Massoud
was a fascinating dichotomy. The man who went to college to become an architect
and create beautiful buildings ended up becoming so brilliant a military strategist
that he is credited in large part for ending the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan. Nine times the Soviet Union tried to defeat Massoud in the
Panjshir Valley, and nine times they were repelled. In fact he is the man who
saved Afghanistan people dignity by leading and winning the cold war.
Ahmed
Shah Massoud was born in Jangalak in the Panjshir Province in 1953. He attended
the university in Kabul where he studied engineering. The invasion of
Afghanistan by the Soviet Union in 1979 changed the course of that country's
history and the direction of Ahmed Shah Massoud's life. Gone were the days of
prayer, study and youthful hope. Arrived were the days of resistence, war, and
the mujahidin. (Literally meaning "strugglers," mujahidin is a term
for Muslims fighting in a war or involved in any other struggle.) No one could
have guessed in the early days that Massoud would become one of the most
brilliant military strategists of his era.
When he
joined the mujahidin around 1980, Ahmed Shah Massoud had no idea that the next
twenty years - the rest of his life - would be involved in one war campaign
after the other. When the Soviet Union finally left Afghanistan, factional
fighting within the country lead to a civil war. The Taliban, financed and
sponsored by Pakistan, went into Afghanistan with a promise of law and order.
At first the war-weary citizens welcomed the Taliban and their promises of
peace and control. It did not take long, however, for the enormity of the
mistake to become known.
The
Taliban inflicted on the people of Afghanistan a repressive version of extreme
Islam. They denied the people all human rights, abolished music and song,
closed schools and medical centers, and established the Ministry of Good and
Evil to enforce their belief system on the entire country. Ahmed Shah Massoud
and other Mujahadin found this radical form of Islam impossible to accept. They
formed an alliance and swore to free their land from this latest invading
force.
As time
passed the Taliban, first supported by the Pakastani ISI, developed a close
association with Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda terrorist organization. Well-funded
and with military support from those organizations, the Taliban took control of
more and more areas of Afghanistan.
Commander
Massoud suffered several setbacks. His appeals for help from the West fell on
deaf ears. Although Massoud represented the UN-recognized government of
Afghanistan, few countries without a vested interest in controlling Afghan soil
did anything to help the mujahidin in their struggle. They were finally forced
into the northeast corner of the country, the Panjshir Valley, and maintained
control of between five to ten percent of the country. The United States and
other countries who had armed and supplied their former allies in the war against
the Soviet Union began to consider whether or not they should recognize the
Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan.
On
September 9, 2001 al-Qaeda suicide bombers assassinated Ahmed Shah Massoud.
They had been posing as Moroccan documentary film makers. One man had a video
camera filled with explosives. The other assassin tried to escape but was
killed by Massoud's bodyguards. While the initial blast did not kill Massoud,
he was severly injured in the head, chest, and legs. Efforts were made to get him to a hospital in
Dushanbe, Tajikistan, but he died en route.
Worried
that the Taliban and al-Qaeda would believe the Northern Alliance was
leaderless and therefore vulnerable to attack, word was sent around the world
that Massoud had been injured but was expected to survive.
Two
days later, on September 11, al-Qaeda attacked the United States with more
suicide bombers. To many people the assassination of Massoud is directly linked
to the attack upon America. One school of thought is that bin Laden wanted to
further indebt the Taliban to him by killing the man they most feared. Others
believe that Massoud posed a threat to al-Qaeda itself. He was a man around
whom America's responsive attack would most easily be built. With the death of
Massoud, the United States lost its most valuable and able Afghanistanis ally.
After
Ahmad Shah Massoud, Marshal M. Qasim Fahim was chosen(northen Alliance) for
leading the war against the Taliban.
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