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Ahmed Shah Masoud
THE ROVING EYE
Masoud: From warrior to statesman
By Pepe Escobar
Note: Pepe Escobar's interview
with Ahmad Shah Masoud was held not long before an assassination
attempt was made on the leader of the Afghani forces fighting
the Taliban. Masoud was being interviewed on Sunday by two Arab
journalists in northern Takhar province near his home when a
bomb concealed in a video camera exploded. The Arabs were killed,
and reports vary on the extent of injuries suffered by Masoud.
THE PANJSHIR VALLEY, Afghanistan
- For millions all over a digital world desperate for a bit of
romance, he is as iconic as Che Guevara: the romantic ideal of
the intellectual warrior.
He looks like a beat generation
poet - with his trademark felt Chitral hat from the Pakistan
region of the Hind Kush always cocked to the side, and a Sartrean
existential twinkle in his eyes. He wanted to be an architect
when, as a youth, he was studying at the French Lycee in Kabul.
Instead, he was to spend half his life as Afghanistan's Master
of Guerrilla Warfare.
He started waging war with
just 20 men, 10 Kalashnikovs, one machine-gun and two rocket
launchers. The intellectual arsenal was certainly deadlier: Mao,
Che, Ho Chi Minh, revolutionary tactics adapted to the Afghan
mind to rouse rural peasants. In more than two decades he defeated
an Afghan dictator (Muhamad Daoud) and then the mighty Red Army
of the Soviet Union. For someone who escaped countless total
encirclement situations by ultra-hardcore Soviet generals, fighting
the black hordes of the almost Monty Pythonish Taliban could
even be labeled a joke.
Ahmad Shah Masoud is as modern
as one can be in a legendary crossroads of empires such as Afghanistan.
His Islam is as soft as a Panjshir peach - bearing not even a
remote comparison with the demented Taliban version. According
to Afghan astrologers, Masoud will live another 40 years - he
is 48. This should be enough time for him to liberate Afghanistan,
put the house in order, and die in peace. It is a mythology as
uplifting as the Shangri-La landscape of the Panjshir Valley
in the north of the country which is his home.
Masoud sleeps less than four
hours a day. Officially, he is the vice president of the Islamic
State of Afghanistan - a government that despite controlling
only 10 percent of Afghanistan is recognized by the United Nations
and the international community as the legitimate. The Taliban
control the non-recognized Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
It is Masoud though, who has
the final word on practically everything regarding the Panjshir
Valley and the war effort. Through a bunch of satellite phones
and walkie-talkies he coordinates a war financed mostly through
revenue from emerald and lapis lazuli mining.
On the morning immediately
after our interview, Masoud received two commanders from torrid
Shamali plains in the central region of the country to discuss
war strategies, attended Friday prayers at the Bazarak mosque,
signed a mountain of executive orders, and departed to inspect
one of the frontlines. A dedicated Francophile, he understands
French well, but does not speak the language, out of shyness:
the conversations are always in Dari, a Persian language.
Whenever he is not commuting
in his military helicopter number 570 between the Panjshir, the
various frontlines, and the Tajik capital Dushanbe, he may take
some time off to swim in his pool with his five children, or
to read in his fabulous library which contains more than 3,000
volumes - including some that are centuries old.
Madame Masoud - also a Panjshiri
- is proud to open her closet to reveal she does not wear a chadri,
the Afghan dress that completely veils a woman's body and which
is obligatory attire in Taliban-controlled parts of the country.
All over the Panjshir, Masoud
is revered as a feudal lord - almost as a king. He appears to
have learned much from his major setback, between 1992 and 1996,
when he controlled Kabul after the Soviet withdrawal, but could
not effect the transition from strategist to statesman. Nowadays,
he is midway through the complex process. War is not his only
strategy: he is actually creating a state from scratch - with
key ministries such as foreign affairs, defense and education.
Nevertheless, everything is still subordinated to the war effort.
He has only 10 military helicopters and no jets - compared to
the Taliban, who now may have no more than three jets from an
original total of 10 old MiGs and Sukhois.
Masoud wants to establish a
regular state army trained by experienced Mujaheddin (fighters),
stationed in a base in Khwaja Bahaouddin, a desert wasteland
near excavations of Greek ruins, the Amu Darya River and the
Tajik border. This army will have between 10,000 and 14,000 fighters.
The Taliban militia is believed to number about 45,000 - but
most have minimal training.
