The Taliban are the ugly offspring of the Cold War who came to power in the 90's as a result of US and Soviet meddling in Afghanistan.

A thread on origins of the mujahideen and the Taliban
The Taliban are not the same as the mujahideen, a strange talking point on twitter which flattens a more complicated and nuanced history.

Both however are a product of imperial meddling.
In the 1970’s Afghanistan’s president Daud Khan undertook an aggressive policy of modernizing the country.

He relied heavily on foreign aid from the United States and the Soviet Union in particular.
This was the reality of Afghanistan going back to its earliest history as a nation: having to navigate the influence of two great empires.

Emir Abdur Rahman equated it to being a swan in a lake with a tiger on one shore and bear on the other.
Daud Khan attempted to leverage this precarious position famously stating he preferred to light his American cigarettes with Russian matches.
As a result the major employer in Afghanistan was the government and that government relied entirely on foreign aid.

The result was an enduring economic crisis the bred corruption, scarcity, and economic disparity.
One of the results of Daud Khan’s modernizing efforts was a new generation of university-trained professors, journalists, military commanders, and government officials.

This generation of thinkers were drawn heavily to the vision of reform.
They fell into two camps: the Khalqis who sought change by any means including revolution and the Parchamis who sought a more gradual reform based on political mobilization.
The relationship between Daud Khan and these groups soured and after attempting to repress them, Khalqi-aligned young military officers overthrew him.

Daud Khan and his entire family were wiped out in what would later be called the Saur Revolution of 1978.
The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan was led by Nur Muhammad Taraki allied with the Soviet Union.

Initially the Soviet Union was caught unaware and was somewhat hesitant.
The new DR of Afghanistan was progressive and made great strides in women’s education, economic reforms, literacy, and access to healthcare.
The United States viewed the revolution as a major threat. However, there was not a single formal response to it.

We often hear the US created the mujahedeen that is not true, though some would love to take credit.
The DR of Afghanistan was unfortunately wildly repressive. Despite the progress and reforms, they also had a habit of disappearing people. Under Taraki and his right-hand man Hafizullah Amin upwards of 20,000 people or more were killed in imprisonment camps.
This resulted in armed resistance. Once they attempted land reforms, the rural landowners joined in open revolt.

This resistance became the mujahideen.
They were not a singular group, nor did they have a unified ideology.

There were made up of 4 groups of people roughly aligned
The most organized were reactionary Islamist factions led by individuals like Hekmatyar a particularly vile man who carried out acid attacks on women and who desired a Qutb-inspired jihad.

He was allied with the various rural mullahs.

And the more moderate Ahmad Shah Massoud
The second segment were disaffected leftists and Maoists who had been suppressed by the new government.

The third was actually the junior offices of the PR of Afghanistan who were part of the revolution but who quickly grew disillusioned and defected.
Finally, the bulk of them were simply ordinary Afghans who didn't take up arms until later.
The DR of Afghanistan’s continued reprisals was a source of concern for the Soviet Union.

In March 1979, Brezhnev warned Taraki that his repressive tactics was fomenting a resistance. Taraki dismissed the concern. Image
The United States exploited this to its advantage by aligning itself with the more organized elements of the mujahideen and funds were funneled to Pakistan’s ISI who were deeply worried about the revolution which took place just across the border.
The internal divisions in the DR of Afghanistan escalated with Hafizullah Amin killing his boss and taking charge.

Even more violent than Taraki, his reprisals bolster the resistance.
He reached out to the Soviet Union for military support specifically in the form of advisers and equipment (dude really wanted helicopters) but again the Soviet Union was hesitant noting that any involvement would escalate the situation.
They were also aware the majority of the mujahideen were just ordinary people and had hoped that by altering DR of Afghanistan’s tactics they can mollify this group. Image
Things changed when the Soviet Union got wind of a rumor that Amin was making overtures to the United States. The fear of a proposed “Ottoman plan” would spur them to action.
Early the Soviet Union had accurately assessed that any involvement would not only be messy but would foment resistance.

But the threat of the US getting a foothold and the reality that the US was already meddling with funds meant the cost of noninvolvement was too high.
The Soviet Union invaded.

Operation Storm 333 was activated; they stormed the presidential palace, killed their one-time ally Amin and his family and installed Babrak Karmal.
The invasion triggered two things: first it led to the final group of the mujahideen to take up arms. This was the bulk of the mujahideen; just ordinary people who fought an invasion by a foreign power.
Second, the United States threw its full support to some segments of the mujahideen.

While the US initially had a muddled policy, some like Brzezinski had been angling for an invasion for a while.
He says he wrote to the Carter “We now have the opportunity of giving to the USSR its Vietnam war.”
The US escalated by increasing funds, setting up training camps, and bringing in Saudi Arabia and China. The hope was to foster jihadism as an alternative to communism.

The four countries: the US, China, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia became the main backers of the mujahideen.
Interestingly US analysts were annoyed by their attempts to train the mujahideen.

The group did their own thing and refused to organized like a formal military.
In fact one documents complains that Afghans had their own sense of time (something anyone from related cultures can attest to if you’ve ever tried to attend a wedding lol).

