ID | 132793 |
Title Proper | Afghanistan |
Other Title Information | to turn a corner |
Language | ENG |
Author | Bhattacharya, Pinaki |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | General Boris Gromov, commander of the 40th Army of the Soviet Union, crossed the 'Friendship' bridge linking the Salang Pass on 15 February I989. hack to the motherland. Najibullah. the Afghan president and a Communist protege' of the USSR regime of Mikhail Gorbachev, was ousted from power in April 1992. The intervening three years have a story to tell to the various protagonists of the current Afghan drama being enacted right now as another superpower gets ready to decamp without completing what it set out to do. The Red Army had left in early I989, and its nominee, Najihullah. held on to power for another three years on the strength of the same Afghan army that had desertions, remained fragmented in factional lines - the Parchams and the Khalqis - and was depleted in terms of resources. |
`In' analytical Note | Aakrosh Vol.17, No.64; Jul.2014: p.38-52 |
Journal Source | Aakrosh Vol.17, No.64; Jul.2014: p.38-52 |
Key Words | Geopolitical Context ; Afghanistan ; Soviet Union ; Red Army ; Russian Regime ; Military Power ; Post Soviet Space ; Afghan Army ; Mikhail Gorbachev ; Russia - Afghan Relations ; Political Framework |