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Library:A History of Afghanistan: Difference between revisions

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summed up their own Afghan studies.  
summed up their own Afghan studies.  


The first publications on Afghanistan, appearing in Rus-
The first publications on Afghanistan, appearing in Rus
sia in the early 18th century, told the readers about the  
sia in the early 18th century, told the readers about the  
country and its population, the events in the Herat and  
country and its population, the events in the Herat and  
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Academician B.A. Dorn in 1829-1838 that a genuinely  
Academician B.A. Dorn in 1829-1838 that a genuinely  
scientific study of Afghanistan began in Russia. B. A. Dom  
scientific study of Afghanistan began in Russia. B. A. Dom  
was the first to make research into the history of the Pash-
was the first to make research into the history of the Pash
tun people and his studies retain their value to this day.  
tun people and his studies retain their value to this day.  


In the middle and the second half of the 19th century  
In the middle and the second half of the 19th century  
prominent Russian Onentalists V. V. Grigoryev, N. V. Kha-
prominent Russian Onentalists V. V. Grigoryev, N. V. Kha
nykov, L. N. Sobolev, M. I. Venyukov, N. A. Aristov, and  
nykov, L. N. Sobolev, M. I. Venyukov, N. A. Aristov, and  
S. N. Yuzhakov, to mention a few, conducted studies into  
S. N. Yuzhakov, to mention a few, conducted studies into  
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and independence, and Anglo-Afghan relations. At the tum  
and independence, and Anglo-Afghan relations. At the tum  
of the 20th century an extensive study of Afghanistan was  
of the 20th century an extensive study of Afghanistan was  
conducted by A. E. Snesarev, M. V. Grulev and A. A. Bob-
conducted by A. E. Snesarev, M. V. Grulev and A. A. Bob
rinsky. Academician V. V. Barthold did a great deal of  
rinsky. Academician V. V. Barthold did a great deal of  
research on Afghan history and culture.
research on Afghan history and culture.
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evoked great interest among Soviet people in the historical  
evoked great interest among Soviet people in the historical  
past and the present of Afghanistan, in the rich culture of  
past and the present of Afghanistan, in the rich culture of  
its peoples, their languages, literature, ideology and eco-
its peoples, their languages, literature, ideology and eco
nomy. This unfading interest stimulated the work of Soviet  
nomy. This unfading interest stimulated the work of Soviet  
Orientalists who produced not only academic research but  
Orientalists who produced not only academic research but  
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N. A. Kislyakov, N. D. Miklouho-Maclay, I. M. Oransky,  
N. A. Kislyakov, N. D. Miklouho-Maclay, I. M. Oransky,  
I. P. Petrushevsky, N. V. Pigulevskaya, I. M. Reisner,  
I. P. Petrushevsky, N. V. Pigulevskaya, I. M. Reisner,  
A. A. Semyonov, K. V. Trever, A. Y. Yakubovsky, B. N. Za-
A. A. Semyonov, K. V. Trever, A. Y. Yakubovsky, B. N. Za
khoder and other Orientalists who have studied the ancient,  
khoder and other Orientalists who have studied the ancient,  
medieval and modern history of Afghanistan and the evolu-
medieval and modern history of Afghanistan and the evolu
tion of Afghan society in recent times. They have also  
tion of Afghan society in recent times. They have also  
studied major aspects of the history and specifics of the  
studied major aspects of the history and specifics of the  
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The knowledge of a nation’s past enables one to better  
The knowledge of a nation’s past enables one to better  
understand the present and grasp the significance of tradi-
understand the present and grasp the significance of tradi
tional views and institutions in present-day life, and the  
tional views and institutions in present-day life, and the  
extent of their influence on the social, economic, political  
extent of their influence on the social, economic, political  
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1978, the first genuine social revolution in its history.  
1978, the first genuine social revolution in its history.  


After the April Revolution the good-neighbourly rela-
After the April Revolution the good-neighbourly rela
tions between the Soviet and Afghan peoples rose to new  
tions between the Soviet and Afghan peoples rose to new  
heights. Their close friendship and revolutionary solidarity  
heights. Their close friendship and revolutionary solidarity  
serve as a sound basis for the steady promotion of these relations. The interest of the Soviet public in the past and present of their southem neighbour, in the political, social,  
serve as a sound basis for the steady promotion of these relations. The interest of the Soviet public in the past and present of their southem neighbour, in the political, social,  
economic and cultural processes taking place in Afghanis-
economic and cultural processes taking place in Afghanis
tan, the revolutionary changes carried out there and in  
tan, the revolutionary changes carried out there and in  
its home and foreign policies has increased still more.  
its home and foreign policies has increased still more.  


A History of Afghanistan has been written by M. R. Aru-
A History of Afghanistan has been written by M. R. Aru
nova (Chapter Two, ‘‘Afghanistan in the Middle Ages”),  
nova (Chapter Two, ‘‘Afghanistan in the Middle Ages"),  
Yu. V. Gankovsky (‘‘The State of Durrani” in Chapter  
Yu. V. Gankovsky (‘‘The State of Durrani" in Chapter  
Three), V. G. Korgun (Chapter Four, “Afghanistan in Con-
Three), V. G. Korgun (Chapter Four, "Afghanistan in Con
temporary Times”, except for the concluding part),  
temporary Times", except for the concluding part),  
V.M. Masson (Chapter One, “Ancient Afghanistan”),  
V.M. Masson (Chapter One, "Ancient Afghanistan"),  
G. A. Muradov (“The Victory of the National-Democratic  
G. A. Muradov ("The Victory of the National-Democratic  
April Revolution and the Foundation of the Democratic  
April Revolution and the Foundation of the Democratic  
Republic of Afghanistan” in Chapter Four, jointly with  
Republic of Afghanistan" in Chapter Four, jointly with  
G. A. Polyakov), and V.A.Romodin (Chapter Three,  
G. A. Polyakov), and V.A.Romodin (Chapter Three,  
‘Afghanistan in Modern Times”, excluding the first part).
‘Afghanistan in Modern Times", excluding the first part).


== Ancient Afghanistan ==
== Ancient Afghanistan ==
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only in the 1960s and 1970s, when a considerable part of  
only in the 1960s and 1970s, when a considerable part of  
the territory was surveyed by archaeologists. A good deal  
the territory was surveyed by archaeologists. A good deal  
has been done by Soviet-Afghan expeditions which dis-
has been done by Soviet-Afghan expeditions which dis
covered numerous Stone and Bronze Age artifacts on the  
covered numerous Stone and Bronze Age artifacts on the  
left bank of the Amu Darya.  
left bank of the Amu Darya.  
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That was a time of the primitive communal system, when  
That was a time of the primitive communal system, when  
man’s life largely depended on natural conditions. In the  
man’s life largely depended on natural conditions. In the  
Palaeolithic hunting and gathering edible plants and mol-
Palaeolithic hunting and gathering edible plants and mol
luscs took up most of his time.  
luscs took up most of his time.  


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in the Teshik-Tash cave on the right bank of the Amu  
in the Teshik-Tash cave on the right bank of the Amu  
Darya. Finds of Middle Palaeolithic tools in the sands by  
Darya. Finds of Middle Palaeolithic tools in the sands by  
the Amu Darya in Northern Afghanistan indicate the pres-
the Amu Darya in Northern Afghanistan indicate the pres
ence of Palaeolithic hunters.1  
ence of Palaeolithic hunters.1  


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Afghan territory.  
Afghan territory.  


The descendants of the hunters who had lived in the foot-
The descendants of the hunters who had lived in the foot
hills and open valleys were the tribes that populated Afgha-
hills and open valleys were the tribes that populated Afgha
nistan in the Middle Stone Age, or Mesolithic, from 10 to  
nistan in the Middle Stone Age, or Mesolithic, from 10 to  
7 thousand years B.C. Some time within this period a group  
7 thousand years B.C. Some time within this period a group  
of people who hunted sheep, antelopes and birds found  
of people who hunted sheep, antelopes and birds found  
shelter in the Kara-Kamar cave. Also, two caves and one  
shelter in the Kara-Kamar cave. Also, two caves and one  
“outdoor” camp on the Balkhab River, south of Mazar-i-
"outdoor" camp on the Balkhab River, south of Mazar-i
Sharif, with the common name of Ak-kupruk, date from the  
Sharif, with the common name of Ak-kupruk, date from the  
same period. Found there, apart from bulky weapons and  
same period. Found there, apart from bulky weapons and  
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triangles, rectangules and segments (Tash-Kupruk, camp  
triangles, rectangules and segments (Tash-Kupruk, camp  
40)—became widespread. Late Mesolithic or Early Neolithic  
40)—became widespread. Late Mesolithic or Early Neolithic  
materials of that kind were found by the Soviet-Afghan ex-
materials of that kind were found by the Soviet-Afghan ex
pedition near Akchah where the people who had evidently  
pedition near Akchah where the people who had evidently  
inhabited this region used to hunt and fish in the deltas of  
inhabited this region used to hunt and fish in the deltas of  
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in the north of the country, resemble those of Central Asia  
in the north of the country, resemble those of Central Asia  
of that time, primarily from Southem Turkmenia (Jebel and  
of that time, primarily from Southem Turkmenia (Jebel and  
Dam-dam-Cheshme) and South-Westem Tajikistan (Tut-
Dam-dam-Cheshme) and South-Westem Tajikistan (Tut
kaul, the lower layer). This most likely indicates the main  
kaul, the lower layer). This most likely indicates the main  
directions of ancient cultural contacts.  
directions of ancient cultural contacts.  
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there is still some doubt as to their stratigraphic site. In the  
there is still some doubt as to their stratigraphic site. In the  
south the signs of a new historical epoch, that of farming  
south the signs of a new historical epoch, that of farming  
and livestock breeding, were more distinct. The condi-
and livestock breeding, were more distinct. The condi
tions for the change were on the whole favourable. Soviet  
tions for the change were on the whole favourable. Soviet  
botanist N.I. Vavilov established that an exceptionally  
botanist N.I. Vavilov established that an exceptionally  
wide variety of grain crops were grown in Afghanistan:  
wide variety of grain crops were grown in Afghanistan:  
about sixty strains of soft wheat and up to fifty strains of  
about sixty strains of soft wheat and up to fifty strains of  
dwarf wheat. Regions like Herat, Qandahar and South-
dwarf wheat. Regions like Herat, Qandahar and South
Easter Afghanistan, he pointed out, should be of great  
Easter Afghanistan, he pointed out, should be of great  
interest to those specialising in farming history.  
interest to those specialising in farming history.  
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houses and numerous fragments of stone vessels and  
houses and numerous fragments of stone vessels and  
sickles—these cultural changes are a clear indicator that a  
sickles—these cultural changes are a clear indicator that a  
new age had set in. Only the flint sign including microliths of geometric outlines (trapezia and segments) bear wit- ness to links with the cultures of Mesolithic and Neolithic  
new age had set in. Only the flint sign including microliths of geometric outlines (trapezia and segments) bear witness to links with the cultures of Mesolithic and Neolithic  
hunters and gatherers. An interesting discovery was that  
hunters and gatherers. An interesting discovery was that  
almost identical types of trapezia, with a concave top line,  
almost identical types of trapezia, with a concave top line,  
have been found at Mehrgarh and at scattered hunters’  
have been found at Mehrgarh and at scattered hunters’  
camps along the Amu Darya. The pottery found in the  
camps along the Amu Darya. The pottery found in the  
Mehrgarh settlement was decorated with painted orna-
Mehrgarh settlement was decorated with painted orna
ments, a sure sign of the early farming period when consid-
ments, a sure sign of the early farming period when consid
erable attention was attached to applied arts.2 Everything  
erable attention was attached to applied arts.2 Everything  
considered, the relics of the Mehrgarh type were not unique.  
considered, the relics of the Mehrgarh type were not unique.  
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raising communities of Southern Turkmenia, probably  
raising communities of Southern Turkmenia, probably  
caused by a migration of tribal groups to the south-east.  
caused by a migration of tribal groups to the south-east.  
Thus, clay figurines of women, found in the Said-kala settle-
Thus, clay figurines of women, found in the Said-kala settle
ment, were made in the same manner as those found during  
ment, were made in the same manner as those found during  
Southem Turkmenian excavations. There is a striking  
Southem Turkmenian excavations. There is a striking  
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Qandahar group of the early farming tribes had obviously  
Qandahar group of the early farming tribes had obviously  
made considerable headway in metallurgy, evidently due to  
made considerable headway in metallurgy, evidently due to  
the occurrence of copper ore in the territory of Afghanis-
the occurrence of copper ore in the territory of Afghanis
tan. Copper and bronze were used for making axes with  
tan. Copper and bronze were used for making axes with  
holes for handles, daggers and ornaments. Casting in closed  
holes for handles, daggers and ornaments. Casting in closed  
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8rd millennium B.C., when the Mundigak settlement must have played the role of the local capital. On a hill formed by the cultural layers of an earlier period there stood a  
8rd millennium B.C., when the Mundigak settlement must have played the role of the local capital. On a hill formed by the cultural layers of an earlier period there stood a  
monumental structure with closed semi-pillars at the fagade,  
monumental structure with closed semi-pillars at the fagade,  
the supposed residency of a local prince. Another archi-
the supposed residency of a local prince. Another archi
tectural monument is a big structure, supposedly a temple,  
tectural monument is a big structure, supposedly a temple,  
enclosed by a wall, which is decorated with sharp pilasters.  
enclosed by a wall, which is decorated with sharp pilasters.  
Bronze compartmental seals were widespread at that time.  
Bronze compartmental seals were widespread at that time.  
A wide variety of them can be found also among the imple-
A wide variety of them can be found also among the imple
ments of that period in Southem Turkmenia and Northem  
ments of that period in Southem Turkmenia and Northem  
and Eastern Iran.  
and Eastern Iran.  


A number of ceramic vessels resemble some of those of  
A number of ceramic vessels resemble some of those of  
the ancient Indian Harappa civilisation in shape and orna-
the ancient Indian Harappa civilisation in shape and orna
mental design. Perhaps the Harappa centres in the Indus  
mental design. Perhaps the Harappa centres in the Indus  
Valley received copper ore and lapis lazuli from Afghanis-
Valley received copper ore and lapis lazuli from Afghanis
tan; one of the largest deposits of lapis lazuli is in Badakh-
tan; one of the largest deposits of lapis lazuli is in Badakh
shan. This beautiful stone was highly valued in the ancient  
shan. This beautiful stone was highly valued in the ancient  
Orient .for it was believed to have magic properties. Begin-
Orient .for it was believed to have magic properties. Begin
ning with the second half of the 4th millennium B.C. lapis  
ning with the second half of the 4th millennium B.C. lapis  
lazuli became widely popular in Mesopotamia and Egypt,  
lazuli became widely popular in Mesopotamia and Egypt,  
and reached Troja in Asia Minor. Through multiple ex-
and reached Troja in Asia Minor. Through multiple ex
change Afghan lapis lazuli reached far into the West. There  
change Afghan lapis lazuli reached far into the West. There  
is evidence that direct trade and cultural contacts with the  
is evidence that direct trade and cultural contacts with the  
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archaeologists revealed the Shoturgai settlement on the  
archaeologists revealed the Shoturgai settlement on the  
Amu Darya bank, and typical samples of Harappa pottery  
Amu Darya bank, and typical samples of Harappa pottery  
and seals were found in the lower layers. So far, only ten-
and seals were found in the lower layers. So far, only ten
tative excavations were conducted, but there is strong evid-
tative excavations were conducted, but there is strong evid
ence that close ties existed between the ancient cultures.  
ence that close ties existed between the ancient cultures.  
It is not ruled out that Shoturgai is the remains of a Harap-
It is not ruled out that Shoturgai is the remains of a Harap
pa trading station. Various specialised production which,  
pa trading station. Various specialised production which,  
having separated from farming, gradually tumed into crafts,  
having separated from farming, gradually tumed into crafts,  
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tribes of Southem Afghanistan—the Seistan group. There  
tribes of Southem Afghanistan—the Seistan group. There  
the Helmand delta, which consisted of numerous streams  
the Helmand delta, which consisted of numerous streams  
flowing into lakes constantly varying in size (hamuns) faci-
flowing into lakes constantly varying in size (hamuns) faci
litated the growth of irrigated farming. In a few dozen early farming settlements of that period high-quality painted ware, made on the potter’s wheel, and also bronze compart-
litated the growth of irrigated farming. In a few dozen early farming settlements of that period high-quality painted ware, made on the potter’s wheel, and also bronze compart
mental seals have been found. The ruins of the capital of  
mental seals have been found. The ruins of the capital of  
that group of tribes, known as Shahr-i-Sohte, are now situat-
that group of tribes, known as Shahr-i-Sohte, are now situat
ed in the territory of Iran. Excavations at Shahr i-Sohte  
ed in the territory of Iran. Excavations at Shahr i-Sohte  
revealed a monumental building, metallic compartmental  
revealed a monumental building, metallic compartmental  
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found traces of the ‘Neolithic with the cult of mountain  
found traces of the ‘Neolithic with the cult of mountain  


oats” (3rd millennium B.C.), so called because ritual  
oats" (3rd millennium B.C.), so called because ritual  
urials of these animals have been discovered in the cultural  
urials of these animals have been discovered in the cultural  
layer. The stone and flint weapons and implements found  
layer. The stone and flint weapons and implements found  
in the same layer were roushiy made and obsolete for  
in the same layer were roushiy made and obsolete for  
- that time. Possibly sited here were the camps of hunters and  
that time. Possibly sited here were the camps of hunters and  
livestock breeders whose cultural development was on a  
livestock breeders whose cultural development was on a  
comparatively low level.  
comparatively low level.  
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though artisans put out wheel-made pottery. In the north,  
though artisans put out wheel-made pottery. In the north,  
by contrast, high-developed culture flourished. It has been  
by contrast, high-developed culture flourished. It has been  
studied by Soviet scientist V. I. Sarianidi during a Soviet-
studied by Soviet scientist V. I. Sarianidi during a Soviet
Afghan expedition there. A number of valuable artifacts,  
Afghan expedition there. A number of valuable artifacts,  
some made of gold and silver, were found during chance  
some made of gold and silver, were found during chance  
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fortress was surrounded by an adobe wall with circular  
fortress was surrounded by an adobe wall with circular  
towers at the comers and semi-circular ones along the wall  
towers at the comers and semi-circular ones along the wall  
(Dashly-I, Ghirdai)—a stable and fairly developed fortifica-
(Dashly-I, Ghirdai)—a stable and fairly developed fortifica
tion system for that time. It is known also that the cultural  
tion system for that time. It is known also that the cultural  
level of the oasis population in the 2nd millennium B.C.  
level of the oasis population in the 2nd millennium B.C.  
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Ceramics of standard shape was made on the potter’s  
Ceramics of standard shape was made on the potter’s  
wheel and baked in special two-tier kilns near the settle-
wheel and baked in special two-tier kilns near the settle
ments. The ceramists produced vessels of strict and refined  
ments. The ceramists produced vessels of strict and refined  
outlines without omamentation. Painted ceramics had  
outlines without omamentation. Painted ceramics had  
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The making of large open-work bronze seals, often picturing  
The making of large open-work bronze seals, often picturing  
people and animals, was probably a separate production  
people and animals, was probably a separate production  
branch. There were also stone seals picturing, among many”
branch. There were also stone seals picturing, among many"
other things, winged lions, an image of a clearly Mesopo-
other things, winged lions, an image of a clearly Mesopo
tamian origin. Outstanding pieces of ancient art are the stone figurines of sitting women, their bodies made of dark ophite and the heads of light-coloured marble. The figurines  
tamian origin. Outstanding pieces of ancient art are the stone figurines of sitting women, their bodies made of dark ophite and the heads of light-coloured marble. The figurines  
bear obvious traces of the artistic canons of far-away  
bear obvious traces of the artistic canons of far-away  
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have local predecessors in Northem Afghanistan in the form  
have local predecessors in Northem Afghanistan in the form  
of any kind of settlements of the early farmers. It had  
of any kind of settlements of the early farmers. It had  
emerged on the Bactrian plain as something already com-
emerged on the Bactrian plain as something already com
plete, and evidently took the place of the archaic and  
plete, and evidently took the place of the archaic and  
largely Neolithic culture of the hunters and livestock  
largely Neolithic culture of the hunters and livestock  
breeders. At the same time all the chief elements of that  
breeders. At the same time all the chief elements of that  
culture are observed in the Bronze Age monuments of  
culture are observed in the Bronze Age monuments of  
Southem Turkmenistan. Moreover, judging by the exca-
Southem Turkmenistan. Moreover, judging by the exca
vations: in Altyn-Tepe, they had taken shape there in a  
vations: in Altyn-Tepe, they had taken shape there in a  
natural way, on the basis of the local cultural traditions of  
natural way, on the basis of the local cultural traditions of  
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walls, Evidently, the gradual migration of those population  
walls, Evidently, the gradual migration of those population  
groups with a high urban-type culture resulted in the  
groups with a high urban-type culture resulted in the  
cultivation of fertile areas in Norther Afghanistan. Si-
cultivation of fertile areas in Norther Afghanistan. Si
multaneously, settlements with an identical culture ap-
multaneously, settlements with an identical culture ap
peared in Southem Uzbekistan, on the right bank of the  
peared in Southem Uzbekistan, on the right bank of the  
Amu-Darya (Sappali, Jarkutan).  
Amu-Darya (Sappali, Jarkutan).  


But, on the whole, that was a fairly Se) saree process.  
But, on the whole, that was a fairly Se) saree process.  
The presence of doubtlessly Mesopotamic features in Dash-
The presence of doubtlessly Mesopotamic features in Dash
ly-type settlements and of the grey ware, more typical of  
ly-type settlements and of the grey ware, more typical of  
the regions south-east of the Caspian Sea than of Southem  
the regions south-east of the Caspian Sea than of Southem  
Line 423: Line 423:
So far, no large monuments of the Bronze Age, which  
So far, no large monuments of the Bronze Age, which  
could be regarded as remains of urban-type settlements, have been found in Northem Afghanistan. Probably at the early stages of the opening up of new lands concentration  
could be regarded as remains of urban-type settlements, have been found in Northem Afghanistan. Probably at the early stages of the opening up of new lands concentration  
of inhabitants proceeded at a slow pace; therefore the com-
of inhabitants proceeded at a slow pace; therefore the com
munities were small and scattered, not far from one  
munities were small and scattered, not far from one  
another, each being a separate social organism. Notable are  
another, each being a separate social organism. Notable are  
Line 429: Line 429:
from other buildings, obviously serving specific purposes  
from other buildings, obviously serving specific purposes  
common to a group of settlements (and perhaps the whole  
common to a group of settlements (and perhaps the whole  
of Northem Afghanistan). Two such buildings were excavat-
of Northem Afghanistan). Two such buildings were excavat
ed in Dashly-3. One of them is square-shaped, each side  
ed in Dashly-3. One of them is square-shaped, each side  
being 130 to 150 metres long. In the centre there stands a  
being 130 to 150 metres long. In the centre there stands a  
Line 466: Line 466:
in the 3rd millennium B.C. in the south of the country.  
in the 3rd millennium B.C. in the south of the country.  
It appears that during this period a process of social and  
It appears that during this period a process of social and  
property differentiation was taking place and social ine-
property differentiation was taking place and social ine
quality was beginning tosetin. __ ; ;  
quality was beginning tosetin. __ ; ;  


Line 476: Line 476:
to the present-day population of Afghanistan. However, a  
to the present-day population of Afghanistan. However, a  
similar anthropological type existed in most of the other  
similar anthropological type existed in most of the other  
early-farming cultures in the areas from Southern Turk-
early-farming cultures in the areas from Southern Turk
menistan to the north-western regions of South Asia, and  
menistan to the north-western regions of South Asia, and  


‘ also among the people of the Harappa civilisation. Analysis  
‘ also among the people of the Harappa civilisation. Analysis  
of inscriptions on Harappa seals gives reason to suppose  
of inscriptions on Harappa seals gives reason to suppose  
that their language can be classed among the proto-Dravi-
that their language can be classed among the proto-Dravi
dian ones which were rather widespread in ancient times.  
dian ones which were rather widespread in ancient times.  
A seal bearing a similar inscription was found in Southern  
A seal bearing a similar inscription was found in Southern  
Line 490: Line 490:
proto-Dravidian group. While in the south of Iran, numerous  
proto-Dravidian group. While in the south of Iran, numerous  
ancient settlements have been found bearing traces of the  
ancient settlements have been found bearing traces of the  
Elamite language which is, in some respects, close to proto-
Elamite language which is, in some respects, close to proto
Dravidian.  
Dravidian.  


In the 2nd millennium B.C. the situation began to  
In the 2nd millennium B.C. the situation began to  
change. There is reason to believe that part of the popula-
change. There is reason to believe that part of the popula
tion in the territory of Afghanistan spoke the languages of  
tion in the territory of Afghanistan spoke the languages of  
the Indo-Iranian group, as most of the country’s present-
the Indo-Iranian group, as most of the country’s present
day population does. The ancient Iranian and ancient In-
day population does. The ancient Iranian and ancient In
dian languages originated from one common language from  
dian languages originated from one common language from  
which they had adopted the fundamentals of grammar and  
which they had adopted the fundamentals of grammar and  
the bulk of the vocabulary. The Indo-Iranian common  
the bulk of the vocabulary. The Indo-Iranian common  
elements (or Aryan, according to their self-identificati-
elements (or Aryan, according to their self-identificati
on) were not confined to the language alone: there was  
on) were not confined to the language alone: there was  
much in common also in religion, mythology and epic  
much in common also in religion, mythology and epic  
Line 513: Line 513:
kinglings. The tribes that spoke ancient Indian languages  
kinglings. The tribes that spoke ancient Indian languages  
were settling in Norther India, possibly in two flows, in  
were settling in Norther India, possibly in two flows, in  
the general direction from the north-west to the south-
the general direction from the north-west to the south
east. They mixed with the local Dravidian-speaking popula-
east. They mixed with the local Dravidian-speaking popula
tion, a fact witnessed by the strong Dravidian influence on  
tion, a fact witnessed by the strong Dravidian influence on  
the Aryan languages of Northern India. The Rigveda, the  
the Aryan languages of Northern India. The Rigveda, the  
Line 523: Line 523:
the territory of Afghanistan and many historians believe  
the territory of Afghanistan and many historians believe  
that the ancestors of the Indo-Aryans lived for a certain  
that the ancestors of the Indo-Aryans lived for a certain  
time in the territory of Central Asia and Afghanistan toge-
time in the territory of Central Asia and Afghanistan toge
ther with the ancestors of Iranian tribes.®  
ther with the ancestors of Iranian tribes.®  


Line 529: Line 529:
names and specific terms associated with the Iranian  
names and specific terms associated with the Iranian  
linguistic group, is traced back to the mid-2nd millennium  
linguistic group, is traced back to the mid-2nd millennium  
B.C.In any case, early in the 1st millennium B.C. the  
B.C." In any case, early in the 1st millennium B.C. the  
areas of present-day Afghanistan and the greater part of  
areas of present-day Afghanistan and the greater part of  
Central Asia were already populated by Iranian speaking  
Central Asia were already populated by Iranian speaking  
Line 544: Line 544:
East via the Caucasus, while others moved to the east of the  
East via the Caucasus, while others moved to the east of the  
Caspian Sea. These data are comparable, to some extent,  
Caspian Sea. These data are comparable, to some extent,  
with the evolution and spread of ancient cultures in accord-
with the evolution and spread of ancient cultures in accord
ance with archaeological evidence.  
ance with archaeological evidence.  


Line 552: Line 552:
the Namazga-5 and Namazga-6 type in a section of the  
the Namazga-5 and Namazga-6 type in a section of the  
foothills in Southern Turkmenistan and in the Murghab  
foothills in Southern Turkmenistan and in the Murghab  
delta and also the artifacts found along the middle rea-
delta and also the artifacts found along the middle rea
ches of the Amu Darya, on both of its banks (of the Ghir-
ches of the Amu Darya, on both of its banks (of the Ghir
dai, Dashly and Sappali type). While the local traditions  
dai, Dashly and Sappali type). While the local traditions  
continued in those cultures, in the 2nd millennium B.C.  
continued in those cultures, in the 2nd millennium B.C.  
Line 559: Line 559:
to the culture of Mesopotamia and a number of regions in  
to the culture of Mesopotamia and a number of regions in  
Western Iran. This was reflected in certain artistic images  
Western Iran. This was reflected in certain artistic images  
(winged lions, or a hero fighting wild beasts), and in cer-
(winged lions, or a hero fighting wild beasts), and in cer
tain types of bronze artifacts, specifically battle axes  
tain types of bronze artifacts, specifically battle axes  
and daggers.  
and daggers.  
Line 573: Line 573:
somewhat rougher version, and of elements that go back  
somewhat rougher version, and of elements that go back  
to the zone of the Bronze Age steppe tribes. Monuments  
to the zone of the Bronze Age steppe tribes. Monuments  
of this kind have been studied well in South-Western Taji-
of this kind have been studied well in South-Western Taji
kistan (the early Tulkhar burial mound, and the cemetery  
kistan (the early Tulkhar burial mound, and the cemetery  
“Tiger Gorge’’) and can, evidently, be found on the left  
"Tiger Gorge’’) and can, evidently, be found on the left  
bank of the Amu Darya (the upper layers of the Shoturgai  
bank of the Amu Darya (the upper layers of the Shoturgai  
settlement).  
settlement).  


This intricate picture reflects the process of the settle-
This intricate picture reflects the process of the settle
ment of the tribes of new ethnos, genetically related to the  
ment of the tribes of new ethnos, genetically related to the  
steppe zone of Eurasia, which had absorbed in the process  
steppe zone of Eurasia, which had absorbed in the process  
of migration certain cultural elements of West Asia. Simul-
of migration certain cultural elements of West Asia. Simul
taneously, linguistic assimilation of the local proto-Indo-
taneously, linguistic assimilation of the local proto-Indo
Iranian population was under way. In the cultural area  
Iranian population was under way. In the cultural area  
highly developed local traditions of settled farming pre-
highly developed local traditions of settled farming pre
vailed. It is obviously not accidental that Indo-Iranian  
vailed. It is obviously not accidental that Indo-Iranian  
myths are reflected in the intricate patterns on the seals  
myths are reflected in the intricate patterns on the seals  
of that time. Whatever the case, this period was most im-
of that time. Whatever the case, this period was most im
portant in the history of the ancient tribes and ethnic  
portant in the history of the ancient tribes and ethnic  
groups of Afghanistan, a time when the direct ancestors  
groups of Afghanistan, a time when the direct ancestors  
Line 595: Line 595:
=== Early Class Society ===
=== Early Class Society ===
The ancient history of Afghanistan, beginning from the  
The ancient history of Afghanistan, beginning from the  
late Bronze Age, has been studied on the basis of archaeo-
late Bronze Age, has been studied on the basis of archaeo
logical evidence as well as written sources. The most im-
logical evidence as well as written sources. The most im
portant source on the ancient history of Afghanistan and  
portant source on the ancient history of Afghanistan and  
neighbouring countries is the Avesta, a remarkable sample  
neighbouring countries is the Avesta, a remarkable sample  
of ancient Iranian writings from which we have leamt the  
of ancient Iranian writings from which we have leamt the  
names of a number of historical-cultural areas in the terri-
names of a number of historical-cultural areas in the terri
tory of Afghanistan dating to the Ist millennium B.C.  
tory of Afghanistan dating to the Ist millennium B.C.  
The Qandahar region, for instance (where an isolated group  
The Qandahar region, for instance (where an isolated group  
Line 608: Line 608:
group of early-farming tribes, is called Haitumanta (after  
group of early-farming tribes, is called Haitumanta (after  
the name of the Haitumant River, now Helmand). Since in  
the name of the Haitumant River, now Helmand). Since in  
ancient Iranian “‘haitu’”? means bridge, it may be supposed  
ancient Iranian "‘haitu’"? means bridge, it may be supposed  
that there was an important river crossing. The area is  
that there was an important river crossing. The area is  
better known under the name Drangiana (ancient Persian  
better known under the name Drangiana (ancient Persian  
Line 617: Line 617:
Herat oasis is named Haroiva in the Avesta (Areia in Greek),  
Herat oasis is named Haroiva in the Avesta (Areia in Greek),  
which eventually became Herat. The regions along the  
which eventually became Herat. The regions along the  
middle reaches of the Amu Darya, together with the south-
middle reaches of the Amu Darya, together with the south
em regions of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, formed Bactria  
em regions of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, formed Bactria  


Line 629: Line 629:
The version of the Avesta, which has come down to us,  
The version of the Avesta, which has come down to us,  
is by far incomplete. The most interesting part that has  
is by far incomplete. The most interesting part that has  
survived intact is ‘“Yasna’’, which literally means “reverence,  
survived intact is ‘"Yasna’’, which literally means "reverence,  
sacrifice”. It contains various texts that were recited during  
sacrifice". It contains various texts that were recited during  
specific religious ceremonies. Among them are 17 chap-
specific religious ceremonies. Among them are 17 chap
ters whose author is said to be Zoroaster (Zarathustra), the  
ters whose author is said to be Zoroaster (Zarathustra), the  
famous founder of one of the world religions. Zoroaster’s  
famous founder of one of the world religions. Zoroaster’s  
preachings known under the title ‘“The Gathas’’, are very  
preachings known under the title ‘"The Gathas’’, are very  
archaic as to language, but very emotional and passionate.  
archaic as to language, but very emotional and passionate.  
The ‘“Videvdat’”’ (a law against devs), another important  
The ‘"Videvdat’"’ (a law against devs), another important  
part of the Avesta, contains texts describing quite ancient tradition. And, last but not, ‘least, the Avesta also includes 22 hymns, so-called yashts, dedicated to different deities.  
part of the Avesta, contains texts describing quite ancient tradition. And, last but not, ‘least, the Avesta also includes 22 hymns, so-called yashts, dedicated to different deities.  
Their language is still more archaic than that of Zoro-
Their language is still more archaic than that of Zoro
aster’s preachings.  
aster’s preachings.  


Line 661: Line 661:
remains of a structure resembling a palace. It was built in  
remains of a structure resembling a palace. It was built in  
the 7th or the 6th century B.C. Found during the Nadi-Ali  
the 7th or the 6th century B.C. Found during the Nadi-Ali  
excavations were, apart from pottery, fragments of cop-
excavations were, apart from pottery, fragments of cop
per and gold omaments. Possibly this was the residency  
per and gold omaments. Possibly this was the residency  
of a local dahyupatt. The yashts make mention of the  
of a local dahyupatt. The yashts make mention of the  
rulers’ dwellings, evidently the oldest palace-type buil-
rulers’ dwellings, evidently the oldest palace-type buil
dings. Monumental structures resting on high raw-brick  
dings. Monumental structures resting on high raw-brick  
platforms and dating from the first third of the Ist mil-
platforms and dating from the first third of the Ist mil
lennium B.C. (Tilla-Tepe) have. been discovered in left-
lennium B.C. (Tilla-Tepe) have. been discovered in left
bank Bactria.  
bank Bactria.  


Available archaeological data indicate that certain chan-
Available archaeological data indicate that certain chan
ges had taken place in the culture of the North Afghanistan  
ges had taken place in the culture of the North Afghanistan  
oases in the first 300-350 years of the 1st millennium B.C.  
oases in the first 300-350 years of the 1st millennium B.C.  
Line 685: Line 685:
of the changes are not quite clear. Most probably they  
of the changes are not quite clear. Most probably they  
reflect the process of cultural assimilation which was linked  
reflect the process of cultural assimilation which was linked  
with the adoption of languages and dialects of the East-
with the adoption of languages and dialects of the East
Iranian linguistic group by the population of Afghanistan  
Iranian linguistic group by the population of Afghanistan  
and neighbouring countries. Early in the 1st millennium  
and neighbouring countries. Early in the 1st millennium  
Line 692: Line 692:
from the Bronze Age steppe livestock breeders, began to  
from the Bronze Age steppe livestock breeders, began to  
merge. When the nomads mastered horse riding, they began  
merge. When the nomads mastered horse riding, they began  
to cover long distances. Mounted warriors became a power-
to cover long distances. Mounted warriors became a power
ful military force in the ancient world. Most known among  
ful military force in the ancient world. Most known among  
those tribes were the Sakas, dwelling mainly in Northem  
those tribes were the Sakas, dwelling mainly in Northem  
Line 703: Line 703:
growing threat of war, and the continuing division of  
growing threat of war, and the continuing division of  
society into rich and poor served to promote the striving  
society into rich and poor served to promote the striving  
to establish large political amalgamations with stable centra-
to establish large political amalgamations with stable centra
lised leadership. The heroic epic tradition of the East-
lised leadership. The heroic epic tradition of the East
Iranian tribes, partially preserved in the Avesta, sheds light  
Iranian tribes, partially preserved in the Avesta, sheds light  
on some aspects of that process. One of the yashts, entitled  
on some aspects of that process. One of the yashts, entitled  
Line 713: Line 713:
for political centralisation, for unification of several oases  
for political centralisation, for unification of several oases  
under one ruler. Some of those amalgamations were fairly  
under one ruler. Some of those amalgamations were fairly  
large. It is said in the “Mihr-Yasht”’ that riding a fast horse,  
large. It is said in the "Mihr-Yasht"’ that riding a fast horse,  
Mithra was the first to reach mountain tops from where  
Mithra was the first to reach mountain tops from where  
he viewed the rich ‘‘Aryan’’ land, comprising Sogd, Margi-
he viewed the rich ‘‘Aryan’’ land, comprising Sogd, Margi
ana, Areia, Khwarizm and the regions lying, evidently, in  
ana, Areia, Khwarizm and the regions lying, evidently, in  
the mountains of Afghanistan. Historians have enough in-
the mountains of Afghanistan. Historians have enough in
formation to suggest that it was one of the quite ancient  
formation to suggest that it was one of the quite ancient  
political amalgamations without fixed borders or stable  
political amalgamations without fixed borders or stable  
Line 723: Line 723:


The heroic epic tradition of the family of Vishtaspa, a  
The heroic epic tradition of the family of Vishtaspa, a  
patron of Zoroaster, describes the dramatic events accom-
patron of Zoroaster, describes the dramatic events accom
panying such amalgamations. Kavi Khusraw, a remote an-
panying such amalgamations. Kavi Khusraw, a remote an
cestor of Vishtaspa, had fought against Frangrasyan, the  
cestor of Vishtaspa, had fought against Frangrasyan, the  
leader of the nomad tribes called the Turas in the Avesta.  
leader of the nomad tribes called the Turas in the Avesta.  
Line 731: Line 731:
Afghanistan. The nomad chief, however, lost a severe battle  
Afghanistan. The nomad chief, however, lost a severe battle  
and was captured. Bound hand and foot, he was brought  
and was captured. Bound hand and foot, he was brought  
before Kavi Khusraw who then killed him “at Chaichasta,  
before Kavi Khusraw who then killed him "at Chaichasta,  
a deep lake with salt water’? (most probably the Aral Sea).  
a deep lake with salt water’? (most probably the Aral Sea).  
Soviet historian I. M. Dyakonov maintains that the Aryan  
Soviet historian I. M. Dyakonov maintains that the Aryan  
land described in the ‘Mihr-Yasht” was a confederation  
land described in the ‘Mihr-Yasht" was a confederation  
formed by the ruler of Drangiana. In any event, it was one  
formed by the ruler of Drangiana. In any event, it was one  
of the temporary amalgamations that were formed under  
of the temporary amalgamations that were formed under  
the rule of lucky kinglets and were based on military  
the rule of lucky kinglets and were based on military  
strength. However, the power of the kinglets was limited  
strength. However, the power of the kinglets was limited  
by a “council of superiors”. The religious elite, a priestly  
by a "council of superiors". The religious elite, a priestly  
caste, played a major role, too.  
caste, played a major role, too.  


Whatever the case, the struggle for unifying the separate  
Whatever the case, the struggle for unifying the separate  
oases in the conditions of constant clashes, when the coun-
oases in the conditions of constant clashes, when the coun
try was often attacked by nomads, became the chief pro-
try was often attacked by nomads, became the chief pro
gressive trend at that period. It was in that historical con-
gressive trend at that period. It was in that historical con
text that Zoroaster emerged on the scene. Stylistical analy-
text that Zoroaster emerged on the scene. Stylistical analy
sis of his preachings, the Gathas, shows they had been  
sis of his preachings, the Gathas, shows they had been  
written by one and the same person and reflect the author’s  
written by one and the same person and reflect the author’s  
vivid personality, impetuous character, passion and intol-
vivid personality, impetuous character, passion and intol
erance. He was obviously a reformer.rejecting the previous  
erance. He was obviously a reformer.rejecting the previous  
beliefs and denouncing the priests behind them.  
beliefs and denouncing the priests behind them.  
Line 755: Line 755:
Zoroaster was fervently opposed to mendacious gods and  
Zoroaster was fervently opposed to mendacious gods and  
their advocates, and also to the rulers under whom the  
their advocates, and also to the rulers under whom the  
“bad preachers’ functioned. In his religious views he gave  
"bad preachers’ functioned. In his religious views he gave  
priority to Ahura-Mazda (the wise deity). He also laid the  
priority to Ahura-Mazda (the wise deity). He also laid the  
foundations of the dualistic system dividing the world  
foundations of the dualistic system dividing the world  
into the kingdom of good and truth (Arta) and the king-
into the kingdom of good and truth (Arta) and the king
dom of evil and falsehood (Drug). Thus Zoroaster put it  
dom of evil and falsehood (Drug). Thus Zoroaster put it  
in so many words: “I want to say about the two Spirits  
in so many words: "I want to say about the two Spirits  
at the beginning of life, and of them the bright one told the  
at the beginning of life, and of them the bright one told the  
evil one: ‘There is no accord between our views, teachings,  
evil one: ‘There is no accord between our views, teachings,  
Line 766: Line 766:
The two primordial spirits appeared as twins, kind and evil  
The two primordial spirits appeared as twins, kind and evil  


in thoughts, words and deeds. And when the two met, they first established life, on the one hand, and destruc- tion of life, on the other.”’ Man, theoretically at least, is  
in thoughts, words and deeds. And when the two met, they first established life, on the one hand, and destruction of life, on the other."’ Man, theoretically at least, is  
free to choose between good or evil. Zoroaster himself  
free to choose between good or evil. Zoroaster himself  
never doubted his choice and was a champion of Arta.  
never doubted his choice and was a champion of Arta.  
But beyond Zoroaster’s abstract notions and vague, though  
But beyond Zoroaster’s abstract notions and vague, though  
poetic, visions, one can discem quite real and earthly aspi-
poetic, visions, one can discem quite real and earthly aspi
rations. 0  
rations. 0  


Line 788: Line 788:
number of cattle owned was what determined one’s social  
number of cattle owned was what determined one’s social  
standing. Cattle, as an easily alienable property, was the  
standing. Cattle, as an easily alienable property, was the  
first to become the object of ownership, for cattle owner-
first to become the object of ownership, for cattle owner
ship meant prosperity. It is noteworthy in this respect  
ship meant prosperity. It is noteworthy in this respect  
that the noble family, one of the first to back up Zoroaster’s  
that the noble family, one of the first to back up Zoroaster’s  
teaching, was called Hvagva, originally meaning “having a  
teaching, was called Hvagva, originally meaning "having a  
good ox” or “good cattle”. The name of one of the prophet’s  
good ox" or "good cattle". The name of one of the prophet’s  
followers, Frashaoshtra, means “having good camels”, and  
followers, Frashaoshtra, means "having good camels", and  
that of another was Jamaspa, “leading ahorse”’. Even the pro-
that of another was Jamaspa, "leading ahorse"’. Even the pro
phet’s name means “owner of yellow camel” or ‘“‘cameleer’’.  
phet’s name means "owner of yellow camel" or ‘"‘cameleer’’.  