Masoud's military mantra in
2001 is "active defense": opening many fronts simultaneously,
a strategy that is driving the Taliban crazy. One of the most
brilliant among his young commanders has been capable not only
of resisting the Taliban, but is about to unleash an offensive
to recapture the key city of Taloqan in the northern province
of Takhar. Masoud smiles when asked about the possibility of
legendary commander Ismail Khan reconquering the Persianized
Herat in western Afghanistan - a key source of revenue for the
Taliban by way of taxes. "I'm not saying we're going to
take it back today or tomorrow, but he's going further step by
step."
Masoud is closely monitoring
the arrest and trial in Kabul of several foreign non-government
organization workers from Shelter Now International, accused
of attempting to convert Afghans to Christianity. He explains
the big picture. "The Taliban have a special program to
expel foreigners. They need excuses for it, and to fill their
places with Arabs and Pakistanis. There is an organization named
Al Rashid which has promised the Taliban it will help accomplish
this task. In the next weeks and months there will be more and
more episodes like this. And behind all this there is a tribal
problem.
"Most of the people with
economic problems living in Afghanistan are non-Pashtuns, especially
in Kabul. [Pashtuns, or Pathans, are the dominant ethnic and
linguistic community in the country.] The Taliban are trying
to intensify these problems so these people leave Afghanistan
for Pakistan. Half of the financial budget of Osama bin Laden's
organization is spent on buying the houses of people who are
not Pashtun."
Masoud does not believe there
will be a dramatic American attempt to capture bin Laden inside
Afghanistan, as has been widely rumored in Pakistan. The exiled
Saudi Arabian is wanted on charges of international terrorism
by the United States. "There will be negotiations between
the Taliban and the American government, but no action."
Masoud is keen to emphasize
that "Cruise missiles don't have any effect in Afghanistan.
Thousands of Scuds were fired inside Afghanistan during Najibullah's
regime [1986-1992]. Around 14 or 15 Scuds were fired into the
Panjshir. Actually we don't know where they landed, and what
effect they had." Masoud's forces still have around 20 Scuds
stationed in the Panjshir.
Masoud believes that the UN
economic sanctions against the Taliban "are a very positive
step". The UN sanctions include a travel ban on senior Taliban
officials, an arms embargo which has not yet been monitored,
and a ban on international flights. "They're saying these
sanctions are against the Afghan people, but that is not true.
We want these sanctions enforced."
He emphasizes "there is
no military solution" to the Afghan crisis. "But to
make the Taliban ready for negotiation - because they are not
ready right now - there are two points to be considered: the
resistance inside Afghanistan, and the international pressure
against Pakistan. The resistance inside Afghanistan is getting
stronger day by day, especially this year. And if the government
of Pakistan stops interfering in the Afghan issue, I'm sure there
will be no Taliban in five or six months."
He acknowledges, though, that
the Taliban are an ultra-hard nut to crack: "We have had
negotiations with the Taliban in the past, especially the one
in the presence of the UN in Ishq Abad two years ago. We had
some agreements, but when their delegation went back to Kandahar,
everything was refused."
Tribalism is rampant, but Masoud
refuses the notion that all of the troubles in Afghanistan are
tribal-related. "For example, (exiled king) Zahir Shah is
Pashtun, and he cannot live under the Taliban. In the same breath,
we have some Tajiks who cannot live with us. The tribal problems
that exist now are intensified by Pakistan."
So it's inevitable that Masoud
does not trust Pakistan's President General Musharraf, who is
trying hard to project a moderate image despite assuming power
in a bloodless coup. "He is following the same line of his
military, from General Zia [ul Haq] to now."
Masoud is in close contact
and receives a lot of help from his former foes, the Russians.
But when asked about the human rights abuses of the Russian army
against the civilian population of Chechnya, he declines a direct
answer. "It is a conflict that should be solved by diplomatic
means." The same applies to the independent Chechen president,
the moderate Aslan Maskhadov, elected in 1997. Masoud says, "nobody
recognizes him for the moment, not even the UN. When the UN does,
I'll state my position." Independent European sources confirm
that Masoud is definitely pro-Chechnya. But of course he cannot
afford to publicly antagonize Moscow.
Even in Masoud's tolerant brand
of Islam some things are forbidden. Cigarettes, for instance.
Two of Masoud's bodyguards recently assembled all the cigarette
packs confiscated in Panjshiri bazaars and set fire to them in
the middle of a busy road. The commander explains, "cigarettes
have been banned since the beginning of the resistance against
the Russians - for economic reasons. People smoke too much. The
region spends too much money on cigarettes, and they don't eat
as much as they should." Nobody actually respects the ban
- decided by a council of elders: people continue to puff away
by driving south to the Shamali plains, north of Kabul, where
the ban does not apply.
