatical support; and
the Williams Class of 1945, whose World Fellowship enabled me to take an additional
semester of leave to complete the writing of this book. Finally, I want again to thank my
wife, Holly, and my children, Nick and Melody, who put up with frequent office detours so
that I could jot down an idea or write a paragraph. Their tolerance and love are
acknowledged with much gratitude.
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