But Zoroaster was not in the least a passive advocate of  
But Zoroaster was not in the least a passive advocate of  
protecting welfare and wealth, of which prosperous lives-
protecting welfare and wealth, of which prosperous lives
tock breeding was a symbol. He argued that society could  
tock breeding was a symbol. He argued that society could  
be protected from misfortune and plunder and that prin-
be protected from misfortune and plunder and that prin
ciples of truth and light on earth could be established by  
ciples of truth and light on earth could be established by  
means of khshatra, the strong power of earthly rulers. In  
means of khshatra, the strong power of earthly rulers. In  
Line 808: Line 808:
peace to joyful settlements. In this respect Zoroastriism  
peace to joyful settlements. In this respect Zoroastriism  
was a doctrine to a great deal in accord with the historical  
was a doctrine to a great deal in accord with the historical  
situation of the time, providing ideological grounds for setting up large state amalgamations under “righteous kings”. This, in turn, was one of the causes of the rapid  
situation of the time, providing ideological grounds for setting up large state amalgamations under "righteous kings". This, in turn, was one of the causes of the rapid  
spread of the new doctrine which served as an ideological  
spread of the new doctrine which served as an ideological  
platform for the nobility which opposed their own power  
platform for the nobility which opposed their own power  
Line 820: Line 820:
in 312 B.C., that is meant or some other period. The life  
in 312 B.C., that is meant or some other period. The life  
and activities of the prophet can approximately be dated  
and activities of the prophet can approximately be dated  
the 7th century B.C. The name of his mother was Dugh-
the 7th century B.C. The name of his mother was Dugh
dova (“milking cows’) and his father’s name was Puru-
dova ("milking cows’) and his father’s name was Puru
sh spa (“one who owns grey or spotted horses’’). At the age  
sh spa ("one who owns grey or spotted horses’’). At the age  
of about thirty Zoroaster began to preach a new doctrine  
of about thirty Zoroaster began to preach a new doctrine  
but was: no success in his country. The opposition was  
but was: no success in his country. The opposition was  
especially vigorous on the part of traditional priests and  
especially vigorous on the part of traditional priests and  
Zoroaster was fOrced to flee his homeland. He found re-
Zoroaster was fOrced to flee his homeland. He found re
cognition, however, at the court of ruler Vishtaspa. The  
cognition, however, at the court of ruler Vishtaspa. The  
new doctrine was supported by many from among the  
new doctrine was supported by many from among the  
nobility, including the -ruler’s chief adviser Jamaspa. With  
nobility, including the -ruler’s chief adviser Jamaspa. With  
this strong support Zoroaster angrily exposed other rulers  
this strong support Zoroaster angrily exposed other rulers  
who heeded the voices of “false prophets’. Zoroaster is  
who heeded the voices of "false prophets’. Zoroaster is  
believed to have achieved that success at the age of forty-
believed to have achieved that success at the age of forty
two. But Vishtaspa’s struggle for creating a large domain  
two. But Vishtaspa’s struggle for creating a large domain  
was hard indeed and he ultimately lost. His main adversary  
was hard indeed and he ultimately lost. His main adversary  
Line 844: Line 844:
where rich and prospering oases had taken shape by the  
where rich and prospering oases had taken shape by the  
2nd millennium B.C. In the Avesta Bactria is described as  
2nd millennium B.C. In the Avesta Bactria is described as  
“a wonderful land with banners raised high’’, which obvi-
"a wonderful land with banners raised high’’, which obvi
ously implies valour. !  
ously implies valour. !  


Line 851: Line 851:
strong political amalgamation. This tradition has it that  
strong political amalgamation. This tradition has it that  
Bactria was a large kingdom with a number of cities. Then  
Bactria was a large kingdom with a number of cities. Then  
it w s attacked by Assyrian troops led by king Ninus and queen Semiramis. As the capital Bactra (now Bala-Hissar near Mazar-i-Sharif) was well fortified (apart from fortifi-
it w s attacked by Assyrian troops led by king Ninus and queen Semiramis. As the capital Bactra (now Bala-Hissar near Mazar-i-Sharif) was well fortified (apart from fortifi
cation walls there was a citadel), it was conquered only  
cation walls there was a citadel), it was conquered only  
by a ruse. After the fall of the capital the attackers seized  
by a ruse. After the fall of the capital the attackers seized  
a large amount of gold and silver. Much of this story resem-
a large amount of gold and silver. Much of this story resem
bles a legend. Semiramis was the actual ruler of Assyria  
bles a legend. Semiramis was the actual ruler of Assyria  
since 810 B.C. At the time of her rule her troops sometimes  
since 810 B.C. At the time of her rule her troops sometimes  
Line 868: Line 868:
that after the defeat of Media, the Achaeminian king Cyrus  
that after the defeat of Media, the Achaeminian king Cyrus  
regarded Bactria a major rival, along with Babylon, Egypt  
regarded Bactria a major rival, along with Babylon, Egypt  
and the Saka nomads. Some Graeco-Roman authors mista-
and the Saka nomads. Some Graeco-Roman authors mista
kenly named Zoroaster as king of Bactria during the Bactri-
kenly named Zoroaster as king of Bactria during the Bactri
an-Assyrian war: the ancient world knew Zoroaster as an  
an-Assyrian war: the ancient world knew Zoroaster as an  
outstanding personality who lived far away in the East.  
outstanding personality who lived far away in the East.  
Line 882: Line 882:
Media’s domination in the Orient was shortlived and its  
Media’s domination in the Orient was shortlived and its  
place was soon taken by the Persian Achaemenian empire.  
place was soon taken by the Persian Achaemenian empire.  
In 550 B.C., Cyrus, the founder of the new dynasty, cap-
In 550 B.C., Cyrus, the founder of the new dynasty, cap
tured the last Median king and seized Ecbatana, the capital  
tured the last Median king and seized Ecbatana, the capital  
of Media. The new state began to flourish and expanded  
of Media. The new state began to flourish and expanded  
enormously, having incorporated Areia, Bactria, Dran-
enormously, having incorporated Areia, Bactria, Dran
giana, Arachosia and Gandhara. These areas had most likely  
giana, Arachosia and Gandhara. These areas had most likely  
been conquered by Cyrus during his eastem campaign be-
been conquered by Cyrus during his eastem campaign be
tween 539 and 530 B.C. Some details of those events were  
tween 539 and 530 B.C. Some details of those events were  
recorded in ancient sources and it is known, for instance,  
recorded in ancient sources and it is known, for instance,  
that the Persians had entered into an alliance with the tribe  
that the Persians had entered into an alliance with the tribe  
of Ariaspa that lived in Drangiana. For their noble be-
of Ariaspa that lived in Drangiana. For their noble be
haviour they were called Evergets (noble). According to another ancient source, Cyrus was assisted in his eastem campaigns by the Sakas of King Amorg, particularly in  
haviour they were called Evergets (noble). According to another ancient source, Cyrus was assisted in his eastem campaigns by the Sakas of King Amorg, particularly in  
combats against the tribe of Derbiks supported by Indian  
combats against the tribe of Derbiks supported by Indian  
Line 902: Line 902:
No details are known about how Cyrus conquered Bactria.  
No details are known about how Cyrus conquered Bactria.  
But it is known that the first battles were not decisive and  
But it is known that the first battles were not decisive and  
that only later the Bactrians voluntarily submitted them-
that only later the Bactrians voluntarily submitted them
selves to the founder of the Achaemenian state. Any resist-
selves to the founder of the Achaemenian state. Any resist
ance was ruthlessly suppressed. Thus, Cyrus destroyed  
ance was ruthlessly suppressed. Thus, Cyrus destroyed  
Kapisa (located in the vicinity of present-day Bahram).  
Kapisa (located in the vicinity of present-day Bahram).  
In the conquered countries he set up satrapies headed by  
In the conquered countries he set up satrapies headed by  
Persian vicegerents who had armed forces and an administra-
Persian vicegerents who had armed forces and an administra
tive apparatus for collecting taxes. But not all of Cyrus’  
tive apparatus for collecting taxes. But not all of Cyrus’  
eastern campaigns were successful. In August 530 B.C. the  
eastern campaigns were successful. In August 530 B.C. the  
Line 919: Line 919:


After the death of Cyrus his son Cambyses succeeded him  
After the death of Cyrus his son Cambyses succeeded him  
as “king of kings’ ae the Achaemenian empire (530-522  
as "king of kings’ ae the Achaemenian empire (530-522  
B.C.). He set out to conquer Egypt, which his father had  
B.C.). He set out to conquer Egypt, which his father had  
failed to do. During the last year of Cambyses’ rule the  
failed to do. During the last year of Cambyses’ rule the  
Line 944: Line 944:
and seized power in Persia. Cambyses hurried back home  
and seized power in Persia. Cambyses hurried back home  
but died on the way from a wound received under unknown  
but died on the way from a wound received under unknown  
circumstances. Gaumata assumed the title of “king of  
circumstances. Gaumata assumed the title of "king of  
kings” and the vast empire was now completely in his  
kings" and the vast empire was now completely in his  
hands. But the disturbances that had started under Cam-
hands. But the disturbances that had started under Cam
byses were mounting. To remain in power, pseudo-Bardiya  
byses were mounting. To remain in power, pseudo-Bardiya  
suspended for three years both tax payment and supply of  
suspended for three years both tax payment and supply of  
troops to the Persian army from the conquered countries.  
troops to the Persian army from the conquered countries.  
Soon after, a plot was hatched among the Persian aristo-
Soon after, a plot was hatched among the Persian aristo
cracy against Guamata and he was killed. Darius I (522-
cracy against Guamata and he was killed. Darius I (522
486 B.C.), of the younger Achaemenian line, became “king
486 B.C.), of the younger Achaemenian line, became "king
of kings’. The new coup worsened the political situation  
of kings’. The new coup worsened the political situation  
still more and Darius I had to promptly suppress insurrec-
still more and Darius I had to promptly suppress insurrec
tions in many parts of his empire, including the eastern  
tions in many parts of his empire, including the eastern  
satrapies.  
satrapies.  


Opposition swelled most in Margiana where the insurg-
Opposition swelled most in Margiana where the insurg
ents chose Frada, a Margian, as leader. Dadarshish, a Bac-
ents chose Frada, a Margian, as leader. Dadarshish, a Bac
trian satrap, was sent to quell the uprising and the Margians  
trian satrap, was sent to quell the uprising and the Margians  
suffered a heavy defeat in a battle on December 10, 522  
suffered a heavy defeat in a battle on December 10, 522  
Line 967: Line 967:
popular movement that was particularly dangerous to the  
popular movement that was particularly dangerous to the  
social foundations of the Achaemenian empire. He argued  
social foundations of the Achaemenian empire. He argued  
that this accounted for the speed and severity of its sup-
that this accounted for the speed and severity of its sup
pression.11  
pression.11  


Line 973: Line 973:
swept across Persida and some other regions. It was led by  
swept across Persida and some other regions. It was led by  
Vahyazdata, who announced himself to be Bardiya, a son  
Vahyazdata, who announced himself to be Bardiya, a son  
of Cyrus. He was supported by the whole of Persida. Ac-
of Cyrus. He was supported by the whole of Persida. Ac
cording to an official version, the rebels were defeated in  
cording to an official version, the rebels were defeated in  
the very first battle at Kapishkanish fortress (supposedly  
the very first battle at Kapishkanish fortress (supposedly  
Line 979: Line 979:
the movement was not put down, and the insurgents mustered forces once again, which shows that they had support among the local population. They were utterly  
the movement was not put down, and the insurgents mustered forces once again, which shows that they had support among the local population. They were utterly  
defeated in the second battle on February 21, 521 B.C.,  
defeated in the second battle on February 21, 521 B.C.,  
at Gandutava. There are all grounds to see these insurrec-
at Gandutava. There are all grounds to see these insurrec
tions as a result of increased class differentiation which  
tions as a result of increased class differentiation which  
evoked protest on the part of the ever more deprived  
evoked protest on the part of the ever more deprived  
Line 990: Line 990:


¢-However, the tendency to isolate some of the satrapies,  
¢-However, the tendency to isolate some of the satrapies,  
particularly those most developed economically and politic-
particularly those most developed economically and politic
ally, remained. Indicative in this respect was the role of  
ally, remained. Indicative in this respect was the role of  
Bactria, whose satraps were usually appointed from among  
Bactria, whose satraps were usually appointed from among  
Line 1,008: Line 1,008:
which the number of mercenaries was increasing.  
which the number of mercenaries was increasing.  


Meanwhile the remote satrapies were growing more in-
Meanwhile the remote satrapies were growing more in
dependent, some becoming individual states. In the East,  
dependent, some becoming individual states. In the East,  
for instance, Khwarizm broke away and a number of Indian  
for instance, Khwarizm broke away and a number of Indian  
lands, annexed under DariusI, became independent.  
lands, annexed under DariusI, became independent.  
Besus, the last Achaemenian satrap of Bactria, did not limit  
Besus, the last Achaemenian satrap of Bactria, did not limit  
his domain to Bactria alone. Sogdians and Indians (evident-
his domain to Bactria alone. Sogdians and Indians (evident
ly the inhabitants of Westem Gandhara) were subordinate  
ly the inhabitants of Westem Gandhara) were subordinate  
to him (at least they supplied troops for his army), while  
to him (at least they supplied troops for his army), while  
the Saka tribes were his ‘‘allies’”’. This vast domain, which  
the Saka tribes were his ‘‘allies’"’. This vast domain, which  
would later become the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, could  
would later become the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, could  
not fail to influence the political ambitions of Besus, who  
not fail to influence the political ambitions of Besus, who  
Line 1,024: Line 1,024:
The lists of the regions taxed by the Achaemenian state  
The lists of the regions taxed by the Achaemenian state  
and records of events in the 6th and 5th centuries B.C,  
and records of events in the 6th and 5th centuries B.C,  
mention the names of various tribes and peoples, thus be-
mention the names of various tribes and peoples, thus be
coming a valuable palaeo-ethnographic source. Among the  
coming a valuable palaeo-ethnographic source. Among the  
multi-lingual population of the Achaemenian empire men-
multi-lingual population of the Achaemenian empire men
tion is also made of the Paktyes who lived somewhere in  
tion is also made of the Paktyes who lived somewhere in  
the eastern satrapies. Some historians believed that Paktye  
the eastern satrapies. Some historians believed that Paktye  
Line 1,033: Line 1,033:
Greek authors make it possible to approximately outline  
Greek authors make it possible to approximately outline  
the territory where the Paktyes lived. Within this territory  
the territory where the Paktyes lived. Within this territory  
was the city of Caspatura, or Caspapura, from which a flo-
was the city of Caspatura, or Caspapura, from which a flo
tilla of Darius I set out down the Indus to explore the new  
tilla of Darius I set out down the Indus to explore the new  
territories of his domain.  
territories of his domain.  


There is also evidence that the lands of the Paktyes  
There is also evidence that the lands of the Paktyes  
bordered on the territory populated by the “Scythians’’,  
bordered on the territory populated by the "Scythians’’,  
that is, a group of nomad tribes ancient authors often called  
that is, a group of nomad tribes ancient authors often called  
by the name of the nomads better known to them. More  
by the name of the nomads better known to them. More  
likely they were the Sakas from the Pamirs, where their  
likely they were the Sakas from the Pamirs, where their  
burials have been discovered, or the Sakas who also lived  
burials have been discovered, or the Sakas who also lived  
in mountain valleys and on mountain plateaus but some-
in mountain valleys and on mountain plateaus but some
what more southerly. Rivers in the area inhabited by the  
what more southerly. Rivers in the area inhabited by the  
Paktyes were navigable and, possibly, their lands were in  
Paktyes were navigable and, possibly, their lands were in  
Line 1,051: Line 1,051:


The toponymy of Bactria, Arachosia, Drangiana and  
The toponymy of Bactria, Arachosia, Drangiana and  
other regions, now fully or partially incorporated in Afgha-
other regions, now fully or partially incorporated in Afgha
nistan, has shown that the population living in those areas in  
nistan, has shown that the population living in those areas in  
the middle of the 1st millennium B.C. spoke mainly the  
the middle of the 1st millennium B.C. spoke mainly the  
Line 1,059: Line 1,059:
the Bactra, and also Ariaspas, Aspasians, etc. It was these  
the Bactra, and also Ariaspas, Aspasians, etc. It was these  
ancient East-Iranian tribes that made up the basis on which  
ancient East-Iranian tribes that made up the basis on which  
the Iranian-speaking peoples populating present-day Afgha-
the Iranian-speaking peoples populating present-day Afgha
nistan were developing. There exist definite links between  
nistan were developing. There exist definite links between  
the Bactrian and modern Afghan languages. A considerable  
the Bactrian and modern Afghan languages. A considerable  
Line 1,065: Line 1,065:
played by the Saka languages. The people who spoke them  
played by the Saka languages. The people who spoke them  
had moved far to the south at a rather early period and their  
had moved far to the south at a rather early period and their  
ranks were replenished by inflows of nomad tribes. Obvi- ously the interaction between the settled population of Arachosia and Drangiana, who spoke East-Iranian dialects,  
ranks were replenished by inflows of nomad tribes. Obviously the interaction between the settled population of Arachosia and Drangiana, who spoke East-Iranian dialects,  
and the nomads of the Saka group marked an important  
and the nomads of the Saka group marked an important  
phase in the ethnic evolution of the ancestors of the Afghan  
phase in the ethnic evolution of the ancestors of the Afghan  
Line 1,074: Line 1,074:
Bactria and neighbouring areas it was, on the whole, a time  
Bactria and neighbouring areas it was, on the whole, a time  
of certain stabilisation. The relative peace, Zoroaster had  
of certain stabilisation. The relative peace, Zoroaster had  
called for in his preachings, came to the “joyful settle-
called for in his preachings, came to the "joyful settle
ments’. There was definite progress in the economy, pri-
ments’. There was definite progress in the economy, pri
marily in irrigated farming and in the handicrafts, The  
marily in irrigated farming and in the handicrafts, The  
Achaemenian government built irrigation installations,  
Achaemenian government built irrigation installations,  
Line 1,088: Line 1,088:
date back to the middle of the 1st millennium B.C.’  
date back to the middle of the 1st millennium B.C.’  


The population was gradually concentrating in urban-
The population was gradually concentrating in urban
type settlements, which were becoming major centres of  
type settlements, which were becoming major centres of  
economic and cultural development. The ruins of the Bac-
economic and cultural development. The ruins of the Bac
trian capital studied by archaeologists occupy an area of  
trian capital studied by archaeologists occupy an area of  
120 hectares, not counting the suburbs. Many cities had a  
120 hectares, not counting the suburbs. Many cities had a  
Line 1,096: Line 1,096:
Dilyar-Tepe, a major centre of that oasis, was circular in  
Dilyar-Tepe, a major centre of that oasis, was circular in  
shape with a rectangular citadel in the centre. Towns were  
shape with a rectangular citadel in the centre. Towns were  
the seat of handicrafts, exchange of goods, and trade. In-
the seat of handicrafts, exchange of goods, and trade. In
dian sources have made it possible to draw up a long list of  
dian sources have made it possible to draw up a long list of  
the trade items of the time: woollen blankets; various iron  
the trade items of the time: woollen blankets; various iron  
Line 1,105: Line 1,105:
among the farming products various wines, including a wine  
among the farming products various wines, including a wine  
variety from Kapisa, were for sale. There was a growth of  
variety from Kapisa, were for sale. There was a growth of  
international trade, which was patronised by the Achae-
international trade, which was patronised by the Achae
menian government, and there existed a trade route from  
menian government, and there existed a trade route from  
Asia Minor to Bactria and further on to India.
Asia Minor to Bactria and further on to India.


The development of money circulation reflected the pro-
The development of money circulation reflected the pro
gress of commodity relations and showed that at the time  
gress of commodity relations and showed that at the time  
the limits of the natural economy were overgrown. Sources  
the limits of the natural economy were overgrown. Sources  
Line 1,121: Line 1,121:
sikles (5.5 grams) are found comparatively rarely. More  
sikles (5.5 grams) are found comparatively rarely. More  
widespread were the coins issued by various Greek towns,  
widespread were the coins issued by various Greek towns,  
above all, Athens. Local coins were also minted in Gand-
above all, Athens. Local coins were also minted in Gand
hara, in the shape of elongated or square silver bars with  
hara, in the shape of elongated or square silver bars with  
various imprints. A large treasure-trove of silver coins was  
various imprints. A large treasure-trove of silver coins was  
found in Kabul, but only a small part of it was stored in  
found in Kabul, but only a small part of it was stored in  
a museum.!5 Apart from Achaemenian, Greek and Gand-
a museum.!5 Apart from Achaemenian, Greek and Gand
haran coins, it contained 29 peculiar coins resembling Greek  
haran coins, it contained 29 peculiar coins resembling Greek  
ones in mintage and Gandharan ones by the impressions  
ones in mintage and Gandharan ones by the impressions  
Line 1,132: Line 1,132:
coins were minted in Kapisa or even in Bactria itself.16  
coins were minted in Kapisa or even in Bactria itself.16  


It may be concluded, on the whole, that during the polit-
It may be concluded, on the whole, that during the polit
ical rule of the Achaemenians, whose domains also included  
ical rule of the Achaemenians, whose domains also included  
the lands of present-day Afghanistan, the development of  
the lands of present-day Afghanistan, the development of  
Line 1,162: Line 1,162:
style. There were also pieces of local Bactrian art. It is  
style. There were also pieces of local Bactrian art. It is  
thought that it was in Bactria that the local version of  
thought that it was in Bactria that the local version of  
Achaemenian glyptics—golden rings with various represen-
Achaemenian glyptics—golden rings with various represen
tations resembling the gems of Asia Minor though differing  
tations resembling the gems of Asia Minor though differing  
from them in certain respects—had taken shape.2°,  
from them in certain respects—had taken shape.2°,  


Major economic and cultural achievements largely stimu-
Major economic and cultural achievements largely stimu
lated separatist tendencies in the eastern satrapies which  
lated separatist tendencies in the eastern satrapies which  
sought political independence. The local elite was not  
sought political independence. The local elite was not  
inclined to endlessly share with the Achaemenian dynasty  
inclined to endlessly share with the Achaemenian dynasty  
the profits gained by the exploitation of their tribesmen.  
the profits gained by the exploitation of their tribesmen.  
Their aspirations were realised only later, when the Achae-
Their aspirations were realised only later, when the Achae
menian empire, hit by an internal crisis, fell under the  
menian empire, hit by an internal crisis, fell under the  
onslaught of the armies led by Alexander the Great.
onslaught of the armies led by Alexander the Great.
Line 1,183: Line 1,183:
Mesopotamia. The persons close to DariusIII, the last  
Mesopotamia. The persons close to DariusIII, the last  
of the Achaemenians, contrived a plot led by Besus, a satrap  
of the Achaemenians, contrived a plot led by Besus, a satrap  
of Bactria, and killed their ruler. Besus immediately pro-
of Bactria, and killed their ruler. Besus immediately pro
claimed himself “king of Asia”. Apart from Bactria, his  
claimed himself "king of Asia". Apart from Bactria, his  
power extended to Areia and Drangiana. He tried to es-
power extended to Areia and Drangiana. He tried to es
tablish his influence in Parthia, too, but Alexander, who  
tablish his influence in Parthia, too, but Alexander, who  
considered himself the natural heir to the Achaemenians,  
considered himself the natural heir to the Achaemenians,  
did not wish to inherit a diminished country and in 330  
did not wish to inherit a diminished country and in 330  
B.C. moved his armies to Areia. There he was initially re-
B.C. moved his armies to Areia. There he was initially re
ceived with honours by the local satrap Satibarzanes, but  
ceived with honours by the local satrap Satibarzanes, but  
as soon as the main forces of Alexander marched further south, Satibarzanes fomented an uprising and destroyed the Graeco-Macedonian garrison left in the town of Arta-
as soon as the main forces of Alexander marched further south, Satibarzanes fomented an uprising and destroyed the Graeco-Macedonian garrison left in the town of Arta
coana, the capital of Areia. Alexander retumed and dealt  
coana, the capital of Areia. Alexander retumed and dealt  
ruthlessly with the rebels, some of whom were killed and  
ruthlessly with the rebels, some of whom were killed and  
Line 1,212: Line 1,212:
plain. Besus fled beyond the Amu Darya and burt the  
plain. Besus fled beyond the Amu Darya and burt the  
ships he had used for crossing the river. But the fate of the  
ships he had used for crossing the river. But the fate of the  
ill-starred “king of Asia’? was as sad as that of Darius III  
ill-starred "king of Asia’? was as sad as that of Darius III  
whom he had betrayed: his own men gave him up to Ale-
whom he had betrayed: his own men gave him up to Ale
xander. After a long absence, during which the Graeco-
xander. After a long absence, during which the Graeco
Macedonians had to fight the freedom-loving Sogdians  
Macedonians had to fight the freedom-loving Sogdians  
in Central Asia, they returmmed to Bactria for a winter stay  
in Central Asia, they returmmed to Bactria for a winter stay  
in 329-328 B.C. There they encountered a new wave of anti-
in 329-328 B.C. There they encountered a new wave of anti
Macedonian rebellion and in the process of quelling it  
Macedonian rebellion and in the process of quelling it  
several cities were destroyed. Pursuing a policy of winning  
several cities were destroyed. Pursuing a policy of winning  
over the local population, Alexander set to forming detach-
over the local population, Alexander set to forming detach
ments of Bactrian and Sogdian horsemen. An impressive  
ments of Bactrian and Sogdian horsemen. An impressive  
feature of that policy was his marrying Roxane, a daughter  
feature of that policy was his marrying Roxane, a daughter  
of Oxyartes, an eminent Bactrian, next winter. Though the  
of Oxyartes, an eminent Bactrian, next winter. Though the  
ancient sources are unanimous in extolling the beauty of  
ancient sources are unanimous in extolling the beauty of  
Roxane (her name in Bactrian means “radiant”), it was for  
Roxane (her name in Bactrian means "radiant"), it was for  
the most part a political move. In 327 B.C. the army, rein-
the most part a political move. In 327 B.C. the army, rein
forced with local contingents, moved from Bactria to the  
forced with local contingents, moved from Bactria to the  
south, across the Hindu Kush, and reached the vicinity of  
south, across the Hindu Kush, and reached the vicinity of  
Line 1,238: Line 1,238:
The Graeco-Macedonian conquest of the Achaemenian  
The Graeco-Macedonian conquest of the Achaemenian  
empire was of immense significance. To a great extent it  
empire was of immense significance. To a great extent it  
was the victory of more developed forms of the slave-own-
was the victory of more developed forms of the slave-own
ing economy over backward ones. The political organisa-
ing economy over backward ones. The political organisa
tion of the Achaemenian empire no longer conformed to  
tion of the Achaemenian empire no longer conformed to  
the interests of the ruling class of the countries it com-
the interests of the ruling class of the countries it com
prised, which aspired towards the continued development  
prised, which aspired towards the continued development  
of the slave-owning economy, particularly of trade and  
of the slave-owning economy, particularly of trade and  
Line 1,250: Line 1,250:
Alexander and the men close to him perceived the motley  
Alexander and the men close to him perceived the motley  
make-up of the new monarchy they were creating and  
make-up of the new monarchy they were creating and  
attempted to smooth it over by drawing the Oriental no-
attempted to smooth it over by drawing the Oriental no
bility into running the country, and even encouraged mixed  
bility into running the country, and even encouraged mixed  
marriages. Many new towns and settlements were built  
marriages. Many new towns and settlements were built  
during this period. A town named Alexandria was built  
during this period. A town named Alexandria was built  
in almost every satrapy.?2 Thus, in the territory of Afgha-
in almost every satrapy.?2 Thus, in the territory of Afgha
nistan Alexandrias were built in Areia, Drangiana and Ara-
nistan Alexandrias were built in Areia, Drangiana and Ara
chosia (evidently in the vicinity of Ghazni); there was also  
chosia (evidently in the vicinity of Ghazni); there was also  
a Caucasian Alexandria at the foothills of the Hindu Kush  
a Caucasian Alexandria at the foothills of the Hindu Kush  
Line 1,261: Line 1,261:
also in Arachosia (obviously in the vicinity of Qandahar).  
also in Arachosia (obviously in the vicinity of Qandahar).  
Simultaneously, there was a fresh growth of trade: the  
Simultaneously, there was a fresh growth of trade: the  
Macedonian phalanxes were followed by Greek and Phoe-
Macedonian phalanxes were followed by Greek and Phoe
nician merchants. Enslavement of the population of the  
nician merchants. Enslavement of the population of the  
cities that offered resistance could not but strengthen the  
cities that offered resistance could not but strengthen the  
Line 1,281: Line 1,281:
After a swift succession of battles, conquests, collusions  
After a swift succession of battles, conquests, collusions  
and assassinations, the outlines of large new states were  
and assassinations, the outlines of large new states were  
beginning to take shape. One of them was ruled by Alexan-
beginning to take shape. One of them was ruled by Alexan
der’s military commander Seleucus who, with a thousand  
der’s military commander Seleucus who, with a thousand  
warriors, captured Babylon in 312 B.C. and eventually  
warriors, captured Babylon in 312 B.C. and eventually  
Line 1,290: Line 1,290:
Indian empire of the Mauryas. Seleucus was evidently not  
Indian empire of the Mauryas. Seleucus was evidently not  
very successful in those battles and, having concluded  
very successful in those battles and, having concluded  
“friendship and a conjugal union”, he was content with  
"friendship and a conjugal union", he was content with  
500 combat elephants, ceding in return a number of regions  
500 combat elephants, ceding in return a number of regions  
of the Graeco-Macedonian domain, in particular Arachosia.  
of the Graeco-Macedonian domain, in particular Arachosia.  
Line 1,313: Line 1,313:
by two or four elephants. The coins were made according  
by two or four elephants. The coins were made according  
to local weight standards, evidently with the purpose of  
to local weight standards, evidently with the purpose of  
winning over to.the government’s side the local elite con-
winning over to.the government’s side the local elite con
nected with trade. When Seleucus died, his son Antio-
nected with trade. When Seleucus died, his son Antio
chus became the king of the empire (280-262 B.C.). The  
chus became the king of the empire (280-262 B.C.). The  
Seleucids were paying increasing attention to the West as  
Seleucids were paying increasing attention to the West as  
Line 1,330: Line 1,330:
vicegerent and not the head of the dynasty, and then the  
vicegerent and not the head of the dynasty, and then the  
official portrait went together with an official inscription:  
official portrait went together with an official inscription:  
<nowiki>**</nowiki>King Diodotus”. Simultaneously, Parthia, too, broke away  
<nowiki>**</nowiki>King Diodotus". Simultaneously, Parthia, too, broke away  
and became an independent state. Diodotus tried to extend  
and became an independent state. Diodotus tried to extend  
his power to Parthia as well, but failed. The successor to  
his power to Parthia as well, but failed. The successor to  
Diodotus was his son, also called Diodotus. But the new  
Diodotus was his son, also called Diodotus. But the new  
dynasty did not last long. In c. 230 B.C. Diodotus II was  
dynasty did not last long. In c. 230 B.C. Diodotus II was  
dethroned and his lineage was exterminated by Euthyde-
dethroned and his lineage was exterminated by Euthyde
mus. Euthydemus’ coins are particularly numerous among  
mus. Euthydemus’ coins are particularly numerous among  
the finds on the sites of ancient settlements and in museum  
the finds on the sites of ancient settlements and in museum  
collections, which suggests that his rule was long and rela-
collections, which suggests that his rule was long and rela
tively stable. Under Euthydemus the state had to hold out  
tively stable. Under Euthydemus the state had to hold out  
against the onslaught of the Seleucids.  
against the onslaught of the Seleucids.  
Line 1,349: Line 1,349:
B.C. he approached the borders of Bactria. The severe battle  
B.C. he approached the borders of Bactria. The severe battle  
near Herat, close to the border, was followed by a two-year  
near Herat, close to the border, was followed by a two-year  
siege of Bactra. Protracted negotiations ensued with Antio-
siege of Bactra. Protracted negotiations ensued with Antio
chus III represented by Telei. A vivid account of the argu-
chus III represented by Telei. A vivid account of the argu
ments put forth by Euthydemus during the negotiations,  
ments put forth by Euthydemus during the negotiations,  
evidently in response to accusations of betraying the Se-
evidently in response to accusations of betraying the Se
leucids, has been preserved. It was not he, Euthydemus  
leucids, has been preserved. It was not he, Euthydemus  
continued, who rose against the king first. On the con-
continued, who rose against the king first. On the con
trary, he acquired power over Bactria by annihilating  
trary, he acquired power over Bactria by annihilating  
the offspring of several other traitors. Euthydemus spoke  
the offspring of several other traitors. Euthydemus spoke  
Line 1,378: Line 1,378:
Graeco-Bactria focussed all attention on the south where  
Graeco-Bactria focussed all attention on the south where  
beyond the Hindu Kush mountains there lay the gradually  
beyond the Hindu Kush mountains there lay the gradually  
weakening Mauryan empire. After Antiochus III was defeat-
weakening Mauryan empire. After Antiochus III was defeat
ed at Magnesia by Roman legions, the treaties concluded  
ed at Magnesia by Roman legions, the treaties concluded  
by him in the East became still more unreliable. At that  
by him in the East became still more unreliable. At that  
Line 1,387: Line 1,387:
front side and an Indian inscription (in the Kharoshthi  
front side and an Indian inscription (in the Kharoshthi  
script) on the reverse, which suggests that an Indic-language  
script) on the reverse, which suggests that an Indic-language  
population existed among his subjects. Proud of his victo-
population existed among his subjects. Proud of his victo
ries, Demetrius assumed the title of “invincible king”.  
ries, Demetrius assumed the title of "invincible king".  
On the coins he was portrayed in a combat helmet shaped  
On the coins he was portrayed in a combat helmet shaped  
as an elephant’s head.  
as an elephant’s head.  
Line 1,407: Line 1,407:
Heliocles. According to ancient authors, he rode a chariot  
Heliocles. According to ancient authors, he rode a chariot  
over his father’s blood and ordered that his dead body be  
over his father’s blood and ordered that his dead body be  
left unburied. He then assumed the title of “‘fair king”.  
left unburied. He then assumed the title of "‘fair king".  


Political stability was inconceivable in such conditions.  
Political stability was inconceivable in such conditions.  
There are indeed coins of at least 20 rulers. Numismatists call them Graeco-Bactrian if they bear only Greek inscrip- tions, and Graeco-Indian if the inscriptions are in two  
There are indeed coins of at least 20 rulers. Numismatists call them Graeco-Bactrian if they bear only Greek inscriptions, and Graeco-Indian if the inscriptions are in two  
languages. Many of the rulers, invariably calling themselves  
languages. Many of the rulers, invariably calling themselves  
kings, were most probably lucky generals or political  
kings, were most probably lucky generals or political  
adventurers whose power was shortlived. And, correspond-
adventurers whose power was shortlived. And, correspond
ingly, their coins were few. Among such Graeco-Bactrian  
ingly, their coins were few. Among such Graeco-Bactrian  
rulers were, probably, Antimachus I and Plato.  
rulers were, probably, Antimachus I and Plato.  


The coins of the Graeco-Indian rulers Antialcidas, Anti-
The coins of the Graeco-Indian rulers Antialcidas, Anti
machus IJ, Apollodotus and Menander are more numerous.  
machus IJ, Apollodotus and Menander are more numerous.  
A great number of them were found in Arachosia which,  
A great number of them were found in Arachosia which,  
evidently, was part of their domains. It is known, for in-
evidently, was part of their domains. It is known, for in
stance, that Menander was born in a settlement not far  
stance, that Menander was born in a settlement not far  
from Caucasian Alexandria. He proved to be a far-sighted  
from Caucasian Alexandria. He proved to be a far-sighted  
Line 1,427: Line 1,427:
Menander relied not only on the Graeco-Bactrian armed  
Menander relied not only on the Graeco-Bactrian armed  
forces, but also on some sections of the local population.  
forces, but also on some sections of the local population.  
It was most likely for this motive that he adopted Bud-
It was most likely for this motive that he adopted Bud
dhism. Still, the contradictions between the Graeco-Mace-
dhism. Still, the contradictions between the Graeco-Mace
donian elite and the local population remained a source  
donian elite and the local population remained a source  
of internal weakness for Graeco-Bactria. The Graeco-Bac-
of internal weakness for Graeco-Bactria. The Graeco-Bac
trian rulers also failed to build a‘stable state system that  
trian rulers also failed to build a‘stable state system that  
would ensure internal stability. The mounting pressure  
would ensure internal stability. The mounting pressure  
Line 1,438: Line 1,438:
Graeco-Bactria was conquered by nomads. They were  
Graeco-Bactria was conquered by nomads. They were  
initially stationed mostly on the right bank of the Amu  
initially stationed mostly on the right bank of the Amu  
Darya where numerous burial mounds have been excavat-
Darya where numerous burial mounds have been excavat
ed, though there is evidence that they are to be found in  
ed, though there is evidence that they are to be found in  
Southern Bactria too.  
Southern Bactria too.  


The Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, which existed only  
The Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, which existed only  
slightly more than 100 years, left a bright trace in the his-
slightly more than 100 years, left a bright trace in the his
tory of Bactria and a number of neighbouring countries.  
tory of Bactria and a number of neighbouring countries.  
That was a period of the further flourishing of urban life  
That was a period of the further flourishing of urban life  
Line 1,480: Line 1,480:
108 metres, and four porticos having 116 stone columns  
108 metres, and four porticos having 116 stone columns  
with capitals, in a style closely resembling the Corinthian  
with capitals, in a style closely resembling the Corinthian  
order. Nearby stood a “southern ensemble” which most  
order. Nearby stood a "southern ensemble" which most  
likely was the ruler’s residency. In one of its main halls  
likely was the ruler’s residency. In one of its main halls  
at least 15 statues, 1 to 1.5 metres tall, were mounted in the  
at least 15 statues, 1 to 1.5 metres tall, were mounted in the  
recesses along the walls. In another hall there stood a  
recesses along the walls. In another hall there stood a  
sculptural group with the statues two or three times larger  
sculptural group with the statues two or three times larger  
than life size. The administrative centre also had an 18-
than life size. The administrative centre also had an 18
column hall built in the traditions of Achaemenian palace  
column hall built in the traditions of Achaemenian palace  
architecture. The main street ended with a temple in which  
architecture. The main street ended with a temple in which  
Line 1,494: Line 1,494:
household articles, a bronze figure of Heracles, and a relief  
household articles, a bronze figure of Heracles, and a relief  
with scenes from the Ikad. The thick raw-brick fortress  
with scenes from the Ikad. The thick raw-brick fortress  
walls, however, were built in the tradition of local monu- mental architecture. Though the vast peristyle courtyard of the administrative centre is of the Rhodes style, peristyle  
walls, however, were built in the tradition of local monumental architecture. Though the vast peristyle courtyard of the administrative centre is of the Rhodes style, peristyle  
courtyards as such, though with a different architectural  
courtyards as such, though with a different architectural  
decor, were built in Achaemenian Bactria (Altyn-10).  
decor, were built in Achaemenian Bactria (Altyn-10).  


Apart from marble sculptures, archaeologists also discov-
Apart from marble sculptures, archaeologists also discov
ered in Ai-khanum plaster and clay figures, with parts of  
ered in Ai-khanum plaster and clay figures, with parts of  
the figures often made of various materials. Some scholars  
the figures often made of various materials. Some scholars  
Line 1,504: Line 1,504:
Oriental phenomenon. The fusion of the traditions of local  
Oriental phenomenon. The fusion of the traditions of local  
Bactrian civilisation and Hellenic culture was typical of the  
Bactrian civilisation and Hellenic culture was typical of the  
Seleucid and Graeco-Bactrian periods. The coins of Graeco-
Seleucid and Graeco-Bactrian periods. The coins of Graeco
Bactrian kings are remarkable samples of the medallion  
Bactrian kings are remarkable samples of the medallion  
portraits of the time.  
portraits of the time.  
Line 1,521: Line 1,521:
closer study.  
closer study.  


Ancient sources suggest that the decline of Graeco-Bac-
Ancient sources suggest that the decline of Graeco-Bac
tria was closely linked with the invasion of Parthia by  
tria was closely linked with the invasion of Parthia by  
nomads, called loosely Scythians. Parthian king Phraates II  
nomads, called loosely Scythians. Parthian king Phraates II  
tried to use the nomad tribes in military open but,  
tried to use the nomad tribes in military open but,  
when he failed to keep his promises, they killed him in 128  
when he failed to keep his promises, they killed him in 128  
B.C. His heir, Artabanus I, attempted to take over the initia-
B.C. His heir, Artabanus I, attempted to take over the initia
tive in the struggle against the nomad tribes by a retalia-
tive in the struggle against the nomad tribes by a retalia
tory blow, but was defeated and in 124 B.C. killed in com-
tory blow, but was defeated and in 124 B.C. killed in com
bat. It was Artabanus’ son, Mithridates II (124-97 B.C.),  
bat. It was Artabanus’ son, Mithridates II (124-97 B.C.),  
who built up Parthian might and eliminated the danger the  
who built up Parthian might and eliminated the danger the  
Line 1,538: Line 1,538:
groups listed in various sources. But in general, it may be  
groups listed in various sources. But in general, it may be  
concluded that the large-scale migration of nomads had  
concluded that the large-scale migration of nomads had  
affected most different groups of tribes, basically those speaking East-Iranian languages. The dominating role was played by the Yiteh-chi—this tribal group occupied the ter-
affected most different groups of tribes, basically those speaking East-Iranian languages. The dominating role was played by the Yiteh-chi—this tribal group occupied the ter
ritory of Bactria. The Sacas penetrated the regions lying  
ritory of Bactria. The Sacas penetrated the regions lying  
further south: Drangiana, Arachosia and Gandhara. The  
further south: Drangiana, Arachosia and Gandhara. The  
Line 1,546: Line 1,546:


Initially nomad incursions were accompanied by fire and  
Initially nomad incursions were accompanied by fire and  
destruction. Clear evidence of this is offered by the Ai-kha-
destruction. Clear evidence of this is offered by the Ai-kha
num excavations: the greater part of the administrative  
num excavations: the greater part of the administrative  
centre had been burnt down. The city dwellers used the  
centre had been burnt down. The city dwellers used the  
Line 1,573: Line 1,573:
neighbouring countries is well characterised by the graves  
neighbouring countries is well characterised by the graves  
of the Yiieh-chi nobility, discovered by a Soviet-Afghan  
of the Yiieh-chi nobility, discovered by a Soviet-Afghan  
archaeological expedition in Tilla-Tepe in Northern Afghan-
archaeological expedition in Tilla-Tepe in Northern Afghan
istan.26 The graves were very simple: a wooden coffin on  
istan.26 The graves were very simple: a wooden coffin on  
short legs was placed in a rectangular hole 1.5-2 metres deep  
short legs was placed in a rectangular hole 1.5-2 metres deep  
and covered by a counterpane decorated with golden and  
and covered by a counterpane decorated with golden and  
silver plates. There were no burial mounds or complex archi-
silver plates. There were no burial mounds or complex archi
tectural structures in the manner of the Kineas mausoleum.  
tectural structures in the manner of the Kineas mausoleum.  
However, the deceased, placed in narrow coffins, were clad  
However, the deceased, placed in narrow coffins, were clad  
in extremely rich clothes embroidered with gold decorations  
in extremely rich clothes embroidered with gold decorations  
in truly barbarian splendour. Stamped and cast golden buc- kles, plates and dagger scabbards were ingeniously and lavishly decorated with inlaid pearls, turquoise and lapis  
in truly barbarian splendour. Stamped and cast golden buckles, plates and dagger scabbards were ingeniously and lavishly decorated with inlaid pearls, turquoise and lapis  
lazuli. In some cases there were three layers of clothes, each  
lazuli. In some cases there were three layers of clothes, each  
decorated in a different style. The burials are dated to  
decorated in a different style. The burials are dated to  
Line 1,594: Line 1,594:
Numerous multi-coloured inlays are also evidence of this.  
Numerous multi-coloured inlays are also evidence of this.  
Another group of scenes represents the purely antique line:  
Another group of scenes represents the purely antique line:  
a warrior clad in armour, Macedonian style, women bestrid-
a warrior clad in armour, Macedonian style, women bestrid
ing a lion, or S.lenus with a rhyton in hand. Many of the  
ing a lion, or S.lenus with a rhyton in hand. Many of the  
representations are complex and have not yet been duly  
representations are complex and have not yet been duly  
Line 1,602: Line 1,602:
both sides. But in this splendour, that has joined various  
both sides. But in this splendour, that has joined various  
elements, one finds no stylistic discord, no eclecticism. It  
elements, one finds no stylistic discord, no eclecticism. It  
was the early stage of cultural integration which later pro-
was the early stage of cultural integration which later pro
duced the remarkable culture of the Kushan period. There  
duced the remarkable culture of the Kushan period. There  
began a new and perhaps most impressive period when the  
began a new and perhaps most impressive period when the  
ancient civilisations of Afghanistan and neighbouring coun-
ancient civilisations of Afghanistan and neighbouring coun
tries flourished.  
tries flourished.  


The developments of that time in the south of Afghanis-
The developments of that time in the south of Afghanis
tan and in contiguous regions have been less studied, but the  
tan and in contiguous regions have been less studied, but the  
general picture 1s the same: the nomads gradually began to  
general picture 1s the same: the nomads gradually began to  
Line 1,614: Line 1,614:
undergoing an intensive process of cultural integration.  
undergoing an intensive process of cultural integration.  


The historical situation varied from area to area: Graeco-
The historical situation varied from area to area: Graeco
Indian traditions were clearly followed in the South-East,  
Indian traditions were clearly followed in the South-East,  
in Drangiana and Gandhara; while in the South-West, partic-
in Drangiana and Gandhara; while in the South-West, partic
ularly in Sacastene, Parthian influence was strong and  
ularly in Sacastene, Parthian influence was strong and  
ultimately extended to Drangiana and Gandhara, though to  
ultimately extended to Drangiana and Gandhara, though to  
Line 1,627: Line 1,627:
Parthian empire, Sacastene enjoyed relative independence).  
Parthian empire, Sacastene enjoyed relative independence).  
It is significant in this context that Sigal, an urban centre  
It is significant in this context that Sigal, an urban centre  
of that region, was called the “royal city of the Sacas”.  
of that region, was called the "royal city of the Sacas".  


