Global Intelligence Update Red Alert August 7, 1998
Russia and Uzbekistan Worried by Taleban Offensive
Russian and Uzbek officials held an emergency meeting on August 4 in Tashkent to coordinate a response to the recent military offensive launched in northern Afghanistan by the Taleban army. The fundamentalist Taleban, who control Kabul and more than two thirds of Afghanistan, are attempting to take Mazar-e-Sharif, the last major stronghold of opposition forces in the north. In a strongly worded statement, Russia and Uzbekistan warned the Taleban to "immediately terminate" their military advance, and declared that they "reserve the right to take all the necessary measures to strengthen security of external borders." The two countries called on the Taleban to begin negotiations, and Uzbek Foreign Minister Abdulaziz Komilov said that Russia and Uzbekistan stood ready to take part in the talks.
The Taleban rejected the Russian and Uzbek "irresponsible assertions," and warned the two countries not to stand in the way of their campaign to win control of northern Afghanistan. In an official statement released on August 6, the Taleban said "The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan condemns the statement of Russia and Uzbekistan and considers this as gross interference in Afghan domestic affairs." An official Taleban spokesman stated that, "in the present circumstances," the Taleban would not consider a negotiated settlement with the opposition, and that northern Afghanistan will "be liberated by military means alone." The spokesman continued, "The only thing acceptable to us would be a complete cessation of resistance and Taleban's enemies giving themselves up."
Even if inclined to seek a negotiated settlement, the Taleban are unlikely to submit to Russian mediation, as they accuse Russia (with Uzbekistan and Iran) of providing arms, training, and logistical support to the opposition United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan (UIFSA). In an interview this week with the Pakistan-based "Afghan Islamic Press," Taleban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar asserted that Russia's support for the anti- Taleban forces would bring "serious consequences."
Reports out of northern Afghanistan differ predictably by source, but the UIFSA has admitted that the Taleban are now within 10 miles of Mazar-e- Sharif, fighting in the town of Balkh, just west of the city. The Taleban's main offensive is coming from the west, though Taleban forces are reportedly at least 100 miles from Mazar-e-Sharif to the south and east. Even based on reports from the UIFSA, transmitted via Iranian radio, the fighting is not going well for anti-Taleban forces.
Though UIFSA representatives have denied that military leader General Abdul Rashid Dostum fled to Uzbekistan on August 4, Iranian radio has reported that UIFSA leaders have given command of all of their forces to Ahmad Shah Massoud, the defense minister of the ousted former government. Dostum fled to Turkey last year, just before the Taleban overran and briefly held Mazar-e-Sharif. In an attempt to downplay the threat to Mazar-e-Sharif, a UIFSA spokesman on August 4 said that hundreds of new forces had arrived in the city over the previous 24 hours from Bamian, Balkh, and Sar-e Pol provinces. However, as these are also provinces in which the UIFSA claims to fiercely combating the Taleban, and which the Taleban claim to have conquered, the reinforcement of Mazar-e-Sharif sounds more like the results of the widespread retreat of UIFSA forces.
Judging from Taleban claims, the Taleban are not only targeting Mazar-e- Sharif, but are also attempting to cut off supplies to the UIFSA from Iran and the Central Asian Republics. The Taleban claim to have captured Ankhoyee, in Faryab province, cutting off the road to Turkmenistan. They also claim to be advancing on Hayratan, near the Uzbek border. The Taleban have also reportedly captured Shebarghan, whose airport was used by Iranian aircraft for the delivery of loads of arms and ammunition to the UIFSA.
The Russian evaluation of the situation can be inferred from the emergency meeting in Tashkent, as well as from comments from Russia's Border Service commander. Russia maintains some 25,000 soldiers along Tajikistan's border with Afghanistan. The Director of Russia's Federal Border Service, Nikolai Bordyuzha, said on August 6 that there was a genuine threat of Taleban forces advancing toward the border with Tajikistan, and that "appropriate instructions have already been given to forestall an advance by Taleban fighters." He said that border troops are prepared not only to repel Taleban incursions, but also to prevent an influx of refugees and retreating anti-Taleban troops.
Whether Russia, Iran, or the Central Asian republics will actively intervene in Afghanistan is unclear, and there are substantial arguments against such a move. Afghanistan has the same meaning for Russia as Vietnam does for the United States. Iran does not wish to devote military resources to its eastern border at this time. And the Central Asian republics are not equipped to take on Afghanistan alone. Finally, even if they succeed in overwhelming the UISFA, the Taleban are unlikely to press into neighboring states, as they will have enough to deal with, battling a certain and interminable guerrilla opposition.
One certainty does emerge from the Afghan conflict. Regardless of the outcome at Mazar-e-Sharif, Russia has quite boldly used the situation to set a precedent. Under the thin facade of the Commonwealth of Independent States joint defense mechanism, Russia is making a stand at the border of the old Soviet Union. Not even pretending to act at the behest of the Central Asian states, Russia is behaving as if the old borders and old imperial responsibilities are intact. Russia has reestablished that it has a fundamental and necessary strategic role to play in Central Asia -- a role it will more actively and aggressively take on in the near future.
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