Basically, when it was time for tea, Afghans would drop their guns and just chill. ImageImage
The US mostly allied with the more organized segments of the mujahideen like Hekmatyar but most of the mujahideen were an organic resistance.
The United States also began producing textbooks to ostensibly teach children how to read and count, but included images of violence and militant rhetoric aimed at disciplining children into a type of American-style patriotism with jihad.
Textbooks like the following included images of bombs and bullets and phrases like my uncle uses this gun in his jihad against the Russians

These textbooks were used in refugee camps in Pakistan. It is from these camps the Taliban were born. Image
After the withdrawal of the Soviet Union the various factions of the mujahideen turned on one another, even go so far as shelling Kabul.
The Taliban were the second generation, a group who grew up in refugee camps, were trained by US textbooks, and then returned to Afghanistan in the midst of its mujahideen civil war.
After the Soviet withdrawal, Pakistan’s ISI had hoped their ally Hekmatyar would be useful, but he turned away. Worried about Hekmatyar and the mujahideen’s design, the ISI turned to the Taliban.

Major-General Naseerullah Babar called the Taliban “my boys.”
With new arms and training they entered the fray led by an older mujahideen commander, Mullah Omar.
In 1994 the Taliban was born.

By 1996 they had established the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan exploiting the divisions of the mujahideen and the vacuum left behind by a great power (sound familiar?).
Unlike now, the Taliban in the 90’s never fully conquered Afghanistan.

Segments of the mujahideen continued their resistance fighting against the Taliban and holding important pockets.
Even more interestingly, the US-made textbooks are still in use by the Taliban. They’ve simply crossed out where it says “Russian” and replaced it with “American.”
The Taliban were born in displacement camps, forged by war, nurtured by imperial meddling, and the ugly offspring of the Cold War.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Ali A Olomi

Ali A Olomi Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @aaolomi

11 Sep
4 years before 9/11 the United States hosted the Taliban in Texas hoping to secure a gas and oil pipe deal.

Unocal invited the Taliban on a charm tour of Texas while the State Department and the CIA treated them as potential allies
In fact there is some evidence that early on the CIA either backed or at least favored the Taliban and allowed ISI to funnel weapons to them during the Afghan Civil War of the 90’s.
The relationship soured after bin Laden’s embassy bombings and the Taliban refusing to hand him over.

Reality is the US was more than willing to ally themselves with the Taliban even against the desires of Afghans themselves
Read 4 tweets
28 Aug
they boarded the dogs and cats onto the plane then left the Afghan staff behind
“I feel very sad for them but relieved for me and happy for the animals” whew
saw this thanks to retweet from @AliceAvizandum
Read 4 tweets
5 Aug
Wow, thank you for 60k! Totally weird to me to have you all following along. Twitter isn’t real life, but still thankful for all the lovely support.

If you’ve enjoyed the stuff I tweet, I highly recommend the following accounts as well:
The reigning monarchs of Islam and the occult: @MaslamaQ @mmelvink @docstobar all brilliant in their scholarship and work.

I'll be tweeting about their books next week so stay tuned.
the fantastic @ShabanaMir1 for her amazing work on Muslims in America

the wonderful @TheLadyImam for her seismic work on gender and Islam

the amazing @kecia_ali for her critical scholarship on Islamic law and gender and sexuality
Read 11 tweets
4 Aug
In Islam, humanity shares the world with the jinn, an invisible race of beings formed of smokeless fire. Some jinn are good, some are ambivalent, and some are down right devilish.

A thread-
The chieftain of the wicked jinn is Iblis, the devil.

Originally a goodly jinn who was raised on to the heavens to live alongside the angels, he was accursed and cast down for his disobedience to God and arrogance.
He refused to bow to humanity proclaiming why should a being of fire bow before a creature of clay.
Read 29 tweets
29 Jul
today Mars leaves Leo and enters Virgo

medieval astrologers of the Islamic world interpreted this as:

-fires & heat
-resource scarcities
-exposure of corruption and fraud
-disasters in nature
-disruption in harvests
-disruption of commerce
-danger is al Andalus and Levant
-Ibn Ezra includes Tunis in his list
while Abu Ma’shar includes the land of the Copts
-death among philosophers and scribes
-death among notable youth
-rebels and damage to buildings
-conflicts which injury property and earth
-earthquakes
The significations include a continuation of the theme of fire which started in Cancer and continued with Leo.

Interestingly while today some associate Aquarius with technology, medieval astrologers connected Virgo with science and technology (technical knowledge more broadly)
Read 8 tweets
28 Jul
In Islamic cosmology, God created humans from clay, jinn from smokeless-fire, & angels from light. As God’s unerring servants angels are so numerous the heavens groan under their numbers. All praise God, while some carry out Divine decrees relating to life and humans

A thread-
Jibra’il, Mik’ail, Israfi’l, and Azra'il are chief of the angels.

The first two deal most directly with humans while the latter two are responsible for their end either through the Day of Judgement, or their death.
Jibra’il is the angel of revelation who descends to earth frequently on orders from God.
Read 22 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(