Inthe first half of the 1st century B.C. the Saca tribes  
Inthe first half of the 1st century B.C. the Saca tribes  
Line 1,637: Line 1,637:
both equally resembling the Sacan name Mavak. Initially  
both equally resembling the Sacan name Mavak. Initially  
Maues modestly called himself a king but later assumed  
Maues modestly called himself a king but later assumed  
the more pretentious title of “great king of kings”. His coins  
the more pretentious title of "great king of kings". His coins  
were minted basically in the fashion of those issued by  
were minted basically in the fashion of those issued by  
Graeco-Indian rulers. Later individual symbols appeared:  
Graeco-Indian rulers. Later individual symbols appeared:  
first the representation of a horse on the reverse side, just  
first the representation of a horse on the reverse side, just  
as in the North Bactrian imitations of Heliocles’ tetradrach-
as in the North Bactrian imitations of Heliocles’ tetradrach
mas, and then the ruler on horseback with spear in hand.  
mas, and then the ruler on horseback with spear in hand.  
That representation, typical for rulers of nomad pe  
That representation, typical for rulers of nomad pe  
was later used also by other Indo-Sacan kings. Judging by  
was later used also by other Indo-Sacan kings. Judging by  
the great variety of Maues’ coins, the founder of the Indo-
the great variety of Maues’ coins, the founder of the Indo
Sacan state ruled for quite a long time. Based on this obser-
Sacan state ruled for quite a long time. Based on this obser
vation (and coins have been our only source so far), one  
vation (and coins have been our only source so far), one  
can conclude that the state had flourished under Azes,  
can conclude that the state had flourished under Azes,  
Line 1,652: Line 1,652:
B.C. A vast number of his coins—nearly 1,500 pieces—have  
B.C. A vast number of his coins—nearly 1,500 pieces—have  
been found in Taxila, the capital of Gandhara, and about  
been found in Taxila, the capital of Gandhara, and about  
4,000 pieces have been discovered at the bottom of the sac-
4,000 pieces have been discovered at the bottom of the sac
red lake in Mir-Zahak, Drangiana. Portrayed on the obverse  
red lake in Mir-Zahak, Drangiana. Portrayed on the obverse  
of these coins is the king himself astride a horse andin heavy  
of these coins is the king himself astride a horse andin heavy  
Line 1,660: Line 1,660:
Evidently during the life-time of Azes Azilises was appointed  
Evidently during the life-time of Azes Azilises was appointed  
co-ruler. Azilises later became an independent king and,  
co-ruler. Azilises later became an independent king and,  
though he preserved the pretentious title “king of kings”,  
though he preserved the pretentious title "king of kings",  
the number of his coins is small. Perhaps the Indo-Sacan  
the number of his coins is small. Perhaps the Indo-Sacan  
state was on the decline. Its last ruler was Azes II. The Greek  
state was on the decline. Its last ruler was Azes II. The Greek  
inscription on his coins is roughly made and often distorted.  
inscription on his coins is roughly made and often distorted.  


The westward expansion of the Indo-Sacan rulers com-
The westward expansion of the Indo-Sacan rulers com
pelled the Parthian rulers of Sacastene to respond to the challenge. As a result, the Indo-Sacan dynasty of Maues had to hand over Gandhara and Drangiana to members of anoth-
pelled the Parthian rulers of Sacastene to respond to the challenge. As a result, the Indo-Sacan dynasty of Maues had to hand over Gandhara and Drangiana to members of anoth
er dynasty possibly related to the Parthian Arshakids. The  
er dynasty possibly related to the Parthian Arshakids. The  


Line 1,676: Line 1,676:
Indo-Sacan in type and bore an Indian inscription on the  
Indo-Sacan in type and bore an Indian inscription on the  
reverse, were clearly minted for Gandhara and adjacent  
reverse, were clearly minted for Gandhara and adjacent  
regions. Gondophares stayed in power fairly long. An in-
regions. Gondophares stayed in power fairly long. An in
scription made on his behalf is dated the 26th year of his  
scription made on his behalf is dated the 26th year of his  
reign and the 103rd year of a certain era. The starting date  
reign and the 103rd year of a certain era. The starting date  
Line 1,686: Line 1,686:
Gondophares is known also to Christian tradition that  
Gondophares is known also to Christian tradition that  
contains a reference of him being visited in India by Apostle  
contains a reference of him being visited in India by Apostle  
Thomas in 29 A.D. In 42 A.D. Greek philosopher Apollo-
Thomas in 29 A.D. In 42 A.D. Greek philosopher Apollo
nius of Tyana made a trip to Taxila where he paid a visit  
nius of Tyana made a trip to Taxila where he paid a visit  
to the Parthian king called Fraotes, which may be a distort-
to the Parthian king called Fraotes, which may be a distort
ed version of the name Gondophares. Like Maues and Azes,  
ed version of the name Gondophares. Like Maues and Azes,  
Gondophares called himself “the great king of kings”,  
Gondophares called himself "the great king of kings",  
and the presence of this title on the coins minted in a Par-
and the presence of this title on the coins minted in a Par
thian manner makes one think that possibly he also claimed  
thian manner makes one think that possibly he also claimed  
the Arshakid throne during the onset of a turbulent period  
the Arshakid throne during the onset of a turbulent period  
in Parthia. His successors seem to have been less powerful,  
in Parthia. His successors seem to have been less powerful,  
though they still maintained and even publicised their  
though they still maintained and even publicised their  
Parthian ties. One of the ancient sources says that the re-
Parthian ties. One of the ancient sources says that the re
gions north of the lower reaches of the Indus were ruled  
gions north of the lower reaches of the Indus were ruled  
by Parthian kings who constantly ousted one another. There  
by Parthian kings who constantly ousted one another. There  
Line 1,716: Line 1,716:
it comes to chronology.*  
it comes to chronology.*  


The early period in Kushan history was a time of inter-
The early period in Kushan history was a time of inter
necine struggle between the small Yiieh-chi domains in  
necine struggle between the small Yiieh-chi domains in  
Northern Bactria. In that struggle the Kushan domain grad-
Northern Bactria. In that struggle the Kushan domain grad
ually gained the upper hand. It is probable that it was in  
ually gained the upper hand. It is probable that it was in  
this period that the coins minted in the fashion of Heliocles’  
this period that the coins minted in the fashion of Heliocles’  
tetradrachmas with a horse depicted on the reverse were  
tetradrachmas with a horse depicted on the reverse were  
issued. At any rate, in the middle or the second half of the  
issued. At any rate, in the middle or the second half of the  
Ist century B.C. that domain issued coins with representa-
Ist century B.C. that domain issued coins with representa
tions of the ruler on horseback on the reverse, just like on  
tions of the ruler on horseback on the reverse, just like on  
the later coins of Maues. Though the ruler Heraios, on  
the later coins of Maues. Though the ruler Heraios, on  
Line 1,731: Line 1,731:
One of Heraios’ successors took control over the other  
One of Heraios’ successors took control over the other  
four Yiieh-chi domains and marched south with his troops  
four Yiieh-chi domains and marched south with his troops  
where he obviously quite easily conquered the Indo-Parthi-
where he obviously quite easily conquered the Indo-Parthi
an state. The name of the founder of the large new state  
an state. The name of the founder of the large new state  
is interpreted in Chinese sources as Kiojiukiu, and in the  
is interpreted in Chinese sources as Kiojiukiu, and in the  
Line 1,738: Line 1,738:
coins with a portrait of the Graeco-Indian king Hermaeus  
coins with a portrait of the Graeco-Indian king Hermaeus  
on the obverse, while the name of the Kushan ruler appears  
on the obverse, while the name of the Kushan ruler appears  
on the reverse with a rather modest inscription: “Kujula Kadphises, :yabgu Kushan, staunch in faith” (yabgu is the title of Yiieh-chi princelings). Having expanded his domain,  
on the reverse with a rather modest inscription: "Kujula Kadphises, :yabgu Kushan, staunch in faith" (yabgu is the title of Yiieh-chi princelings). Having expanded his domain,  
Kadphises adopted the traditional Indo-Sacan and Indo-
Kadphises adopted the traditional Indo-Sacan and Indo
Parthian title of “king of kings”, though the number of  
Parthian title of "king of kings", though the number of  
coins bearing this title is relatively small. It is thought that  
coins bearing this title is relatively small. It is thought that  
Kadphises I issued the numerous coins of a so-called “name-
Kadphises I issued the numerous coins of a so-called "name
less king”, a typical Kushan coins showing a horseman on  
less king", a typical Kushan coins showing a horseman on  
the reverse with an inscription indicating the grandiloquent  
the reverse with an inscription indicating the grandiloquent  
title: “great king of kings, liberator”. Evidently these coins  
title: "great king of kings, liberator". Evidently these coins  
date from the time when the powerful empire, comprising  
date from the time when the powerful empire, comprising  
Bactria, Arachosia, Gandhara, Paropamisus and possibly  
Bactria, Arachosia, Gandhara, Paropamisus and possibly  
Line 1,767: Line 1,767:
Kadphises II the Kushan borders in the south ran in the  
Kadphises II the Kushan borders in the south ran in the  
lower reaches of the Indus and at Benares. The Kushan  
lower reaches of the Indus and at Benares. The Kushan  
state then included nearly the entire territory of present-
state then included nearly the entire territory of present
day Afghanistan, at least the southern part of Central Asia  
day Afghanistan, at least the southern part of Central Asia  
and the whole of North-Western India. Like Parthia and  
and the whole of North-Western India. Like Parthia and  
Line 1,777: Line 1,777:
under the Indo-Parthian rulers who had released into the  
under the Indo-Parthian rulers who had released into the  
market defective silver coins. Under Kadphises II gold and  
market defective silver coins. Under Kadphises II gold and  
copper coins constituted the bulk of the money in circula-
copper coins constituted the bulk of the money in circula
tion. The picture of the Hindu god Siva, sometimes together  
tion. The picture of the Hindu god Siva, sometimes together  
with the bull Nandi, on the reverse of coins, testifies to  
with the bull Nandi, on the reverse of coins, testifies to  
Line 1,796: Line 1,796:
started with his advent to power, then the years of his rule  
started with his advent to power, then the years of his rule  
must have been from 128 to 151. In historical tradition  
must have been from 128 to 151. In historical tradition  
Kanishka is known as an adherent of Buddhism. He is as-
Kanishka is known as an adherent of Buddhism. He is as
sociated with the convention of a large Buddhist council.  
sociated with the convention of a large Buddhist council.  
The construction of religious buildings and patronage of  
The construction of religious buildings and patronage of  
Line 1,822: Line 1,822:
Kanishka era, or in 152-156, according to the chronology  
Kanishka era, or in 152-156, according to the chronology  
we have herewith accepted. However, no coins bearing  
we have herewith accepted. However, no coins bearing  
Vasishka’s name have been found so far. Possibly he was of the dynasty that ruled the southem part of the empire without the right to issue its own coins. Another outstand-
Vasishka’s name have been found so far. Possibly he was of the dynasty that ruled the southem part of the empire without the right to issue its own coins. Another outstand
ing Kushan ruler was Huvishka, whose name is found in  
ing Kushan ruler was Huvishka, whose name is found in  
inscriptions dated 28-60 (Kanishka era), i.e., 156-188 A.D.  
inscriptions dated 28-60 (Kanishka era), i.e., 156-188 A.D.  
Huvishka’s coins are nearly as numerous as those of Kanish-
Huvishka’s coins are nearly as numerous as those of Kanish
ka and they also bear pictures of various deities on the  
ka and they also bear pictures of various deities on the  
reverse. roe ,  
reverse. roe ,  
Line 1,847: Line 1,847:
related to them are not known. All through the latter half  
related to them are not known. All through the latter half  
of the 3rd and probably the first half of the 4th centuries  
of the 3rd and probably the first half of the 4th centuries  
A.D. bronze imitations of Vasudeva’s coins—several succeed-
A.D. bronze imitations of Vasudeva’s coins—several succeed
ing series—were minted in Bactria.29  
ing series—were minted in Bactria.29  


Line 1,853: Line 1,853:
brought forth by failures in the conflicts with the major  
brought forth by failures in the conflicts with the major  
new state of the Sasanids. Though medieval tradition  
new state of the Sasanids. Though medieval tradition  
says that Bactria had already been conquered by Arda-
says that Bactria had already been conquered by Arda
shir I (227-243), this is not confirmed by other sources.  
shir I (227-243), this is not confirmed by other sources.  
Falling under Sasanian influence at that time were most  
Falling under Sasanian influence at that time were most  
Line 1,864: Line 1,864:
the kingdoms and provinces whose rulers were subordinate  
the kingdoms and provinces whose rulers were subordinate  
to him, or paid tribute to him, apart from Sacastene and  
to him, or paid tribute to him, apart from Sacastene and  
' Herat (ancient Areia). The Sasanian vicegerent in the East at that time was Narses, the son of Shapur I, who bore the title “king of Sacastene, Turkestan and India up to the  
' Herat (ancient Areia). The Sasanian vicegerent in the East at that time was Narses, the son of Shapur I, who bore the title "king of Sacastene, Turkestan and India up to the  
seashore”. There is a good deal of literature on the inter-
seashore". There is a good deal of literature on the inter
pretation of the inscription in Ka’bah of Zardusht.3°  
pretation of the inscription in Ka’bah of Zardusht.3°  
Most scholars doubt that the greater part of the Kushan  
Most scholars doubt that the greater part of the Kushan  
Line 1,874: Line 1,874:


Most likely at that time the first series of so-called  
Most likely at that time the first series of so-called  
Kushano-Sasanian coins were minted by the Sasanian vice-
Kushano-Sasanian coins were minted by the Sasanian vice
gerents in the East, who normally were members of the  
gerents in the East, who normally were members of the  
ruling dynasty. Issued in great variety, these coins have  
ruling dynasty. Issued in great variety, these coins have  
repeatedly attracted scholars’ attention. Their interpreta-
repeatedly attracted scholars’ attention. Their interpreta
tion is still the bone of contention among them, for differ-
tion is still the bone of contention among them, for differ
ent opinions exist in regard to Kushan chronology.3 !  
ent opinions exist in regard to Kushan chronology.3 !  


Line 1,885: Line 1,885:
Vasudeva, but the rulers (Kushan Shahs) who issued them  
Vasudeva, but the rulers (Kushan Shahs) who issued them  
had Sasanian names—Varahran and Hormizd. The other  
had Sasanian names—Varahran and Hormizd. The other  
group was minted in the Sasanian fashion and bore Sasa-
group was minted in the Sasanian fashion and bore Sasa
nian inscriptions, but the titles of the rulers were the same—  
nian inscriptions, but the titles of the rulers were the same—  
“king of the Kushans”’ or “great king of the Kushans”’.  
"king of the Kushans"’ or "great king of the Kushans"’.  
Some of the coins in the second group have Kushan inscrip-
Some of the coins in the second group have Kushan inscrip
tions. The rulers who issued the coins of the latter group are  
tions. The rulers who issued the coins of the latter group are  
far more numerous. These were, apart from Varahran and  
far more numerous. These were, apart from Varahran and  
Hormizd, Shapur, Ardashir and Peroz. Incidentally, judg-
Hormizd, Shapur, Ardashir and Peroz. Incidentally, judg
ing by crowns and other signs, different persons often had  
ing by crowns and other signs, different persons often had  
the same names.  
the same names.  
Line 1,897: Line 1,897:
The historical significance of these coins is all too clear:  
The historical significance of these coins is all too clear:  
the Sasanian vicegerents of the eastern regions of the state  
the Sasanian vicegerents of the eastern regions of the state  
sought to maintain authority by using the cultural tradi-
sought to maintain authority by using the cultural tradi
tions of the territories they ruled or claimed. Hormizd, for  
tions of the territories they ruled or claimed. Hormizd, for  
instance, is named on some coins not just as a king but as  
instance, is named on some coins not just as a king but as  
the “great king of kings’’, a title that is the same as that of  
the "great king of kings’’, a title that is the same as that of  
the head of the Sasanian state. Possibly it was Hormizd, the  
the head of the Sasanian state. Possibly it was Hormizd, the  
brother of Varahran II, who led an uprising in the 80s in  
brother of Varahran II, who led an uprising in the 80s in  
the East to seize the Sasanian throne. We have observed the  
the East to seize the Sasanian throne. We have observed the  
same situation in the epoch of the Achaemenians, when  
same situation in the epoch of the Achaemenians, when  
members of the ruling dynasty in Bactria considered them-
members of the ruling dynasty in Bactria considered them
selves powerful enough to seek the imperial throne.  
selves powerful enough to seek the imperial throne.  


Line 1,913: Line 1,913:


The might of the Kushan state was on the wane. At the  
The might of the Kushan state was on the wane. At the  
turn of the 5th century the Sasanians came under increas-
turn of the 5th century the Sasanians came under increas
ing pressure from Asian nomads, who repeated the march  
ing pressure from Asian nomads, who repeated the march  
of the Sacas and the Yiieh-chis, and for some time ancient  
of the Sacas and the Yiieh-chis, and for some time ancient  
Kushan lands regained their independence, though there  
Kushan lands regained their independence, though there  
was a lack of former unity and might. Political divisions,  
was a lack of former unity and might. Political divisions,  
which made it easier for foreign invaders to win, were lar-
which made it easier for foreign invaders to win, were lar
gely accounted for by the social and economic situation—  
gely accounted for by the social and economic situation—  
the rise of the agricultural aristocracy signalling the emerg  
the rise of the agricultural aristocracy signalling the emerg  
Line 1,925: Line 1,925:
In the Kushan period ancient civilisation reached its  
In the Kushan period ancient civilisation reached its  
peak. It was a time of political stability and an upsurge of  
peak. It was a time of political stability and an upsurge of  
the economy based on irrigated farming and highly specia-
the economy based on irrigated farming and highly specia
lised crafts. Urban-type settlements are the best evidence of  
lised crafts. Urban-type settlements are the best evidence of  
the level of progress. According to ancient tradition the  
the level of progress. According to ancient tradition the  
Line 1,937: Line 1,937:
the antique world, compiled by Claudius Ptolemaeus in  
the antique world, compiled by Claudius Ptolemaeus in  
the 2nd century A.D. he named 18 cities in Bactria alone,  
the 2nd century A.D. he named 18 cities in Bactria alone,  
though this enumeration is incomplete and to a consider-
though this enumeration is incomplete and to a consider
able extent provisional. It was believed that by the 2nd  
able extent provisional. It was believed that by the 2nd  
century B.C. the population of Bactria was around one mil-
century B.C. the population of Bactria was around one mil
lion, doubtlessly increasing over the next 200-300 years.  
lion, doubtlessly increasing over the next 200-300 years.  
Ancient Bactra was presumably for a certain time the  
Ancient Bactra was presumably for a certain time the  
Line 1,956: Line 1,956:
shows that the cities were built on instructions from the  
shows that the cities were built on instructions from the  
central authorities. Carefully planned and systematically  
central authorities. Carefully planned and systematically  
built-up urban centres, they were strengthened with for-
built-up urban centres, they were strengthened with for
tress walls that had towers at equal distance from one  
tress walls that had towers at equal distance from one  
another, strictly in keeping with the Kushan fortification  
another, strictly in keeping with the Kushan fortification  
standard. Well studied among such urban centres in North-
standard. Well studied among such urban centres in North
erm Bactria are Kei-Kobad-shah, Dalverzin-Tepe and Zar-
erm Bactria are Kei-Kobad-shah, Dalverzin-Tepe and Zar
Tepe.  
Tepe.  


Line 1,967: Line 1,967:
Among then, in particular, is Begram, located 60 kilometres  
Among then, in particular, is Begram, located 60 kilometres  
north of Kabul at the foot of the majestic spurs of the  
north of Kabul at the foot of the majestic spurs of the  
Hindu Kush Mountains. They are in all likelihood the re-
Hindu Kush Mountains. They are in all likelihood the re
mains of the ancient city of Kapisa. A settlement that  
mains of the ancient city of Kapisa. A settlement that  
existed from the lst century B.C. to the 4th century A.D.  
existed from the lst century B.C. to the 4th century A.D.  
and was built in the initial period of the Kushan state, has  
and was built in the initial period of the Kushan state, has  
been studied better than others. Some 25 hectares of its  
been studied better than others. Some 25 hectares of its  
territory are enclosed by rectangular city walls. Excava-
territory are enclosed by rectangular city walls. Excava
tions have revealed three consecutive periods, and help one  
tions have revealed three consecutive periods, and help one  
to trace the evolution of the urban culture of Paropamis-
to trace the evolution of the urban culture of Paropamis
ade.32 A central road divided the city into two parts. The  
ade.32 A central road divided the city into two parts. The  
residential districts along the city arteries had small “flats”
residential districts along the city arteries had small "flats"
with three or more rooms, including a home sanctuary. In  
with three or more rooms, including a home sanctuary. In  
the city centre there stood the ruler’s palace, in which  
the city centre there stood the ruler’s palace, in which  
archaeologists found a splendid art collection, obviously  
archaeologists found a splendid art collection, obviously  
the remnants of a palace treasure-trove. The articles of an  
the remnants of a palace treasure-trove. The articles of an  
cient art are evidence of the broad trade and cultural rela-
cient art are evidence of the broad trade and cultural rela
tions of the Kushan state. There were tiny black-vamish  
tions of the Kushan state. There were tiny black-vamish  
cups from Han China, as well as glass vessels with various  
cups from Han China, as well as glass vessels with various  
scenes painted on them, beautifully made bronze figurines  
scenes painted on them, beautifully made bronze figurines  
of Hippocrates, Heracles, a horseman and a stoic philos-
of Hippocrates, Heracles, a horseman and a stoic philos
opher portrayed in a grotesque manner, originating from  
opher portrayed in a grotesque manner, originating from  
the eastem provinces of the Roman empire. But of especial  
the eastem provinces of the Roman empire. But of especial  
Line 1,998: Line 1,998:
Ist millennium B.C., but it was mainly after the Yiieh-chi  
Ist millennium B.C., but it was mainly after the Yiieh-chi  
tribes conquered Bactria that it developed into a large  
tribes conquered Bactria that it developed into a large  
centre.33 The central part of Dilberjin is square, with for-
centre.33 The central part of Dilberjin is square, with for
tress walls all around, occupying an area of some 15 hecta-
tress walls all around, occupying an area of some 15 hecta
res. Large residential districts stretch to the south and east  
res. Large residential districts stretch to the south and east  
of that fortified nucleus, which means that the entire area  
of that fortified nucleus, which means that the entire area  
Line 2,008: Line 2,008:
known from Greek myths as Dioscuri. Iconographically  
known from Greek myths as Dioscuri. Iconographically  
the frescoes have patent Hellenistic features. Later, but  
the frescoes have patent Hellenistic features. Later, but  
perhaps not before Kadphises II came to power, there oc-
perhaps not before Kadphises II came to power, there oc
curred a “‘change of gods’: in the second period a large  
curred a "‘change of gods’: in the second period a large  
multicoloured mural on the temple wall depicted Siva and  
multicoloured mural on the temple wall depicted Siva and  
his wife Parvati, both sitting on a bull. The excavations  
his wife Parvati, both sitting on a bull. The excavations  
Line 2,021: Line 2,021:
houses huddled together along the streets.  
houses huddled together along the streets.  


Yet another structure, the “big house”, is vastly differ-
Yet another structure, the "big house", is vastly differ
ent. The numerous living and household quarters are  
ent. The numerous living and household quarters are  
grouped round a spacious internal courtyard. On the whole,  
grouped round a spacious internal courtyard. On the whole,  
Line 2,027: Line 2,027:
to members of the city patriciate. In the suburbs there were  
to members of the city patriciate. In the suburbs there were  
a Buddhist sanctuary and a water reservoir (sardoba). After  
a Buddhist sanctuary and a water reservoir (sardoba). After  
the flourishing period under major Kushan monarchs Dil-
the flourishing period under major Kushan monarchs Dil
berjin began to degenerate in the 5th century and gradually  
berjin began to degenerate in the 5th century and gradually  
became fully neglected. That was the lot of most of the  
became fully neglected. That was the lot of most of the  
Line 2,033: Line 2,033:


In the Kushan period commerce was well developed and,  
In the Kushan period commerce was well developed and,  
like the building of new towns, it was evidently encouraged -
like the building of new towns, it was evidently encouraged  
by the Kushan rulers. Top priority was given to trade with  
by the Kushan rulers. Top priority was given to trade with  
the Roman empire, mainly with its eastern provinces. The  
the Roman empire, mainly with its eastern provinces. The  
Line 2,039: Line 2,039:
Herat where it forked, with one road turning straight to the south, to Drangiana (Sacastene), and the other through mountain passes and ravines down to Kapisa-Begram. From  
Herat where it forked, with one road turning straight to the south, to Drangiana (Sacastene), and the other through mountain passes and ravines down to Kapisa-Begram. From  
Begram the road ran to Ortospana (approximately the  
Begram the road ran to Ortospana (approximately the  
present-day site of Kabul) and then straight to the flourish-
present-day site of Kabul) and then straight to the flourish
Ing cities of Gandhara. The distances between various points  
Ing cities of Gandhara. The distances between various points  
along the trade routes were thoroughly measured and the  
along the trade routes were thoroughly measured and the  
Line 2,054: Line 2,054:
India along the Great Silk Route, which linked the West  
India along the Great Silk Route, which linked the West  
and the East of the civilised world of the time and ran  
and the East of the civilised world of the time and ran  
through Bactria. Trade with Rome was particularly exten-
through Bactria. Trade with Rome was particularly exten
sive. According to ancient authors, various goods to the sum  
sive. According to ancient authors, various goods to the sum  
of not less than 55 million sesterces were brought to India  
of not less than 55 million sesterces were brought to India  
Line 2,063: Line 2,063:
territory. Far less is known about internal trade. However,  
territory. Far less is known about internal trade. However,  
the fact that thousands of small copper coins have been  
the fact that thousands of small copper coins have been  
found during excavations of Kushan towns and rural settle-
found during excavations of Kushan towns and rural settle
ments speaks for itself. Those were small value coins, which  
ments speaks for itself. Those were small value coins, which  
means that money operations were conducted also in small-
means that money operations were conducted also in small
scale, or perhaps in retail, trade.  
scale, or perhaps in retail, trade.  


The emergence of the powerful Kushan state was closely  
The emergence of the powerful Kushan state was closely  
associated with the evolution of internal processes in Bac-
associated with the evolution of internal processes in Bac
tria, Arachosia, Gandhara and other regions. The lack of  
tria, Arachosia, Gandhara and other regions. The lack of  
relevant data prevents scholars from getting a deeper insight  
relevant data prevents scholars from getting a deeper insight  
Line 2,075: Line 2,075:
can be spoken of only in general terms. The considerable  
can be spoken of only in general terms. The considerable  
progress observed in handicrafts production, in urban life  
progress observed in handicrafts production, in urban life  
and in money circulation is an indication that the produc-
and in money circulation is an indication that the produc
tion relations of the slave-owning system continued to  
tion relations of the slave-owning system continued to  
develop. Strong power, which strengthened the domestic  
develop. Strong power, which strengthened the domestic  
and external position of the state, met the interests of the  
and external position of the state, met the interests of the  
top slave-owning stratum of society and the big merchants of Bactria and Gandhara. Interesting facts about agrarian relations have been disclosed in Soviet archaeological stu-
top slave-owning stratum of society and the big merchants of Bactria and Gandhara. Interesting facts about agrarian relations have been disclosed in Soviet archaeological stu
dies dealing with North Bactrian rural settlements of the  
dies dealing with North Bactrian rural settlements of the  
Kushan period. These settlements are of two types: small  
Kushan period. These settlements are of two types: small  
Line 2,091: Line 2,091:


However, settlements of another type prevail. They are  
However, settlements of another type prevail. They are  
square-shaped or rectangular, surrounded by a wall, some-
square-shaped or rectangular, surrounded by a wall, some
times having towers, and resemble towns in layout; only  
times having towers, and resemble towns in layout; only  
they are a good deal smaller, normally not more than 0.5-1  
they are a good deal smaller, normally not more than 0.5-1  
hectare. In excavated settlements of this type archaeolog-
hectare. In excavated settlements of this type archaeolog
ists have found huge depositories for wine and grain remi-
ists have found huge depositories for wine and grain remi
niscent of the state storehouses of the Oriental despotat,  
niscent of the state storehouses of the Oriental despotat,  
for instance, Urartu. Possibly these settlements were temple  
for instance, Urartu. Possibly these settlements were temple  
Line 2,121: Line 2,121:
agricultural aristocracy. In the 5th and 6th centuries, when  
agricultural aristocracy. In the 5th and 6th centuries, when  
the urban centres were on the decline, individual estates  
the urban centres were on the decline, individual estates  
and castles came to the fore. The castles with many-metre platforms at the base were increasingly becoming impregn- able fortresses, symbolising the independence of their  
and castles came to the fore. The castles with many-metre platforms at the base were increasingly becoming impregnable fortresses, symbolising the independence of their  
owners. These were most likely the symptoms of the on-
owners. These were most likely the symptoms of the on
coming of the new feudal age. The degeneration of towns  
coming of the new feudal age. The degeneration of towns  
was accompanied by a decline of artisan industries, with  
was accompanied by a decline of artisan industries, with  
Line 2,128: Line 2,128:
hand-made. Nomad invasions by themselves can hardly  
hand-made. Nomad invasions by themselves can hardly  
explain these developments. ndeed, the penetration of  
explain these developments. ndeed, the penetration of  
nomads in the 2nd century B.C. did not stop the develop-
nomads in the 2nd century B.C. did not stop the develop
ment of the local structures which had not used up to the  
ment of the local structures which had not used up to the  
full all the opportunities of the existing mode of produc-
full all the opportunities of the existing mode of produc
tion. During this period the situation underwent rapid  
tion. During this period the situation underwent rapid  
change, and there is reason to associate this with the crisis  
change, and there is reason to associate this with the crisis  
Line 2,155: Line 2,155:
has been already mentioned, and its monuments are to be  
has been already mentioned, and its monuments are to be  
found all over the territory of that vast state. As a rule,  
found all over the territory of that vast state. As a rule,  
they are lavishly decorated with sculptures, reliefs and pain-
they are lavishly decorated with sculptures, reliefs and pain
tings, which make them genuine treasures of art. Most  
tings, which make them genuine treasures of art. Most  
widely known are the ancient Buddhist monuments in the  
widely known are the ancient Buddhist monuments in the  
Line 2,167: Line 2,167:
Buddhist cult. They show men in light tunics with thick  
Buddhist cult. They show men in light tunics with thick  
moustaches on strong-willed faces. Great inner strength  
moustaches on strong-willed faces. Great inner strength  
distinguishes the “head of an ascetic”, an emaciated old  
distinguishes the "head of an ascetic", an emaciated old  
man with sharp lines at the mouth, his brows knitted with  
man with sharp lines at the mouth, his brows knitted with  
determination. Hadda sculpture, with its realism and  
determination. Hadda sculpture, with its realism and  
emphasis on the individual features of the personages pre-
emphasis on the individual features of the personages pre
sented, its psychological penetration, is an outstanding  
sented, its psychological penetration, is an outstanding  
achievement of Kushan art, which had creatively assimilated  
achievement of Kushan art, which had creatively assimilated  
the methods of expressive psychological portrayal of Hel-
the methods of expressive psychological portrayal of Hel
lenic sculpturers.  
lenic sculpturers.  


Line 2,192: Line 2,192:
inscription is about repair works and mentions the nobles  
inscription is about repair works and mentions the nobles  
who supervised the reconstruction, and names the complex  
who supervised the reconstruction, and names the complex  
itself—the “Temple of Kanishka, the Victor”. It is not  
itself—the "Temple of Kanishka, the Victor". It is not  
ruled out that the prodigious structure was erected during  
ruled out that the prodigious structure was erected during  
Kanishka’s rule.  
Kanishka’s rule.  
Line 2,199: Line 2,199:
the beliefs of the popular masses, most interesting relics of  
the beliefs of the popular masses, most interesting relics of  
which are the numerous terracotta figurines that have been  
which are the numerous terracotta figurines that have been  
found in towns and rural settlements (Buddhist ones ac-
found in towns and rural settlements (Buddhist ones ac
count for but a few). Preference is given to figurines of  
count for but a few). Preference is given to figurines of  
female deities, clad in robes hanging in heavy folds, with  
female deities, clad in robes hanging in heavy folds, with  
Line 2,206: Line 2,206:
household. This explains why such figurines were found  
household. This explains why such figurines were found  
in almost every house. Another distinctive feature of the mass, folk culture is the considerable number of figurines of horsemen, or just of saddled horses, as a kind of memory  
in almost every house. Another distinctive feature of the mass, folk culture is the considerable number of figurines of horsemen, or just of saddled horses, as a kind of memory  
of the founders of the Kushan state and one of the funda-
of the founders of the Kushan state and one of the funda
mental elements of its armed forces. Kushan culture, clo-
mental elements of its armed forces. Kushan culture, clo
sely associated with the socio-economic basis and the polit-
sely associated with the socio-economic basis and the polit
ical situation in the state, is clear evidence of the flourish-
ical situation in the state, is clear evidence of the flourish
ing of the ancient civilisations that existed in the territory  
ing of the ancient civilisations that existed in the territory  
of Afghanistan, a process brought forth to a great extent  
of Afghanistan, a process brought forth to a great extent  
Line 2,218: Line 2,218:
== Afghanistan in the Middle Ages ==
== Afghanistan in the Middle Ages ==
After the collapse of the Kushan empire a large part  
After the collapse of the Kushan empire a large part  
of Afghanistan was incorporated in the state of the Chion-
of Afghanistan was incorporated in the state of the Chion
ites or Ephthalites, which rose on its ruins. Some scholars  
ites or Ephthalites, which rose on its ruins. Some scholars  
believe the’ Ephthalite state had been growing round the  
believe the’ Ephthalite state had been growing round the  
Line 2,225: Line 2,225:
and extended theirrule as far as Punjab, Sind and Rajasthan.  
and extended theirrule as far as Punjab, Sind and Rajasthan.  
The local rajas who agreed to pay tribute to the Ephthalite  
The local rajas who agreed to pay tribute to the Ephthalite  
rulers usually remained in their domains. Towards the mid-
rulers usually remained in their domains. Towards the mid
6th century the Ephthalite state was falling into decay. In  
6th century the Ephthalite state was falling into decay. In  
the year 533 their supreme ruler Mihiragula was defeated  
the year 533 their supreme ruler Mihiragula was defeated  
by a coalition of rajas who ruled North-Westem India, and  
by a coalition of rajas who ruled North-Westem India, and  
in 567 the joint forces of Iran (ruled by the Sassanian dy-
in 567 the joint forces of Iran (ruled by the Sassanian dy
nasty at the time) and the West-Turkic kaganate dealt a  
nasty at the time) and the West-Turkic kaganate dealt a  
crushing blow to the Ephthalites and divided their terri-
crushing blow to the Ephthalites and divided their terri
tory. The greater part of what is today Afghanistan went  
tory. The greater part of what is today Afghanistan went  
to Khusraw I Anushirwan (with the exception of the north-
to Khusraw I Anushirwan (with the exception of the north
eastern regions controlled by the Turks). The state that  
eastern regions controlled by the Turks). The state that  
had emerged in the valley of the Kabul River and in the area  
had emerged in the valley of the Kabul River and in the area  
Line 2,253: Line 2,253:


The disintegration of the Kushan state and Ephthalite  
The disintegration of the Kushan state and Ephthalite  
conquests brought about the emergence of a large number of small, conflicting principalities in the territory of Afghan- istan and contiguous regions of the Indus valley. The  
conquests brought about the emergence of a large number of small, conflicting principalities in the territory of Afghanistan and contiguous regions of the Indus valley. The  
rulers and nobility of these principalities were gradually  
rulers and nobility of these principalities were gradually  
becoming big feudal-type landowners.  
becoming big feudal-type landowners.  


As feudal society was taking shape, new social classes  
As feudal society was taking shape, new social classes  
were emerging, those of feudal landowners and the under-
were emerging, those of feudal landowners and the under
privilegéd socially downtrodden peasants. Only in individ-
privilegéd socially downtrodden peasants. Only in individ
ual remote regions did the relations of the previous social  
ual remote regions did the relations of the previous social  
systems persist. ;  
systems persist. ;  


Major changes set in in ideology and culture: replacing  
Major changes set in in ideology and culture: replacing  
Buddhism in .the religious form of Hinduism was the ideo-
Buddhism in .the religious form of Hinduism was the ideo
logy of feudal society.  
logy of feudal society.  


Line 2,275: Line 2,275:
=== The Arab Conquest ===
=== The Arab Conquest ===
The Arab Caliphate, formed in the early half of the  
The Arab Caliphate, formed in the early half of the  
7th century, played an immense role in the fates of neigh-
7th century, played an immense role in the fates of neigh
bouring countries. Its emergence was closely linked with  
bouring countries. Its emergence was closely linked with  
complex social, ideological and political processes of the  
complex social, ideological and political processes of the  
Line 2,287: Line 2,287:
eet part of Arabia under his power and influence. His  
eet part of Arabia under his power and influence. His  
irst four successors, the caliphs Abu Bakr (632-634),  
irst four successors, the caliphs Abu Bakr (632-634),  
Omar (634-644), Osman (644-656), and Ali (656-661), are called pious in Muslim tradition. In the years of their rule, which was the period of early Islam, theocracy was a recog-
Omar (634-644), Osman (644-656), and Ali (656-661), are called pious in Muslim tradition. In the years of their rule, which was the period of early Islam, theocracy was a recog
nised ideal in the caliphate, just as it was under Muhammad:  
nised ideal in the caliphate, just as it was under Muhammad:  
religious and secular power, law and religion constituted  
religious and secular power, law and religion constituted  
Line 2,293: Line 2,293:
was simultaneously the head of state.) _  
was simultaneously the head of state.) _  


Urging the spread of Islam, the caliphs built an enor-
Urging the spread of Islam, the caliphs built an enor
mous state. After a number of victorious campaigns they  
mous state. After a number of victorious campaigns they  
controlled a considerable part of the Byzantine empire,  
controlled a considerable part of the Byzantine empire,  
conquered the Sasanian state and a number of other states  
conquered the Sasanian state and a number of other states  
in South-West Asia, North Africa and on the Iberian Penin-
in South-West Asia, North Africa and on the Iberian Penin
sula. By the middle of the 8th century the caliphate com-
sula. By the middle of the 8th century the caliphate com
prised the territories of Iran, Iraq, Syria, Palestine, Egypt,  
prised the territories of Iran, Iraq, Syria, Palestine, Egypt,  
Libya, countries of the Maghreb (Algeria, Tunisia, Moroc-
Libya, countries of the Maghreb (Algeria, Tunisia, Moroc
co), and Spain, part of Transcaucasia (up to the Main Cau-
co), and Spain, part of Transcaucasia (up to the Main Cau
casian Range), part of Central Asia (including Samarkand,  
casian Range), part of Central Asia (including Samarkand,  
Khwarizm and Ferghana), a considerable part of Afghanis-
Khwarizm and Ferghana), a considerable part of Afghanis
tan and some regions of North-Western India (Sind and the  
tan and some regions of North-Western India (Sind and the  
valley of the Indus, up to Multan). They also controlled  
valley of the Indus, up to Multan). They also controlled  
Line 2,313: Line 2,313:
in particular Bamian, Bust, Balkh, Badghis, Ghazni, Kabul,  
in particular Bamian, Bust, Balkh, Badghis, Ghazni, Kabul,  
Parvan, and Gorband, the local rulers and the population  
Parvan, and Gorband, the local rulers and the population  
offered fierce resistance and the caliphs and their viceger-
offered fierce resistance and the caliphs and their viceger
ents often had to dispatch troops once again to subdue the  
ents often had to dispatch troops once again to subdue the  
recalcitrants. The sources say some mountain regions—  
recalcitrants. The sources say some mountain regions—  
Line 2,328: Line 2,328:
centuries were a rather complex period in the history of  
centuries were a rather complex period in the history of  
the peoples inhabiting Afghanistan. Regrettably, sources  
the peoples inhabiting Afghanistan. Regrettably, sources  
of relevant data are insufficient for studying many impor-
of relevant data are insufficient for studying many impor
tant aspects of the political and socio-economic processes  
tant aspects of the political and socio-economic processes  
of the evolution of statehood during the Arab conquest and learning about the relations between various peoples and tribes and the development of new social and economic  
of the evolution of statehood during the Arab conquest and learning about the relations between various peoples and tribes and the development of new social and economic  
Line 2,349: Line 2,349:
and economic activity. Slaves were used mainly in the  
and economic activity. Slaves were used mainly in the  
household and also in mining, handicrafts and livestock  
household and also in mining, handicrafts and livestock  
breeding. Under the Arabs the land was drastically redistri-
breeding. Under the Arabs the land was drastically redistri
buted, particularly where farming had been well developed.  
buted, particularly where farming had been well developed.  
The greater part of the land was declared state property  
The greater part of the land was declared state property  
Line 2,375: Line 2,375:
tion by Arab conquerors. The peasants were compelled to cultivate state-owned and private lands and also the lands of zgta owners on metayage rent terms, thus falling into  
tion by Arab conquerors. The peasants were compelled to cultivate state-owned and private lands and also the lands of zgta owners on metayage rent terms, thus falling into  
feudal dependence. The land was given to peasants on the  
feudal dependence. The land was given to peasants on the  
condition that they would pay one-fourth, one-sixth or one-
condition that they would pay one-fourth, one-sixth or one
eighth of the crops, depending on who owned the beasts  
eighth of the crops, depending on who owned the beasts  
of draught, farm implements and seeds—the sharecropper  
of draught, farm implements and seeds—the sharecropper  
Line 2,382: Line 2,382:
A corollary of the incorporation of Afghanistan in the  
A corollary of the incorporation of Afghanistan in the  
caliphate was the migration of Arabs who settled on the  
caliphate was the migration of Arabs who settled on the  
conquered lands. Some of those lands became the posses-
conquered lands. Some of those lands became the posses
sion of Arab military commanders and officials. However,  
sion of Arab military commanders and officials. However,  
there were less Arab settlements in Afghanistan than, for  
there were less Arab settlements in Afghanistan than, for  
instance, in Iraq or Iran. But it is known that Arab war-
instance, in Iraq or Iran. But it is known that Arab war
riors, resettled with their families to Tokharistan, Eastem  
riors, resettled with their families to Tokharistan, Eastem  
Khorasan and other localities, were given land and housing.  
Khorasan and other localities, were given land and housing.  
In some regions the Arabs did not mix with the local popu-
In some regions the Arabs did not mix with the local popu
lation and lived isolated. Arab villages existed in many  
lation and lived isolated. Arab villages existed in many  
regions of Afghanistan also in the 20th century (in partic-
regions of Afghanistan also in the 20th century (in partic
ular, in the north of the country, near Kabul and Jalalabad).  
ular, in the north of the country, near Kabul and Jalalabad).  


The main consequence of the Arab conquest was the  
The main consequence of the Arab conquest was the  
gradual spread of Islam and Arabic ie the official and lit-
gradual spread of Islam and Arabic ie the official and lit
erary language), and also the introduction of the Arabic '  
erary language), and also the introduction of the Arabic '  
script in the writing of the local languages. In the terri-
script in the writing of the local languages. In the terri
tory of present-day Afghanistan Islam was spread primarily  
tory of present-day Afghanistan Islam was spread primarily  
in Balkh (a mosque was built there in 742), Herat and Seis-
in Balkh (a mosque was built there in 742), Herat and Seis
tan. As for Kabul, Ghur and a number of mountain locali-
tan. As for Kabul, Ghur and a number of mountain locali
ties, their population began to profess Islam much later,  
ties, their population began to profess Islam much later,  
in the 9th-11th centuries, for the Arabs could not subjugate  
in the 9th-11th centuries, for the Arabs could not subjugate  
Line 2,417: Line 2,417:
conquest.  
conquest.  


Muslims paid the zagat (literally ‘“cleansing’’, alms for the poor) amounting to 2.5 per cent of the crop. The culti- vators also paid the kharaj, or one-tenth of the crop. Non-
Muslims paid the zagat (literally ‘"cleansing’’, alms for the poor) amounting to 2.5 per cent of the crop. The cultivators also paid the kharaj, or one-tenth of the crop. Non
Muslims had to pay a bigger land tax and a special per  
Muslims had to pay a bigger land tax and a special per  
capita tax—the jizza. In addition, the population also paid  
capita tax—the jizza. In addition, the population also paid  
Line 2,423: Line 2,423:
officials and others); their unpaid bonded labour was used  
officials and others); their unpaid bonded labour was used  
for the construction of roads, irrigation canals and palaces.  
for the construction of roads, irrigation canals and palaces.  
Taxation usually involved various abuses and cruel treat-
Taxation usually involved various abuses and cruel treat
ment on the part of tax collectors and the landowners. Taxes  
ment on the part of tax collectors and the landowners. Taxes  
were constantly rising. Fearing eruption of broad popular  
were constantly rising. Fearing eruption of broad popular  
Line 2,441: Line 2,441:
opposition took various forms—from passive resistance  
opposition took various forms—from passive resistance  
(leaving the place of residence and evading taxation) to  
(leaving the place of residence and evading taxation) to  
armed actions which in most cases merged with the rebel-
armed actions which in most cases merged with the rebel
lions by individuals or groups of people defending the  
lions by individuals or groups of people defending the  
interests of various social strata. Many of those protest  
interests of various social strata. Many of those protest  
actions were conducted under the banner of various sec-
actions were conducted under the banner of various sec
tarian doctrines, as those propounded by Shiites, Khari-
tarian doctrines, as those propounded by Shiites, Khari
jites, and Hurramites.* Thus, the supporters of the Khari-
jites, and Hurramites.* Thus, the supporters of the Khari
jite sect, which had taken its final shape towards the end of  
jite sect, which had taken its final shape towards the end of  
the 7th century, led several rebellions in the 8th century  
the 7th century, led several rebellions in the 8th century  
Line 2,458: Line 2,458:


Most of these movements in the early half of the 8th  
Most of these movements in the early half of the 8th  
century were directed against the caliphs of the Umay-
century were directed against the caliphs of the Umay
yad dynasty (661-750). The struggle was headed by des-
yad dynasty (661-750). The struggle was headed by des
cendants of Abbas (uncles of prophet Muhammad), known  
cendants of Abbas (uncles of prophet Muhammad), known  
as Abbasids. Among other things, they promised the Mus-
as Abbasids. Among other things, they promised the Mus
lims (including the new converts) and non-Muslims to  
lims (including the new converts) and non-Muslims to  
ease the burdensome taxation. This explains why the  
ease the burdensome taxation. This explains why the  
pro-Abbasid uprising stirred up by Abu Muslim at Merv  
pro-Abbasid uprising stirred up by Abu Muslim at Merv  
(747) was joined by the population of Tokharistan, He-
(747) was joined by the population of Tokharistan, He
rat, Talikan, Balkh and other regions, by people who  
rat, Talikan, Balkh and other regions, by people who  
belonged to different social strata, ethnic groups, reli-
belonged to different social strata, ethnic groups, reli
gious trends and sects.  
gious trends and sects.  