The most striking contrast
between Masoud's Islam and the Taliban's ultra-hardcore version
regards the situation of women. For Masoud, on paper, women could
even compete in free elections. He asked a recent visitor for
a copy of the Swiss constitution: for him, this is a typical
example of democracy that could work in Afghanistan, with different
ethnic groups and different languages.
According to Masoud, officially
there are no Mujaheddin women. Actually there is one - an already
famous commander in Takhar province, but she is not regarded
as a Mujaheddin. Masoud insists, though, that all the women in
the Panjshir are combat-ready - and this is normal in a war situation.
"They all know how to operate a weapon. Not to make war,
but do defend themselves in case the Taliban attack." There
is a Kalashnikov in every home, but informally it was possible
to ascertain that most women in the Panjshir don't know how to
fire a gun.
Masoud is adamant that in Afghanistan
women have suffered oppression for generations. He says that
"the cultural environment of the country suffocates women.
But the Taliban exacerbate this with oppression." His most
ambitious project is to shatter this cultural prejudice and so
give more space, freedom an equality to women - they would have
the same rights as men.
This means giving Afghan women
the chance to study. Masoud even wants to build a university
in the Panjshir Valley - besides developing more schools for
women. "But these are things that I can do only step by
step." For him, "women themselves also have to follow
an evolution, and this could take one generation, maybe two".
As far as the university project is concerned, it is essential
because under the Taliban reign of cultural terror people cannot
go to the capital Kabul anymore to study, they are forced to
go to the northern town of Faizabad, or to Pakistan, Iran or
New Delhi - if they have a lot of money. Most, including the
most able, don't come back.
For Masoud, unlike the Taliban,
equality between men and women is totally logical. In Afghan
practice, it is another matter. Masoud develops a political discourse
that does not correspond to the reality on the ground. His eagerness
for more opening contrasts with a 95 percent illiteracy rate
among women across the country. Many are still enveloped in the
chadribecause the culture is like that. Masoud recognizes the
hurdles: "I don't have the power to change Afghan culture."
It is important to note that for his democratic plans, Masoud
refers to the Panjshir Valley, a much less conservative area
than, for instance, Faizabad in Badakhshan province, where Burhanuddin
Rabbani, the titular head of the Islamic State, lives. Rabbani
himself is very conservative about women.
There are only two high schools
for girls in the Panjshir, compared to about 10 for boys. Basically,
there is no money available for education, but the priority is
to educate the boys first. Masoud again recognizes he can't go
against this cultural tendency.
His obsessive dream, though,
is more democracy for more of Afghanistan. In the unlikely event
of a referendum in the near future, Masoud says that "depending
on the time of the election, most of the population of Afghanistan
would vote for a national political party that could have the
power to reconstruct the country". For him, "the future
has to be solved through only one way: democracy". And in
a unified country. "I'm not interested in a partition of
Afghanistan. We have our country and we respect its integrity."
This could only happen, of
course, if he is capable of reconquering Afghanistan. "I'm
not waging war against the Taliban. I'm at war with Pakistan."
Masoud is certain that "forty percent of the people in the
frontlines are not Afghans, they are foreigners - mostly Pakistani
military, Taliban-educated in Pakistani madrassas, [fundamentalist
religious schools] and Saudis faithful to Osama bin Laden. These
people can come from all over - since Osama has issued a worldwide
appeal for 'good Muslims' to come to Afghanistan to engage in
a jihad [holy war]." So, along with Russians, Americans,
Chinese and everybody else, Masoud is also clearly worried about
the possible Talibanization of Central Asia.
Masoud has spent most of his
life at the frontlines. Today he is regarded world-wide as the
only credible savior of Afghanistan. But he knows he is no solitary
Messiah. "It's not only me resisting the Taliban. This involves
people from all over Afghanistan. Their numbers grow larger and
larger every day. As you can see in the IDP [internally displaced
persons] camps and with other refugees in the Panjshir. They
don't have enough food and clothes. But even with these problems
they do not want to live under the Taliban, they prefer to stay
here [in the Panjshir Valley]. I'm completely sure our resistance
will be successful one day, Inch' Allah [By the grace of God].
This country will go toward peace."
And when it does, Masoud's
vision for the future couldn't be more straightforward. "To
be honest, I would spend the rest of my life reconstructing my
country." This way, and only this way, the warrior turned
statesman can die in peace - as the Afghan seers read it in the
stars.
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