By jonathanwilkes

Published: Friday, 21 October 2022 at 12:00 am


On 3 August 1978, the central council of the Islamic Society of Afghanistan (Jamiat-i-Islami) wrote an impassioned plea to Kurt Waldheim, secretary-general of the United Nations. In their letter, they decried Afghanistan’s political leaders, the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), as a “power-thirsty gang” intent on destroying Afghanistan’s political and social fabric and lacking any respect for humanitarian norms or human rights. The Council demanded UN intercession, warning that “the continued survival of this group will endanger the peace of this region of the world”.

This warning soon came true. On 24 December 1979, the Soviet Politburo issued a public directive justifying the deployment of Soviet troops into Afghanistan to support their allies, the same PDPA. The Soviets, the Politburo claimed, sought “to give international aid to the friendly Afghan people” and to prevent “anti-Afghan actions from neighbouring countries”.

Within days, 50,000 Soviet troops were on the ground in Afghanistan. They would remain there for almost a decade as part of Soviet efforts to keep their local allies in power.

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was one of the moments that defined the 1980s. It took place against the backdrop of the global Cold War, in which the Soviet Union and the United States (as well as China) vied for supremacy. Indeed, so international was the Cold War during the 1970s and early 1980s that, while US and Soviet leaders pursued talks on limiting strategic arms and the balance of power in Europe, Soviet forces backed independence movements in southern and eastern Africa as American troops withdrew from Vietnam.

While Vietnam remains the most enduringly remembered of the Cold War’s “hot wars”, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan had equally explosive consequences – not just for the Cold War superpowers, but for regional relations in south and central Asia, and Afghanistan itself.

It signalled the end of détente and a resurgence in Cold War tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. It also led to an international outcry, including public condemnation in the UN General Assembly. In 1980, US president Jimmy Carter called for economic sanctions and a boycott of that year’s Moscow Olympics, declaring, in his State of the Union address, that “the Soviet Union must pay a concrete price for their aggression”.

Afghanistan’s agony: the key dates in decades of politics in turmoil and war

January 1965 | The People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan forms in the nation’s capital, Kabul, against a backdrop of constitutional reform. Groups such as the Islamic Society of Afghanistan also begin organising. 

17 July 1973 | The king’s cousin, Mohammad Daoud Khan launches a coup d’etat, establishing the Republic of Afghanistan.

27 April 1978 | The PDPA launches a coup, killing Daoud and his family, and announces the creation of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. The PDPA and the Soviet Union sign a treaty of friendship in December.

15–20 March 1979 | A popular uprising against the PDPA takes places in Herat. The PDPA forcibly retakes the city, resulting in between 5,000 and 25,000 civilian deaths.

3 July 1979 | US president Jimmy Carter authorises limited financial support for Afghan resistance groups, working alongside Pakistan.

24 December 1979 | Soviet troops enter Afghanistan, with the Politburo citing the December 1978 treaty of friendship. 

14 January 1980 | The UN General Assembly resoundingly passes a resolution demanding the immediate withdrawal of Soviet troops.

11 March 1985 | Mikhail Gorbachev comes to power in the Soviet Union. He begins looking for ways to ensure a Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan.

14 April 1988 | UN-negotiated Geneva Accords are signed, paving the way for the withdrawal of Soviet troops.

15 February 1989 | The final Soviet forces withdraw from Afghanistan. Fighting nevertheless continues, and the United States and Soviet Union continue to provide financial support to combatants.

1990 | The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees estimates there are at least 6.3 million Afghan refugees worldwide.

29 April 1992 | A new interim government assumes authority in Afghanistan, uniting a coalition of resistance groups. However, infighting continues, preventing the government from being effective.

27 September 1996 | The Taliban seizes Kabul, effectively becoming Afghanistan’s rulers. Resistance continues in north-eastern Afghanistan, headed by the Northern Alliance.

December 2001 | Three months after the 9/11 attacks, the Northern Alliance – with backing from the US and its allies – topples the Taliban from power.

February 2020 | The United States and the Taliban sign the Doha Agreement, in which the US agrees to withdraw its troops before the May of the following year.

May 2021 | The Taliban launches an offensive against Afghan government forces. It goes on to take Kabul that August.

Existing tensions

Yet this common narrative of Afghanistan in the 1980s – one of Cold War competition and intervention by the so-called “great powers” – tells only a partial story. In this regard, the Islamic Society of Afghanistan’s UN petition sheds far greater light on how and why a war would break out that would engulf not just Afghanistan and Afghans, but also regional and international powers alike.

Soviet invading forces encountered a nation already embroiled in civil war – one which would go on to outlast the 1980s, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War itself. Violence had broken out more than a year earlier in the aftermath of the coup that brought the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan to power in April 1978.

The PDPA had formed in the mid-1960s during Afghanistan’s era of constitutional reform. While it outwardly pledged to pursue Afghan democratisation, in internal documents the party declared its allegiance to Marxism. Upon splitting into two factions, known as “Khalq” and “Parcham”, in 1973 the latter backed former prime minister Mohammad Daoud Khan in overthrowing his cousin, King Mohammed Zahir Shah, and seizing power.

After being sidelined under Daoud, however, the two factions reunited and launched an unexpected attack on the government in 1978, which culminated in Daoud’s assassination – and gave the PDPA an opportunity to govern.


On the podcast | Matt Elton joins a panel of experts – William Dalrymple, Rabia Latif Khan, Elisabeth Leake and Bijan Omrani – to explore how Afghanistan’s past can help us understand its present situation