Line 2,475: Line 2,475:
class ideology of the feudal lords. But the conditions of  
class ideology of the feudal lords. But the conditions of  
the popular masses did not improve. New uprisings flared  
the popular masses did not improve. New uprisings flared  
up in the caliphate, including the territory of what is pres-
up in the caliphate, including the territory of what is pres
ent-day Afghanistan. In 755 a large uprising, known as the  
ent-day Afghanistan. In 755 a large uprising, known as the  
Sunbadh Magian uprising, spread to a number of regions  
Sunbadh Magian uprising, spread to a number of regions  
from Khorasan to Azerbaijan; in 767 another popular  
from Khorasan to Azerbaijan; in 767 another popular  
rebellion with Ustad Aziz (Sis) at the head took place in  
rebellion with Ustad Aziz (Sis) at the head took place in  
Herat; late in the 8th century a new wave of Kharijite rebel-
Herat; late in the 8th century a new wave of Kharijite rebel
lions swept across Seistan and the disturbances continued  
lions swept across Seistan and the disturbances continued  
into the 9th century. Major uprisings against the Abbasids  
into the 9th century. Major uprisings against the Abbasids  
broke out in other areas of the caliphate—in Southem Azer-
broke out in other areas of the caliphate—in Southem Azer
baijan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and Palestine.  
baijan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and Palestine.  


Line 2,490: Line 2,490:
a significant role in the history of Afghanistan, it must be  
a significant role in the history of Afghanistan, it must be  
noted that the mid-7th century saw the beginning of the  
noted that the mid-7th century saw the beginning of the  
division of Muslims.3 Standing out among them were pri-
division of Muslims.3 Standing out among them were pri
marily the supporters of “true Islam’’—the Sunnites,* adherents of the Sunna (they hold that the caliphate is an elective office), and also the Shiites (Shiah, i.e., “the party  
marily the supporters of "true Islam’’—the Sunnites,* adherents of the Sunna (they hold that the caliphate is an elective office), and also the Shiites (Shiah, i.e., "the party  
of Ali”). The latter recognised the hereditary right to be  
of Ali"). The latter recognised the hereditary right to be  
imam—head of the Muslim community of the caliphate and  
imam—head of the Muslim community of the caliphate and  
supreme political leader of the state—only for Ali (Muham-
supreme political leader of the state—only for Ali (Muham
mad’s cousin and son-in-law) and his descendants. The  
mad’s cousin and son-in-law) and his descendants. The  
Shiites had several sects within the framework of both  
Shiites had several sects within the framework of both  
moderate and extreme Shiism, Ismailism4 being one of  
moderate and extreme Shiism, Ismailism4 being one of  
them. This sect has survived to the present day; its follow-
them. This sect has survived to the present day; its follow
ers live in a number of Asian countries and also in Afghanis-
ers live in a number of Asian countries and also in Afghanis
tan, mainly in its northern regions.  
tan, mainly in its northern regions.  


The third sect, the Kharijites (insurgents) who came  
The third sect, the Kharijites (insurgents) who came  
out against big landowners, and supported the legal and  
out against big landowners, and supported the legal and  
social equality of all Muslims and their dominating posi-
social equality of all Muslims and their dominating posi
tion over the Zimmiyas (non-Muslims). In their view, sover-
tion over the Zimmiyas (non-Muslims). In their view, sover
eign power was epitomised in the religious community,  
eign power was epitomised in the religious community,  
while the caliph (who had to be elected) should, in his  
while the caliph (who had to be elected) should, in his  
activities, be responsible to it. An important aspect of their  
activities, be responsible to it. An important aspect of their  
doctrine is that any Muslim, and any ruler for that matter,  
doctrine is that any Muslim, and any ruler for that matter,  
imam or caliph, should he commit a “great sin”, was there-
imam or caliph, should he commit a "great sin", was there
after considered a Kaftr or infidel, and opposition to him  
after considered a Kaftr or infidel, and opposition to him  
was God-willed. This maxim often served as ideological  
was God-willed. This maxim often served as ideological  


round for overthrowing a ruler, or for a “holy war”, but  
round for overthrowing a ruler, or for a "holy war", but  
in actual fact for political struggle, rebellions and insurrec-
in actual fact for political struggle, rebellions and insurrec
tions. In the territory of Afghanistan this sect was most  
tions. In the territory of Afghanistan this sect was most  
widespread in Seistan.  
widespread in Seistan.  
Line 2,526: Line 2,526:
The coming to power of the Abbasids, as was mentioned  
The coming to power of the Abbasids, as was mentioned  
above, did not improve the position of the popular masses  
above, did not improve the position of the popular masses  
in the caliphate. The decrees lowering tax rates and cancel-
in the caliphate. The decrees lowering tax rates and cancel
ling some requisitions over and above the kAaraj were either  
ling some requisitions over and above the kAaraj were either  
practically ignored or observed for only a brief span of time.  
practically ignored or observed for only a brief span of time.  
Line 2,533: Line 2,533:
and anti-Abbasid uprisings, led primarily by the Shiites, Kharijites and later by the Ismailians and Karmathians,* continued. In the territory of Afghanistan such uprisings  
and anti-Abbasid uprisings, led primarily by the Shiites, Kharijites and later by the Ismailians and Karmathians,* continued. In the territory of Afghanistan such uprisings  
occurred mainly in Seistan. The rebellions were caused by  
occurred mainly in Seistan. The rebellions were caused by  
overtaxation; illegal confiscation of lands of peasant com-
overtaxation; illegal confiscation of lands of peasant com
munities and local owners; collection of additional sums  
munities and local owners; collection of additional sums  
of money and fines from farmers, artisans and traders;  
of money and fines from farmers, artisans and traders;  
Line 2,543: Line 2,543:
movement continuedmany years, andin consequence Seistan  
movement continuedmany years, andin consequence Seistan  
was actually free from caliphate control. for more than 30  
was actually free from caliphate control. for more than 30  
years. Hamzah ibn Atraq cancelled the payment of the kAa-
years. Hamzah ibn Atraq cancelled the payment of the kAa
raj. His treasury was replenished by the war booty seized by  
raj. His treasury was replenished by the war booty seized by  
the Seistanians during attacks on Arab-controlled territories.  
the Seistanians during attacks on Arab-controlled territories.  


By the 9th century the situation in the caliphate wor-
By the 9th century the situation in the caliphate wor
sened. Supported by the population, which was displeased  
sened. Supported by the population, which was displeased  
by the mounting tax burden, the local feudal lords con-
by the mounting tax burden, the local feudal lords con
tinued to come out against the power of the caliphs.  
tinued to come out against the power of the caliphs.  


The Abbasid caliphate was disintegrating politically  
The Abbasid caliphate was disintegrating politically  
under the impact of a number of factors, connected prima-
under the impact of a number of factors, connected prima
rily with the development of feudal relations, different  
rily with the development of feudal relations, different  
socio-economic levels of the countries conquered by the  
socio-economic levels of the countries conquered by the  
Line 2,560: Line 2,560:
common in terms of language and culture. The incessant  
common in terms of language and culture. The incessant  
popular uprisings, often used by. the local feudal lords for  
popular uprisings, often used by. the local feudal lords for  
winning political. independence, greatly weakened the cali-
winning political. independence, greatly weakened the cali
phate as a whole and its position in the provinces.  
phate as a whole and its position in the provinces.  


Line 2,568: Line 2,568:
refused to send the caliph tribute and gifts and provide  
refused to send the caliph tribute and gifts and provide  
troops; and expenditures on suppressing popular uprisings .  
troops; and expenditures on suppressing popular uprisings .  
and feudal rebellions were growing. Together all this under-
and feudal rebellions were growing. Together all this under
mined the economic and military might of the caliphs.  
mined the economic and military might of the caliphs.  
In fact, they had no real opportunity to resist the separat-
In fact, they had no real opportunity to resist the separat
ism of the hereditary aristocracy, the vicegerents’ desire to consolidate their hereditary power and independence in the provinces they governed. Furthermore, apart from the  
ism of the hereditary aristocracy, the vicegerents’ desire to consolidate their hereditary power and independence in the provinces they governed. Furthermore, apart from the  
local aristocracy, apart from the rulers and vicegerents of  
local aristocracy, apart from the rulers and vicegerents of  
separate regions, the small feudal lords, too, on seizing lands  
separate regions, the small feudal lords, too, on seizing lands  
by military force (with the help of their volunteer detach-
by military force (with the help of their volunteer detach
ments or ghazi*) established hereditary power in the cap-
ments or ghazi*) established hereditary power in the cap
tured territories, and sought to become independent.  
tured territories, and sought to become independent.  


Line 2,582: Line 2,582:
the Ghulam Guard out of Turkic slaves.  
the Ghulam Guard out of Turkic slaves.  


Fearing the emergence of another large hotbed of anti-
Fearing the emergence of another large hotbed of anti
Arab action, Mamun, son of caliph Harun-ar-Rashid (786-
Arab action, Mamun, son of caliph Harun-ar-Rashid (786
809), (in 809-813 Mamun was vicegerent of Khorasan),  
809), (in 809-813 Mamun was vicegerent of Khorasan),  
sent his troops against the ruler of the Kabul Shah dynasty  
sent his troops against the ruler of the Kabul Shah dynasty  
Line 2,591: Line 2,591:
Kabul Shah were defeated, his throne and crown were sent  
Kabul Shah were defeated, his throne and crown were sent  
to Mecca, while the land tax and tribute were doubled.  
to Mecca, while the land tax and tribute were doubled.  
The domains of the Kabul Shahs were made part of Khora-
The domains of the Kabul Shahs were made part of Khora
san and from then on were subordinate to the Khorasan  
san and from then on were subordinate to the Khorasan  
vicegerent of the Abbasids. Mosques were built in the  
vicegerent of the Abbasids. Mosques were built in the  
Line 2,598: Line 2,598:


In referring to the political situation in the caliphate  
In referring to the political situation in the caliphate  
in the context of attempts by the ruling elite to consol-
in the context of attempts by the ruling elite to consol
idate their power in the conquered regions (including the  
idate their power in the conquered regions (including the  
territory of Afghanistan), it must be stressed that the elite  
territory of Afghanistan), it must be stressed that the elite  
Line 2,604: Line 2,604:
dominant religion, which was to justify the changes in  
dominant religion, which was to justify the changes in  
social life brought about by the development of feudal  
social life brought about by the development of feudal  
relations. To achieve that goal, tenets of the Koran and cer-
relations. To achieve that goal, tenets of the Koran and cer
tain khadises (traditions) of the Sunna were reshaped, and  
tain khadises (traditions) of the Sunna were reshaped, and  
doctors of sacred law and theology—fakihs and ulemas,  
doctors of sacred law and theology—fakihs and ulemas,  
Line 2,613: Line 2,613:
other sects and religions were persecuted. This period saw  
other sects and religions were persecuted. This period saw  
the further spread of Sufism, an ascetic mystic sect within  
the further spread of Sufism, an ascetic mystic sect within  
Islam, that passively condemned wealth and preached sub-
Islam, that passively condemned wealth and preached sub
mission, tolerance and contentment with one’s lot. Pover  
mission, tolerance and contentment with one’s lot. Pover  
was said to be the ideal for the “salvation of the soul”.  
was said to be the ideal for the "salvation of the soul".  


To retain power, at least nominally, the caliphs meted  
To retain power, at least nominally, the caliphs meted  
Line 2,626: Line 2,626:
and Seistan regions.  
and Seistan regions.  


Sole masters in vast territories, Tahir and his success-
Sole masters in vast territories, Tahir and his success
ors, known as the Tahirids (821-873), dispatched to the  
ors, known as the Tahirids (821-873), dispatched to the  
caliph fixed sums from every district. The Tahirids sought  
caliph fixed sums from every district. The Tahirids sought  
to buttress their power and to that end were insistently  
to buttress their power and to that end were insistently  
spreading Islam wherever the population professed Zoro-
spreading Islam wherever the population professed Zoro
astrianism. At the same time they took measures to regulate  
astrianism. At the same time they took measures to regulate  
taxation, develop agriculture and irrigation, and issued  
taxation, develop agriculture and irrigation, and issued  
Line 2,643: Line 2,643:
in Seistan in 861 and moved north where they captured  
in Seistan in 861 and moved north where they captured  
Herat, Balkh, and Ghazni, took control over Kabul and, .  
Herat, Balkh, and Ghazni, took control over Kabul and, .  
having overthrown the Tahirid dynasty in 873, gained con-
having overthrown the Tahirid dynasty in 873, gained con
trol over Khorasan. As he failed to conquer Baghdad, the  
trol over Khorasan. As he failed to conquer Baghdad, the  
capital of the caliphate, Amr ibn Lays made peace with the  
capital of the caliphate, Amr ibn Lays made peace with the  
Line 2,652: Line 2,652:
Having consolidated their hold on the seized territories,  
Having consolidated their hold on the seized territories,  
they moved north to attack the Samanids (a local dynasty  
they moved north to attack the Samanids (a local dynasty  
of Termez extraction), who had gained a foothold in Cen-
of Termez extraction), who had gained a foothold in Cen
tral Asia in 821. In the battle at Balkh, Amr ibn Lays was  
tral Asia in 821. In the battle at Balkh, Amr ibn Lays was  
defeated by the Samanids, taken prisoner and executed.  
defeated by the Samanids, taken prisoner and executed.  


After their victory over Amr ibn Lays the Samanids con-
After their victory over Amr ibn Lays the Samanids con
quered vast territories. Their domains, which included the  
quered vast territories. Their domains, which included the  
whole of present-day Afghanistan, stretched from the Tien  
whole of present-day Afghanistan, stretched from the Tien  
Line 2,677: Line 2,677:
provinces, thereby promoting separatist tendencies among  
provinces, thereby promoting separatist tendencies among  
them. These tendencies were spreading also among the  
them. These tendencies were spreading also among the  
Ghulam Guard, who often joined popular actions conduct-
Ghulam Guard, who often joined popular actions conduct
ed, as before, under slogans advanced by various sects.  
ed, as before, under slogans advanced by various sects.  


Line 2,685: Line 2,685:
and Ghur.  
and Ghur.  


In 962-963 Alp-tegin, commander of the Samanid Ghu-
In 962-963 Alp-tegin, commander of the Samanid Ghu
lam Guard, captured Ghazni and then Bust and remained  
lam Guard, captured Ghazni and then Bust and remained  
there. After his death, his son-in-law Sabuk-tegin (977-997),  
there. After his death, his son-in-law Sabuk-tegin (977-997),  
Line 2,691: Line 2,691:
claimants to those lands, founded the Ghaznavid dynasty  
claimants to those lands, founded the Ghaznavid dynasty  
(977-1186). Sabuk-tegin not only gained a firm hold on  
(977-1186). Sabuk-tegin not only gained a firm hold on  
Ghazni but undertook some successful expeditions, includ-
Ghazni but undertook some successful expeditions, includ
ing one to Ghur, and moved east, towards India. He  
ing one to Ghur, and moved east, towards India. He  
launched an offensive against the principality ruled by the Shahi dynasty whose domains stretched from Lagman (the Kabul River valley) to the Chenab River. As a result,  
launched an offensive against the principality ruled by the Shahi dynasty whose domains stretched from Lagman (the Kabul River valley) to the Chenab River. As a result,  
Sabuk-tegin captured those lands and reached Peshawar.  
Sabuk-tegin captured those lands and reached Peshawar.  
The power of the Ghaznavids reached its peak under Mah-
The power of the Ghaznavids reached its peak under Mah
mud (997-1030).  
mud (997-1030).  


Line 2,701: Line 2,701:
the territories of Iran, ithe south of Central Asia with  
the territories of Iran, ithe south of Central Asia with  
Khorezm, and North-Western India, to which Mahmud went  
Khorezm, and North-Western India, to which Mahmud went  
on 17 expeditions, waging a holy war against the “‘infidels”’.  
on 17 expeditions, waging a holy war against the "‘infidels"’.  
Afghan units played a significant role in his army. Caring  
Afghan units played a significant role in his army. Caring  
mainly about replenishing his treasury, Mahmud waged a  
mainly about replenishing his treasury, Mahmud waged a  
Line 2,709: Line 2,709:
own discretion. Mahmud spent lavishly on the maintenance  
own discretion. Mahmud spent lavishly on the maintenance  
of the troops, the central administrative apparatus, punitive  
of the troops, the central administrative apparatus, punitive  
expeditions, and on criminal investigation. All the recal-
expeditions, and on criminal investigation. All the recal
citrants, those suspected of disloyalty or heresy were  
citrants, those suspected of disloyalty or heresy were  
subjected to cruel persecution; some were executed and  
subjected to cruel persecution; some were executed and  
Line 2,720: Line 2,720:
Meanwhile, Mahmud, wishing to acquire the fame of an  
Meanwhile, Mahmud, wishing to acquire the fame of an  
enlightened ruler and true Muslim, kept a magnificent.  
enlightened ruler and true Muslim, kept a magnificent.  
court, where many well-known theologians, famous scien-
court, where many well-known theologians, famous scien
tists and poets lived. Their names went down in the chroni-
tists and poets lived. Their names went down in the chroni
cles of world civilisation. Among them were Firdausi, al-Bi-
cles of world civilisation. Among them were Firdausi, al-Bi
runi, and Unsuri, to mention just a few. In Mahmud’s days  
runi, and Unsuri, to mention just a few. In Mahmud’s days  
majestic mosques and palaces were built. Most famous  
majestic mosques and palaces were built. Most famous  
Line 2,735: Line 2,735:
As a result of the exhaustive struggle against the Seljuks,  
As a result of the exhaustive struggle against the Seljuks,  
who were supported by the Khorasan nobility and the Ghur  
who were supported by the Khorasan nobility and the Ghur  
rulers, and also because of internecine strife, the Ghazna-
rulers, and also because of internecine strife, the Ghazna
vids were losing one province after another. The Seljuks captured Balkh, then Herat and the whole of Khorasan and Seistan. In 1151 the capital Ghazni was seized by the  
vids were losing one province after another. The Seljuks captured Balkh, then Herat and the whole of Khorasan and Seistan. In 1151 the capital Ghazni was seized by the  
rulers of the mountainous Ghur province. The city was  
rulers of the mountainous Ghur province. The city was  
Line 2,754: Line 2,754:
(1119-1157) of the Seljuk dynasty. After his death the state  
(1119-1157) of the Seljuk dynasty. After his death the state  
collapsed. For some time Muhammad Khwarizm Shah  
collapsed. For some time Muhammad Khwarizm Shah  
(1200-1220) ruled in Afghanistan until his rule was dis-
(1200-1220) ruled in Afghanistan until his rule was dis
continued by the invasion by Genghiz Khan in 1220. -
continued by the invasion by Genghiz Khan in 1220.  


Reviewing the milestones of the political history of  
Reviewing the milestones of the political history of  
Line 2,761: Line 2,761:
in Ghur in the upper reaches of the Harirud between  
in Ghur in the upper reaches of the Harirud between  
Bamian and Herat. Historical sources assert that neither the  
Bamian and Herat. Historical sources assert that neither the  
Arabs nor the Samanids managed to penetrate the prov-
Arabs nor the Samanids managed to penetrate the prov
ince deeply, no matter how hard they tried. However  
ince deeply, no matter how hard they tried. However  
there js reason to believe that Islam had spread in some re-
there js reason to believe that Islam had spread in some re
gions’ of Ghur back in the early 9th century, for Carmat  
gions’ of Ghur back in the early 9th century, for Carmat  
uprisings had taken place there in the early 10th century.  
uprisings had taken place there in the early 10th century.  
Line 2,777: Line 2,777:
that in the 11th century gradual feudalisation was taking  
that in the 11th century gradual feudalisation was taking  


_place there and the communal or private lands of the peas-
_place there and the communal or private lands of the peas
ants were forcibly taken away by the maliks.  
ants were forcibly taken away by the maliks.  


Early in the 12th century the Ghaznavids handed over  
Early in the 12th century the Ghaznavids handed over  
the administration of Ghur to malik Izz-ad-din, who thus  
the administration of Ghur to malik Izz-ad-din, who thus  
became the first “great prince of Ghur” and Ghur essential-
became the first "great prince of Ghur" and Ghur essential
ly became an independent territory. In the second half of the 12th century, the Ghurids, as already noted, availing themselves of the weakening of the Seljuks and Ghazna-
ly became an independent territory. In the second half of the 12th century, the Ghurids, as already noted, availing themselves of the weakening of the Seljuks and Ghazna
vids, dealt a crushing blow to the latter and seized their  
vids, dealt a crushing blow to the latter and seized their  
capital Ghazni.  
capital Ghazni.  
Line 2,793: Line 2,793:
immense territory from Lahore and Multan to Bengal.  
immense territory from Lahore and Multan to Bengal.  
In Ghur itself the residency of its rulers was at Firuzkuh.  
In Ghur itself the residency of its rulers was at Firuzkuh.  
Bamian, another centre of the Ghurids, was ruled by Fakhr-
Bamian, another centre of the Ghurids, was ruled by Fakhr
ad-din Ghuri. Under his rule were also Shugnan, Vakhan,  
ad-din Ghuri. Under his rule were also Shugnan, Vakhan,  
part of Tokharistan as well as part of the mountain areas  
part of Tokharistan as well as part of the mountain areas  
of the Hindu Kush and the Pamirs. Herat, Ghazni, Kabul  
of the Hindu Kush and the Pamirs. Herat, Ghazni, Kabul  
and Bust were major trade centres in the territory of Afghan-
and Bust were major trade centres in the territory of Afghan
istan.  
istan.  


Line 2,812: Line 2,812:
centuries in the history of Afghanistan was marked by  
centuries in the history of Afghanistan was marked by  
frequent incursions of foreign conquerors and internecine  
frequent incursions of foreign conquerors and internecine  
strife. The invaders seized vast territories, and then redis-
strife. The invaders seized vast territories, and then redis
tributed the land. But no matter who owned the land—the  
tributed the land. But no matter who owned the land—the  
Arab nobility, local landowners or the military-nomad  
Arab nobility, local landowners or the military-nomad  
aristocracy—feudal landownership kept spreading, becom-
aristocracy—feudal landownership kept spreading, becom
ing hereditary. Tribal ties were disrupted and feudalism  
ing hereditary. Tribal ties were disrupted and feudalism  
developed steadily, though unevenly. Slavery was gradually  
developed steadily, though unevenly. Slavery was gradually  
Line 2,827: Line 2,827:
it impossible for the peasants to work their own plots,  
it impossible for the peasants to work their own plots,  
for they lacked water, seeds and cattle. In such cases the  
for they lacked water, seeds and cattle. In such cases the  
land plots were voluntarily left to the patronage of the feudal lords on the condition that the peasants would get part of the harvest (often not more than a quarter), a sys-
land plots were voluntarily left to the patronage of the feudal lords on the condition that the peasants would get part of the harvest (often not more than a quarter), a sys
tem practised not only in Oriental countries but also in  
tem practised not only in Oriental countries but also in  
Europe.  
Europe.  
Line 2,835: Line 2,835:
measures to advance agriculture, handicraft production and  
measures to advance agriculture, handicraft production and  
trade. Irrigation work and town building developed. In  
trade. Irrigation work and town building developed. In  
some areas industrial crops such as cotton and silk be-
some areas industrial crops such as cotton and silk be
came widespread; livestock breeding was expanding, and  
came widespread; livestock breeding was expanding, and  
so were the trades on its base. Apart from growing wheat,  
so were the trades on its base. Apart from growing wheat,  
barley, fruits and vegetables, rice was sown on larger areas.  
barley, fruits and vegetables, rice was sown on larger areas.  
Canals, kyarizes, wells, and protective structures to stop  
Canals, kyarizes, wells, and protective structures to stop  
quick-sand movement, were built. Agriculture and the hand-
quick-sand movement, were built. Agriculture and the hand
icrafts gradually separated; along with urban semi-agrarian  
icrafts gradually separated; along with urban semi-agrarian  
settlements, large feudal-type cities were growing in  
settlements, large feudal-type cities were growing in  
number. Balkh, for instance, had nearly 200,000 inhabit-
number. Balkh, for instance, had nearly 200,000 inhabit
ants. Even a small town like Panjshir had a population of  
ants. Even a small town like Panjshir had a population of  
20,000. In the cities there were corporations of bakers,  
20,000. In the cities there were corporations of bakers,  
Line 2,854: Line 2,854:
with golden and silver needlework, metal-chasing, and the  
with golden and silver needlework, metal-chasing, and the  
making of glazed ceramics, weapons, and bronze articles  
making of glazed ceramics, weapons, and bronze articles  
reached a high level. Incidentally, the development of hand-
reached a high level. Incidentally, the development of hand
icrafts in the towns did not mean that there were no crafts-
icrafts in the towns did not mean that there were no crafts
men among the rural settled, nomad or semi-nomad cattle-
men among the rural settled, nomad or semi-nomad cattle
breeding population. Thus, leather currying and metal-
breeding population. Thus, leather currying and metal
processing were often done by nomad craftsmen.  
processing were often done by nomad craftsmen.  


The cities were becoming centres of craftsmanship and  
The cities were becoming centres of craftsmanship and  
trade, both domestic and foreign. Narrative sources and  
trade, both domestic and foreign. Narrative sources and  
archaeological finds provide evidence that Afghanistan main-
archaeological finds provide evidence that Afghanistan main
tained trade relations with India, China, and the Mediter-
tained trade relations with India, China, and the Mediter
ranean countries. Situated along trade routes Herat, Kabul,  
ranean countries. Situated along trade routes Herat, Kabul,  
Balkh, Ghazni and Bust were major centres of handicraft  
Balkh, Ghazni and Bust were major centres of handicraft  
Line 2,872: Line 2,872:
rulers. Slave labour was often used in the ore pits. Silver  
rulers. Slave labour was often used in the ore pits. Silver  
pits, with a few thousand workers in each, operated in the regions of Panjshir, Ghuzgan and Parvan; iron ore was mined in Ghur and near Kabul, lead and sulphur in Tokharistan,  
pits, with a few thousand workers in each, operated in the regions of Panjshir, Ghuzgan and Parvan; iron ore was mined in Ghur and near Kabul, lead and sulphur in Tokharistan,  
gems and semi-precious stones—ruby, lapis lazuli and tur-
gems and semi-precious stones—ruby, lapis lazuli and tur
quoise—in Badakhshan, in the north of the country.  
quoise—in Badakhshan, in the north of the country.  


As the cities developed, their architecture improved: new  
As the cities developed, their architecture improved: new  
palaces, caravanserais, mosques and madrasahs were con-
palaces, caravanserais, mosques and madrasahs were con
structed. Ancient ruins in that area and archaeological finds  
structed. Ancient ruins in that area and archaeological finds  
testify to the wide use of alabaster, ore, coloured glazed  
testify to the wide use of alabaster, ore, coloured glazed  
Line 2,896: Line 2,896:


Right up to the start of the 2nd millennium A.D. the  
Right up to the start of the 2nd millennium A.D. the  
area inhabited by the Pashtuns was confined to the Sulei-
area inhabited by the Pashtuns was confined to the Sulei
man Mountains between the valleys of the Kuram River in  
man Mountains between the valleys of the Kuram River in  
the north and the Gomal River in the south. By that time  
the north and the Gomal River in the south. By that time  
the Pashtun ethno-linguistic community had formed, the  
the Pashtun ethno-linguistic community had formed, the  
boundaries of Pashtun territory were fixed, and the founda-
boundaries of Pashtun territory were fixed, and the founda
tions of the original culture of the Pashtuns and their indi-
tions of the original culture of the Pashtuns and their indi
vidual mentality were formed on the basis of the semi-
vidual mentality were formed on the basis of the semi
nomad and nomad livestock raising economy. It was prob-
nomad and nomad livestock raising economy. It was prob
ably at the time when the group of related East-Iranian  
ably at the time when the group of related East-Iranian  
dialects were developing that the Pashto (Pushtu) language  
dialects were developing that the Pashto (Pushtu) language  
Line 2,909: Line 2,909:


As the productive forces developed and the population  
As the productive forces developed and the population  
increased the Pashtun tribes gradually began to live a set-
increased the Pashtun tribes gradually began to live a set
tled life. Dwelling in territories around the Suleiman Moun-
tled life. Dwelling in territories around the Suleiman Moun
tains, some even engaged in sedentary farming. Their mi- gration was made easier by the fact that the sedentary Irano-Tajik and Indo-Aryan population of those regions had  
tains, some even engaged in sedentary farming. Their migration was made easier by the fact that the sedentary Irano-Tajik and Indo-Aryan population of those regions had  
been partially exterminated during the incursions by Gen-
been partially exterminated during the incursions by Gen
ghiz Khan and his successors, and also under Tamerla-
ghiz Khan and his successors, and also under Tamerla
ne (these developments will be described in more detail  
ne (these developments will be described in more detail  
below), and some of them had moved to safer regions.  
below), and some of them had moved to safer regions.  
Line 2,922: Line 2,922:
territory of Zhob.  
territory of Zhob.  


In the process of settlement, tribal relations were dis-
In the process of settlement, tribal relations were dis
rupted, and unions’ of tribes were formed and broke up.  
rupted, and unions’ of tribes were formed and broke up.  
Property and social inequality was growing in the Pashtun  
Property and social inequality was growing in the Pashtun  
Line 2,937: Line 2,937:
of the biggest Pashtun tribes. The Tarklani tribe, too,  
of the biggest Pashtun tribes. The Tarklani tribe, too,  
populating the Bajaur area has genetic ties with the Turks.  
populating the Bajaur area has genetic ties with the Turks.  
Besides, Indo-Aryan tribes and ethnic groups that popu-
Besides, Indo-Aryan tribes and ethnic groups that popu
lated the valleys of the Kabul and its tributaries and the  
lated the valleys of the Kabul and its tributaries and the  
lands between the Suleiman Mountains and the Indus  
lands between the Suleiman Mountains and the Indus  
Line 2,951: Line 2,951:
system that had taken firm root, undoubtedly influenced  
system that had taken firm root, undoubtedly influenced  
the development of feudal relations among the Pashtuns.  
the development of feudal relations among the Pashtuns.  
Ample evidence of this is provided, in particular, by analy-
Ample evidence of this is provided, in particular, by analy
sis of Pashtun socio-political, economic and state adminis-
sis of Pashtun socio-political, economic and state adminis
trative terminology.
trative terminology.


=== The Mongolian Conquest ===
=== The Mongolian Conquest ===
Early in the 13th century, after lengthy and persistent  
Early in the 13th century, after lengthy and persistent  
struggle, Mongolian tribal chief Temuchin achieved polit-
struggle, Mongolian tribal chief Temuchin achieved polit
ical unification of Mongolia. Having assumed the title of  
ical unification of Mongolia. Having assumed the title of  
Genghiz Khan (1206-1227), he was recognised great khan.  
Genghiz Khan (1206-1227), he was recognised great khan.  
Line 2,963: Line 2,963:
By that time an early-feudal society had taken shape in  
By that time an early-feudal society had taken shape in  
Mongolia, though tribal relationships remained and tribal  
Mongolia, though tribal relationships remained and tribal  
unions (uluses) were at different levels of social develop-
unions (uluses) were at different levels of social develop
ment. Every ulus was hierarchically subdivided into mili-
ment. Every ulus was hierarchically subdivided into mili
tary-administrative units, their names depending on the  
tary-administrative units, their names depending on the  
numerical strength of the armed units they supplied (tu-
numerical strength of the armed units they supplied (tu
mens,* thousands, hundreds and tens). The units were  
mens,* thousands, hundreds and tens). The units were  
headed by hereditary tribal chiefs, elders of clans and fami-
headed by hereditary tribal chiefs, elders of clans and fami
lies, etc., in which the master (or feudal lord) of the tribes-
lies, etc., in which the master (or feudal lord) of the tribes
men was also their military commander. Implicit obedience  
men was also their military commander. Implicit obedience  
was total.  
was total.  


The armed force thus formed was well organised and dis-
The armed force thus formed was well organised and dis
ciplined. Being nomads, the Mongols created a very mobile  
ciplined. Being nomads, the Mongols created a very mobile  
and manoeuvrable cavalry whose actions, facilitated by the  
and manoeuvrable cavalry whose actions, facilitated by the  
combat’ equipment of that time (catapults, wall-breaching  
combat’ equipment of that time (catapults, wall-breaching  
machines and weapons) determined their success in battles  
machines and weapons) determined their success in battles  
against enemy units recruited from among the'settled popu-
against enemy units recruited from among the'settled popu
lation of divided feudal state formations.  
lation of divided feudal state formations.  


Line 2,987: Line 2,987:
Having waged several successful campaigns, the Mongols  
Having waged several successful campaigns, the Mongols  
extended their power to the territories of China, Korea,  
extended their power to the territories of China, Korea,  
Tibet, Eastern Turkestan, Central and Western Asia, Trans-
Tibet, Eastern Turkestan, Central and Western Asia, Trans
caucasia, Iran, Afghanistan, Eastern Europe, the areas north  
caucasia, Iran, Afghanistan, Eastern Europe, the areas north  
of the Black Sea, and the lower reaches of the Don and  
of the Black Sea, and the lower reaches of the Don and  
Volga rivers. As distinct from many other conquerors in the  
Volga rivers. As distinct from many other conquerors in the  
East, Genghiz Khan and his military commanders ravaged  
East, Genghiz Khan and his military commanders ravaged  
whole regions in a systematic and organised manner, des-
whole regions in a systematic and organised manner, des
troyed irrigation systems tuming fertile oases into desert  
troyed irrigation systems tuming fertile oases into desert  
land, burned down and wiped off towns and villages. With  
land, burned down and wiped off towns and villages. With  
a 200,000-strong force they often totally annihilated a  
a 200,000-strong force they often totally annihilated a  
population that could offer resistance; thousands of crafts-
population that could offer resistance; thousands of crafts
men were tumed into slaves and sent away to Mongolia.
men were tumed into slaves and sent away to Mongolia.


Afghanistan did not escape the common lot.? Having at-
Afghanistan did not escape the common lot.? Having at
tacked the Khwarizm Shahs in 1219 and conquered Central  
tacked the Khwarizm Shahs in 1219 and conquered Central  
Asia by 1220, the Mongols marched on to Afghanistan.  
Asia by 1220, the Mongols marched on to Afghanistan.  
In 1221 they seized Herat, exterminated the whole garri-
In 1221 they seized Herat, exterminated the whole garri
son, the greater part of the population and took away many  
son, the greater part of the population and took away many  
craftsmen, including all the Herat weavers. Other cities and  
craftsmen, including all the Herat weavers. Other cities and  
Line 3,012: Line 3,012:
tried to hold off the Mongols. He mustered an army of  
tried to hold off the Mongols. He mustered an army of  
70,000 in Ghazni (where he was vicegerent) from among  
70,000 in Ghazni (where he was vicegerent) from among  
the volunteer troops of Khorasan, Ghur, and the detach-
the volunteer troops of Khorasan, Ghur, and the detach
ments of the Khalajes, Afghans and Turkmenians, and  
ments of the Khalajes, Afghans and Turkmenians, and  
moved against the Mongols. He pitched a camp near Parvan,  
moved against the Mongols. He pitched a camp near Parvan,  
Line 3,019: Line 3,019:
bolstered the confidence of the Afghan population. Though  
bolstered the confidence of the Afghan population. Though  
strife among the feudal lords ultimately made Jalal-ad-din  
strife among the feudal lords ultimately made Jalal-ad-din  
flee to India and then to Iran, in many towns and settle-
flee to India and then to Iran, in many towns and settle
ments anti-Mongolian uprisings flared up. One of the  
ments anti-Mongolian uprisings flared up. One of the  
largest was in Herat, where unsurgents killed the Mongol  
largest was in Herat, where unsurgents killed the Mongol  
Line 3,026: Line 3,026:
troops. The siege of Herat lasted nearly half a year, and  
troops. The siege of Herat lasted nearly half a year, and  
after its seizure in 1222 the city and its outskirts were  
after its seizure in 1222 the city and its outskirts were  
ravaged and ruined and the whole of the population mas-
ravaged and ruined and the whole of the population mas
sacred.* It was not until 1236 that Herat was restored  
sacred.* It was not until 1236 that Herat was restored  
and populated by an order from Genghiz Khan’s son  
and populated by an order from Genghiz Khan’s son  
Line 3,050: Line 3,050:
only loyalty but even servility to the invaders. Some of  
only loyalty but even servility to the invaders. Some of  
them received permission from Mongol khans to retain  
them received permission from Mongol khans to retain  
control over various regions. But even when such permis-
control over various regions. But even when such permis
sion was given, officials were sent to watch over the ruler’s  
sion was given, officials were sent to watch over the ruler’s  
activities and see to it that taxes were properly collected  
activities and see to it that taxes were properly collected  
and the khan’s instructions observed. As a rule, Genghiz  
and the khan’s instructions observed. As a rule, Genghiz  
Khan and his successors appointed their own vicegerents  
Khan and his successors appointed their own vicegerents  
in large regions, mostly Mongol princes and military com-
in large regions, mostly Mongol princes and military com
manders.  
manders.  


To tighten their grip on the seized territory, the Mon-
To tighten their grip on the seized territory, the Mon
gols resettled Turko-Mongol and Mongol nomads there.  
gols resettled Turko-Mongol and Mongol nomads there.  
These resettlements, carried out repeatedly in the 13th to  
These resettlements, carried out repeatedly in the 13th to  
Line 3,067: Line 3,067:
and cities of Afghanistan (including Kabul and Herat),  
and cities of Afghanistan (including Kabul and Herat),  
originated from those tribes. Their name is derived from the  
originated from those tribes. Their name is derived from the  
word “hazara’’, meaning “thousand’’.*  
word "hazara’’, meaning "thousand’’.*  


In the middle of the 13th century the Mongol empire  
In the middle of the 13th century the Mongol empire  
broke up into several uluses, nominally subordinate to the  
broke up into several uluses, nominally subordinate to the  
‘ great khan of Mongolia. The territories in South-West and  
‘ great khan of Mongolia. The territories in South-West and  
West Asia became the ulus of Hulagu (1256-1265), a grand-
West Asia became the ulus of Hulagu (1256-1265), a grand
son of Genghiz Khan.  
son of Genghiz Khan.  


In 1256 Hulagu, who continued conquests in Asia, des-
In 1256 Hulagu, who continued conquests in Asia, des
troyed the state of the Ismailites and the Alamut fortress,  
troyed the state of the Ismailites and the Alamut fortress,  
its centre. Having seized Baghdad, he executed Mustasim,  
its centre. Having seized Baghdad, he executed Mustasim,  
Line 3,089: Line 3,089:


In 1261 Hulagu assumed the title of Ikhan** and was  
In 1261 Hulagu assumed the title of Ikhan** and was  
granted an investiture from the great Khan Khubilai (1259-
granted an investiture from the great Khan Khubilai (1259
1294) for the whole of Iran and newly-conquered territor-
1294) for the whole of Iran and newly-conquered territor
ies,*** including a part of Afghanistan.19 Bordering on the |  
ies,*** including a part of Afghanistan.19 Bordering on the |  
hostile Golden .Horde in the North, the Chagatai ulus along  
hostile Golden .Horde in the North, the Chagatai ulus along  
the Amu Darya River in the East, and the Mameluke Sulta-
the Amu Darya River in the East, and the Mameluke Sulta
nate in Egypt in the West, Hulagu Khan and the Ilkhans  
nate in Egypt in the West, Hulagu Khan and the Ilkhans  
who auccenied him waged incessant wars requiring constant  
who auccenied him waged incessant wars requiring constant  
expenditures. Heavy spending was caused also by the main-
expenditures. Heavy spending was caused also by the main
tenance of the I[khan’s court, the military-nomad elite and  
tenance of the Ilkhan’s court, the military-nomad elite and  
the fiscal apparatus.  
the fiscal apparatus.  


The Mongol invasion led to a redivision of land: the  
The Mongol invasion led to a redivision of land: the  
lands that had belonged to the Khwarizm Shahs and the  
lands that had belonged to the Khwarizm Shahs and the  
local feudal aristocracy—most of whom had been extermi-
local feudal aristocracy—most of whom had been extermi
nated, banished or simply fled from the country—went over  
nated, banished or simply fled from the country—went over  
to the elite of the military-nomad tribes. The change in the  
to the elite of the military-nomad tribes. The change in the  
Line 3,111: Line 3,111:
(it not only played a major political role in the state, but  
(it not only played a major political role in the state, but  
was greater in number); remnants of the local sedentary  
was greater in number); remnants of the local sedentary  
aristocracy, including the military; and high Muslim theo-
aristocracy, including the military; and high Muslim theo
logians who had retained their influence. Speaking about  
logians who had retained their influence. Speaking about  
the set-up of the ruling class, the following must be em-
the set-up of the ruling class, the following must be em
phasised.  
phasised.  


The nomad nobility (including the Mongol princes from  
The nomad nobility (including the Mongol princes from  
among the Genghizids), the tribal chiefs and military com-
among the Genghizids), the tribal chiefs and military com
manders, who seized the conquered lands or were given land for their service and then as private holdings, were becom- ing big feudal lords. The greater part of the nobility, sup  
manders, who seized the conquered lands or were given land for their service and then as private holdings, were becoming big feudal lords. The greater part of the nobility, sup  
ported by the tribes and having an opportunity of plunder  
ported by the tribes and having an opportunity of plunder  
ing vast territories that had been given to them by the  
ing vast territories that had been given to them by the  
Line 3,140: Line 3,140:
Another part of the Mongol nobility, less numerous but  
Another part of the Mongol nobility, less numerous but  
more far-sighted, sought contacts with the local aristocracy,  
more far-sighted, sought contacts with the local aristocracy,  
including the military, the merchants and Muslim theolo-
including the military, the merchants and Muslim theolo
gians (the latter had a great influence on the population),  
gians (the latter had a great influence on the population),  
and took measures to restore the disrupted economy, the  
and took measures to restore the disrupted economy, the  
Line 3,156: Line 3,156:
property to their own benefit. That part of the ruling class  
property to their own benefit. That part of the ruling class  
sought increasingly to strengthen their economic and polit  
sought increasingly to strengthen their economic and polit  
ical position and wished to see the Hulagid state decentral-
ical position and wished to see the Hulagid state decentral
ised. The strongest among them achieved a certain degree  
ised. The strongest among them achieved a certain degree  
of independence, as was the case, for instance, with the  
of independence, as was the case, for instance, with the  
Line 3,167: Line 3,167:


The Muslim theologians, owing to the Mongols’ relative  
The Muslim theologians, owing to the Mongols’ relative  
religious tolerance, retained their land holdings. Further-
religious tolerance, retained their land holdings. Further
more, the Mongol khans freed them from all taxes and  
more, the Mongol khans freed them from all taxes and  
duties even before they adopted Islam. Connected with  
duties even before they adopted Islam. Connected with  
commerce, they, just like the military aristocracy, advocat-
commerce, they, just like the military aristocracy, advocat
ed centralisation of the state and restoration of agriculture  
ed centralisation of the state and restoration of agriculture  
and the handicrafts.  
and the handicrafts.  


These trends within the ruling class played a major  
These trends within the ruling class played a major  
role in the historical development of the state of the Il-
role in the historical development of the state of the Il
khans. The main forms of landownership in it were the  
khans. The main forms of landownership in it were the  
divant, or the state-owned land; the inju, or khass inju, that  
divant, or the state-owned land; the inju, or khass inju, that  
Line 3,194: Line 3,194:
the expenses of the Mongol court, princes and other relatives  
the expenses of the Mongol court, princes and other relatives  
of Genghiz Khan and his offspring, their vassals attached to  
of Genghiz Khan and his offspring, their vassals attached to  
their hordes, or were used on the basis of personal comm-
their hordes, or were used on the basis of personal comm
endation or patronage; sometimes the znju lands were given  
endation or patronage; sometimes the znju lands were given  
by Ilkhans to feudal lords for use or just as a gift.  
by Ilkhans to feudal lords for use or just as a gift.  


The igta lands, the conventional land grants, while jurid-
The igta lands, the conventional land grants, while jurid
ically state-owned, turned into hereditary fiefs of the  
ically state-owned, turned into hereditary fiefs of the  
military elite. The lands, given by the Mongols to Muslim  
military elite. The lands, given by the Mongols to Muslim  
Line 3,209: Line 3,209:
the term mukasseh implied lands and real estate.  
the term mukasseh implied lands and real estate.  


In the 14th century, during the rule of the Ilkhans, there already functioned the system called soyurgal, when the landowner was given the right to immunity. I. P. Petru-
In the 14th century, during the rule of the Ilkhans, there already functioned the system called soyurgal, when the landowner was given the right to immunity. I. P. Petru
shevsky stressed in his fundamental research Agriculture  
shevsky stressed in his fundamental research Agriculture  
and Agrarian Relations in Iran in the 13th-14th Centuries  
and Agrarian Relations in Iran in the 13th-14th Centuries  
that in order to understand the historical significance of  
that in order to understand the historical significance of  
immunity one must tum to Marx’s observation that in  
immunity one must tum to Marx’s observation that in  
feudal society the feudal “functions of general and judge  
feudal society the feudal "functions of general and judge  
were attributes of landed property”.12  
were attributes of landed property".12  


The pasture lands of the nomad tribes were a special  
The pasture lands of the nomad tribes were a special  
category of land in the state of the Ilkhans. Those lands  
category of land in the state of the Ilkhans. Those lands  
legally belonged to the tribe but in practice were control-
legally belonged to the tribe but in practice were control
led by the tribal elite. The lands of the rural communities  
led by the tribal elite. The lands of the rural communities  
and of the landowning peasants who had left the com-
and of the landowning peasants who had left the com
munities accounted for a meagre portion of the land. At  
munities accounted for a meagre portion of the land. At  
the time when feudalism developed, that category of land  
the time when feudalism developed, that category of land  
Line 3,235: Line 3,235:
and the military the right to receive a salary or pension  
and the military the right to receive a salary or pension  
in some region or other. Often several berats were given to  
in some region or other. Often several berats were given to  
one and the same region. One of the newest reforms effect-
one and the same region. One of the newest reforms effect
ed under the Mongols—under Ghazan Khan, to be more’  
ed under the Mongols—under Ghazan Khan, to be more’  
precise—was the attachment of peasants to the land.  
precise—was the attachment of peasants to the land.  
Line 3,248: Line 3,248:


Lenin pointed out that under feudalism non-economic  
Lenin pointed out that under feudalism non-economic  
coercion may take different forms, “ranging from the  
coercion may take different forms, "ranging from the  
peasant’s: serf status to his lack of rights in the social es-
peasant’s: serf status to his lack of rights in the social es
tates”.13 Given feudal property in land, which made up the  
tates".13 Given feudal property in land, which made up the  
basis of fetidalism, one of these forms was attaching the  
basis of fetidalism, one of these forms was attaching the  
farmer not to the feudal lord but to the place where he  
farmer not to the feudal lord but to the place where he  
Line 3,259: Line 3,259:
they lived and weré not permitted to change their place of  
they lived and weré not permitted to change their place of  
residence. During the time when agriculture was being  
residence. During the time when agriculture was being  
ruined, irrigation structures destroyed, peasants and handi-
ruined, irrigation structures destroyed, peasants and handi
craftsmen taken away as prisoners and exploitation inten-
craftsmen taken away as prisoners and exploitation inten
sified, masses of rural inhabitants fled to the mountains,  
sified, masses of rural inhabitants fled to the mountains,  
and joined bands of robbers. The mass departure of peasants  
and joined bands of robbers. The mass departure of peasants  
Line 3,275: Line 3,275:
edicts tax rates were established (and partially reduced),  
edicts tax rates were established (and partially reduced),  
and the berats and some of the most burdensome duties  
and the berats and some of the most burdensome duties  
(as, for instance, billeting rights) were cancelled. To pro-
(as, for instance, billeting rights) were cancelled. To pro
mote handicrafts and trade, the tamga tax was reduced for  
mote handicrafts and trade, the tamga tax was reduced for  
craftsmen and merchants, and in some regions it was even  
craftsmen and merchants, and in some regions it was even  
cancelled altogether; slave craftsmen working in large work-
cancelled altogether; slave craftsmen working in large work
shops (karkhanahs) were transferred to the quitrent system,  
shops (karkhanahs) were transferred to the quitrent system,  
without freeing them from slavery. The slaves, whose  
without freeing them from slavery. The slaves, whose  
Line 3,304: Line 3,304:


The policy of centralisation pursued by Ghazan Khan  
The policy of centralisation pursued by Ghazan Khan  
was strongly opposed by the military-nomad elite. A num-
was strongly opposed by the military-nomad elite. A num
ber of feudal rebellions erupted at the time. All of them  
ber of feudal rebellions erupted at the time. All of them  
were quelled, though some concessions had to be made. The  
were quelled, though some concessions had to be made. The  
Line 3,329: Line 3,329:


Later, under Abagha Khan (1265-1282), the son of  
Later, under Abagha Khan (1265-1282), the son of  
Ilkhan Hulagu, Shams-ad-din. managed to get an edict con- °
Ilkhan Hulagu, Shams-ad-din. managed to get an edict con°
firming his right to administration. Among other towns and  
firming his right to administration. Among other towns and  
regions named in the edict, Afghanistan was mentioned as  
regions named in the edict, Afghanistan was mentioned as  
Line 3,344: Line 3,344:
At the same time the Afghans continued to settle not only  
At the same time the Afghans continued to settle not only  
the territory of present-day Afghanistan but also that of  
the territory of present-day Afghanistan but also that of  
India. The Afghans played a meaningful role in the polit- ical history of India in the 13th century, specifically during the rule of the Delhi sultan Ghiyath-ad-din Balban (1265-
India. The Afghans played a meaningful role in the political history of India in the 13th century, specifically during the rule of the Delhi sultan Ghiyath-ad-din Balban (1265
1287), the Hildji dynasty (1290-1321) and also later.15  
1287), the Hildji dynasty (1290-1321) and also later.15  


Line 3,353: Line 3,353:
Almar, who had consolidated his position in Teri. In the  
Almar, who had consolidated his position in Teri. In the  
letter he declared that never before, under no sultan did  
letter he declared that never before, under no sultan did  
his “fathers and grandfathers serve the Mongols or pay  
his "fathers and grandfathers serve the Mongols or pay  
tribute to the infidels”.  
tribute to the infidels".  


Some of the Afghan maliks voluntarily recognised the  
Some of the Afghan maliks voluntarily recognised the  
Line 3,366: Line 3,366:
besieged, after 12 days of incessant fighting, to surrenderand  
besieged, after 12 days of incessant fighting, to surrenderand  
received a contribution of 10,000 dinars, 10 packs of silk  
received a contribution of 10,000 dinars, 10 packs of silk  
fabric, 5 Arab thoroughbreds, 50 slaves, and valuables. Besi-
fabric, 5 Arab thoroughbreds, 50 slaves, and valuables. Besi
des, the Afghans were obliged to pay them annual tribute.16  
des, the Afghans were obliged to pay them annual tribute.16  


It took the Kurts several years to conquer the Afghan  
It took the Kurts several years to conquer the Afghan  
lands. At the tum of the 14th century the ruin and im-
lands. At the tum of the 14th century the ruin and im
poverishment of the population of the Kurt principality,  
poverishment of the population of the Kurt principality,  
and of the whole of the Hulagid state at that, were so enor-
and of the whole of the Hulagid state at that, were so enor
mous, and the flight of the tax-paying population reached  
mous, and the flight of the tax-paying population reached  
such disastrous proportions, that not only the Kurts, but  
such disastrous proportions, that not only the Kurts, but  
Line 3,384: Line 3,384:
for a term of two years.  
for a term of two years.  


Speaking about the position of the tax-paying popula-
Speaking about the position of the tax-paying popula
tion in the Kurt state, mention should be made of the  
tion in the Kurt state, mention should be made of the  
karkhanah, the profit from which went to the ruler. Wide-
karkhanah, the profit from which went to the ruler. Wide
spread at that period were karkhanahs for thé manufacture  
spread at that period were karkhanahs for thé manufacture  
of bricks and tile, which was obviously caused by the need to fortify city walls.  
of bricks and tile, which was obviously caused by the need to fortify city walls.  


The revival of the slave-owning system in many countries  
The revival of the slave-owning system in many countries  
during the Mongol rule also took place in the Kurt prin-
during the Mongol rule also took place in the Kurt prin
cipality. The sources say that in artisan production, with  
cipality. The sources say that in artisan production, with  
the status of slaves, apart from the local people, there  
the status of slaves, apart from the local people, there  
Line 3,401: Line 3,401:
the fact that bazaars and caravanserais were built in the  
the fact that bazaars and caravanserais were built in the  
city. Another interesting fact is that Ogodai’s decree on  
city. Another interesting fact is that Ogodai’s decree on  
the restoration of Herat in 1236 was issued on the mer-
the restoration of Herat in 1236 was issued on the mer
chants’ advice.  
chants’ advice.  


Line 3,410: Line 3,410:
of the principality was administered by feudal rulers who  
of the principality was administered by feudal rulers who  
depended (as vassals) on the Kurts. Among them were  
depended (as vassals) on the Kurts. Among them were  
Ghurs, Afghans, Tajiks, and also the militaryynomad Mon-
Ghurs, Afghans, Tajiks, and also the militaryynomad Mon
gol elite. The largest Mongol settlements were in Badg-
gol elite. The largest Mongol settlements were in Badg
his. The conflicts that erupted between the Mongol elite  
his. The conflicts that erupted between the Mongol elite  
and the Kurts often grew into armed clashes. In some  
and the Kurts often grew into armed clashes. In some  
Line 3,427: Line 3,427:
To win support of the pcople, the Kurt maliks sought  
To win support of the pcople, the Kurt maliks sought  
popularity among them and set out to bolster their position  
popularity among them and set out to bolster their position  
among Sunnite theologians. They built mosques and ma-
among Sunnite theologians. They built mosques and ma
drasahs, bestowed alms to the poor, and made offerings  
drasahs, bestowed alms to the poor, and made offerings  
of money and property to dervishes. Acting as champions  
of money and property to dervishes. Acting as champions  
Line 3,448: Line 3,448:
headed by Danishmand Bahadur, and later by his son  
headed by Danishmand Bahadur, and later by his son  
Bujay. After a siege lasting five months and fierce battles  
Bujay. After a siege lasting five months and fierce battles  
the city was taken. The Mongols destroyed all the fortifica-
the city was taken. The Mongols destroyed all the fortifica
tions and many buildings in Herat. In 1319 Mongol prince  
tions and many buildings in Herat. In 1319 Mongol prince  
Yasawur sacked the city outskirts. In 1358 Herat was again  
Yasawur sacked the city outskirts. In 1358 Herat was again  
Line 3,461: Line 3,461:
sacking the city and its environs.  
sacking the city and its environs.  


A negative impact on Herat’s economic life was doubt-
A negative impact on Herat’s economic life was doubt
lessly exerted by the internecine strife and by the rebel  
lessly exerted by the internecine strife and by the rebel  
lions of vassals. The rebellions by the rulers of Isfizar and  
lions of vassals. The rebellions by the rulers of Isfizar and  
Line 3,473: Line 3,473:
in attacks from the outside, the Kurts continued to fight  
in attacks from the outside, the Kurts continued to fight  
successfully the recalcitrant vassals, forcing them to pay  
successfully the recalcitrant vassals, forcing them to pay  
taxes and indemnities, and restored or rebuilt city fortifica-
taxes and indemnities, and restored or rebuilt city fortifica
tions. The second city wall, about a farsakh long (7-8 kilo-
tions. The second city wall, about a farsakh long (7-8 kilo
metres), scaled the northern and eastem parts of the city.  
metres), scaled the northern and eastem parts of the city.  
It was built under Muizz-ad-din Kurt (1331-1370).  
It was built under Muizz-ad-din Kurt (1331-1370).  


Built in Herat under the Kurts were the citadel Ikhtiar-
Built in Herat under the Kurts were the citadel Ikhtiar
ad-din, the palaces Bargakh and Koshk, madrasahs, the  
ad-din, the palaces Bargakh and Koshk, madrasahs, the  
tomb of malik Muizz-ad-din, bazaars and caravanserais. The walls of many houses were decorated beautifully with orna- ments. Most fascinating were the walls of the Bargakh  
tomb of malik Muizz-ad-din, bazaars and caravanserais. The walls of many houses were decorated beautifully with ornaments. Most fascinating were the walls of the Bargakh  
palace built under malik Ghiyath-ad-din (1307-1329). Fol-
palace built under malik Ghiyath-ad-din (1307-1329). Fol
lowing the malik’s instructions, the big mosque, which had  
lowing the malik’s instructions, the big mosque, which had  
been built in Herat under the Ghurids, was restored.  
been built in Herat under the Ghurids, was restored.  
Line 3,488: Line 3,488:
and growth of Herat, and the measures to improve it, all  
and growth of Herat, and the measures to improve it, all  
show that the Kurt influence was waxing and that the  
show that the Kurt influence was waxing and that the  
patronage of the Mongol rulers was increasingly oppress-
patronage of the Mongol rulers was increasingly oppress
ing them. Beginning with the early 14th century the Kurt  
ing them. Beginning with the early 14th century the Kurt  
maliks more and more often refused not only to go to the  
maliks more and more often refused not only to go to the  
Line 3,496: Line 3,496:
with threats. But the victory of Ghiyath-ad-din over a  
with threats. But the victory of Ghiyath-ad-din over a  
Chagatai prince, who had opposed the Hulagids, strengthened  
Chagatai prince, who had opposed the Hulagids, strengthened  
the position of the Kurt rulers at the Ilkhans’ court. Muizz-
the position of the Kurt rulers at the Ilkhans’ court. Muizz
ad-din, son of Ghiyath-ad-din, formally recognised himself  
ad-din, son of Ghiyath-ad-din, formally recognised himself  
to be a vassal of the Mongols, but after the death of Ilkhan  
to be a vassal of the Mongols, but after the death of Ilkhan  
Abu Said (1335) he ordered that his name be mentioned  
Abu Said (1335) he ordered that his name be mentioned  
during religious service at mosques on Fridays as an inde-
during religious service at mosques on Fridays as an inde
pendent ruler and that it be inscribed on coins.  
pendent ruler and that it be inscribed on coins.  


The disintegration of the Hulagid state, which had  
The disintegration of the Hulagid state, which had  
concluded by 1353, offered the Kurts an opportunity to  
concluded by 1353, offered the Kurts an opportunity to  
consolidate the independence of their state. They estab-
consolidate the independence of their state. They estab
lished friendly relations with Timur (Tamerlane) who by  
lished friendly relations with Timur (Tamerlane) who by  
that time had extended his power to Central Asia, and  
that time had extended his power to Central Asia, and  
Line 3,515: Line 3,515:
In the last thirty years of the 14th century several states  
In the last thirty years of the 14th century several states  
were attacked by Timur (1336-1405), the son of emir  
were attacked by Timur (1336-1405), the son of emir  
Taragay of -the Barlas in the Kesh province (now Shahri-
Taragay of -the Barlas in the Kesh province (now Shahri
syabz). Having gained a firm position in Mavarannahr and  
syabz). Having gained a firm position in Mavarannahr and  
actually being head of the state (formally the Chagatai  
actually being head of the state (formally the Chagatai  
Line 3,532: Line 3,532:


The conquest by Timur of the territories of what is now  
The conquest by Timur of the territories of what is now  
Afghanistan began in 1370 with the seizure of Balkh. Hav-
Afghanistan began in 1370 with the seizure of Balkh. Hav
ing established friendly relations with the Kurts, Timur,  
ing established friendly relations with the Kurts, Timur,  
however, soon demanded that they recognise his supreme  
however, soon demanded that they recognise his supreme  
Line 3,549: Line 3,549:
Muizz-ad-din, were destroyed.  
Muizz-ad-din, were destroyed.  


Fearing an uprising, Timur left a garrison and a viceger-
Fearing an uprising, Timur left a garrison and a viceger
ent in Herat and prohibited the restoring of the city walls  
ent in Herat and prohibited the restoring of the city walls  
and the construction of new fortifications. His apprehen-
and the construction of new fortifications. His apprehen
sions were not unfounded. In 1383, the people of Herat,  
sions were not unfounded. In 1383, the people of Herat,  
partly consisting of Ghurs, set the town afire, annihilated  
partly consisting of Ghurs, set the town afire, annihilated  
Line 3,559: Line 3,559:
The Herat uprising was suppressed with utmost cruelty  
The Herat uprising was suppressed with utmost cruelty  
by troops of Timur’s son, Miran Shah. Simultaneously, an  
by troops of Timur’s son, Miran Shah. Simultaneously, an  
expedition was sent to Ghur accompanied by mass extermi-
expedition was sent to Ghur accompanied by mass extermi
nation of the population; then the troops invaded Seistan,  
nation of the population; then the troops invaded Seistan,  
where many cities were ravaged, especially Bust; and other  
where many cities were ravaged, especially Bust; and other  
Line 3,574: Line 3,574:
of the domain. During his Indian expedition in 1398 Timur  
of the domain. During his Indian expedition in 1398 Timur  
captured some of the territories populated by Afghan tribes  
captured some of the territories populated by Afghan tribes  
(a district in Peshawar, part of Bajaur, Swat, and other territo-
(a district in Peshawar, part of Bajaur, Swat, and other territo
ries). However, Timur failed to subjugate many of the tribes.  
ries). However, Timur failed to subjugate many of the tribes.  


In the struggle against the Afghans, Timur and his suc-
In the struggle against the Afghans, Timur and his suc
cessors cruelly punished the unruly and made wide use of  
cessors cruelly punished the unruly and made wide use of  
the strife among the various tribes and tribal groups. Timur  
the strife among the various tribes and tribal groups. Timur  
Line 3,591: Line 3,591:
The Afghan chiefs, on their return from predatory ex  
The Afghan chiefs, on their return from predatory ex  
peditions to India, received part of the spoils, and some  
peditions to India, received part of the spoils, and some  
times also land grants. This tended to speed up the feudal-
times also land grants. This tended to speed up the feudal
isation of Afghan society. Besides, after entire regions were  
isation of Afghan society. Besides, after entire regions were  
devastated during the invasion of the troops of the Mongols  
devastated during the invasion of the troops of the Mongols  
Line 3,597: Line 3,597:
migrations from the mountains to the flat country, to the  
migrations from the mountains to the flat country, to the  
vast pasturelands in the Ghazni area and the valleys of the  
vast pasturelands in the Ghazni area and the valleys of the  
Helmand, Kabul and Kunar, practically seizing those terri-
Helmand, Kabul and Kunar, practically seizing those terri
tories. As a result of conflicts with the rulers of Kabul and  
tories. As a result of conflicts with the rulers of Kabul and  
Ghazni, part of the tribes (for instance, the Yusufzais)  
Ghazni, part of the tribes (for instance, the Yusufzais)  
Line 3,621: Line 3,621:


The feudalisation of Afghan tribes proceeded under the  
The feudalisation of Afghan tribes proceeded under the  
influence of and in interaction with the feudal environ-
influence of and in interaction with the feudal environ
ment, i.e., the cities and agricultural oases, where the feudal  
ment, i.e., the cities and agricultural oases, where the feudal  
system was already established. This interaction had a  
system was already established. This interaction had a  
Line 3,630: Line 3,630:
development of feudal relations among various tribes (also  
development of feudal relations among various tribes (also  
depending on the places of their settlement), the lack, for  
depending on the places of their settlement), the lack, for  
quite a long time, of cities with a purely Afghan popula-
quite a long time, of cities with a purely Afghan popula
tion, the relatively poor level of the handicrafts among  
tion, the relatively poor level of the handicrafts among  
the Afghans who remained active as intermediaries in  
the Afghans who remained active as intermediaries in  
transit trade along the caravan routes from Iran and Central  
transit trade along the caravan routes from Iran and Central  
Asia to India, and the forniation of Povindah tribes special-
Asia to India, and the forniation of Povindah tribes special
ising in that trade, etc.1  
ising in that trade, etc.1  


Line 3,643: Line 3,643:
state of the Great Moghuls and the state of the Safavids.  
state of the Great Moghuls and the state of the Safavids.  


After Timur’s death in 1405 his state was rent by inter-
After Timur’s death in 1405 his state was rent by inter
necine strife and part of the territory he had seized fell  
necine strife and part of the territory he had seized fell  
away. The Timurid rulers retained power in Central Asia,  
away. The Timurid rulers retained power in Central Asia,  
Line 3,661: Line 3,661:
to suppress uprisings, mutinies, and intemecine strife.  
to suppress uprisings, mutinies, and intemecine strife.  
Among the most potent enemies of the Herat Timurids were  
Among the most potent enemies of the Herat Timurids were  
the chiefs of the Turkmenian tribal confederation Qara-
the chiefs of the Turkmenian tribal confederation Qara
Qoynlu, who captured Azerbaijan, Armenia, Kurdistan and  
Qoynlu, who captured Azerbaijan, Armenia, Kurdistan and  
Arab Iraq and sought to form an independent state. But,  
Arab Iraq and sought to form an independent state. But,  
Line 3,670: Line 3,670:
and measures were taken to develop farming, irrigation, the  
and measures were taken to develop farming, irrigation, the  
handicrafts and trade. Much attention was devoted to Herat,  
handicrafts and trade. Much attention was devoted to Herat,  
the capital of the state. The city was adomed with magnifi-
the capital of the state. The city was adomed with magnifi
cent buildings: the Mosalla ensemble with the mausoleums  
cent buildings: the Mosalla ensemble with the mausoleums  
of Shahrukh’s wife and son, a madrasah, the tomb of  
of Shahrukh’s wife and son, a madrasah, the tomb of  
Line 3,679: Line 3,679:
and internecine strife. Mutinies became more violent, and  
and internecine strife. Mutinies became more violent, and  
devastating incursions by the Hazaras and Nikudaris into  
devastating incursions by the Hazaras and Nikudaris into  
the areas of Ghur, Qandahar and Farah became more fre-
the areas of Ghur, Qandahar and Farah became more fre
quent. Among the short-term rulers of Herat were Shah-
quent. Among the short-term rulers of Herat were Shah
rukh’s son Ulugh Beg and his grandsons Abdul Latif and  
rukh’s son Ulugh Beg and his grandsons Abdul Latif and  
Abdul Qasim Babur. In 1458 Herat was seized by Abu Said,  
Abdul Qasim Babur. In 1458 Herat was seized by Abu Said,  
the ruler of Mavarannahr. But during his rule the interne-
the ruler of Mavarannahr. But during his rule the interne
cine strife did not cease. In 1469 he was killed.  
cine strife did not cease. In 1469 he was killed.  


Line 3,698: Line 3,698:


New palaces, madrasahs, hospitals, baths, bridges, gardens  
New palaces, madrasahs, hospitals, baths, bridges, gardens  
and parks appeared in the city. Repair and reconstruc- tion of the central mosque of Herat, built under the Ghurids, were conducted on a broad scale. However, con-_  
and parks appeared in the city. Repair and reconstruction of the central mosque of Herat, built under the Ghurids, were conducted on a broad scale. However, con-_  
centrating on the development of the arts and culture and  
centrating on the development of the arts and culture and  
on the construction activities of the Herat Timurids,  
on the construction activities of the Herat Timurids,  
medieval authors almost never describe that part of the city  
medieval authors almost never describe that part of the city  
where the working population lived. Apart from the grand  
where the working population lived. Apart from the grand  
buildings in the city centre, there were overcrowded dist-
buildings in the city centre, there were overcrowded dist
ricts with narrow dirty streets, without running water—  
ricts with narrow dirty streets, without running water—  
hotbeds of diseases. Only on rare occasions, when describ-
hotbeds of diseases. Only on rare occasions, when describ
ing splendid buildings and shady gardens or the benefi-
ing splendid buildings and shady gardens or the benefi
cence of a ruler, do the sources mention that under Sultan  
cence of a ruler, do the sources mention that under Sultan  
Husayn running water was to be found only in the vicinity  
Husayn running water was to be found only in the vicinity  
of the central mosque, or that thousands of people died  
of the central mosque, or that thousands of people died  
during an epidemic of the plague in Herat and its environs.  
during an epidemic of the plague in Herat and its environs.  
They note, as if.in passing, that water and air contamina-
They note, as if.in passing, that water and air contamina
tion was the cause of the epidemic.!9  
tion was the cause of the epidemic.!9  


Under the Timurids Herat was a major centre o f domestic  
Under the Timurids Herat was a major centre o f domestic  
and foreign trade. Trade and the handicrafts were concen-
and foreign trade. Trade and the handicrafts were concen
trated along the main bazaar routes intersecting the city and  
trated along the main bazaar routes intersecting the city and  
at small marketplaces in the city districts.  
at small marketplaces in the city districts.  
Line 3,724: Line 3,724:
by craftsmen, raw materials, livestock or foodstuffs, were  
by craftsmen, raw materials, livestock or foodstuffs, were  
all sold at special places. Horses, for instance, were sold at  
all sold at special places. Horses, for instance, were sold at  
the fortress walls not far from the Melik Bazaar. Handi-
the fortress walls not far from the Melik Bazaar. Handi
craft articles of a common type were sold in several build-
craft articles of a common type were sold in several build
ings called tims, The tims most probably had links with  
ings called tims, The tims most probably had links with  
handicraft corporations known as firkas or asnafs, though  
handicraft corporations known as firkas or asnafs, though  
Line 3,732: Line 3,732:
Many sources mention trade relations of the Timurid  
Many sources mention trade relations of the Timurid  
state with countries of the East and Europe. Though Balkh,  
state with countries of the East and Europe. Though Balkh,  
Qandahar, Ghazni and Kabul were major trade cities where-
Qandahar, Ghazni and Kabul were major trade cities where
to caravans arrived from Iran, Central Asia, India and China,  
to caravans arrived from Iran, Central Asia, India and China,  
the centre of foreign trade at the time was Herat. Ambas-
the centre of foreign trade at the time was Herat. Ambas
sadors arrived from other countries, and there were am-
sadors arrived from other countries, and there were am
bassadors from Moscow too (1464-1465).20 It is known  
bassadors from Moscow too (1464-1465).20 It is known  
that the Timurids sent ambassadors from Herat to India,  
that the Timurids sent ambassadors from Herat to India,  
Line 3,745: Line 3,745:


The city suburbs stretched in a continuous line, about  
The city suburbs stretched in a continuous line, about  
10 farsakhs long, and were like small towns and settle-
10 farsakhs long, and were like small towns and settle
ments located close to one another. The Herat suburbs  
ments located close to one another. The Herat suburbs  
were subdivided into nine districts, or bulyuks, which made  
were subdivided into nine districts, or bulyuks, which made  
Line 3,754: Line 3,754:
were named after the canals that irrigated them.  
were named after the canals that irrigated them.  


In the Herat province life bustled most in Obah, Sha-
In the Herat province life bustled most in Obah, Sha
felyan, Isfizar, Fushenj, Kusuviye, and Badghis. The Timu-
felyan, Isfizar, Fushenj, Kusuviye, and Badghis. The Timu
rid rulers also built baths, bridges and pavilions at mineral  
rid rulers also built baths, bridges and pavilions at mineral  
springs in the Herat province. Some of the towns in the  
springs in the Herat province. Some of the towns in the  
Line 3,763: Line 3,763:
Farming was developing parallel with trade and the  
Farming was developing parallel with trade and the  
handicrafts; the area of irrigated, and hence cultivated,  
handicrafts; the area of irrigated, and hence cultivated,  
land was expanding; and irrigation canals and kiryaz sys-
land was expanding; and irrigation canals and kiryaz sys
tems were built. Economic advancement in the state of the  
tems were built. Economic advancement in the state of the  
Herat Timurids was significant; though, the sources say,  
Herat Timurids was significant; though, the sources say,  
it never reached the 12th-century level (prior to the Mongol  
it never reached the 12th-century level (prior to the Mongol  
invasion). But still, in the 15th century most of the dis-
invasion). But still, in the 15th century most of the dis
tricts had an economic specialisation of their own. Sayavu-
tricts had an economic specialisation of their own. Sayavu
shan, for instance, was a grapevine-growing area with crops  
shan, for instance, was a grapevine-growing area with crops  
reaching 30,000 harvars.* The Badghis region was famous  
reaching 30,000 harvars.* The Badghis region was famous  
for its pistachios. It also provided Herat with timber, fuel,  
for its pistachios. It also provided Herat with timber, fuel,  
livestock and grain. Obah, lying in the foothills, was dis-
livestock and grain. Obah, lying in the foothills, was dis
tinguished for fertile soil, white-marble quarries, and a hot  
tinguished for fertile soil, white-marble quarries, and a hot  
mineral spring. A similar spring was in Shafelyan, which  
mineral spring. A similar spring was in Shafelyan, which  
Line 3,778: Line 3,778:
apricots, plums, peaches and musk-melons.  
apricots, plums, peaches and musk-melons.  


Under the Timurids the feudal system was further devel-
Under the Timurids the feudal system was further devel
oped, which was seen in the spread of soyurgal. Territories  
oped, which was seen in the spread of soyurgal. Territories  
of various size, from a village to an administrative region,  
of various size, from a village to an administrative region,  
Line 3,785: Line 3,785:


While recognising the supreme power of the head of the  
While recognising the supreme power of the head of the  
Timurid state, the holders of large soyurgals could them-
Timurid state, the holders of large soyurgals could them
selves give out soyurgals to smaller feudal lords, their vas-
selves give out soyurgals to smaller feudal lords, their vas
sals, who had a staff of officials, a court and a large military  
sals, who had a staff of officials, a court and a large military  
reserve contingent. Thus, late in the 15th century the  
reserve contingent. Thus, late in the 15th century the  
Line 3,793: Line 3,793:
Hindu Kush, was some 30,000 strong.  
Hindu Kush, was some 30,000 strong.  


Big feudal lords made independent expeditions of con-
Big feudal lords made independent expeditions of con
quest and levied taxes in the seized territories. Shaikh  
quest and levied taxes in the seized territories. Shaikh  
Ali Khan, the Timurid ruler of Kabul, attacked Indian  
Ali Khan, the Timurid ruler of Kabul, attacked Indian  
Line 3,803: Line 3,803:
the tarkhan deeds. Those possessing them had, apart from  
the tarkhan deeds. Those possessing them had, apart from  
immunity, all sorts of privileges in the distribution of war  
immunity, all sorts of privileges in the distribution of war  
spoils, were not subject to legal responsibility until commit-
spoils, were not subject to legal responsibility until commit
ting nine violations of the law, etc. Usually the word tar-
ting nine violations of the law, etc. Usually the word tar
Ae was added to the name of persons receiving such  
Ae was added to the name of persons receiving such  


Line 3,810: Line 3,810:


The holdings of Muslim religious institutions and those  
The holdings of Muslim religious institutions and those  
of outstanding Muslim theologians, which made up a con-
of outstanding Muslim theologians, which made up a con
siderable part of the land, also enjoyed the right of tax  
siderable part of the land, also enjoyed the right of tax  
immunity.  
immunity.  
Line 3,816: Line 3,816:
Deeds lifting some or all taxes were often given to the  
Deeds lifting some or all taxes were often given to the  
owners of mulgs (private lands). Such lands, which were  
owners of mulgs (private lands). Such lands, which were  
called free mulgs, were sometimes huge and brought im-
called free mulgs, were sometimes huge and brought im
mense profit. The poet Jami, for instance, received an in-
mense profit. The poet Jami, for instance, received an in
come of over 100,000 dinars annually from the lands in  
come of over 100,000 dinars annually from the lands in  
the Herat province.  
the Herat province.  
Line 3,827: Line 3,827:


_ To replenish the treasury, the authorities increased  
_ To replenish the treasury, the authorities increased  
land- and poll-tax rates (kharaj and sarshomar), and taxes  
landand poll-tax rates (kharaj and sarshomar), and taxes  
on gardens; fixed kharaj rates prior to harvesting; intro-
on gardens; fixed kharaj rates prior to harvesting; intro
duced new duties; and compelled the population to do  
duced new duties; and compelled the population to do  
unpaid work, to dig canals and build palaces. As is known  
unpaid work, to dig canals and build palaces. As is known  
from historical records, there were instances when the material for building houses, laying out parks and growing gardens was collected from the population in lieu of taxes.  
from historical records, there were instances when the material for building houses, laying out parks and growing gardens was collected from the population in lieu of taxes.  


The intensification of feudal exploitation was compoun-
The intensification of feudal exploitation was compoun
ded with the tyranny of the authorities and financial officials.  
ded with the tyranny of the authorities and financial officials.  
The mounting tax burden and oppression by officials  
The mounting tax burden and oppression by officials  
evoked acute dissatisfaction and, in some instances, violent  
evoked acute dissatisfaction and, in some instances, violent  
protest action among the masses. Popular action was spon-
protest action among the masses. Popular action was spon
taneous and often ended with the killing of tax-collectors.  
taneous and often ended with the killing of tax-collectors.  


Sometimes, after a mutiny, the authorities would depose  
Sometimes, after a mutiny, the authorities would depose  
some of the officials and reduce taxes, with the very es-
some of the officials and reduce taxes, with the very es
sence of feudal exploitation left unchanged, of course.  
sence of feudal exploitation left unchanged, of course.  




Thus, under Sultan Abu Said, decrees were issued, an-
Thus, under Sultan Abu Said, decrees were issued, an
nouncing a reduction of a part of the kAaraj to be paid  
nouncing a reduction of a part of the kAaraj to be paid  
before harvest gathering and the lifting of taxes on fruit-
before harvest gathering and the lifting of taxes on fruit
trees. In response to the popular action of protest against  
trees. In response to the popular action of protest against  
abuses by officials who had misappropriated part of the  
abuses by officials who had misappropriated part of the  
taxes and increased the poll-tax tenfold in Herat in 1457-
taxes and increased the poll-tax tenfold in Herat in 1457
1458, Mahmud Mirza, son of Abul Qasim Babur, ordered  
1458, Mahmud Mirza, son of Abul Qasim Babur, ordered  
that the unlawfully collected money be returned to the popu-
that the unlawfully collected money be returned to the popu
lation. The subsequent years saw new uprisings caused b  
lation. The subsequent years saw new uprisings caused b  
abuses of power by the fisk officials. During one such upri-
abuses of power by the fisk officials. During one such upri
sing Ali Sher Nawai, who was then a vizier, was compelled  
sing Ali Sher Nawai, who was then a vizier, was compelled  
to announce, on behalf of Sultan Husayn, the lifting of  
to announce, on behalf of Sultan Husayn, the lifting of  
Line 3,861: Line 3,861:


As before, the anti-feudal thrust of popular action  
As before, the anti-feudal thrust of popular action  
under the Timurids often took the form of religious sectar-
under the Timurids often took the form of religious sectar
ian movements. Most known at that time was the Hurufi  
ian movements. Most known at that time was the Hurufi  
sect21 which was under the influence of the Ismailites and  
sect21 which was under the influence of the Ismailites and  
the Sufis. It had followers in Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Syria  
the Sufis. It had followers in Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Syria  
and Herat, mostly among the craftsmen and urban intel-
and Herat, mostly among the craftsmen and urban intel
lectuals. They saw the people’s liberation from tyranny in  
lectuals. They saw the people’s liberation from tyranny in  
an armed uprising led by a mahdi who would “feed the  
an armed uprising led by a mahdi who would "feed the  
Earth with truth and justice”. Common property and com-
Earth with truth and justice". Common property and com
mon meals were introduced in the dervish abode of the  
mon meals were introduced in the dervish abode of the  
Hurufis in Herat. After Ahmad Lur, a member of that  
Hurufis in Herat. After Ahmad Lur, a member of that  
sect, wounded Sultan Shahrukh with a knife in Herat’s  
sect, wounded Sultan Shahrukh with a knife in Herat’s  
central mosque in 1427* (Ahmad Lur was slashed to death on the spot), the Hurufis were subjected to repres- sion; some were executed. :  
central mosque in 1427* (Ahmad Lur was slashed to death on the spot), the Hurufis were subjected to repression; some were executed. :  


Some of the feudal rulers and tribal chiefs began to  
Some of the feudal rulers and tribal chiefs began to  
rise increasingly against the Herat Timurids, especially in  
rise increasingly against the Herat Timurids, especially in  
the middle of the 15th century. According to historical  
the middle of the 15th century. According to historical  
sources, they not only refused to pay taxes but staged numer-
sources, they not only refused to pay taxes but staged numer
ous rebellions against the Timurid princes and the rulers  
ous rebellions against the Timurid princes and the rulers  
of a number of regions. Many were only nominally depend-
of a number of regions. Many were only nominally depend
ent on the centre, but they sought full independence all  
ent on the centre, but they sought full independence all  
the same. Among the recalcitrant vassals of the Timurids  
the same. Among the recalcitrant vassals of the Timurids  
Line 3,897: Line 3,897:
route. The strife between the Timurid princes flared up  
route. The strife between the Timurid princes flared up  
anew. This enabled Muhammad Shaybani to seize Balkh  
anew. This enabled Muhammad Shaybani to seize Balkh  
and then, in 1507, Herat.22 Soon Khorasan was practical-
and then, in 1507, Herat.22 Soon Khorasan was practical
ly conquered. But Muhammad Shaybani’s rule was short-
ly conquered. But Muhammad Shaybani’s rule was short
lived. In 1510 his trepps were routed and he himself was  
lived. In 1510 his trepps were routed and he himself was  
killed near Merv in a battle against Shah Ismail (1502-
killed near Merv in a battle against Shah Ismail (1502
1524), the founder of the Safavid dynasty that had been  
1524), the founder of the Safavid dynasty that had been  
established in Iran and contiguous regions.  
established in Iran and contiguous regions.  


After lengthy and persistent battles the Safavids con-
After lengthy and persistent battles the Safavids con
quered Khorasan and the lands on the left bank of the Amu  
quered Khorasan and the lands on the left bank of the Amu  
Darya up to Balkh. Khorasan became an outlying province  
Darya up to Balkh. Khorasan became an outlying province  
Line 3,913: Line 3,913:
the subsequent years often assumed the form of religious  
the subsequent years often assumed the form of religious  
struggle which was waged off and on for several decades with  
struggle which was waged off and on for several decades with  
alternating success, Due to this, the Uzbek khans of Mava-
alternating success, Due to this, the Uzbek khans of Mava
rannahr, who enjoyed certain support of the population  
rannahr, who enjoyed certain support of the population  
opposed to the Safavid rulers, even managed to tempora- rily establish their power in Herat (in 1535, 1587 and 1597).  
opposed to the Safavid rulers, even managed to temporarily establish their power in Herat (in 1535, 1587 and 1597).  


Late in the 16th century Herat was recaptured by  
Late in the 16th century Herat was recaptured by  
Line 3,931: Line 3,931:


=== Babur, the Roshanites and Khushhal Khan ===
=== Babur, the Roshanites and Khushhal Khan ===
In 1504, the Ferghana ruler’s son, Timurid prince Zahir-
In 1504, the Ferghana ruler’s son, Timurid prince Zahir
ad-din Babur, who later founded the dynasty of the Great  
ad-din Babur, who later founded the dynasty of the Great  
Moghuls, captured Kabul. A large part of the lands populat-
Moghuls, captured Kabul. A large part of the lands populat
ed by Afghan tribes came under the rule of that dynasty.  
ed by Afghan tribes came under the rule of that dynasty.  
In his memoirs Babur Namah, a most important source for  
In his memoirs Babur Namah, a most important source for  
studying Afghanistan and the Afghans, he relates valuable  
studying Afghanistan and the Afghans, he relates valuable  
information about the settlement, way of life, morals and  
information about the settlement, way of life, morals and  
customs of the Afghan tribes and gives a detailed descrip-
customs of the Afghan tribes and gives a detailed descrip
tion of a number of towns and regions, paying particular  
tion of a number of towns and regions, paying particular  
attention to Kabul, which he was very fond of. Babur also  
attention to Kabul, which he was very fond of. Babur also  
wrote Mubayyin, a treatise in verse on state administra-
wrote Mubayyin, a treatise in verse on state administra
tion.  
tion.  


Line 3,971: Line 3,971:
province took part in the long struggle for Qandahar. Their  
province took part in the long struggle for Qandahar. Their  
chiefs sided intermittently with the Safavids and with the  
chiefs sided intermittently with the Safavids and with the  
Great Moghuls. Part of the Abdalis moved to the Herat provin-
Great Moghuls. Part of the Abdalis moved to the Herat provin
ce, while others, who supported the Great Moghuls, went to  
ce, while others, who supported the Great Moghuls, went to  
India and settled mainly in Multan. The Ghilzais gained a  
India and settled mainly in Multan. The Ghilzais gained a  
Line 3,980: Line 3,980:
subordinate to the Safavid vicegerents appointed ‘by the  
subordinate to the Safavid vicegerents appointed ‘by the  
shah. To gain the continued loyalty of the tribes and  
shah. To gain the continued loyalty of the tribes and  
receive military support from the Afghan chiefs, the Safa-
receive military support from the Afghan chiefs, the Safa
vids often gave them a free hand in tax-collecting, granted  
vids often gave them a free hand in tax-collecting, granted  
them titles, land and money, availing themselves of the  
them titles, land and money, availing themselves of the  
discord and struggle between separate tribes or their sub-
discord and struggle between separate tribes or their sub
divisions. Thus, under Abbas I (1587-1629) in 1597 Abdali  
divisions. Thus, under Abbas I (1587-1629) in 1597 Abdali  
malik Sado of the Popolzai clan received the title of ‘‘chief  
malik Sado of the Popolzai clan received the title of ‘‘chief  
of Afghans” for his cooperation in the struggle for Qan-
of Afghans" for his cooperation in the struggle for Qan
dahar. Sado’s troops were instructed to safeguard the roads  
dahar. Sado’s troops were instructed to safeguard the roads  
from Herat to Qandahar. The Sado family were granted  
from Herat to Qandahar. The Sado family were granted  
Line 3,997: Line 3,997:
the settled population for cultivated lands and pastures,  
the settled population for cultivated lands and pastures,  
acting as middlemen and guarding the caravan routes, the  
acting as middlemen and guarding the caravan routes, the  
Afghans for a long time retained intra-tribal military orga-
Afghans for a long time retained intra-tribal military orga
nisation based on traditional family ties. At the same  
nisation based on traditional family ties. At the same  
time, tribe unions were formed mainly for joint struggle  
time, tribe unions were formed mainly for joint struggle  
against other tribes and local, non-Afghan rulers whose  
against other tribes and local, non-Afghan rulers whose  
lands the Afghans seized or intended to seize. Within such unions the relations between tribes at that period were based increasingly on vassal dependence, which largely  
lands the Afghans seized or intended to seize. Within such unions the relations between tribes at that period were based increasingly on vassal dependence, which largely  
accounted for the erosion of patriarchal and tribal rela-
accounted for the erosion of patriarchal and tribal rela
tions. The development of social relations among the  
tions. The development of social relations among the  
Afghan tribes has been thoroughly studied primarily in  
Afghan tribes has been thoroughly studied primarily in  
works by Professor J. M.‘Reisner and his disciples Profes-
works by Professor J. M.‘Reisner and his disciples Profes
sors Yu. V.Gankovsky, L. R. Gordon-Polonskaya, and  
sors Yu. V.Gankovsky, L. R. Gordon-Polonskaya, and  
V. A. Romodin.24 They stressed in their studies that during  
V. A. Romodin.24 They stressed in their studies that during  
the development of seized lands and pastures and settle-
the development of seized lands and pastures and settle
ment in seized territories, the subdivisions of Afghan tribes  
ment in seized territories, the subdivisions of Afghan tribes  
gradually mixed, while tribal unions tended to become the  
gradually mixed, while tribal unions tended to become the  
Line 4,015: Line 4,015:


For various reasons groups of one and the same tribe  
For various reasons groups of one and the same tribe  
often occupied pastures and land oases not on an uninter-
often occupied pastures and land oases not on an uninter
rupted tract of land but intermittently. The chiefs of some  
rupted tract of land but intermittently. The chiefs of some  
tribes, instead of forming tribal troops set up military units  
tribes, instead of forming tribal troops set up military units  
Line 4,023: Line 4,023:
the Kabul and Qandahar regions and in the Peshawar  
the Kabul and Qandahar regions and in the Peshawar  
Valley, the Afghans divided them among the tribesmen.  
Valley, the Afghans divided them among the tribesmen.  
This division of land was based on various principles: ac-
This division of land was based on various principles: ac
cording to the number of people or to the size of the here-
cording to the number of people or to the size of the here
cia shares, or depending on the prestige of the heads of  
cia shares, or depending on the prestige of the heads of  
the families and their role in the conquest of the lands.  
the families and their role in the conquest of the lands.  
Line 4,034: Line 4,034:
gradually becoming feudal landlords.  
gradually becoming feudal landlords.  


The growing property inequality and the natural con-
The growing property inequality and the natural con
ditions in the new regions of settlement, where nomad  
ditions in the new regions of settlement, where nomad  
livestock breeding was often out of the question, made  
livestock breeding was often out of the question, made  
Line 4,050: Line 4,050:
Developmentt’;in« Afghan society of barter and trade,  
Developmentt’;in« Afghan society of barter and trade,  


emergencé:of tisury, ad 'consolidation’-of*the riglt’to land-
emergencé:of tisury, ad 'consolidation’-of*the riglt’to land
Ownership—first'for thé Milslim thedlogiaris anid then for  
Ownership—first'for thé Milslim thedlogiaris anid then for  
the nobility—etodéd patriarchal-tribalrélitions! with the  
the nobility—etodéd patriarchal-tribalrélitions! with the  
tribal chiefs ‘and “elite? tiitning intd" a‘ hereditary ‘feudal  
tribal chiefs ‘and "elite? tiitning intd" a‘ hereditary ‘feudal  
nobility. : ~ Peto at be.  
nobility. : ~ Peto at be.  
- ~li¥'the process of the feudalisation of the Afghan tribes,  
~li¥'the process of the feudalisation of the Afghan tribes,  
thé ‘social’ infgtitutions, that'‘were ‘patriarchal -by form:(spe-
thé ‘social’ infgtitutions, that'‘were ‘patriarchal -by form:(spe
cifically, -thé 'jé##ga-touncik ‘of: tribes); gradually changed  
cifically, -thé 'jé##ga-touncik ‘of: tribes); gradually changed  
their social’ maké-up, ensurif'g thé: right ‘of the nobility  
their social’ maké-up, ensurif'g thé: right ‘of the nobility  
Line 4,065: Line 4,065:
Féudalisation proceeded unevenly among various tribes.  
Féudalisation proceeded unevenly among various tribes.  
In the livestock ~breedir4 tribes, the Wazirs, for instance,  
In the livestock ~breedir4 tribes, the Wazirs, for instance,  
patriatchal-ttibal Felations ‘were only beginning to disin-
patriatchal-ttibal Felations ‘were only beginning to disin
tegrate"inithe P'6th*k8th cenfiries, while the feudalisation  
tegrate"inithe P'6th*k8th cenfiries, while the feudalisation  
of the Khattaks}tKHalils,-Muhammadzais and flat-country  
of the Khattaks}tKHalils,-Muhammadzais and flat-country  
Line 4,075: Line 4,075:
was that the development of the productive forces, the  
was that the development of the productive forces, the  
social division of labour and the shaping of antagonistic  
social division of labour and the shaping of antagonistic  
classes, while undermining the traditional forms of col-
classes, while undermining the traditional forms of col
lective landownership, led to the formation not only of  
lective landownership, led to the formation not only of  
feudal landownership but also of private landownership  
feudal landownership but also of private landownership  
by the peasants.  
by the peasants.  


Karl Marx wrote on that score that “the more the tribe  
Karl Marx wrote on that score that "the more the tribe  
moves away from its original place of settlement and oc-
moves away from its original place of settlement and oc
cupies alien land, thus entering substantially new condi-
cupies alien land, thus entering substantially new condi
tions of labour and the energies of the individual further  
tions of labour and the energies of the individual further  
developing—hence the communal character seems, and must  
developing—hence the communal character seems, and must  
seem,rather as a negative unity in relation to the outside  
seem,rather as a negative unity in relation to the outside  
world—the more do conditions arise which cause the indivi-
world—the more do conditions arise which cause the indivi
dual to become a private proprietor of land—of a partic-
dual to become a private proprietor of land—of a partic




ular plot—whose separate cultivation devolves on him and  
ular plot—whose separate cultivation devolves on him and  
his family.”25
his family."25


The struggle between the peasants and the tribal elite,  
The struggle between the peasants and the tribal elite,  
Line 4,105: Line 4,105:
the impoverished tribesmen were seeking the patronage of  
the impoverished tribesmen were seeking the patronage of  
influential Muslim theologians, timing their land plots  
influential Muslim theologians, timing their land plots  
over tq them and thus becoming khamsa'yas.- °  
over tq them and thus becoming khamsa'yas.°  


As they became big landlords, the Muslim theologians  
As they became big landlords, the Muslim theologians  
Line 4,117: Line 4,117:
Like many other anti-feudal movements'in the Middle  
Like many other anti-feudal movements'in the Middle  
Ages, that movement, too, had originate’dand spread as a  
Ages, that movement, too, had originate’dand spread as a  
sectarian one. Its leader and idedlogist’ was Bayazid An- °
sectarian one. Its leader and idedlogist’ was Bayazid An°
sari.26 Bom in Punjab, he moved ‘together with his family  
sari.26 Bom in Punjab, he moved ‘together with his family  
to Kaniguram (Waziristan), the homeland of his father.  
to Kaniguram (Waziristan), the homeland of his father.  
Line 4,130: Line 4,130:
religion, property status or hereditary ‘privileges; were  
religion, property status or hereditary ‘privileges; were  
equal before God. Believing in the migration of*souls, he  
equal before God. Believing in the migration of*souls, he  
preached that “the path to salvation” was the same for  
preached that "the path to salvation" was the same for  
slaves, khamsayas, Afghans and non-Afghans, and that  
slaves, khamsayas, Afghans and non-Afghans, and that  
salvation could be achieved in the struggle for equality  
salvation could be achieved in the struggle for equality  
Line 4,139: Line 4,139:
who rejected and those who accepted his doctrine (the  
who rejected and those who accepted his doctrine (the  


“people of the light””—the Roshanites). Those who rejected his doctrine, his adversaries, were declared, from time to time, to be non-existent, having no right to own land and  
"people of the light""—the Roshanites). Those who rejected his doctrine, his adversaries, were declared, from time to time, to be non-existent, having no right to own land and  
other property, and were often annihilated. Their property  
other property, and were often annihilated. Their property  
was confiscated to be distributed among the sect members.  
was confiscated to be distributed among the sect members.  
Line 4,149: Line 4,149:
is Khay ul-Bayan (Good Word), written as Bayazid’s dialogue  
is Khay ul-Bayan (Good Word), written as Bayazid’s dialogue  
with God. Bayazid Ansari was not only an eloquent speaker  
with God. Bayazid Ansari was not only an eloquent speaker  
and a superb poet, but also a gifted political leader and mili-
and a superb poet, but also a gifted political leader and mili
tary commander of the 1560s. From preaching he went  
tary commander of the 1560s. From preaching he went  
over to organising an uprising. By its slogans and composi  
over to organising an uprising. By its slogans and composi  
tion the-Roshani movement en masse was a peasant move-
tion the-Roshani movement en masse was a peasant move
ment spearheaded against the tribal nobility (becoming  
ment spearheaded against the tribal nobility (becoming  
feudal lords) and the Muslim theologians. Because the  
feudal lords) and the Muslim theologians. Because the  
Line 4,164: Line 4,164:
struggle, significant military victories in the territory of  
struggle, significant military victories in the territory of  
Afghanistan too. They captured temporarily the areas of  
Afghanistan too. They captured temporarily the areas of  
Nangarhar, as well as Ghazni, Kabul and contiguous re-
Nangarhar, as well as Ghazni, Kabul and contiguous re
gions, and blocked the Khyber Pass, thereby disrupting  
gions, and blocked the Khyber Pass, thereby disrupting  
not only traditional trade routes, but also the military  
not only traditional trade routes, but also the military  
Line 4,177: Line 4,177:
often executed.  
often executed.  


Most active in the movement were the Khalils, Muham-
Most active in the movement were the Khalils, Muham
madzais, flat-country Momands, and Hughianis, among  
madzais, flat-country Momands, and Hughianis, among  
whom social contrad ctions reached a high point, while  
whom social contrad ctions reached a high point, while  
the ordinary members were subjected to double exploita-
the ordinary members were subjected to double exploita
tion, by the tribal nobility and the Moghul vicegerents.  
tion, by the tribal nobility and the Moghul vicegerents.  
The Roshanites were backed up by other tribes, sometimes together with their chiefs. The chiefs joined the movement for various reasons. Some planned to avail themselves of  
The Roshanites were backed up by other tribes, sometimes together with their chiefs. The chiefs joined the movement for various reasons. Some planned to avail themselves of  
Line 4,204: Line 4,204:
and pooled their own efforts, dealt a series of heavy defeats  
and pooled their own efforts, dealt a series of heavy defeats  
at the Roshanites, after which the movement lost its force.  
at the Roshanites, after which the movement lost its force.  
Bayazid Ansari’s grandson Karimdad, the last of the move-
Bayazid Ansari’s grandson Karimdad, the last of the move
ment leaders, was killed in 1638.  
ment leaders, was killed in 1638.  


Line 4,211: Line 4,211:
not so much due to the fact that the nobility, which sought  
not so much due to the fact that the nobility, which sought  
land grants, high titles and privileges, compacted with the  
land grants, high titles and privileges, compacted with the  
Great Moghuls. Some of the tribes themselves, as, for in-
Great Moghuls. Some of the tribes themselves, as, for in
stance, the Yusufzais, opposed the equalisation of rights  
stance, the Yusufzais, opposed the equalisation of rights  
of free tribesmen with those of the slaves and khamsayas,  
of free tribesmen with those of the slaves and khamsayas,  
since this left no chance for exploiting the latter two.  
since this left no chance for exploiting the latter two.  
In addition, one should take into account different levels  
In addition, one should take into account different levels  
of social development, economic and political discon-
of social development, economic and political discon
nection, and traditional tribal strife.  
nection, and traditional tribal strife.  


Line 4,225: Line 4,225:
foreign rule. What is more, the movement of the Roshanites  
foreign rule. What is more, the movement of the Roshanites  
and their striving to unite the population on a territorial  
and their striving to unite the population on a territorial  
basis at a time when patriarchal-tribal relations were fractur-
basis at a time when patriarchal-tribal relations were fractur
ing, was a progressive factor which undoubtedly influenced the development of Afghan society.  
ing, was a progressive factor which undoubtedly influenced the development of Afghan society.  


Line 4,232: Line 4,232:
the ruler of the Khattaks.27  
the ruler of the Khattaks.27  


The Khattak principality with its centre in Akora, situat-
The Khattak principality with its centre in Akora, situat
ed on the roads leading to Peshawar, at the confluence  
ed on the roads leading to Peshawar, at the confluence  
of the Kabul and Landai rivers, was formed in the 16th  
of the Kabul and Landai rivers, was formed in the 16th  
Line 4,256: Line 4,256:
of Shahbaz Khan in 1641 Moghul padishah Shah Jahan  
of Shahbaz Khan in 1641 Moghul padishah Shah Jahan  
approved the appointment of the former’s son Khushhal  
approved the appointment of the former’s son Khushhal  
Khan as ruler of the Khattaks. For taking part in the expedi-
Khan as ruler of the Khattaks. For taking part in the expedi
tions of Moghul troops to Balkh, Badakhshan, Deccan and  
tions of Moghul troops to Balkh, Badakhshan, Deccan and  
other places, Khushhal Khan received a large land grant  
other places, Khushhal Khan received a large land grant  
Line 4,265: Line 4,265:


During Khushhal Khan’s rule many of the Khattaks began  
During Khushhal Khan’s rule many of the Khattaks began  
to live a settled life. By that time stratification of the Khat-
to live a settled life. By that time stratification of the Khat
taks on the basis of property ownerships and feudalisation  
taks on the basis of property ownerships and feudalisation  
attained higher levels than among many other tribes. The  
attained higher levels than among many other tribes. The  
Line 4,278: Line 4,278:
liable to redivision, as was periodically practised before.  
liable to redivision, as was periodically practised before.  


Though the main forces of the Roshanites were sup-
Though the main forces of the Roshanites were sup
pressed, riots among the Afghan tribes continued into the  
pressed, riots among the Afghan tribes continued into the  
1640s and 1650s. The disturbances intensified in response to  
1640s and 1650s. The disturbances intensified in response to  
Line 4,290: Line 4,290:
committed outrages, pillages, and burned down houses.  
committed outrages, pillages, and burned down houses.  


At first Khushhal Khan was not very active in the opera-
At first Khushhal Khan was not very active in the opera
tions conducted by the tribes. But, suspected by the Great  
tions conducted by the tribes. But, suspected by the Great  
Moghuls of supporting the insurgents, he was seized and  
Moghuls of supporting the insurgents, he was seized and  
Line 4,310: Line 4,310:
Moghul padishah Aurangzeb had to fight against the  
Moghul padishah Aurangzeb had to fight against the  
Afghan tribes for almost two years. By destroying crops,  
Afghan tribes for almost two years. By destroying crops,  
exterminating the population and kindling intertribal en-
exterminating the population and kindling intertribal en
mity the Great Moghuls intended to subdue the Afghans  
mity the Great Moghuls intended to subdue the Afghans  
and to induce their chiefs to treachery. The sources cite  
and to induce their chiefs to treachery. The sources cite  
numerous facts of chiefs being bribed and intrigues by the  
numerous facts of chiefs being bribed and intrigues by the  
Moghul rulers. For instance, the governor of Kabul sent  
Moghul rulers. For instance, the governor of Kabul sent  
letters to the tribal nobility on behalf of an Afghan chief, saying that the Afridi chiefs were not going to divide the conquered lands and intended to leave them for them-
letters to the tribal nobility on behalf of an Afghan chief, saying that the Afridi chiefs were not going to divide the conquered lands and intended to leave them for them
selves. All that, naturally, caused tensions, and then a  
selves. All that, naturally, caused tensions, and then a  
split, among the tribes. Khushhal Khan’s son Ashraf, who  
split, among the tribes. Khushhal Khan’s son Ashraf, who  
led the movement, was seized in 1683 and taken to Bija-
led the movement, was seized in 1683 and taken to Bija
pur. His successor Afzal recognised himself as a vassal of  
pur. His successor Afzal recognised himself as a vassal of  
the Great Moghuls. But even after the uprising was sup-
the Great Moghuls. But even after the uprising was sup
pressed, the power of Moghul padishahs was only nominal  
pressed, the power of Moghul padishahs was only nominal  
in many regions populated by Afghans.  
in many regions populated by Afghans.  
Line 4,329: Line 4,329:
=== The Qandahar and Herat Principalities ===
=== The Qandahar and Herat Principalities ===
At the end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th  
At the end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th  
century the Safavid state, which included Herat and Qan-
century the Safavid state, which included Herat and Qan
dahar, was in the grip of a severe economic and political  
dahar, was in the grip of a severe economic and political  
crisis. A. Volynsky, the Russian Ambassador to Iran from  
crisis. A. Volynsky, the Russian Ambassador to Iran from  
1715 to 1718, wrote: “During his stay [in Iran] Alexan-
1715 to 1718, wrote: "During his stay [in Iran] Alexan
der the Great could not have sacked the country as much  
der the Great could not have sacked the country as much  
and I oa oe that this crown is facing complete ruin.’”2 8  
and I oa oe that this crown is facing complete ruin.’"2 8  


One of the most important causes of such decline was  
One of the most important causes of such decline was  
the ruin of small peasant farming—the economic basis  
the ruin of small peasant farming—the economic basis  
of the feudal Safavid state.29 After the 1698-1701 census,  
of the feudal Safavid state.29 After the 1698-1701 census,  
the duties and part of the rent, paid in money, were in-
the duties and part of the rent, paid in money, were in
creased and a new taxation system was introduced. With  
creased and a new taxation system was introduced. With  
the growth of the proportion of taxes paid to the treasury  
the growth of the proportion of taxes paid to the treasury  
and the end to the wars of aggression that had brought  
and the end to the wars of aggression that had brought  
abundant spoils, the feudal lords’ profits shrank drastically.  
abundant spoils, the feudal lords’ profits shrank drastically.  
To increase them, they taxed the population more rigor-
To increase them, they taxed the population more rigor
ously. Feudal exploitation increased many times over. The  
ously. Feudal exploitation increased many times over. The  
ruin of peasants caused the decline of agriculture, which  
ruin of peasants caused the decline of agriculture, which  
left craftsmen without raw materials and merchants with-
left craftsmen without raw materials and merchants with
out goods. Many peasants left their homes. The lands,  
out goods. Many peasants left their homes. The lands,  
including those in the shah’s domain, were left untilled.  
including those in the shah’s domain, were left untilled.  
Line 4,355: Line 4,355:
intrigues and corruption made the situation even worse.  
intrigues and corruption made the situation even worse.  


A tide of discontent and indignation swept the coun-
A tide of discontent and indignation swept the coun
try. Many chiefs of nomad tribes came out against the shah. For the Safavids this meant not only the contrac- tion of their social base but also the loss of military back-
try. Many chiefs of nomad tribes came out against the shah. For the Safavids this meant not only the contraction of their social base but also the loss of military back
ing from the tribes.  
ing from the tribes.  


The peoples whose lands were forcefully incorporated  
The peoples whose lands were forcefully incorporated  
into the Safavid state fought most vigorously against the  
into the Safavid state fought most vigorously against the  
central government. The liberation movement of the sub-
central government. The liberation movement of the sub
jugated peoples had two main trends in it: one included the  
jugated peoples had two main trends in it: one included the  
broad masses—the peasants, the rural settled and nomad  
broad masses—the peasants, the rural settled and nomad  
tax-paying population (rayats and ilyats), and the towns-
tax-paying population (rayats and ilyats), and the towns
people (handicraftsmen and small traders); the other includ-
people (handicraftsmen and small traders); the other includ
ed the local feudal lords dissatisfied with the infringement  
ed the local feudal lords dissatisfied with the infringement  
on their political power and the worsening of their econom-
on their political power and the worsening of their econom
ic situation. In those protest actions the striving for freedom  
ic situation. In those protest actions the striving for freedom  
from foreign domination was closely intertwined  
from foreign domination was closely intertwined  
Line 4,381: Line 4,381:


In each tribe the disintegration of tribal relations and  
In each tribe the disintegration of tribal relations and  
the shaping of feudal ones proceeded in a somewhat dif-
the shaping of feudal ones proceeded in a somewhat dif
ferent direction. The Abdalis and Ghilzais had reached  
ferent direction. The Abdalis and Ghilzais had reached  
a higher level of social and economic development. In the  
a higher level of social and economic development. In the  
Ghilzai tribes the tribal elite was most feudalised among  
Ghilzai tribes the tribal elite was most feudalised among  
the Hotakis who made up a large part of the Afghan popu-
the Hotakis who made up a large part of the Afghan popu
lation in the Qandahar province. The Hotaki group included  
lation in the Qandahar province. The Hotaki group included  
the Khan family of the entire Ghilzai tribe (Shah-alam-
the Khan family of the entire Ghilzai tribe (Shah-alam
hel), which doubtlessly facilitated the growth of Hotakis’  
hel), which doubtlessly facilitated the growth of Hotakis’  
political influence on the other Ghilzai tribes.  
political influence on the other Ghilzai tribes.  
Line 4,403: Line 4,403:


Apart from tax oppression, the Afghan tribes were  
Apart from tax oppression, the Afghan tribes were  
subjected to national discrimination and religious per-
subjected to national discrimination and religious per
secution. The latter was caused by the increased role of  
secution. The latter was caused by the increased role of  
Shiite theologians in the Safavid state (the Afghans were  
Shiite theologians in the Safavid state (the Afghans were  
Sunnites). The persecution of Sunnites grew especially  
Sunnites). The persecution of Sunnites grew especially  
large-scale under shah Sultan Husayn (1694-1722) who,  
large-scale under shah Sultan Husayn (1694-1722) who,  
being under the influence of Shiite mujtaheeds,* perse-
being under the influence of Shiite mujtaheeds,* perse
cuted Sunnites, Sufi dervishes and members of various  
cuted Sunnites, Sufi dervishes and members of various  
sects, specifically those populating the outlying provinces  
sects, specifically those populating the outlying provinces  
Line 4,422: Line 4,422:
policy of terror, of exploiting discord between individual  
policy of terror, of exploiting discord between individual  
Afghan tribes, also between the Ghilzais and Abdalis, only  
Afghan tribes, also between the Ghilzais and Abdalis, only  
added to the dissatisfaction of the people. The malcon-
added to the dissatisfaction of the people. The malcon
tents were led by Hotaki chief Mir Wais, the galantar of  
tents were led by Hotaki chief Mir Wais, the galantar of  
Qandahar.  
Qandahar.  
Line 4,428: Line 4,428:
Mir Wais went to Isfahan to lodge a complaint against  
Mir Wais went to Isfahan to lodge a complaint against  
Gurgen Khan. On his arrival he saw that the shah’s power  
Gurgen Khan. On his arrival he saw that the shah’s power  
was weak and realised that by bringing together the mal-
was weak and realised that by bringing together the mal
contents he could fight not only against Gurgen Khan but  
contents he could fight not only against Gurgen Khan but  
even attempt to liberate Qandahar from the Safavids. After  
even attempt to liberate Qandahar from the Safavids. After  
that Mir Wais went on a pilgrimage to Mecca where he  
that Mir Wais went on a pilgrimage to Mecca where he  
received the blessing of Sunnite theologians for a struggle  
received the blessing of Sunnite theologians for a struggle  
against the “heretical king”, the Shiite shah Husayn.  
against the "heretical king", the Shiite shah Husayn.  


Back in Qandahar in 1708, Mir Wais summoned a jirga,  
Back in Qandahar in 1708, Mir Wais summoned a jirga,  
Line 4,444: Line 4,444:
stage in the complex evolution of the Afghan state.  
stage in the complex evolution of the Afghan state.  


All strata of the population took part in the 1709 up-
All strata of the population took part in the 1709 up
rising. The nobility of the tribes, ilyats and townspeople  
rising. The nobility of the tribes, ilyats and townspeople  
had one common goal—liberation from Safavid domination.  
had one common goal—liberation from Safavid domination.  
Line 4,451: Line 4,451:
against Mir Wais, in 1710 -1711 and in 1713, which ended  
against Mir Wais, in 1710 -1711 and in 1713, which ended  
in the utter defeat of the shah’s troops. In their struggle  
in the utter defeat of the shah’s troops. In their struggle  
against the Safavid forces the Afghans were greatly support-
against the Safavid forces the Afghans were greatly support
ed by the Baluchis, nomad tribes that inhabited the Qan-
ed by the Baluchis, nomad tribes that inhabited the Qan
dahar plain.  
dahar plain.  


Line 4,468: Line 4,468:


The insurrection in Qandahar and’ the formation of the  
The insurrection in Qandahar and’ the formation of the  
Qandahar (or Ghilzai, as it was otherwise called) principa-
Qandahar (or Ghilzai, as it was otherwise called) principa
lity were followed by uprisings in the northern Caucasus  
lity were followed by uprisings in the northern Caucasus  
led by Surhay Khan of Kazikumuh, and disturbances in  
led by Surhay Khan of Kazikumuh, and disturbances in  
Line 4,474: Line 4,474:


The Afghan tribes (mainly the Abdalis) populating the .  
The Afghan tribes (mainly the Abdalis) populating the .  
Herat region revolted in 1716.34 Those tribes were in fer-
Herat region revolted in 1716.34 Those tribes were in fer
ment soon after the assassination of Gurgen Khan by  
ment soon after the assassination of Gurgen Khan by  
whose order thousands of Afghan families had been reset-
whose order thousands of Afghan families had been reset
tled from Qandahar to Herat in the early 18th century,  
tled from Qandahar to Herat in the early 18th century,  
while many chiefs, including the grandfather and uncles  
while many chiefs, including the grandfather and uncles  
of Ahmad Khan Abdali (the future founder of the inde-
of Ahmad Khan Abdali (the future founder of the inde
pendent Afghan state) had been murdered.  
pendent Afghan state) had been murdered.  


Line 4,494: Line 4,494:
Meanwhile Abdullah Khan Sadozai again escaped from  
Meanwhile Abdullah Khan Sadozai again escaped from  
prison and took refuge in the Dushah Mountains. He was  
prison and took refuge in the Dushah Mountains. He was  
joined gradually by thousands of his supporters. The in-
joined gradually by thousands of his supporters. The in
surgents occupied Isfizar, after which they moved on to  
surgents occupied Isfizar, after which they moved on to  
Herat and laid siege to it. With wide support from the  
Herat and laid siege to it. With wide support from the  
Line 4,505: Line 4,505:
noted at the time that bread and livestock were supplied  
noted at the time that bread and livestock were supplied  
to the Safavid residency in Isfahan and other places mostly  
to the Safavid residency in Isfahan and other places mostly  
from the Herat region. “However,he wrote, “during my  
from the Herat region. "However," he wrote, "during my  
presence there the Persians lost it, for it was conquered  
presence there the Persians lost it, for it was conquered  
by the Afghans, and that causes the Persians to start a  
by the Afghans, and that causes the Persians to start a  
Line 4,523: Line 4,523:
last, attempt to suppress the insurgents also failed.  
last, attempt to suppress the insurgents also failed.  


For all the differences among the Afghan tribes, includ-
For all the differences among the Afghan tribes, includ
ing those between the Ghilzais and Abdalis, the Ghilzais grew  
ing those between the Ghilzais and Abdalis, the Ghilzais grew  
stronger militarily. The tribe’s nobility with Mir Wais’s  
stronger militarily. The tribe’s nobility with Mir Wais’s  
Line 4,544: Line 4,544:
Nadir Quli Beg, the leader of a feudal group in Khorasan,  
Nadir Quli Beg, the leader of a feudal group in Khorasan,  
joined the detachments of Tahmasp, the son of shah Sultan  
joined the detachments of Tahmasp, the son of shah Sultan  
Husayn, in 1726 and placed him under his influence. Hav-
Husayn, in 1726 and placed him under his influence. Hav
ing united the Khorasan tribes, Nadir Quli Beg captured  
ing united the Khorasan tribes, Nadir Quli Beg captured  
Khorasan, Mazenderan and Astrabad and began mustering  
Khorasan, Mazenderan and Astrabad and began mustering  
Line 4,576: Line 4,576:
the Afghans had been winning, too, but were forced to  
the Afghans had been winning, too, but were forced to  
retreat to Ghurian when reinforcements had come to back  
retreat to Ghurian when reinforcements had come to back  
up Nadir. As the news reached the Abdali chiefs, they sum-
up Nadir. As the news reached the Abdali chiefs, they sum
moned Zulfiqar Khan and his troops from Farah to Herat.  
moned Zulfiqar Khan and his troops from Farah to Herat.  
In the battle which took place soon after that and involved great bloodshed, the insurgents suffered a defeat, in spite of their desperate resistance.  
In the battle which took place soon after that and involved great bloodshed, the insurgents suffered a defeat, in spite of their desperate resistance.  


Nadir’s troops plundered Farah and captured the fami-
Nadir’s troops plundered Farah and captured the fami
lies of the Abdali chiefs, including those of Zulfigar Khan  
lies of the Abdali chiefs, including those of Zulfigar Khan  
and Allahyar Khan. This development hastened the chiefs  
and Allahyar Khan. This development hastened the chiefs  
to conclude peace. Nadir, too, wanted peace, for he was  
to conclude peace. Nadir, too, wanted peace, for he was  
aware of a, Ghilzai expedition to Khorasan. He therefore  
aware of a, Ghilzai expedition to Khorasan. He therefore  
had to set out for Meshhed immediately. A peace agree-
had to set out for Meshhed immediately. A peace agree
ment was concluded in June 1729, according to which the  
ment was concluded in June 1729, according to which the  
Abdali tribe was to release the prisoners and pay tributes.  
Abdali tribe was to release the prisoners and pay tributes.  
Line 4,600: Line 4,600:
heavy defeats on the Turks.  
heavy defeats on the Turks.  


In 1731 the Herat province was again in a state of fer-
In 1731 the Herat province was again in a state of fer
ment. Ruined under the Safavids by taxes and exhausted  
ment. Ruined under the Safavids by taxes and exhausted  
by a struggle which had lasted almost 15 years, the popular  
by a struggle which had lasted almost 15 years, the popular  
masses refused to pay the requisitions fixed by the terms  
masses refused to pay the requisitions fixed by the terms  
of peace with Nadir. The chiefs of the Abdali tribe, de-
of peace with Nadir. The chiefs of the Abdali tribe, de
prived of independence and being forced not only to obey  
prived of independence and being forced not only to obey  
Nadir’s orders but to share their profits with him, were  
Nadir’s orders but to share their profits with him, were  
preparing for an uprising. They were promised support  
preparing for an uprising. They were promised support  
from’ Husayn, the ruler of the Qandahar principality (1722-
from’ Husayn, the ruler of the Qandahar principality (1722
1738) who had been frightened by the military successes  
1738) who had been frightened by the military successes  
of Nadir and feared that he would attack Qandahar.  
of Nadir and feared that he would attack Qandahar.  
Line 4,616: Line 4,616:
and banished him from Herat. The power went over to  
and banished him from Herat. The power went over to  
Zulfiqar Khan who declared Herat an independent city.  
Zulfiqar Khan who declared Herat an independent city.  
The insurgents then advanced towards Meshhed in an at-
The insurgents then advanced towards Meshhed in an at
tempt to take control of the whole of Khorasan.  
tempt to take control of the whole of Khorasan.  


Line 4,627: Line 4,627:
Meanwhile preparations were underway in Herat to  
Meanwhile preparations were underway in Herat to  
beat back an enemy attack. The population of the city  
beat back an enemy attack. The population of the city  
and its suburbs were busy building fortifications and form-
and its suburbs were busy building fortifications and form
ing armed detachments. Messengers were sent to Qandahar  
ing armed detachments. Messengers were sent to Qandahar  
with a request for reinforcements.  
with a request for reinforcements.  
Line 4,650: Line 4,650:
The insurgents marched through mountain paths and ravines  
The insurgents marched through mountain paths and ravines  
of the Paropamisus on their way back and brought the food  
of the Paropamisus on their way back and brought the food  
safely to Herat. As soon as he leamed of this, Nadir at-
safely to Herat. As soon as he leamed of this, Nadir at
tacked Jebrail and, after long and stubbom battles, captured  
tacked Jebrail and, after long and stubbom battles, captured  
it. New ways were to be sought to bring food to Herat.  
it. New ways were to be sought to bring food to Herat.  
Line 4,693: Line 4,693:
In 1736 Nadir was proclaimed the shah of Iran at a  
In 1736 Nadir was proclaimed the shah of Iran at a  
meeting of the nobility in the Mugan Steppe. Beginning  
meeting of the nobility in the Mugan Steppe. Beginning  
with late 1736 his troops made repeated attacks on Qan-
with late 1736 his troops made repeated attacks on Qan
dahar. Nadir feared that the Qandahar Afghans would pose  
dahar. Nadir feared that the Qandahar Afghans would pose  
a perpetual threat to him. Besides, the seizure of Qandahar  
a perpetual threat to him. Besides, the seizure of Qandahar  
was to be the first step in the preparations for an: expedi-
was to be the first step in the preparations for an: expedi
tion to India. But despite his undeniable military superio-
tion to India. But despite his undeniable military superio
rity, Nadir could not: enter Qandahar for more thana year.  
rity, Nadir could not: enter Qandahar for more thana year.  
The long siege compelled him to build a whole town on the  
The long siege compelled him to build a whole town on the  
site of his military camp. The sources relate numerous facts  
site of his military camp. The sources relate numerous facts  
about the heroic resistance of the Qandahar people. Their  
about the heroic resistance of the Qandahar people. Their  
sorties were causing serious losses to the enemy. By Decem-
sorties were causing serious losses to the enemy. By Decem
ber 1737 only afew thousands remained of the army which  
ber 1737 only afew thousands remained of the army which  
Nadir had led to Qandahar. A new levy of recruits was  
Nadir had led to Qandahar. A new levy of recruits was  
Line 4,716: Line 4,716:
a cadastral survey of lands requiring irrigation was made in  
a cadastral survey of lands requiring irrigation was made in  
the Qandahar province at Nadir’s orders and taxes were  
the Qandahar province at Nadir’s orders and taxes were  
fixed. Abdali khans were appointed the rulers of the pro-
fixed. Abdali khans were appointed the rulers of the pro
vince and a number of its regions. It must be noted that the  
vince and a number of its regions. It must be noted that the  
Abdali tribal elite occupied prominent places in Nadir’s  
Abdali tribal elite occupied prominent places in Nadir’s  
Line 4,752: Line 4,752:


Nadir. sent there Tahmasp Khan Jalair, one of his best  
Nadir. sent there Tahmasp Khan Jalair, one of his best  
military commanders, in the capacity of the ruler of Afgha-
military commanders, in the capacity of the ruler of Afgha
nistan and the north-western regions of the Punjab, which had been added to Nadir’s empire. In the 1740s riots flared up anew in several regions, including the Qandahar and  
nistan and the north-western regions of the Punjab, which had been added to Nadir’s empire. In the 1740s riots flared up anew in several regions, including the Qandahar and  
Kabul provinces. Taqi Khan, the ruler of Kabul, supported  
Kabul provinces. Taqi Khan, the ruler of Kabul, supported  
Line 4,760: Line 4,760:
to their side. The example of the people of Qandahar and  
to their side. The example of the people of Qandahar and  
Kabul was followed by the Hazaras who, having joined  
Kabul was followed by the Hazaras who, having joined  
hands with the Herat population, rebelled against the Ira-
hands with the Herat population, rebelled against the Ira
nian authorities. The Yusufzais rose too. The liberation  
nian authorities. The Yusufzais rose too. The liberation  
struggle of the Afghan and other subjugated peoples was  
struggle of the Afghan and other subjugated peoples was  
combined with protest actions against the mounting tax  
combined with protest actions against the mounting tax  
burden. That was the reason why a powerful wave of upris-
burden. That was the reason why a powerful wave of upris
ings rolled across the country after the introduction of new  
ings rolled across the country after the introduction of new  
taxes in 1743.* Taking part in the uprising were various  
taxes in 1743.* Taking part in the uprising were various  
Line 4,770: Line 4,770:
working masses, being most active.  
working masses, being most active.  


The founding of the independent principalities of Qan-
The founding of the independent principalities of Qan
dahar and Herat and the subsequent actions of the Afghans  
dahar and Herat and the subsequent actions of the Afghans  
were not merely isolated incidents. The Afghans were the  
were not merely isolated incidents. The Afghans were the  
first to raise the banner of struggle against Safavid domi-
first to raise the banner of struggle against Safavid domi
nation. That liberation struggle, which started in the late  
nation. That liberation struggle, which started in the late  
17th century and lasted, with short intervals, for nearly  
17th century and lasted, with short intervals, for nearly  
half a century, promoted the development of a fierce  
half a century, promoted the development of a fierce  
struggle against the Safavids and Nadir Shah. The risings of  
struggle against the Safavids and Nadir Shah. The risings of  
the Afghans and other peoples in the territory of present-
the Afghans and other peoples in the territory of present
- day Afghanistan, together with the liberation movements in  
day Afghanistan, together with the liberation movements in  
Daghestan, Georgia and Central Asia, were one of the main  
Daghestan, Georgia and Central Asia, were one of the main  
‘causes of the collapse of the shah’s empire. Major elements  
‘causes of the collapse of the shah’s empire. Major elements  
in the Afghan tribes’ stubborn long-time resistance to  
in the Afghan tribes’ stubborn long-time resistance to  
foreign rule, the uprisings in the first half of the 18th.  
foreign rule, the uprisings in the first half of the 18th.  
century speeded up “the entire formation of the Afghan ‘  
century speeded up "the entire formation of the Afghan ‘  
state, a process prepared by the course of the evolution of  
state, a process prepared by the course of the evolution of  
Afghan society”.38  
Afghan society".38  


== Afghanistan in Modern Times ==
== Afghanistan in Modern Times ==
Line 4,793: Line 4,793:
The Durrani state was not the first state formation among  
The Durrani state was not the first state formation among  
the Afghans (Pashtuns). In the 16th century two feudal  
the Afghans (Pashtuns). In the 16th century two feudal  
principalities—Akora and Teri—had emerged in the terri-
principalities—Akora and Teri—had emerged in the terri
tory populated by an East Afghan tribe—the Khattaks.  
tory populated by an East Afghan tribe—the Khattaks.  
In the 17th century a small feudal principality was formed  
In the 17th century a small feudal principality was formed  
Line 4,799: Line 4,799:
Afghan (Pashtun) feudal principalities occupied a very  
Afghan (Pashtun) feudal principalities occupied a very  
small area and did not become the nucleus of a state that  
small area and did not become the nucleus of a state that  
could unite within its borders all lands populated by Pash-
could unite within its borders all lands populated by Pash
tuns. Nor did the two Afghan feudal principalities that  
tuns. Nor did the two Afghan feudal principalities that  
‘emerged at the beginning of the 18th scent as panerto  
‘emerged at the beginning of the 18th scent as panerto  
and Herat, although they did play an important role in the  
and Herat, although they did play an important role in the  
history of the Afghan people. The state of Durrani (1747-
history of the Afghan people. The state of Durrani (1747
1819) was the first to unite all the lands populated by  
1819) was the first to unite all the lands populated by  
Pashtuns into one independent state.  
Pashtuns into one independent state.  
Line 4,811: Line 4,811:
crucible of the wars against foreign oppressors. The sons  
crucible of the wars against foreign oppressors. The sons  
of Bayazid Ansari, who fought for a long time against the  
of Bayazid Ansari, who fought for a long time against the  
Great Moghuls, called themselves “the padishahs of the  
Great Moghuls, called themselves "the padishahs of the  
Afghans”. It was not until the mid-18th century that the  
Afghans". It was not until the mid-18th century that the  
conditions were ripe for the formation of an independent  
conditions were ripe for the formation of an independent  
Afghan state. By that time the development of feudal  
Afghan state. By that time the development of feudal  
Line 4,818: Line 4,818:
internal conditions for unification. A major factor that  
internal conditions for unification. A major factor that  
speeded up that process was the need to fight the external  
speeded up that process was the need to fight the external  
enemies—the Iranian and Moghul feudal lords who for cen-
enemies—the Iranian and Moghul feudal lords who for cen
turies oppressed the Afghan people. In the mid-18th cen  
turies oppressed the Afghan people. In the mid-18th cen  
tury, the disintegration of the Iranian state, the collapse  
tury, the disintegration of the Iranian state, the collapse  
Line 4,845: Line 4,845:
the initial stage, to reckon with the survivals of the tribal  
the initial stage, to reckon with the survivals of the tribal  
system in Afghan society, and could not immediately begin  
system in Afghan society, and could not immediately begin  
to exploit their tribesmen in an open and direct way. There-
to exploit their tribesmen in an open and direct way. There
fore the emergence of the independent new state had a  
fore the emergence of the independent new state had a  
favourable effect on the position of the rank-and-file commu-
favourable effect on the position of the rank-and-file commu
nity members, all the more so since part of the immense  
nity members, all the more so since part of the immense  
war spoils brought to the country by Ahmad Shah (1747-1773),  
war spoils brought to the country by Ahmad Shah (1747-1773),  
Line 4,857: Line 4,857:
a pernicious effect on the people’s living conditions. The  
a pernicious effect on the people’s living conditions. The  
establishment of a modicum of order and security in the  
establishment of a modicum of order and security in the  
vilayets (provinces) was in the interest of their popula-
vilayets (provinces) was in the interest of their popula
tion—farmers, livestock breeders, craftsmen and small traders.  
tion—farmers, livestock breeders, craftsmen and small traders.  


Line 4,868: Line 4,868:
did not fall into pieces right after the death of its founder.  
did not fall into pieces right after the death of its founder.  


After the death of Nadir Shah Afshar, who was assas-
After the death of Nadir Shah Afshar, who was assas
sinated in a coup on June 20, 1747, his vast empire col-
sinated in a coup on June 20, 1747, his vast empire col
lapsed? and its separate parts became independent states.  
lapsed? and its separate parts became independent states.  
The Afghan units of Nadir’s army, which were commanded by several khans of the Abdali tribe, captured a number of artillery pieces from the Iranian army and part of the shah’s  
The Afghan units of Nadir’s army, which were commanded by several khans of the Abdali tribe, captured a number of artillery pieces from the Iranian army and part of the shah’s  
Line 4,886: Line 4,886:
Afghan state. One of them was that the Sadozais were not  
Afghan state. One of them was that the Sadozais were not  
numerous, and the khans of the Abdali tribe believed that  
numerous, and the khans of the Abdali tribe believed that  
a shah elected from the Sadozais did not have “powerful
a shah elected from the Sadozais did not have "powerful
enough support to suppress the autocracy of major tribal  
enough support to suppress the autocracy of major tribal  
khans’’.3 No mean role was played also by the backing ren-
khans’’.3 No mean role was played also by the backing ren
dered to Ahmad Khan by Sabir Shah, an outstanding Muslim  
dered to Ahmad Khan by Sabir Shah, an outstanding Muslim  
theologian and a leader of the large Sufi order of the Chishtiye  
theologian and a leader of the large Sufi order of the Chishtiye  
Line 4,902: Line 4,902:
Afghan state, they occupied a leading position in it. For  
Afghan state, they occupied a leading position in it. For  
the same reason the Abdali tribe was renamed Durrani  
the same reason the Abdali tribe was renamed Durrani  
(the pearly). Furthermore, the key posts in the state appa-
(the pearly). Furthermore, the key posts in the state appa
ratus, the army and the court of Afghan shahs were granted  
ratus, the army and the court of Afghan shahs were granted  
to, and made hereditary for the khans of the major Durrani  
to, and made hereditary for the khans of the major Durrani  
clans and families.* Ahmad Shah even refused the title of “durr-i dauran” (the pearl of the epoch) offered to him by Derwish Sabir Shah and, instead, chose the title of  
clans and families.* Ahmad Shah even refused the title of "durr-i dauran" (the pearl of the epoch) offered to him by Derwish Sabir Shah and, instead, chose the title of  
“durr-i durran”’, i.e., ‘‘the pearl of pearls”.  
"durr-i durran"’, i.e., ‘‘the pearl of pearls".  


Ahmad Shah, relying on the Afghan mounted units, well  
Ahmad Shah, relying on the Afghan mounted units, well  
Line 4,921: Line 4,921:
Iran and Southem Turkestan.  
Iran and Southem Turkestan.  


Due to the specific features of the socio-economic devel-
Due to the specific features of the socio-economic devel
opment of Afghan society in the Durrani epoch, the state  
opment of Afghan society in the Durrani epoch, the state  
formed by Ahmad Shah was a state of conquerors. In the  
formed by Ahmad Shah was a state of conquerors. In the  
Line 4,933: Line 4,933:
after the Durrani state was formed, to begin direct and  
after the Durrani state was formed, to begin direct and  
open expropriation and exploitation of their tribesmen.  
open expropriation and exploitation of their tribesmen.  
In order to weaken and gloss over the growing class contra-
In order to weaken and gloss over the growing class contra
dictions and to prevent an outburst of discontent among  
dictions and to prevent an outburst of discontent among  
ordinary members of the communities, they sought to draw  
ordinary members of the communities, they sought to draw  
Line 4,944: Line 4,944:
tribes for their own benefit. Since part of the immense  
tribes for their own benefit. Since part of the immense  
military spoils also went to the rank-and-file, thousands of  
military spoils also went to the rank-and-file, thousands of  
free members of the communities readily joined the expe-
free members of the communities readily joined the expe
ditions, especially when they promised easy success.  
ditions, especially when they promised easy success.  


Line 4,964: Line 4,964:


Kashmir, the pearl of Afghan territorial possessions  
Kashmir, the pearl of Afghan territorial possessions  
in India, was seized in 1752. And though later the viceger-
in India, was seized in 1752. And though later the viceger
ents of that province often rose in arms against the Durrani  
ents of that province often rose in arms against the Durrani  
shahs, Kashmir remained in their hands up to 1819.  
shahs, Kashmir remained in their hands up to 1819.  
Line 4,982: Line 4,982:
Balkh remained in the power of the Durrani shahs, not a  
Balkh remained in the power of the Durrani shahs, not a  
single rupee from the city reached their treasury. Timur  
single rupee from the city reached their treasury. Timur  
Shah (17,73- 4793), Ahmad Shah’s son and successor, could  
Shah (17,734793), Ahmad Shah’s son and successor, could  
not’ find’ atr¥o¥é)} whd"would agree to be the ruler there.  
not’ find’ atr¥o¥é)} whd"would agree to be the ruler there.  
The shah’s enéifies joked on that score: “The Loutis, who  
The shah’s enéifies joked on that score: "The Loutis, who  
wandered from town to town with monkeys and other  
wandered from town to town with monkeys and other  
animals, taught them to cast earth upon their heads ... when they were asked whether they would be govemors of Balkh.”5 By the beginning of the 19th century Qunduz,  
animals, taught them to cast earth upon their heads ... when they were asked whether they would be govemors of Balkh."5 By the beginning of the 19th century Qunduz,  
Meymaneh, Andhoi and Shibirghan had become fully in-
Meymaneh, Andhoi and Shibirghan had become fully in
dependent, and even in Balkh the power of the Afghan  
dependent, and even in Balkh the power of the Afghan  
vicegerent had become merely nominal.  
vicegerent had become merely nominal.  
Line 4,994: Line 4,994:
the expansion policy of Ahmad Shah and his successors, on  
the expansion policy of Ahmad Shah and his successors, on  
their successes and setbacks. In the spring of 1761, when  
their successes and setbacks. In the spring of 1761, when  
Ahmad Shah was in the prime of his might, the south-east-
Ahmad Shah was in the prime of his might, the south-east
em border of his domain ran less than 100 kilometres from  
em border of his domain ran less than 100 kilometres from  
Delhi and their total area exceeded 2,000,000 square kilo-
Delhi and their total area exceeded 2,000,000 square kilo
metres.  
metres.  


Line 5,002: Line 5,002:
largest states in the Middle East. The trade routes linking  
largest states in the Middle East. The trade routes linking  
Iran, Central Asia and Eastem Turkestan with the states  
Iran, Central Asia and Eastem Turkestan with the states  
of South Asia ran through its territory. Ahmad Shah main-
of South Asia ran through its territory. Ahmad Shah main
tained diplomatic relations with many countries. In the  
tained diplomatic relations with many countries. In the  
years of his rule the Russian govemment made the first  
years of his rule the Russian govemment made the first  
attempt to establish equal and friendly relations with Afgha-
attempt to establish equal and friendly relations with Afgha
nistan.6  
nistan.6  


However, the conquests of Ahmad Shah and his succes-
However, the conquests of Ahmad Shah and his succes
sors had different consequences for the Afghan (Pashtun)  
sors had different consequences for the Afghan (Pashtun)  
and non-Afghan parts of the Durrani state. In the Afghan  
and non-Afghan parts of the Durrani state. In the Afghan  
Line 5,021: Line 5,021:
of the lands of the indigenous population. The fading away  
of the lands of the indigenous population. The fading away  
of tribal relations and of the vestiges of the tribal epoch  
of tribal relations and of the vestiges of the tribal epoch  
and the development of feudal relations, for all the com-
and the development of feudal relations, for all the com
plexity of that process, doubtlessly signified progress.  
plexity of that process, doubtlessly signified progress.  
Therefore the epoch of the Durrani shahs, despite all its  
Therefore the epoch of the Durrani shahs, despite all its  
Line 5,030: Line 5,030:
Shah and his successors were all too different for the  
Shah and his successors were all too different for the  
neighbouring countries, whose peoples in the latter half of  
neighbouring countries, whose peoples in the latter half of  
the 18th century enjoyed a higher social and economic level. To them those conquests meant greater exploitation and ruin. The actions of Ahmad Shah prevented the unifi-
the 18th century enjoyed a higher social and economic level. To them those conquests meant greater exploitation and ruin. The actions of Ahmad Shah prevented the unifi
cation of Iran under the Zend dynasty (1750-1794), and  
cation of Iran under the Zend dynasty (1750-1794), and  
delayed the consolidation of the Sikh state in the Punjab  
delayed the consolidation of the Sikh state in the Punjab  
Line 5,037: Line 5,037:
and the rout of the army of the Marathis, the strongest  
and the rout of the army of the Marathis, the strongest  
one in India at the time,* by Ahmad Shah in 1761,  
one in India at the time,* by Ahmad Shah in 1761,  
weakened the peoples of India in the face of the impend-
weakened the peoples of India in the face of the impend
ing British threat and, in the long run, made it easier for  
ing British threat and, in the long run, made it easier for  
Britain to conquer the South Asian subcontinent.8  
Britain to conquer the South Asian subcontinent.8  
Line 5,044: Line 5,044:
feudal state’s ownership of land: it levied a rent-tax from  
feudal state’s ownership of land: it levied a rent-tax from  
all the territories under its sovereignty. (That did not  
all the territories under its sovereignty. (That did not  
exclude the éxistence of both private and communal land-
exclude the éxistence of both private and communal land
ownership and land tenure.) The surplus product taken from  
ownership and land tenure.) The surplus product taken from  
direct producers was distributed among the members of the  
direct producers was distributed among the members of the  
Line 5,052: Line 5,052:
government apparatus, the non-Afghan top military, the  
government apparatus, the non-Afghan top military, the  
surviving local feudal families in a number of provinces  
surviving local feudal families in a number of provinces  
conquered by Ahmad Shah, and the small feudal lords emer-
conquered by Ahmad Shah, and the small feudal lords emer
ging in the community in the process of its disintegration.  
ging in the community in the process of its disintegration.  


Line 5,064: Line 5,064:
jagirdars (holders of privileged land grants who had full  
jagirdars (holders of privileged land grants who had full  
tax immunity) had to pay no tax. Many lands granted by  
tax immunity) had to pay no tax. Many lands granted by  
the shah or other individuals to various religious institu-
the shah or other individuals to various religious institu
tions were also tax-free. Many Afghan (Pashtun) tribes were  
tions were also tax-free. Many Afghan (Pashtun) tribes were  
also relieved of taxation if they served in the army. The  
also relieved of taxation if they served in the army. The  
Line 5,085: Line 5,085:


After the formation of the Durrani state the Afghan  
After the formation of the Durrani state the Afghan  
khans used their dominating position in the state for build-
khans used their dominating position in the state for build
ing up their power and might to the utmost. The transfer  
ing up their power and might to the utmost. The transfer  
of tax collecting functions to them and their endowment  
of tax collecting functions to them and their endowment  
with administrative, military and legal power in the terri-
with administrative, military and legal power in the terri
tories inhabited by their tribes increased the influence of  
tories inhabited by their tribes increased the influence of  
the tribal nobility and facilitated their gradual turning into  
the tribal nobility and facilitated their gradual turning into  
Line 5,096: Line 5,096:
and to generous land ts which they received from the  
and to generous land ts which they received from the  
Durrani shahs in the Afghan and non-Afghan vilayets of the  
Durrani shahs in the Afghan and non-Afghan vilayets of the  
state.* The expansion of feudal landownership was promot-
state.* The expansion of feudal landownership was promot
ed by the entire land and tax policy of the Durrani shahs,  
ed by the entire land and tax policy of the Durrani shahs,  
who suppressed the resistance of Afghan and non-Afghan  
who suppressed the resistance of Afghan and non-Afghan  
peasants alike. Therefore in the initial years of Ahmad  
peasants alike. Therefore in the initial years of Ahmad  
Shah’s rule relations between the shah and the Afghan  
Shah’s rule relations between the shah and the Afghan  
tribal nobility were, on the whole, marked by loyal coope-
tribal nobility were, on the whole, marked by loyal coope
ration, due to their common interests.  
ration, due to their common interests.  


Line 5,110: Line 5,110:
volunteer units from among the tribesmen and had almost  
volunteer units from among the tribesmen and had almost  
uncontrolled power in the territories occupied by these  
uncontrolled power in the territories occupied by these  
tribes,.had already produced rudiments of inevitable separ-
tribes,.had already produced rudiments of inevitable separ
atist tendencies, which presented a serious threat to the  
atist tendencies, which presented a serious threat to the  
integrity and unity of the Durrani state.  
integrity and unity of the Durrani state.  
Line 5,117: Line 5,117:
which the Afghan nobility enriched itself with immense  
which the Afghan nobility enriched itself with immense  
spoils* and lavish land grants, he was helped readily by the  
spoils* and lavish land grants, he was helped readily by the  
khans. They even tolerated, to a certain extent, his inter-
khans. They even tolerated, to a certain extent, his inter
ference in their internal affairs and his taking away part of  
ference in their internal affairs and his taking away part of  
their rent. The situation changed when Ahmad Shah and his  
their rent. The situation changed when Ahmad Shah and his  
Line 5,125: Line 5,125:
The Afghan feudal. lords tried to make up for the losses  
The Afghan feudal. lords tried to make up for the losses  
in India by seizing state-owned lands in Afghan regions  
in India by seizing state-owned lands in Afghan regions  
proper. They also tried to augment their profits by reduc-
proper. They also tried to augment their profits by reduc
ing the share of the rent paid to the state, all the more so  
ing the share of the rent paid to the state, all the more so  
since the absolute increase of the rent was opposed by both  
since the absolute increase of the rent was opposed by both  
the free members of the Afghan communities and the en-
the free members of the Afghan communities and the en
slaved peasants who now and then rose in rebellion. The  
slaved peasants who now and then rose in rebellion. The  
sources put it straight that the Afghan feudal lords demand-
sources put it straight that the Afghan feudal lords demand
ed more land and a reduced land tax, but were often re-
ed more land and a reduced land tax, but were often re
fused.9 Simultaneously, there was a growth of separatist  
fused.9 Simultaneously, there was a growth of separatist  


Line 5,138: Line 5,138:
and handicraftsmen and a decline in trade as a result of  
and handicraftsmen and a decline in trade as a result of  
endless wars and feudal mutinies) grew more and more  
endless wars and feudal mutinies) grew more and more  
unwilling to share these profits with the central govern-
unwilling to share these profits with the central govern
ment.  
ment.  


Line 5,146: Line 5,146:
who depended on the shahs, and, lastly, on the rich Indian  
who depended on the shahs, and, lastly, on the rich Indian  
merchants and usurers in the eastern vilayets of the state,  
merchants and usurers in the eastern vilayets of the state,  
who profited on levyirig state taxes and financing expedi-
who profited on levyirig state taxes and financing expedi
tions of conquest.* But these forces were clearly insuf-
tions of conquest.* But these forces were clearly insuf
ficient to resist the Afghan tribal khans. This made the  
ficient to resist the Afghan tribal khans. This made the  
Durrani shahs seek other ways of strengthening their power  
Durrani shahs seek other ways of strengthening their power  
Line 5,158: Line 5,158:
set the powerful Durrani feudal nobility against the khans  
set the powerful Durrani feudal nobility against the khans  
of East Afghan tribes. To that end, he created an artificial  
of East Afghan tribes. To that end, he created an artificial  
formation called bar-Durrani, that is, “upper” or “moun-
formation called bar-Durrani, that is, "upper" or "moun
tain” Durranis, comprising the Yusufzais, Tarklanris,  
tain" Durranis, comprising the Yusufzais, Tarklanris,  
Momands, Khattaks, and some other East Afghan tribes.  
Momands, Khattaks, and some other East Afghan tribes.  
But all those measures effected. no cardinal change in the  
But all those measures effected. no cardinal change in the  
Line 5,165: Line 5,165:
shahs was that the Afghan tribes and their khans almost fully  
shahs was that the Afghan tribes and their khans almost fully  
retained their independence. The khans rose repeatedly even  
retained their independence. The khans rose repeatedly even  
against Ahmad Shah_10 Though those uprisings were suppress-
against Ahmad Shah_10 Though those uprisings were suppress
ed by the shah, the breeding-ground for feudal plots and  
ed by the shah, the breeding-ground for feudal plots and  
mutinies remained. Therefore the Afghan lands often caused  
mutinies remained. Therefore the Afghan lands often caused  
Ahmad Shah and his successors no less worry and apprehen-
Ahmad Shah and his successors no less worry and apprehen
sion than the vilayets of North-Western India or Eastern Iran.  
sion than the vilayets of North-Western India or Eastern Iran.  


Line 5,182: Line 5,182:
the death of Ahmad Shah.11 During his rule that post  
the death of Ahmad Shah.11 During his rule that post  
remained vacant. The reason for this was that, since the  
remained vacant. The reason for this was that, since the  
post of vizier belonged to the Bamizai clan and was here-
post of vizier belonged to the Bamizai clan and was here
ditary, Timur Shah would have to appoint a relative of  
ditary, Timur Shah would have to appoint a relative of  
executed Shah Wali Khan as vizier, and he did not want to  
executed Shah Wali Khan as vizier, and he did not want to  
Line 5,190: Line 5,190:
Timur Shah’s attempts to restrict the influence of Afghan  
Timur Shah’s attempts to restrict the influence of Afghan  
aristocracy and bolster his own power came up against  
aristocracy and bolster his own power came up against  
constant resistance on the part of tribal khans and viceger-
constant resistance on the part of tribal khans and viceger
ents who organised uprisings.  
ents who organised uprisings.  


Line 5,199: Line 5,199:
lands under his administration among the members of his  
lands under his administration among the members of his  
family, leaving himself the city of Muzaffarabad and its  
family, leaving himself the city of Muzaffarabad and its  
outskirts “to have something to live on’. There were  
outskirts "to have something to live on’. There were  
repeated attempts on the life of Timur Shah. Some sources  
repeated attempts on the life of Timur Shah. Some sources  
say he died of poisoning.12  
say he died of poisoning.12  


In the last quarter of the 18th century big feudal land-
In the last quarter of the 18th century big feudal land
ownership of the Afghan khans kept growing and the khans  
ownership of the Afghan khans kept growing and the khans  
continued to plunder state-owned lands. At the same time  
continued to plunder state-owned lands. At the same time  
Line 5,216: Line 5,216:
Timur Shah’s son Shah Zaman made an attempt to put  
Timur Shah’s son Shah Zaman made an attempt to put  
an end to the growing feudal decentralisation and stop the  
an end to the growing feudal decentralisation and stop the  
disintegration of the Durrani state. “He wanted to quash  
disintegration of the Durrani state. "He wanted to quash  
the influence of the tribal nobility, which led to greater  
the influence of the tribal nobility, which led to greater  
feudal fragmentation, and to strengthen central power.
feudal fragmentation, and to strengthen central power."
Many executions followed and property confiscations  
Many executions followed and property confiscations  
were widespread. Many hereditary posts were taken away  
were widespread. Many hereditary posts were taken away  
from eminent khans and given to those who were not high-
from eminent khans and given to those who were not high
born but faithful to the shah. Shah Zaman even contem-
born but faithful to the shah. Shah Zaman even contem
plated a transfer of the capital from Kabul to Lahore, which was motivated by the fact that he wanted to resume con- quests in North-Western India. In 1799, the khans of the  
plated a transfer of the capital from Kabul to Lahore, which was motivated by the fact that he wanted to resume conquests in North-Western India. In 1799, the khans of the  
tribes, including the Durrani tribe, joined in a plot to limit  
tribes, including the Durrani tribe, joined in a plot to limit  
the Shah’s authority. They demanded, in particular, that  
the Shah’s authority. They demanded, in particular, that  
Line 5,234: Line 5,234:
handouts of money and high titles did not help. Payinda  
handouts of money and high titles did not help. Payinda  
Khan’s son Fateh Khan Barakzai and other khans who  
Khan’s son Fateh Khan Barakzai and other khans who  
were dissatisfied with Shah Zaman backed shahzade Mah-
were dissatisfied with Shah Zaman backed shahzade Mah
mud, his brother and rival who had taken refuge in Iran.  
mud, his brother and rival who had taken refuge in Iran.  
Zaman was dethroned and blinded, and Shah Mahmud  
Zaman was dethroned and blinded, and Shah Mahmud  
Line 5,251: Line 5,251:


During the reign of the last Durrani shahs at the end of  
During the reign of the last Durrani shahs at the end of  
the 18th and.the beginning of the 19th century, the archi-
the 18th and.the beginning of the 19th century, the archi
tects of the British colonial policy made the first open  
tects of the British colonial policy made the first open  
attempts to interfere in the internal affairs of Afghanistan.  
attempts to interfere in the internal affairs of Afghanistan.  
Line 5,258: Line 5,258:
the British East India Company, relying on its influence in  
the British East India Company, relying on its influence in  
Iran, made the Iranian authorities help shahzade Mahmud  
Iran, made the Iranian authorities help shahzade Mahmud  
in his struggle for the Afghan throne. In this way the Brit-
in his struggle for the Afghan throne. In this way the Brit
ish colonial leaders helped to overthrow Shah Zaman. Late  
ish colonial leaders helped to overthrow Shah Zaman. Late  
in 1808 a diplomatic mission headed by M. Elphinstone  
in 1808 a diplomatic mission headed by M. Elphinstone  
was sent to Afghanistan. Its head managed to conclude  
was sent to Afghanistan. Its head managed to conclude  
an agreement with Shah Shuja on June 17, 1809. The agree-
an agreement with Shah Shuja on June 17, 1809. The agree
ment made it binding on the shah not to let French troops  
ment made it binding on the shah not to let French troops  
pass through the territory of Afghanistan in the event of an expedition of Napoleon! to India, and not to join the Franco-Russo-Iranian alliance.* Soon after the signing of the  
pass through the territory of Afghanistan in the event of an expedition of Napoleon! to India, and not to join the Franco-Russo-Iranian alliance.* Soon after the signing of the  
Line 5,282: Line 5,282:
wars grew more intense. International transit trade across  
wars grew more intense. International transit trade across  
Afghanistan was on the decline. In that situation real  
Afghanistan was on the decline. In that situation real  
power went completely to the khans of the most power-
power went completely to the khans of the most power
ful Afghan feudal clans, among which the Barakzai clan  
ful Afghan feudal clans, among which the Barakzai clan  
headed: by Fateh Khan was the strongest. Fateh Khan  
headed: by Fateh Khan was the strongest. Fateh Khan  
was popularly known as “‘taj-bakhsh’’, “the giver of the  
was popularly known as "‘taj-bakhsh’’, "the giver of the  
crown”, for he handed the crown of the shah of Afghanis-
crown", for he handed the crown of the shah of Afghanis
ae OM to one, now to another descendant of Ahmad  
ae OM to one, now to another descendant of Ahmad  
_ Shah.  
_ Shah.  
Line 5,300: Line 5,300:


In the Afghan areas proper feudal decentralisation led  
In the Afghan areas proper feudal decentralisation led  
to the emergence of several independent feudal principa-
to the emergence of several independent feudal principa
lities. In most of them, as in Kabul, Qandahar and Peshawar,  
lities. In most of them, as in Kabul, Qandahar and Peshawar,  
power was seized by the Barakzai khans in 1819. Only in  
power was seized by the Barakzai khans in 1819. Only in  
Line 5,323: Line 5,323:
had befallen that state. But in the first decades of the 19th  
had befallen that state. But in the first decades of the 19th  
century conditions had already emerged for overcoming  
century conditions had already emerged for overcoming  
the crisis and consolidating the political situation. In econom-
the crisis and consolidating the political situation. In econom
ic terms, this consolidation was ensured by the develop-
ic terms, this consolidation was ensured by the develop
ment of commodity-money relations within the more or  
ment of commodity-money relations within the more or  
less closed regional markets that had taken shape around  
less closed regional markets that had taken shape around  
Line 5,334: Line 5,334:
needed great power to guard their possessions against en  
needed great power to guard their possessions against en  
croachments by other feudal lords. At the same time, the  
croachments by other feudal lords. At the same time, the  
feudal landlords needed the mighty state power to sup-
feudal landlords needed the mighty state power to sup
press the resistance of the exploited peasants.  
press the resistance of the exploited peasants.  


The years of political strife in Afghanistan coincided  
The years of political strife in Afghanistan coincided  
with the time when the might of the Sikhs’ state in the Pun-
with the time when the might of the Sikhs’ state in the Pun
jab was at its peak under maharaja Ranjit Singh. In the early  
jab was at its peak under maharaja Ranjit Singh. In the early  
19th century the British colonial conquerors had already  
19th century the British colonial conquerors had already  
Line 5,348: Line 5,348:
Having subdued Multan in 1818, and Kashmir in 1819,  
Having subdued Multan in 1818, and Kashmir in 1819,  
the Sikhs began to subjugate the areas populated by  
the Sikhs began to subjugate the areas populated by  
Afghans on. the right bank of the Indus. In 1819, they con-
Afghans on. the right bank of the Indus. In 1819, they con
quered Dera Ghazi Khan and in 1821 Dera Ismail Khan and won a dominating position in the Afghan regions along the middle reaches of the Indus.  
quered Dera Ghazi Khan and in 1821 Dera Ismail Khan and won a dominating position in the Afghan regions along the middle reaches of the Indus.  


Line 5,363: Line 5,363:
The next ruler of Kabul was Dost Muhammad Khan, who  
The next ruler of Kabul was Dost Muhammad Khan, who  
came to power in 1826. An energetic ruler, he soon subdued  
came to power in 1826. An energetic ruler, he soon subdued  
Ghazni and greatly extended his domain. Later on, he persi-
Ghazni and greatly extended his domain. Later on, he persi
stently sought leadership over his brothers who ruled other  
stently sought leadership over his brothers who ruled other  
regions and cities in Afghanistan. The objective outcome of  
regions and cities in Afghanistan. The objective outcome of  
Line 5,370: Line 5,370:
signified a new stage in the history of the Afghan state.  
signified a new stage in the history of the Afghan state.  


One of the most important achievements of Dost Muham-
One of the most important achievements of Dost Muham
mad Khan was the formation of a regular army. The long-
mad Khan was the formation of a regular army. The long
barrelled muskets made by Kabul gunsmiths had a longer  
barrelled muskets made by Kabul gunsmiths had a longer  
fire range than even the guns used at that time by the  
fire range than even the guns used at that time by the  
Line 5,379: Line 5,379:


The growing strength of the independent principality of  
The growing strength of the independent principality of  
Kabul and the successes of Dost Muhammad Khan in unit-
Kabul and the successes of Dost Muhammad Khan in unit
ing the state ran counter to the British plans for expansion  
ing the state ran counter to the British plans for expansion  
in Afghanistan and then in Central Asia. The East India  
in Afghanistan and then in Central Asia. The East India  
Company adopted a tough policy with regard to Dost  
Company adopted a tough policy with regard to Dost  
Muhammad Khan to remove that obstacle. To frustrate  
Muhammad Khan to remove that obstacle. To frustrate  
his efforts to unite Afghanistan, the Company made an at-
his efforts to unite Afghanistan, the Company made an at
tempt to use former shah Shuja-ul-Mulk, its paid stooge who  
tempt to use former shah Shuja-ul-Mulk, its paid stooge who  
lived in India. In 1833, the British, who were preparing Shu-
lived in India. In 1833, the British, who were preparing Shu
ja’s offensive against Afghanistan, agreed that Ranjit Singh  
ja’s offensive against Afghanistan, agreed that Ranjit Singh  
should support Shuja. The East India Company also attemp-
should support Shuja. The East India Company also attemp
ted to set Afghan chiefs against Dost Muhammad Khan.  
ted to set Afghan chiefs against Dost Muhammad Khan.  


In March 1834 Shuja with a 22,000-strong army, recruit-
In March 1834 Shuja with a 22,000-strong army, recruit
ed and armed with the help of the East India Company,  
ed and armed with the help of the East India Company,  
set out to Qandahar through the Bolan Pass. The Qandahar  
set out to Qandahar through the Bolan Pass. The Qandahar  
rulers tumed to Dost Muhammad Khan for help. Late in June 1834, Shuja was defeated in the battle at the settle- ment of Qala-eh Azim, not far from Qandahar, and fled.  
rulers tumed to Dost Muhammad Khan for help. Late in June 1834, Shuja was defeated in the battle at the settlement of Qala-eh Azim, not far from Qandahar, and fled.  
The Sikhs thereby added Peshawar and the area around it  
The Sikhs thereby added Peshawar and the area around it  
to their domains.  
to their domains.  
Line 5,401: Line 5,401:
the loss of Peshawar. The negotiations with Ranjit Singh  
the loss of Peshawar. The negotiations with Ranjit Singh  
proved futile, and in September 1834 Dost Muhammad  
proved futile, and in September 1834 Dost Muhammad  
Khan declared a “jihad” (sacred war) against the Sikhs.  
Khan declared a "jihad" (sacred war) against the Sikhs.  
As a sacred war could be declared only by a sovereign Mus-
As a sacred war could be declared only by a sovereign Mus
lim ruler, he had been given the title of emir Se al-mu-
lim ruler, he had been given the title of emir Se al-mu
minin, which means “‘the ruler of the faithful’) by the Mus-
minin, which means "‘the ruler of the faithful’) by the Mus
lim theologians of Kabul. Dost Muhammad Khan renounced  
lim theologians of Kabul. Dost Muhammad Khan renounced  
the title of shah, probably afraid of causing discontent  
the title of shah, probably afraid of causing discontent  
among his numerous ambitious and envious brothers. Hav-
among his numerous ambitious and envious brothers. Hav
ing raised some 500,000 rupees with great difficulty, he  
ing raised some 500,000 rupees with great difficulty, he  
equipped a fairly large army and, reinforced with the  
equipped a fairly large army and, reinforced with the  
Line 5,429: Line 5,429:


In October 1835, the emir dispatched a letter to the  
In October 1835, the emir dispatched a letter to the  
Russian tsar Nicholas I which was delivered by Afghan mes-
Russian tsar Nicholas I which was delivered by Afghan mes
sengers to Orenburg in May 1836.  
sengers to Orenburg in May 1836.  


The governor of Orenburg, V. A. Perovsky, who attached  
The governor of Orenburg, V. A. Perovsky, who attached  
great significance to this diplomatic move aimed at estab-
great significance to this diplomatic move aimed at estab
lishing friendly relations between Afghanistan and Russia,  
lishing friendly relations between Afghanistan and Russia,  
sent the Afghan envoys, accompanied by his aide-de-camp,  
sent the Afghan envoys, accompanied by his aide-de-camp,  
Line 5,439: Line 5,439:


In May 1836, Dost Muhammad Khan asked Lord  
In May 1836, Dost Muhammad Khan asked Lord  
Auckland, the govemor-general of India, to help him regu- late Afghan-Sikh relations. The Afghan emir agreed to re- cognise the Sikhs’ claims to Kashmir on the condition that  
Auckland, the govemor-general of India, to help him regulate Afghan-Sikh relations. The Afghan emir agreed to recognise the Sikhs’ claims to Kashmir on the condition that  
Peshawar was retumed to him. But a reunion of Peshawar  
Peshawar was retumed to him. But a reunion of Peshawar  
with Afghanistan did not suit the British colonial policy-
with Afghanistan did not suit the British colonial policy
makers, and the emir’s proposal was tumed down.  
makers, and the emir’s proposal was tumed down.  


I. V. Vitkevich, who accompanied the Afghan envoys  
I. V. Vitkevich, who accompanied the Afghan envoys  
from Orenburg to St. Petersburg, was later appointed Rus-
from Orenburg to St. Petersburg, was later appointed Rus
sia’s representative in Kabul by the tsarist foreign ministry.  
sia’s representative in Kabul by the tsarist foreign ministry.  
It was his duty, according to his instructions, to help re-
It was his duty, according to his instructions, to help re
concile the “Afghan rulers”, that is, Dost Muhammad Khan  
concile the "Afghan rulers", that is, Dost Muhammad Khan  
and Kohandil Khan, the ruler of Qandahar. Vitkevich  
and Kohandil Khan, the ruler of Qandahar. Vitkevich  
had to make it clear to the Barakzai rulers “that, owing to  
had to make it clear to the Barakzai rulers "that, owing to  
the long distance between Russia and Afghanistan, the  
the long distance between Russia and Afghanistan, the  
former could not render them effective aid, but did, never-
former could not render them effective aid, but did, never
theless, have sincere sympathy with them and would always  
theless, have sincere sympathy with them and would always  
intercede for them through the mediatorship of Persia”.  
intercede for them through the mediatorship of Persia".  
Besides, he was instructed to discover opportunities for  
Besides, he was instructed to discover opportunities for  
expanding Russo-Afghan trade.16  
expanding Russo-Afghan trade.16  
Line 5,484: Line 5,484:
Khan and the Barakzai rulers of Qandahar, on the one hand,  
Khan and the Barakzai rulers of Qandahar, on the one hand,  
and Iran, on the other, and to impede their joint attack  
and Iran, on the other, and to impede their joint attack  
on Herat. But Burnes’s mission failed, primarily because of the aggressive intentions of the British colonial policy- makers with regard to Afghanistan.  
on Herat. But Burnes’s mission failed, primarily because of the aggressive intentions of the British colonial policymakers with regard to Afghanistan.  


During the talks Burnes received a letter of instructions  
During the talks Burnes received a letter of instructions  
from Lord Auckland stating that the claims of Dost Muham-
from Lord Auckland stating that the claims of Dost Muham
mad Khan to Peshawar should be categorically rejected and  
mad Khan to Peshawar should be categorically rejected and  
that it should be made clear to him that the British would  
that it should be made clear to him that the British would  
Line 5,495: Line 5,495:
Muhammad Khan should break off relations with Russia  
Muhammad Khan should break off relations with Russia  
and Iran, expel Vitkevich from Kabul immediately and  
and Iran, expel Vitkevich from Kabul immediately and  
never again receive Russian or Iranian representatives with-
never again receive Russian or Iranian representatives with
out the permission of the British authorities. Dost Muham-
out the permission of the British authorities. Dost Muham
mad Khan rejected this ultimatum and in April 1838  
mad Khan rejected this ultimatum and in April 1838  
Burnes left Kabul.  
Burnes left Kabul.  


In these circumstances Vitkevich assisted in reconciling  
In these circumstances Vitkevich assisted in reconciling  
Dost Muhammad Khan with the ruler of Qandahar, Kohan-
Dost Muhammad Khan with the ruler of Qandahar, Kohan
dil Khan, and persuaded them to set up a defensive alli-
dil Khan, and persuaded them to set up a defensive alli
ance with Iran to repel the impending British attack. The  
ance with Iran to repel the impending British attack. The  
treaty was to come into force provided the tsarist govern-
treaty was to come into force provided the tsarist govern
ment offered its guarantees. Vitkevich also reached an  
ment offered its guarantees. Vitkevich also reached an  
understanding with Dost Muhammad Khan on expanding  
understanding with Dost Muhammad Khan on expanding  
Line 5,513: Line 5,513:


But at that time substantial changes were taking place  
But at that time substantial changes were taking place  
in the policy of the Russian tsarist government which ob-
in the policy of the Russian tsarist government which ob
structed the pursuance of the former policy of countering  
structed the pursuance of the former policy of countering  
British expansion in the Middle East. Seeking a rapproche-
British expansion in the Middle East. Seeking a rapproche
ment with Britain in the efforts to settle the Turco-Egyp-
ment with Britain in the efforts to settle the Turco-Egyp
tian conflict and hoping to gain British support with regard  
tian conflict and hoping to gain British support with regard  
to the straits, the tsarist government made concessions over  
to the straits, the tsarist government made concessions over  
Line 5,534: Line 5,534:
attempted to persuade Ranjit Singh, whose relations with  
attempted to persuade Ranjit Singh, whose relations with  
Dost Muhammad Khan remained hostile, to take an active  
Dost Muhammad Khan remained hostile, to take an active  
part in the war. Ranjit Singh refused to make any conces-
part in the war. Ranjit Singh refused to make any conces
sions to Dost Muhammad Khan with regard to the return  
sions to Dost Muhammad Khan with regard to the return  
of Peshawar. On the contrary, during the long negotiations  
of Peshawar. On the contrary, during the long negotiations  
Line 5,549: Line 5,549:
which was signed in July 1838, the East India Company  
which was signed in July 1838, the East India Company  
and Ranjit Singh assumed commitments to reinstate Shuja  
and Ranjit Singh assumed commitments to reinstate Shuja  
as the shah of Afghanistan. In return for military and polit-
as the shah of Afghanistan. In return for military and polit
ical support promised him, Shuja agreed to cede Sind  
ical support promised him, Shuja agreed to cede Sind  
(which he did not possess) to the British and reaffirmed  
(which he did not possess) to the British and reaffirmed  
his giving up to the Sikhs, “for all time to come”, Peshawar,  
his giving up to the Sikhs, "for all time to come", Peshawar,  
Multan, Kashmir and other territories conquered by Ranjit  
Multan, Kashmir and other territories conquered by Ranjit  
Singh, previously possessions of the Sadozai shahs of  
Singh, previously possessions of the Sadozai shahs of  
Line 5,570: Line 5,570:
in addition to the units of India Sepoys.  
in addition to the units of India Sepoys.  


The next British move in preparing to invade Afghan-
The next British move in preparing to invade Afghan
istan was to bring pressure to bear on the Shah of Iran to  
istan was to bring pressure to bear on the Shah of Iran to  
lift the siege of Herat. The British government even went  
lift the siege of Herat. The British government even went  
Line 5,577: Line 5,577:
the siege late in August and early in September 1838.
the siege late in August and early in September 1838.


After the British had forced tsarist diplomacy to re-
After the British had forced tsarist diplomacy to re
treat, signed a treaty with Ranjit Singh and Shuja and com-
treat, signed a treaty with Ranjit Singh and Shuja and com
pelled the Shah of Iran to withdraw his troops from Herat,  
pelled the Shah of Iran to withdraw his troops from Herat,  
they speeded up preparations for the invasion of Afghan-
they speeded up preparations for the invasion of Afghan
istan. To justify the war of aggression and conceal its true  
istan. To justify the war of aggression and conceal its true  
motives, Lord Auckland, governor-general of India, published  
motives, Lord Auckland, governor-general of India, published  
a declaration in Simla on October 1, 1838, which surpassed  
a declaration in Simla on October 1, 1838, which surpassed  
in its hypocrisy and lies even the most despicable docu-
in its hypocrisy and lies even the most despicable docu
ments in the history of colonial policy. It urged that Dost  
ments in the history of colonial policy. It urged that Dost  
Muhammad Khan should be toppled and Shuja be put on  
Muhammad Khan should be toppled and Shuja be put on  
the Afghan throne with the help of the East India Compa-
the Afghan throne with the help of the East India Compa
ny’s armies.  
ny’s armies.  


Line 5,596: Line 5,596:
The population of that territory was about 1.3 million.  
The population of that territory was about 1.3 million.  


The Qandahar principality was divided among the broth-
The Qandahar principality was divided among the broth
ers Kohandil, Rahmdil and Mehrdil. Each of the rulers had  
ers Kohandil, Rahmdil and Mehrdil. Each of the rulers had  
his own court and received his share of profits from the  
his own court and received his share of profits from the  
Line 5,614: Line 5,614:
to take advantage of them in the coming war.  
to take advantage of them in the coming war.  


At the end of 1838, the troops of the East India Com-
At the end of 1838, the troops of the East India Com
pany under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir John  
pany under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir John  
Keane set out for Afghanistan. Early in April 1839 all the  
Keane set out for Afghanistan. Early in April 1839 all the  
units that were to invade Afghanistan through Qandahar,  
units that were to invade Afghanistan through Qandahar,  
were assembled in Quetta. The ‘“‘Army of Indus’’, as it was  
were assembled in Quetta. The ‘"‘Army of Indus’’, as it was  
called, numbered about 20,000 officers and men serving  
called, numbered about 20,000 officers and men serving  
in line. But the total strength of the army was far greater,  
in line. But the total strength of the army was far greater,  
for it was accompanied by nearly 38,000 transport and camp attendants. The actual leader of the expedition was Sir William Macnaghten, secretary of the Anglo-Indian  
for it was accompanied by nearly 38,000 transport and camp attendants. The actual leader of the expedition was Sir William Macnaghten, secretary of the Anglo-Indian  
government, who served as “ambassador and minister”
government, who served as "ambassador and minister"
under Shuja.  
under Shuja.  


The troops began to move towards Qandahar in mid-
The troops began to move towards Qandahar in mid
April. At first, they met hardly any resistance on the part of  
April. At first, they met hardly any resistance on the part of  
the Afghans. Moreover, some of the influential Afghan  
the Afghans. Moreover, some of the influential Afghan  
Line 5,634: Line 5,634:
place soon after the British troops had entered Qandahar.  
place soon after the British troops had entered Qandahar.  
On May 7, 1839, just before the ceremony, he signed an  
On May 7, 1839, just before the ceremony, he signed an  
eight-clause treaty aimed at abolishing Afghanistan’s inde-
eight-clause treaty aimed at abolishing Afghanistan’s inde
.pendence. It confirmed the treaty concluded in July 1838  
.pendence. It confirmed the treaty concluded in July 1838  
and Shuja’s consent to the isolation of Afghanistan from the  
and Shuja’s consent to the isolation of Afghanistan from the  
Line 5,659: Line 5,659:
British were informed about the number of troops in  
British were informed about the number of troops in  
Ghazni and had learned of the most vulnerable spot in the  
Ghazni and had learned of the most vulnerable spot in the  
city defences, the Kabul Gates, which had not been barri-
city defences, the Kabul Gates, which had not been barri
caded. The British toes took the city by storm and  
caded. The British toes took the city by storm and  
massacred its population.!9  
massacred its population.!9  


A week later, they set out for Kabul, having left a garri-
A week later, they set out for Kabul, having left a garri
son in the fortress. Meanwhile, an 11,000-strong British  
son in the fortress. Meanwhile, an 11,000-strong British  
detachment was moving towards Kabul through the Khyber  
detachment was moving towards Kabul through the Khyber  
Line 5,677: Line 5,677:
his numerous household. Outside it, the foreigners, hated  
his numerous household. Outside it, the foreigners, hated  
by the people, ruled the country on his behalf. Sir William  
by the people, ruled the country on his behalf. Sir William  
Macnaghten, the conceited and self-opinionated chief repre-
Macnaghten, the conceited and self-opinionated chief repre
sentative of the East India Company, the shah’s ‘‘ambassa-
sentative of the East India Company, the shah’s ‘‘ambassa
dor and minister’, enjoyed dictatorial powers in the  
dor and minister’, enjoyed dictatorial powers in the  
country.  
country.  
Line 5,689: Line 5,689:
most improperly in military terms. In addition, P art of the  
most improperly in military terms. In addition, P art of the  
occupation forces was soon withdrawn from Afghanistan  
occupation forces was soon withdrawn from Afghanistan  
and the garrison near Kabul was greatly reduced. Mean-
and the garrison near Kabul was greatly reduced. Mean
while, a guerrilla war had started in Afghanistan, and unrest  
while, a guerrilla war had started in Afghanistan, and unrest  
among various sections of the population was mounting.  
among various sections of the population was mounting.  
The British had to give up the plan of an immediate offen-
The British had to give up the plan of an immediate offen
sive on south Turkestan, where Dost Muhammad Khan had  
sive on south Turkestan, where Dost Muhammad Khan had  
taken refuge, because the local population was making  
taken refuge, because the local population was making  
Line 5,716: Line 5,716:
Meanwhile popular unrest was mounting in Afghanistan.  
Meanwhile popular unrest was mounting in Afghanistan.  
Ghilzai uprisings followed one another, the one in April  
Ghilzai uprisings followed one another, the one in April  
1840 being the biggest. Popular protest erupted in the Qan-
1840 being the biggest. Popular protest erupted in the Qan
dahar and Khyber regions and in many other areas.  
dahar and Khyber regions and in many other areas.  


In August, Dost Muhammad Khan moved towards Ba-
In August, Dost Muhammad Khan moved towards Ba
miyan. The British found themselves in a real fix and were  
miyan. The British found themselves in a real fix and were  
saved from being routed in that region by the arrival of a  
saved from being routed in that region by the arrival of a  
Line 5,734: Line 5,734:
1840, the British were defeated, suffering heavy losses in  
1840, the British were defeated, suffering heavy losses in  
dead and wounded. They retreated in fear of an uprising °  
dead and wounded. They retreated in fear of an uprising °  
in the rear, or an encirclement. But precisely at that mo-
in the rear, or an encirclement. But precisely at that mo
ment, for reasons we still do not know, Dost Muhammad  
ment, for reasons we still do not know, Dost Muhammad  
Khan left his army, arrived in Kabul and surrendered to  
Khan left his army, arrived in Kabul and surrendered to  
Line 5,746: Line 5,746:
Very soon the whole nation rose to struggle, and this had a  
Very soon the whole nation rose to struggle, and this had a  
decisive effect on the further developments. In the spring  
decisive effect on the further developments. In the spring  
and summer of 1841 the flame of popular war was spread-
and summer of 1841 the flame of popular war was spread
ing throughout the country. The clergy, who saw the es-
ing throughout the country. The clergy, who saw the es
tablishment of the power of “the infidels” (the British) as a  
tablishment of the power of "the infidels" (the British) as a  
desecration of the Muslim faith, ceased to mention the  
desecration of the Muslim faith, ceased to mention the  
name of Shuja in Friday prayers. The toiling people protest-
name of Shuja in Friday prayers. The toiling people protest
ed against the mounting burden of taxes.  
ed against the mounting burden of taxes.  


Line 5,759: Line 5,759:
food prices on the Kabul markets. The British conquerors tured the whole population of Afghanistan against them. But neither the spreading popular discontent, nor the rising  
food prices on the Kabul markets. The British conquerors tured the whole population of Afghanistan against them. But neither the spreading popular discontent, nor the rising  
tide of insurrections shook the confidence of the British  
tide of insurrections shook the confidence of the British  
leaders, including Macnaghten, in the stability of their posi-
leaders, including Macnaghten, in the stability of their posi
tion in the occupied country.  
tion in the occupied country.  


Line 5,766: Line 5,766:
action during which they disrupted the communications  
action during which they disrupted the communications  
between the Kabul garrison and India; after this, during the  
between the Kabul garrison and India; after this, during the  
night of November 1, the Kabul uprising began. The insur-
night of November 1, the Kabul uprising began. The insur
gents encircled the houses of Alexander Bumes and other  
gents encircled the houses of Alexander Bumes and other  
British officers. After unsuccessful attempts to pacify the  
British officers. After unsuccessful attempts to pacify the  
Line 5,782: Line 5,782:
found itself in a poor plight. After a’ fierce battle, in which  
found itself in a poor plight. After a’ fierce battle, in which  
several hundred British troops had been killed and the  
several hundred British troops had been killed and the  
Afghans had captured part of the British artillery, the insur-
Afghans had captured part of the British artillery, the insur
gents controlled the key positions on the Bemaru heights.  
gents controlled the key positions on the Bemaru heights.  


By that time the most outstanding among the leaders  
By that time the most outstanding among the leaders  
of the Afghan liberation struggle was Muhammad Akbar  
of the Afghan liberation struggle was Muhammad Akbar  
Khan, the emir’s son. Sir William Macnaghten was compel-
Khan, the emir’s son. Sir William Macnaghten was compel
led to enter into negotiations with the Afghan leaders, and  
led to enter into negotiations with the Afghan leaders, and  
on December 11, 1841, he signedan agreement on the with-
on December 11, 1841, he signedan agreement on the with
drawal of British troops from Afghanistan, the release of the  
drawal of British troops from Afghanistan, the release of the  
prisoners of war and the return of Dost Muhammad Khan.  
prisoners of war and the return of Dost Muhammad Khan.  
Line 5,798: Line 5,798:
and murdering their leaders. However, Muhammad Akbar  
and murdering their leaders. However, Muhammad Akbar  
Khan guessed his intentions. In anticipation of his actions,  
Khan guessed his intentions. In anticipation of his actions,  
he attempted to-take him prisoner during the talks on De-
he attempted to-take him prisoner during the talks on De
cember 23, 1841. Macnaghten offered resistance and Mu-
cember 23, 1841. Macnaghten offered resistance and Mu
hammad Akbar Khan killed him.  
hammad Akbar Khan killed him.  


Line 5,805: Line 5,805:




the immediate withdrawal of British troops from Afghan-
the immediate withdrawal of British troops from Afghan
istan. Some 4,500 officers and men left Kabul with nine  
istan. Some 4,500 officers and men left Kabul with nine  
field guns, and 12,000 camp and transport attendants. The  
field guns, and 12,000 camp and transport attendants. The  
Line 5,817: Line 5,817:
With the foreign troops out of Kabul, Shuja, pressed by  
With the foreign troops out of Kabul, Shuja, pressed by  
the popular masses, was compelled to declare a ‘‘sacred  
the popular masses, was compelled to declare a ‘‘sacred  
war” on the British and set out for Jalalabad, where he  
war" on the British and set out for Jalalabad, where he  
secretly hoped to join the British camp. But on his way  
secretly hoped to join the British camp. But on his way  
there he was attacked by a Barakzai sardar with a group of  
there he was attacked by a Barakzai sardar with a group of  
Line 5,842: Line 5,842:
troops, virtually ordering a punitive expedition. In August  
troops, virtually ordering a punitive expedition. In August  
1842 the British marched on Kabul and soon occupied it.  
1842 the British marched on Kabul and soon occupied it.  
Fateh Jang was reinstated in Bala Hissar. The British colo-
Fateh Jang was reinstated in Bala Hissar. The British colo
nialists plundered and bumed Kabul and its outskirts,  
nialists plundered and bumed Kabul and its outskirts,  
killing thousands of civilians. British punitive detachments  
killing thousands of civilians. British punitive detachments  
Line 5,848: Line 5,848:


But, for all that, the British could not keep Afghanistan  
But, for all that, the British could not keep Afghanistan  
under control. The continuing war waged by the popula-
under control. The continuing war waged by the popula
tion forced them to leave the country. Aware that he could not retain power without foreign support, Fateh Jang abdi- cated the heone. Before leaving Kabul, the British installed  
tion forced them to leave the country. Aware that he could not retain power without foreign support, Fateh Jang abdicated the heone. Before leaving Kabul, the British installed  
Shahpur, another son of Shuja, in his stead. As soon as he  
Shahpur, another son of Shuja, in his stead. As soon as he  
leamt that Muhammad Akbar Khan was getting ready for  
leamt that Muhammad Akbar Khan was getting ready for  
Line 5,858: Line 5,858:
1838-1842.  
1838-1842.  


The heroic struggle of the Afghan peoples led to a vic-
The heroic struggle of the Afghan peoples led to a vic
tory over a strong and dangerous enemy. The courageous  
tory over a strong and dangerous enemy. The courageous  
soldiers and volunteers from various tribes, well experienced  
soldiers and volunteers from various tribes, well experienced  
Line 5,867: Line 5,867:
on the patriotic traditions of the peoples of Afghanistan.  
on the patriotic traditions of the peoples of Afghanistan.  


Back in power, Dost Mulaninad Khan persistently con-
Back in power, Dost Mulaninad Khan persistently con
tinued to pursue a policy of uniting the country. It took  
tinued to pursue a policy of uniting the country. It took  
him a good deal of time and effort to establish effective  
him a good deal of time and effort to establish effective  
Line 5,876: Line 5,876:


In the mid-1840s Dost Muhammad Khan controlled no  
In the mid-1840s Dost Muhammad Khan controlled no  
more than a quarter of the territory of present-day Afghan-
more than a quarter of the territory of present-day Afghan
istan. Kohandil Khan was again the independent ruler of  
istan. Kohandil Khan was again the independent ruler of  
Qandahar; after the death of Kamran in 1842 all power in  
Qandahar; after the death of Kamran in 1842 all power in  
Line 5,886: Line 5,886:
In 1843, the East India Company seized Sind whose  
In 1843, the East India Company seized Sind whose  
emirs had recognised the supreme power of Afghan rulers  
emirs had recognised the supreme power of Afghan rulers  
in the past. As a result of the first Anglo-Sikh war of 1845-
in the past. As a result of the first Anglo-Sikh war of 1845
1846, the East India Company established control over the  
1846, the East India Company established control over the  
Punjab, after which the territory of the Sikh state was great-
Punjab, after which the territory of the Sikh state was great
ly diminished and it only formally became independent.  
ly diminished and it only formally became independent.  
The actual master in Lahore was the British resident. In  
The actual master in Lahore was the British resident. In  
Line 5,897: Line 5,897:
Dost Muhammad Khan and his men were aware of the  
Dost Muhammad Khan and his men were aware of the  
great danger for the future of Afghanistan presented by the  
great danger for the future of Afghanistan presented by the  
new onslaught of the British colonial aggressors in North-
new onslaught of the British colonial aggressors in North
West India. At the end of 1848, responding to the request of  
West India. At the end of 1848, responding to the request of  
Chattar Singh, the Sikh viceroy of the Hazara region, for  
Chattar Singh, the Sikh viceroy of the Hazara region, for  
military aid in fighting the British, Dost Muhammad Khan  
military aid in fighting the British, Dost Muhammad Khan  
concluded an agreement with him. The Afghan emir pro-
concluded an agreement with him. The Afghan emir pro
mised to send troops and the Sikhs promised to give him  
mised to send troops and the Sikhs promised to give him  
back Peshawar.  
back Peshawar.  
Line 5,924: Line 5,924:
south-east, he focussed his attention on the north, sending  
south-east, he focussed his attention on the north, sending  


a large military expedition there. That marked the begin-
a large military expedition there. That marked the begin
ning of the conquest by Afghan emirs of the regions on the  
ning of the conquest by Afghan emirs of the regions on the  
left bank of the Amu Darya, which lasted many years. In  
left bank of the Amu Darya, which lasted many years. In  
the 1850s the domains of Dost Muhammad Khan already  
the 1850s the domains of Dost Muhammad Khan already  
included a new province—Afghan Turkestan, with Muham-
included a new province—Afghan Turkestan, with Muham
mad Afzal Khan, the emir’s eldest son, as its ruler.  
mad Afzal Khan, the emir’s eldest son, as its ruler.  


However, the international situation and the develop-
However, the international situation and the develop
ments in British India made British diplomacy seek a rap-
ments in British India made British diplomacy seek a rap
prochement with Dost Muhammiad Khan. At that time, the  
prochement with Dost Muhammiad Khan. At that time, the  
British ruling circles were quite prepared to be content with  
British ruling circles were quite prepared to be content with  
controlling Dost Muhammad Khan’s foreign policy and  
controlling Dost Muhammad Khan’s foreign policy and  
using Afghanistan as an ally against Iran and as an instru-
using Afghanistan as an ally against Iran and as an instru
ment in their overt and covert struggle against Russian influ-
ment in their overt and covert struggle against Russian influ
ence in the Middle East. The British did therefore support  
ence in the Middle East. The British did therefore support  
the Afghan emir for some years with money and weapons.  
the Afghan emir for some years with money and weapons.  
Dost Muhammad Khan, for his part, accepted the pro- posals of the East India Company on improving mutual relations, for he needed peace, above all, to strengthen his  
Dost Muhammad Khan, for his part, accepted the proposals of the East India Company on improving mutual relations, for he needed peace, above all, to strengthen his  
power and unite Afghanistan.  
power and unite Afghanistan.  


The initial understanding between the British authori-
The initial understanding between the British authori
ties in India and Dost Muhammad Khan was evidently  
ties in India and Dost Muhammad Khan was evidently  
reached at the end of the first Anglo-Afghan war, when the  
reached at the end of the first Anglo-Afghan war, when the  
Line 5,954: Line 5,954:
resulted in the signing of an agreement consisting of three  
resulted in the signing of an agreement consisting of three  
articles on March 30, 1855. Article One of the agreement  
articles on March 30, 1855. Article One of the agreement  
proclaimed: the establishment of friendship and peace be-
proclaimed: the establishment of friendship and peace be
tween the East India Company and Dost Muhammad Khan  
tween the East India Company and Dost Muhammad Khan  
and his successors. In Articles Two and Three the sides  
and his successors. In Articles Two and Three the sides  
pledged themselves to respect the integrity of each other’s  
pledged themselves to respect the integrity of each other’s  
territory. In addition, Dost Muhammad Khan made a pro-
territory. In addition, Dost Muhammad Khan made a pro
mise that he and his successors would “‘be the friends of the  
mise that he and his successors would "‘be the friends of the  
friends and the enemies of the enemies’’ of the East India  
friends and the enemies of the enemies’’ of the East India  
Company. Meanwhile the British side made no such com-
Company. Meanwhile the British side made no such com
mitment. This just goes to show that the agreement was  
mitment. This just goes to show that the agreement was  
unequal, for it provided Britain with far greater benefits  
unequal, for it provided Britain with far greater benefits  
Line 5,981: Line 5,981:
1855 agreement and the unilateral commitments were the  
1855 agreement and the unilateral commitments were the  
price paid by Dost Muhammad Khan for the British aid in  
price paid by Dost Muhammad Khan for the British aid in  
money and weapons, for the East India Company’s pro-
money and weapons, for the East India Company’s pro
mise not to interfere in the internal affairs of his state and  
mise not to interfere in the internal affairs of his state and  
for the consent not to obstruct the annexation of Qandahar,  
for the consent not to obstruct the annexation of Qandahar,  
Line 5,989: Line 5,989:
In the 1850s and early 1860s Dost Muhammad Khan  
In the 1850s and early 1860s Dost Muhammad Khan  
succeeded in uniting the main regions of Afghanistan under  
succeeded in uniting the main regions of Afghanistan under  
his rule, which had been part of that state since the mid-
his rule, which had been part of that state since the mid
18th century, with the exception of Peshawar and other  
18th century, with the exception of Peshawar and other  
towns and regions on the right bank of the Indus which  
towns and regions on the right bank of the Indus which  
became part of the British colonial possessions in India in  
became part of the British colonial possessions in India in  
1849. The economic ties among the regions of the feudal  
1849. The economic ties among the regions of the feudal  
state of Dost Muhammad Khan had not yet become suffi-
state of Dost Muhammad Khan had not yet become suffi
ciently well established. For some time the emir managed  
ciently well established. For some time the emir managed  
to curb the separatist tendencies of the numerous local  
to curb the separatist tendencies of the numerous local  
feudal lords. But the state he had unified still lacked stabi-
feudal lords. But the state he had unified still lacked stabi
lity as was evidenced during the internecine wars that erupt-
lity as was evidenced during the internecine wars that erupt
ed in Afghanistan after the death of Dost Muhammad Khan.  
ed in Afghanistan after the death of Dost Muhammad Khan.  


- At the close of his rule Dost Muhammad Khan launched  
At the close of his rule Dost Muhammad Khan launched  
an expedition to Herat. In June 1862 he set out from Qan-
an expedition to Herat. In June 1862 he set out from Qan
dahar with a strong army, reached Herat early in July,  
dahar with a strong army, reached Herat early in July,  
besieged the city, and captured it in May of the following  
besieged the city, and captured it in May of the following  
Line 6,008: Line 6,008:


But that was his last victory. On June 9, 1863, Dost  
But that was his last victory. On June 9, 1863, Dost  
Muhammad Khan died in Herat. After his death, at a cere-
Muhammad Khan died in Herat. After his death, at a cere
mony in Herat, his heir, Sher Ali Khan, was proclaimed the  
mony in Herat, his heir, Sher Ali Khan, was proclaimed the  
emir of Afghanistan in the presence of nearly all the sons  
emir of Afghanistan in the presence of nearly all the sons  
Line 6,022: Line 6,022:
Sharif were opposed to the spread of the power of Sher  
Sharif were opposed to the spread of the power of Sher  
Ali Khan to the regions that they regarded as their own  
Ali Khan to the regions that they regarded as their own  
hereditary domains. The other brothers stirred up rebel-
hereditary domains. The other brothers stirred up rebel
lions in response to the emir’s attempts to abolish some  
lions in response to the emir’s attempts to abolish some  
feudal privileges such as the right to have troops and not to  
feudal privileges such as the right to have troops and not to  
Line 6,028: Line 6,028:
the new emir was Muhammad Azam, who operated from  
the new emir was Muhammad Azam, who operated from  
Zurmat. But he could not hold out against the emir’s  
Zurmat. But he could not hold out against the emir’s  
troops, escaped to Kohat and later settled in Rawalpindi, enjoying the patronage of the British authorities and receiv- ing handouts from them.  
troops, escaped to Kohat and later settled in Rawalpindi, enjoying the patronage of the British authorities and receiving handouts from them.  


The heads of the British colonial administration fed  
The heads of the British colonial administration fed  
the fires of the internecine wars for their own reasons.  
the fires of the internecine wars for their own reasons.  
Pursuing a “closed border” policy with regard to the neigh-
Pursuing a "closed border" policy with regard to the neigh
bouring Afghan tribes, after the suppression of the Indian  
bouring Afghan tribes, after the suppression of the Indian  
‘uprising of 1857-1859, the British colonial authorities,  
‘uprising of 1857-1859, the British colonial authorities,  
Line 6,039: Line 6,039:
Indus. The Afghans were joined in their struggle against the  
Indus. The Afghans were joined in their struggle against the  
British by emigrants from India, followers of the Muslim  
British by emigrants from India, followers of the Muslim  
movement “tarika-i-muhammadiya”.24 The British colo-
movement "tarika-i-muhammadiya".24 The British colo
nialists regarded the Afghan lands bordering on India as  
nialists regarded the Afghan lands bordering on India as  
the object of their future expansion and therefore did not  
the object of their future expansion and therefore did not  
Line 6,055: Line 6,055:
where he was kept in detention.  
where he was kept in detention.  


Meanwhile, the intemecine struggle was raging in Af-
Meanwhile, the intemecine struggle was raging in Af
baad Among the active opponents of the emir were his  
baad Among the active opponents of the emir were his  


Line 6,064: Line 6,064:
(the emir’s beloved son and heir) and Muhammad Amin  
(the emir’s beloved son and heir) and Muhammad Amin  
Khan fought each other in a duel, in which both were  
Khan fought each other in a duel, in which both were  
killed.25 Sher Ali Khan lapsed into deep depression, remain-
killed.25 Sher Ali Khan lapsed into deep depression, remain
ing in Qandahar for a long time, unable to run the state.  
ing in Qandahar for a long time, unable to run the state.  
The news of this became publicly known, causing turmoil  
The news of this became publicly known, causing turmoil  
Line 6,076: Line 6,076:
ruled Herat. Dissatisfied with such a policy on the part  
ruled Herat. Dissatisfied with such a policy on the part  
of the British, Muhammad Afzal Khan did not trust them  
of the British, Muhammad Afzal Khan did not trust them  
and made attempts to establish contacts with Russia, ex-
and made attempts to establish contacts with Russia, ex
pecting to get more reliable support from that country.  
pecting to get more reliable support from that country.  


In October 1867 Muhammad Afzal Khan died and the  
In October 1867 Muhammad Afzal Khan died and the  
administration of Kabul passed to Muhammad Azam, who  
administration of Kabul passed to Muhammad Azam, who  
was proclaimed emir. But his rule turned out to be short-
was proclaimed emir. But his rule turned out to be short
lived. During the internecine struggle in 1868 the balance  
lived. During the internecine struggle in 1868 the balance  
tipped drastically in favour of Sher Ali Khan. The latter  
tipped drastically in favour of Sher Ali Khan. The latter  
Line 6,088: Line 6,088:
Sher Ali Khan occupied Kabul.  
Sher Ali Khan occupied Kabul.  


Toppled, Muhammad Azam and his nephew Abdurrah-
Toppled, Muhammad Azam and his nephew Abdurrah
man (the son of Muhammad Afzal) tried to hold out against  
man (the son of Muhammad Afzal) tried to hold out against  
the adversary but were defeated and with a few people  
the adversary but were defeated and with a few people  
Line 6,103: Line 6,103:
Abdurrahman spent more than ten years in Russia’s  
Abdurrahman spent more than ten years in Russia’s  
Central Asian domains, receiving fairly lavish grants from  
Central Asian domains, receiving fairly lavish grants from  
the tsarist authorities. Although his permanent place of resi-
the tsarist authorities. Although his permanent place of resi
dence was Samarkand, he often stayed in Tashkent, attend-
dence was Samarkand, he often stayed in Tashkent, attend
ing receptions, holiday festivities and balls at the house of go-
ing receptions, holiday festivities and balls at the house of go
vemor-general Kaufmann, who often invited him to watch  
vemor-general Kaufmann, who often invited him to watch  
military parades and exercises as well. Once Abdurrahman  
military parades and exercises as well. Once Abdurrahman  
Line 6,114: Line 6,114:
was translated for him from Russian into Persian.  
was translated for him from Russian into Persian.  


His contacts with Russians notably broadened his out-
His contacts with Russians notably broadened his out
look. Later, when he returned home, his interest in engi-
look. Later, when he returned home, his interest in engi
neering (primarily when used for military purposes) did  
neering (primarily when used for military purposes) did  
not abate. He built an arms factory in Kabul with British  
not abate. He built an arms factory in Kabul with British  
aid, and all kinds of workshops. But, being the ruler, he did not promote the new sciences on which technology was based, but patronised merely the teaching of the “old”
aid, and all kinds of workshops. But, being the ruler, he did not promote the new sciences on which technology was based, but patronised merely the teaching of the "old"
(divine) sciences. __  
(divine) sciences. __  


After Sher Ali Khan had firmly established himself as  
After Sher Ali Khan had firmly established himself as  
emir in 1869 and extended his power to the territories  
emir in 1869 and extended his power to the territories  
which had previously been part of the state of Dost Muham-
which had previously been part of the state of Dost Muham
mad Khan, he set about eliminating the consequences of  
mad Khan, he set about eliminating the consequences of  
the internecine war. To build up central power, Sher Ali  
the internecine war. To build up central power, Sher Ali  
Line 6,133: Line 6,133:


Having accepted the invitation of the viceroy of India  
Having accepted the invitation of the viceroy of India  
Mayo to visit the country, Sher Ali Khan met him in Am-
Mayo to visit the country, Sher Ali Khan met him in Am
bala in March 1869. During the talks Sher Ali Khan insisted  
bala in March 1869. During the talks Sher Ali Khan insisted  
that the British should stop any interference in the internal  
that the British should stop any interference in the internal  
affairs of his state and assume obligations ‘“‘not to recognise  
affairs of his state and assume obligations ‘"‘not to recognise  
in Afghanistan as friends” anyone except the emir and his  
in Afghanistan as friends" anyone except the emir and his  
heirs. But the British limited themselves to a declarative  
heirs. But the British limited themselves to a declarative  
condemnation of internecine wars in Afghanistan, refusing  
condemnation of internecine wars in Afghanistan, refusing  
Line 6,143: Line 6,143:
Sher Ali Khan had appointed as his heir.  
Sher Ali Khan had appointed as his heir.  


On his return from India, Sher Ali Khan set about effect-
On his return from India, Sher Ali Khan set about effect
ing reforms. He began with taxation and military reforms.  
ing reforms. He began with taxation and military reforms.  
The Russian Ambassador to Iran, I. A: Zinovyev, wrote in  
The Russian Ambassador to Iran, I. A: Zinovyev, wrote in  
a report to the Foreign Ministry on August 14, 1869:  
a report to the Foreign Ministry on August 14, 1869:  
“To lessen the influence of his bigger vassals, the emir de-
"To lessen the influence of his bigger vassals, the emir de
cided to take over control of the country’s financial sources  
cided to take over control of the country’s financial sources  
and to form a si.gle permanent army.*7 It is known that  
and to form a si.gle permanent army."*7 It is known that  
Sher Ali Khan decided to go over to levying the land tax  
Sher Ali Khan decided to go over to levying the land tax  
in money only, giving up taxation in kind. But that deci-
in money only, giving up taxation in kind. But that deci
sion was never carried out and the tax was levied both in  
sion was never carried out and the tax was levied both in  
money and in kind, as previously.*  
money and in kind, as previously.*  
Line 6,163: Line 6,163:
historian Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar. even arrived at  
historian Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar. even arrived at  
the conclusion that precisely at that time the conditions  
the conclusion that precisely at that time the conditions  
were first ripe for the emergence of the “sprouts of capital-
were first ripe for the emergence of the "sprouts of capital
ist relations”.28 This point of view merits attention. But  
ist relations".28 This point of view merits attention. But  
since the data on the socio-economic relations in the  
since the data on the socio-economic relations in the  
Afghanistan of that time, contained in the sources, have not  
Afghanistan of that time, contained in the sources, have not  
Line 6,173: Line 6,173:
measures to improve the administrative system, to set  
measures to improve the administrative system, to set  
up Afghanistan’s first cabinet of ministers, and instituted  
up Afghanistan’s first cabinet of ministers, and instituted  
a deliberative body which was to advise the emir on matt-
a deliberative body which was to advise the emir on matt
ers of state administration.  
ers of state administration.  


Line 6,188: Line 6,188:
often had to seek additional earings. But, for all that,  
often had to seek additional earings. But, for all that,  
Sher Ali Khan’s army was efficient enough. Later on, many  
Sher Ali Khan’s army was efficient enough. Later on, many  
regular officers and men fought excellently against the Bri-
regular officers and men fought excellently against the Bri
tish aggressors. When he was forming the regular army,  
tish aggressors. When he was forming the regular army,  
Sher Ali Khan ordered that the English service regulations  
Sher Ali Khan ordered that the English service regulations  
be translated into Pushtu and Persian (Dari).  
be translated into Pushtu and Persian (Dari).  


Special mention should be made of the reforms in edu-
Special mention should be made of the reforms in edu
cation and culture, in particular printing, started by Sher  
cation and culture, in particular printing, started by Sher  
Ali Khan. At that time, lithography was introduced in  
Ali Khan. At that time, lithography was introduced in  
Line 6,201: Line 6,201:
rupee.39 The first Afghan newspaper, Shams an-Nahar,  
rupee.39 The first Afghan newspaper, Shams an-Nahar,  
whose first issue came off the press in 1873, was published  
whose first issue came off the press in 1873, was published  
up till the start of the second Anglo-Afghan war of 1878-
up till the start of the second Anglo-Afghan war of 1878
1880. Among the most important and interesting, from the point of view of the history of culture, were the measures effected by Sher Ali Khan in education. Before him Af-
1880. Among the most important and interesting, from the point of view of the history of culture, were the measures effected by Sher Ali Khan in education. Before him Af
ghanistan had no secular schools, and there existed only  
ghanistan had no secular schools, and there existed only  
two ways of providing children with education: either at  
two ways of providing children with education: either at  
Line 6,211: Line 6,211:
departments, military and civilian. English was taught by  
departments, military and civilian. English was taught by  
Indian teachers.31 Many present-day Afghan historians  
Indian teachers.31 Many present-day Afghan historians  
attach great historical and cultural significance to the re-
attach great historical and cultural significance to the re
forms effected by Sher Ali Khan in the 1870s, regarding  
forms effected by Sher Ali Khan in the 1870s, regarding  
them as the start of the modemisation of Afghanistan.  
them as the start of the modemisation of Afghanistan.  
Line 6,228: Line 6,228:
town walls and the internal ones (round the citadel), which  
town walls and the internal ones (round the citadel), which  
the emir had ordered to build, on the number of soldiers  
the emir had ordered to build, on the number of soldiers  
employed as building workers, on a pay rise for those sol-
employed as building workers, on a pay rise for those sol
diers, etc. For more than five years 6,000 workers and  
diers, etc. For more than five years 6,000 workers and  
about 1,000 skilled builders (for instance, carpenters) were  
about 1,000 skilled builders (for instance, carpenters) were  
engaged in the construction of the town. The soldiers build-
engaged in the construction of the town. The soldiers build
ing the town were paid five rupees in addition to their  
ing the town were paid five rupees in addition to their  
regular monthly pay, and the skilled builders received daily  
regular monthly pay, and the skilled builders received daily  
Line 6,242: Line 6,242:
independent development. He was fairly well informed  
independent development. He was fairly well informed  
about developments in Europe, and did, to a certain extent,  
about developments in Europe, and did, to a certain extent,  
know the history of the European states and Russia, regard-
know the history of the European states and Russia, regard
ing Peter the Great with much respect.32
ing Peter the Great with much respect.32


Line 6,254: Line 6,254:


At the end of the 1860s and beginning of the 1870s  
At the end of the 1860s and beginning of the 1870s  
the British “‘closed border’’ policy in the north-west of India  
the British "‘closed border’’ policy in the north-west of India  
gave way to an “offensive policy’. This meant that blatant  
gave way to an "offensive policy’. This meant that blatant  
aggression was now the official policy of Britain, which had  
aggression was now the official policy of Britain, which had  
entered the imperialist stage of capitalist development, and  
entered the imperialist stage of capitalist development, and  
Line 6,267: Line 6,267:


Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Gorchakov proposed  
Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Gorchakov proposed  
that Afghanistan be regarded a ‘“‘neutral zone”’ between the  
that Afghanistan be regarded a ‘"‘neutral zone"’ between the  
domains of tsarist Russia in Central Asia and British India.  
domains of tsarist Russia in Central Asia and British India.  
It was envisaged that the independence of Afghanistan  
It was envisaged that the independence of Afghanistan  
Line 6,275: Line 6,275:
government renounced its former proposal on Afghanistan’s  
government renounced its former proposal on Afghanistan’s  
neutrality and officially assured the British that it regarded  
neutrality and officially assured the British that it regarded  
Afghanistan “beyond the field of Russian influence”.  
Afghanistan "beyond the field of Russian influence".  
Under an agreement between Russia and Britain the Amu  
Under an agreement between Russia and Britain the Amu  
Darya river was recognised as the northem frontier of  
Darya river was recognised as the northem frontier of  
Line 6,297: Line 6,297:
nobility conspired to bring to power Sher Ali Khan’s son  
nobility conspired to bring to power Sher Ali Khan’s son  
Yaqub, who suited the British. Having left the capital to  
Yaqub, who suited the British. Having left the capital to  
Yaqub, Sher Ali Khan set out to Mazar-i-Sharif on Decem-
Yaqub, Sher Ali Khan set out to Mazar-i-Sharif on Decem
ber 13, 1878, with members of the Russian mission who  
ber 13, 1878, with members of the Russian mission who  
still remained in Afghanistan. The emir still pinned hopes  
still remained in Afghanistan. The emir still pinned hopes  
Line 6,317: Line 6,317:
commissioner Sir Louis Cavagnari, a peace treaty under  
commissioner Sir Louis Cavagnari, a peace treaty under  
which Afghanistan did, in fact, lose its independence. A  
which Afghanistan did, in fact, lose its independence. A  
British resident with armed guards was now to stay perma-
British resident with armed guards was now to stay perma
nently in Kabul to control the emir’s activities and the way  
nently in Kabul to control the emir’s activities and the way  
he spent annual British subsidies. Yaqub recognised Britain’s  
he spent annual British subsidies. Yaqub recognised Britain’s  
Line 6,323: Line 6,323:
Khyber and Michni passes. Prime Minister of the British  
Khyber and Michni passes. Prime Minister of the British  
Tory cabinet Benjamin Disraeli declared that the Treaty of  
Tory cabinet Benjamin Disraeli declared that the Treaty of  
Gandamak ensured a scientifically fixed and adequate fron-
Gandamak ensured a scientifically fixed and adequate fron
tier for the Indian empire.  
tier for the Indian empire.  


Line 6,363: Line 6,363:
British conquerors, who had alleged that their purpose was  
British conquerors, who had alleged that their purpose was  
to defend the Indian borders and eliminate ‘‘the threat of  
to defend the Indian borders and eliminate ‘‘the threat of  
a Russian invasion”, betrayed their true intentions. The  
a Russian invasion", betrayed their true intentions. The  
population of Afghanistan resisted the invaders’ attempts to  
population of Afghanistan resisted the invaders’ attempts to  
take over the administration of their country. Although  
take over the administration of their country. Although  
the British authorities managed to win the support of some  
the British authorities managed to win the support of some  
feudal lords by bribing them, the officials appointed by the  
feudal lords by bribing them, the officials appointed by the  
British from among them to administer some of the coun-
British from among them to administer some of the coun
try’s regions .were conffonted with popular resentment.  
try’s regions .were conffonted with popular resentment.  
Some of the officials were killed, and others fled to the  
Some of the officials were killed, and others fled to the  
Line 6,377: Line 6,377:
were led by Afghan General Muhammad Jan Khan Wardak,  
were led by Afghan General Muhammad Jan Khan Wardak,  
a capable commander. In the autumn of 1879 he arrived in  
a capable commander. In the autumn of 1879 he arrived in  
Ghazni province having persuaded the volunteer detach- ments of the Wardak tribe to take part in future hostilities. Mullah Din Muhammad, too, called for a sacred war against  
Ghazni province having persuaded the volunteer detachments of the Wardak tribe to take part in future hostilities. Mullah Din Muhammad, too, called for a sacred war against  
the British. At that time, he, together with Muhammad  
the British. At that time, he, together with Muhammad  
Jan Khan and mullah Abdul Ghafur Langari, was getting  
Jan Khan and mullah Abdul Ghafur Langari, was getting  
Line 6,395: Line 6,395:
looted and bumed down.37 The capital was liberated not  
looted and bumed down.37 The capital was liberated not  
only due to the valour of the soldiers who had come from  
only due to the valour of the soldiers who had come from  
various parts of the country under the banners of Muham-
various parts of the country under the banners of Muham
mad Jan Khan Wardak, Ghulam Haidar Khan Charhi, and  
mad Jan Khan Wardak, Ghulam Haidar Khan Charhi, and  
other leaders of the popular uprising, but also due to the  
other leaders of the popular uprising, but also due to the  
Line 6,401: Line 6,401:
surrounding areas in the struggle.  
surrounding areas in the struggle.  


The Afghans failed in their further actions against Rob-
The Afghans failed in their further actions against Rob
erts’ troops. The unfavourable balance of forces caused by  
erts’ troops. The unfavourable balance of forces caused by  
the arrival of enemy reinforcements forced Muhammad  
the arrival of enemy reinforcements forced Muhammad  
Line 6,408: Line 6,408:
British recaptured Bala Hissar, the ruined citadel of Kabul.  
British recaptured Bala Hissar, the ruined citadel of Kabul.  


At the end of 1879 and the beginning of 1880 the ag-
At the end of 1879 and the beginning of 1880 the ag
gressors’ position was unstable, in spite of the seizure of  
gressors’ position was unstable, in spite of the seizure of  
Kabul. A popular guerrilla war was still going on. In the  
Kabul. A popular guerrilla war was still going on. In the  
long run, the British ruling circles had lost all hope of  
long run, the British ruling circles had lost all hope of  
tuming Afghanistan into a colony by force of arms. Plan-
tuming Afghanistan into a colony by force of arms. Plan
ning a withdrawal of the occupation forces, they sought  
ning a withdrawal of the occupation forces, they sought  
ways of achieving the most favourable outcome to a pro-
ways of achieving the most favourable outcome to a pro
tracted war that had cost them a good deal of money but  
tracted war that had cost them a good deal of money but  
held out no hope for the better. Some of Britain’s top  
held out no hope for the better. Some of Britain’s top  
Line 6,420: Line 6,420:
emir on the throne and stationing their garrisons in some  
emir on the throne and stationing their garrisons in some  
regions of Afghanistan it was possible to make it a dependent  
regions of Afghanistan it was possible to make it a dependent  
state. Simultaneously, it was planned to break up the coun- try into several domains dependent on Britain.  
state. Simultaneously, it was planned to break up the country into several domains dependent on Britain.  


Having dethroned Yaqub, the British aggressors saw how  
Having dethroned Yaqub, the British aggressors saw how  
Line 6,430: Line 6,430:
tsarist government did not allow Abdurrahman Khan to  
tsarist government did not allow Abdurrahman Khan to  
leave for Afghanistan for it wished its rival, Britain, to  
leave for Afghanistan for it wished its rival, Britain, to  
lose that war. So it thought that the appearance in Afghan-
lose that war. So it thought that the appearance in Afghan
istan of a claimant to the throne, who was dangerous to  
istan of a claimant to the throne, who was dangerous to  
Sher Ali Khan and also to Yaqub, would cause disarray  
Sher Ali Khan and also to Yaqub, would cause disarray  
among the resistance forces and weaken the Afghans fight-
among the resistance forces and weaken the Afghans fight
ing the aggressor. But in the autumn of 1879 the situation  
ing the aggressor. But in the autumn of 1879 the situation  
in Afghanistan had changed; and so had the attitude of the  
in Afghanistan had changed; and so had the attitude of the  
Line 6,447: Line 6,447:
close by. By facilitating the emergence of a new aspirant on  
close by. By facilitating the emergence of a new aspirant on  
the political scene, it expected Abdurrahman Khan to gain  
the political scene, it expected Abdurrahman Khan to gain  
a foothold in Afghan Turkestan and to create an indepen-
a foothold in Afghan Turkestan and to create an indepen
dent domain there. If he became the emir of the whole of  
dent domain there. If he became the emir of the whole of  
Afghanistan, the tsarist authorities hoped to have a friendly  
Afghanistan, the tsarist authorities hoped to have a friendly  
neighbour. To give British diplomats no pretext for accusing  
neighbour. To give British diplomats no pretext for accusing  
Russia of interfering in Afghan affairs, they allowed Abdur-
Russia of interfering in Afghan affairs, they allowed Abdur
rahman Khan merely to “escape” unhindered from Tashkent.  
rahman Khan merely to "escape" unhindered from Tashkent.  


As he appeared in Badakhshan, Abdurrahman Khan was  
As he appeared in Badakhshan, Abdurrahman Khan was  
pleasant in his treatment of the members of the local nobi-
pleasant in his treatment of the members of the local nobi
lity who had not yet submitted to him. He received them  
lity who had not yet submitted to him. He received them  
in a big way, trying to gain their favour. He cajoled the  
in a big way, trying to gain their favour. He cajoled the  
influential persons he needed, and his prestige rose.9 9  
influential persons he needed, and his prestige rose.9 9  


,His chief rival in the struggle for power in the north-
,His chief rival in the struggle for power in the north
em part of the country was Ghulam Haidar Khan Wardak,  
em part of the country was Ghulam Haidar Khan Wardak,  
the Afghan general whom emir Yaqub had appointed his  
the Afghan general whom emir Yaqub had appointed his  
deputy in 1879 in Char-vilayet and who nowruled Mazar-i-
deputy in 1879 in Char-vilayet and who nowruled Mazar-i
Sharif and other towns on the left bank of the Amu Darya.  
Sharif and other towns on the left bank of the Amu Darya.  
Ghulam Haidar Khan wanted to become the ruler of the  
Ghulam Haidar Khan wanted to become the ruler of the  
Line 6,470: Line 6,470:
General Ghulam Haidar Khan Wardak sent large forces,  
General Ghulam Haidar Khan Wardak sent large forces,  
part of the regular troops he commanded, to Kataghan in  
part of the regular troops he commanded, to Kataghan in  
a bid to extend his influence to that province and to neigh-
a bid to extend his influence to that province and to neigh
bouring Badakhshan. But the forces he had sent recog-
bouring Badakhshan. But the forces he had sent recog
nised Abdurrahman Khan as their leader and joined him.  
nised Abdurrahman Khan as their leader and joined him.  
This instantly changed the situation in the northern pro-
This instantly changed the situation in the northern pro
vinces in favour of Abdurrahman Khan. Ghulam Haidar  
vinces in favour of Abdurrahman Khan. Ghulam Haidar  
Khan fled to Bokhara, where he was killed some time later.  
Khan fled to Bokhara, where he was killed some time later.  


As he gained a foothold in Khanabad, Talikan and  
As he gained a foothold in Khanabad, Talikan and  
Qunduz, Abdurrahman Khan, pursuing a cautious wait-
Qunduz, Abdurrahman Khan, pursuing a cautious wait
and-see policy and avoiding any move that could cause a  
and-see policy and avoiding any move that could cause a  
conflict with Britain, began negotiations by correspondence  
conflict with Britain, began negotiations by correspondence  
Line 6,484: Line 6,484:
who had arrived in Kabul from India.  
who had arrived in Kabul from India.  


The British policy-makers were contemplating the divi-
The British policy-makers were contemplating the divi
sion of Afghanistan into “independent domains” under a  
sion of Afghanistan into "independent domains" under a  
British protectorate. One of the chief elements of their  
British protectorate. One of the chief elements of their  
plan was to find a suitable claimant to the vacant throne  
plan was to find a suitable claimant to the vacant throne  
Line 6,494: Line 6,494:
choice of an emir friendly towards the British government.  
choice of an emir friendly towards the British government.  
It was stipulated that the Qandahar region would become  
It was stipulated that the Qandahar region would become  
an “independent state”.*9  
an "independent state".*9  


The British policy with regard to Afghanistan was greatly  
The British policy with regard to Afghanistan was greatly  
Line 6,512: Line 6,512:
It was at that time, in the spring of 1880, that the troops  
It was at that time, in the spring of 1880, that the troops  
of Abdurrahman Khan launched an offensive on Kabul from the north, while the volunteer units of Ghazni were approaching the city from the south. That could have  
of Abdurrahman Khan launched an offensive on Kabul from the north, while the volunteer units of Ghazni were approaching the city from the south. That could have  
created a critical situation for the troops of General Rob-
created a critical situation for the troops of General Rob
erts. A detachment of 7,000 was dispatched to Kabul from  
erts. A detachment of 7,000 was dispatched to Kabul from  
Qandahar under the command of Genera] Donald Stewart.  
Qandahar under the command of Genera] Donald Stewart.  


But, in spite of this, the general situation in the coun-
But, in spite of this, the general situation in the coun
try was already precarious for the invaders early in the  
try was already precarious for the invaders early in the  
summer of 1880. They failed to maintain control over  
summer of 1880. They failed to maintain control over  
communications. The reports coming to India from Afghan-
communications. The reports coming to India from Afghan
istan said that Afghan volunteer units up to 20,000 strong  
istan said that Afghan volunteer units up to 20,000 strong  
were being assembled in Ghazni province. The British  
were being assembled in Ghazni province. The British  
Line 6,533: Line 6,533:
capital with 2,000 soldiers and 12 field guns. The country  
capital with 2,000 soldiers and 12 field guns. The country  
on the whole was on his side. According to the Afghan  
on the whole was on his side. According to the Afghan  
sources of that time, the total number of soldiers support-
sources of that time, the total number of soldiers support
ing him was 300,000.43 On June 26, Abdurrahman Khan’s  
ing him was 300,000.43 On June 26, Abdurrahman Khan’s  
answer reached Kabul. He said that he should have complete  
answer reached Kabul. He said that he should have complete  
Line 6,539: Line 6,539:
by his grandfather Dost Muhammad Khan.  
by his grandfather Dost Muhammad Khan.  


Formally, that answer did not mention Qandahar, al-
Formally, that answer did not mention Qandahar, al
though Abdurrahman Khan’s claim to that province had  
though Abdurrahman Khan’s claim to that province had  
been expressed earlier in no uncertain terms. Ignoring the  
been expressed earlier in no uncertain terms. Ignoring the  
Line 6,548: Line 6,548:
mullah Mushk-i Alam, who enjoyed great prestige in the  
mullah Mushk-i Alam, who enjoyed great prestige in the  
country and had influence with the other leaders of the  
country and had influence with the other leaders of the  
“national party’? who headed the volunteer units concen-
"national party’? who headed the volunteer units concen
trated in Ghazni province, took the side of Abdurrahman  
trated in Ghazni province, took the side of Abdurrahman  
Khan.  
Khan.  
Line 6,559: Line 6,559:
the emir of Kabul and that the British troops would soon be  
the emir of Kabul and that the British troops would soon be  
withdrawn from his domains. The British handed over the  
withdrawn from his domains. The British handed over the  
capital to him and supplied him with arms and military equ-
capital to him and supplied him with arms and military equ
ipment and later on began to pay him a large annual subsidy.  
ipment and later on began to pay him a large annual subsidy.  


Line 6,566: Line 6,566:
Gandamak on the presence of a permanent British resident  
Gandamak on the presence of a permanent British resident  
with armed guards in Afghanistan. Instead, there was to  
with armed guards in Afghanistan. Instead, there was to  
be an agent in Kabul from among Indian Muslims for liai-
be an agent in Kabul from among Indian Muslims for liai
son between Abdurrahman Khan and the British authorities  
son between Abdurrahman Khan and the British authorities  
in India. But Abdurrahman Khan’s pledge to conduct diplo-
in India. But Abdurrahman Khan’s pledge to conduct diplo
matic talks with other states only through the viceroy of  
matic talks with other states only through the viceroy of  
India placed Afghanistan’s foreign policy under British con-
India placed Afghanistan’s foreign policy under British con
trol. On the whole, the terms of the agreement with the  
trol. On the whole, the terms of the agreement with the  
British were too exacting for Afghanistan.  
British were too exacting for Afghanistan.  
Line 6,579: Line 6,579:
operations in Qandahar province. The British government,  
operations in Qandahar province. The British government,  
bent on severing the Qandahar province from the Afghan  
bent on severing the Qandahar province from the Afghan  
state, made it an “independent domain” headed by sardar  
state, made it an "independent domain" headed by sardar  
Sher Ali Khan Qandahari, its stooge.  
Sher Ali Khan Qandahari, its stooge.  


As the talks between Abdurrahman Khan and the British  
As the talks between Abdurrahman Khan and the British  
on recognising him as emir were entering their last phase,  
on recognising him as emir were entering their last phase,  
Ayub Khan, the ruler of Herat, moved his troops to Qan-
Ayub Khan, the ruler of Herat, moved his troops to Qan
dahar to drive the invaders out of Afghanistan. With Afghan  
dahar to drive the invaders out of Afghanistan. With Afghan  
regular army regiments and several artillery batteries in  
regular army regiments and several artillery batteries in  
Herat, Ayub Khan had had a good chance of winning a battle  
Herat, Ayub Khan had had a good chance of winning a battle  
against Abdurrahman Khan when the latter had just appea-
against Abdurrahman Khan when the latter had just appea
red in Afghan Turkestan and had not yet assembled a large  
red in Afghan Turkestan and had not yet assembled a large  
force. But Ayub Khan did not sacrifice the interests of the  
force. But Ayub Khan did not sacrifice the interests of the  
Line 6,595: Line 6,595:
to prepare his troops for an offensive on Qandahar.  
to prepare his troops for an offensive on Qandahar.  


In response to the request of the Qandahar “‘ruler’’ for  
In response to the request of the Qandahar "‘ruler’’ for  
urgent help for his troops stationed in the Ghirishk region,  
urgent help for his troops stationed in the Ghirishk region,  
the British sent a brigade there under the command of  
the British sent a brigade there under the command of  
Line 6,603: Line 6,603:
complete failure for their p) sin Afghanistan.44  
complete failure for their p) sin Afghanistan.44  


With the approach of Ayub Khan, soldiers of the Qan-
With the approach of Ayub Khan, soldiers of the Qan
dahar “ruler” began to go over to his side. His army was,  
dahar "ruler" began to go over to his side. His army was,  
moreover, replenished by numerous volunteers from among  
moreover, replenished by numerous volunteers from among  
the local population. As a result, the military and political  
the local population. As a result, the military and political  
Line 6,611: Line 6,611:
village of Maiwand, 55 kilometres from Qandahar, the  
village of Maiwand, 55 kilometres from Qandahar, the  
Afghans led by Ayub Khan won a sweeping victory, having  
Afghans led by Ayub Khan won a sweeping victory, having  
routed a brigade of regular enemy troops. After that, how-
routed a brigade of regular enemy troops. After that, how
ever, the British command managed, with the assistance of  
ever, the British command managed, with the assistance of  
Abdurrahman Khan, to move fresh forces to Qandahar  
Abdurrahman Khan, to move fresh forces to Qandahar  
Line 6,620: Line 6,620:
The outcome of the battle of Maiwand also decided the  
The outcome of the battle of Maiwand also decided the  
fate of Qandahar, for it frustrated the plans of the British  
fate of Qandahar, for it frustrated the plans of the British  
colonial policy-makers to tear the city away from Afghan-
colonial policy-makers to tear the city away from Afghan
istan. When the invaders clearly saw that the population  
istan. When the invaders clearly saw that the population  
was implacable with respect to them, they deemed it right  
was implacable with respect to them, they deemed it right  
Line 6,628: Line 6,628:
efforts to make Afghanistan their colony had been in vain.  
efforts to make Afghanistan their colony had been in vain.  
Only the agreement with Abdurrahman Khan gave them an  
Only the agreement with Abdurrahman Khan gave them an  
opportunity to end the hopeless war more or less satis-
opportunity to end the hopeless war more or less satis
factorily.  
factorily.  


Line 6,642: Line 6,642:
In the summer of 1881 battles for Qandahar flared up  
In the summer of 1881 battles for Qandahar flared up  
between Abdurrahman Khan, who ruled in Kabul, and  
between Abdurrahman Khan, who ruled in Kabul, and  
Ayub who still controlled Herat. In July Ayub Khan defeat-
Ayub who still controlled Herat. In July Ayub Khan defeat
ed the troops of Abdurrahman Khan which had captured Qandahar and occupied it. Then Abdurrahman Khan him self led his army against Ayub Khan and won a decisive  
ed the troops of Abdurrahman Khan which had captured Qandahar and occupied it. Then Abdurrahman Khan him self led his army against Ayub Khan and won a decisive  
battle in September 1881. Ayub Khan retreated to Herat,  
battle in September 1881. Ayub Khan retreated to Herat,  
Line 6,651: Line 6,651:
his death in 1914.  
his death in 1914.  


Extending his power to the whole of the country, Ab-
Extending his power to the whole of the country, Ab
durrahman Khan defeated guerrilla units and executed  
durrahman Khan defeated guerrilla units and executed  
many of the popular war leaders who had fought against  
many of the popular war leaders who had fought against  
the British and then against himself after he reconciled him  
the British and then against himself after he reconciled him  
self with the enemy. Some Muslim theologians were execut-
self with the enemy. Some Muslim theologians were execut
ed on the same charges. To guard his power against the  
ed on the same charges. To guard his power against the  
descendants of emir Sher Ali Khan, he deported many  
descendants of emir Sher Ali Khan, he deported many  
of their supporters from among the nobility. Having ap-
of their supporters from among the nobility. Having ap
pointed his faithful supporters the rulers of regions and  
pointed his faithful supporters the rulers of regions and  
keeping them under his constant control, and having flood  
keeping them under his constant control, and having flood  
Line 6,681: Line 6,681:
after that, he categorically rejected the request of Mahtum  
after that, he categorically rejected the request of Mahtum  
Quli, one of the four khans of Mery, to incorporate Merv  
Quli, one of the four khans of Mery, to incorporate Merv  
(at that time independent) into Afghanistan.45 Abdurrah-
(at that time independent) into Afghanistan.45 Abdurrah
man was well aware of the fact that interference in the  
man was well aware of the fact that interference in the  
affairs of Merv might well entail a conflict with Russia.  
affairs of Merv might well entail a conflict with Russia.  


In_ 1884-1885 an acute conflict erupted between Britain  
In_ 1884-1885 an acute conflict erupted between Britain  
and Russia over the “Afghan delimitation” issue. The Bri-
and Russia over the "Afghan delimitation" issue. The Bri
tish and Russian governments agreed to draw a border-
tish and Russian governments agreed to draw a border


line between Afghanistan and the Russian domains in Cen- tral Asia along the Amu Darya river. But when the actual  
line between Afghanistan and the Russian domains in Central Asia along the Amu Darya river. But when the actual  
delimitation was being done, considerable difficulties arose  
delimitation was being done, considerable difficulties arose  
in the regions in the river’s upper reaches, for the sides  
in the regions in the river’s upper reaches, for the sides  
Line 6,696: Line 6,696:
disputes were even more acute in the north-western border  
disputes were even more acute in the north-western border  
area of Afghanistan, in the territories lying between Kerki,  
area of Afghanistan, in the territories lying between Kerki,  
the point where the Amu Darya turns north, and the re-
the point where the Amu Darya turns north, and the re
gions where the borders of Afghanistan, Iran and Bokhara  
gions where the borders of Afghanistan, Iran and Bokhara  
(Russia’s vassal territory) converged, in the lands populated  
(Russia’s vassal territory) converged, in the lands populated  
by Turkmenian tribes. The latter did in fact remain inde-
by Turkmenian tribes. The latter did in fact remain inde
pendent until 1884 and did not obey the rulers of the  
pendent until 1884 and did not obey the rulers of the  
neighbouring states.  
neighbouring states.  
Line 6,717: Line 6,717:
British feared the hostile attitude of the Afghan population,  
British feared the hostile attitude of the Afghan population,  
which, as historical experience had proved, could come to  
which, as historical experience had proved, could come to  
the surface even if there was complete understanding be-
the surface even if there was complete understanding be
tween the British and the Afghan emir. Abdurrahman  
tween the British and the Afghan emir. Abdurrahman  
Khan, anticipating the possible complications that might  
Khan, anticipating the possible complications that might  
be caused by the arrival of the British commission with a  
be caused by the arrival of the British commission with a  
large military escort in Afghanistan, sent detailed instruc-
large military escort in Afghanistan, sent detailed instruc
tions on that score to his officials and military commanders  
tions on that score to his officials and military commanders  
in the border regions.  
in the border regions.  
Line 6,729: Line 6,729:
tries, Abdurrahman Khan sought, with British diplomatic  
tries, Abdurrahman Khan sought, with British diplomatic  
support, to retain as many of the disputed regions as possib  
support, to retain as many of the disputed regions as possib  
le for himself during demarcation. But, in so doing, he want-
le for himself during demarcation. But, in so doing, he want
ed to avoid a conflict with Russia. The British, on the other  
ed to avoid a conflict with Russia. The British, on the other  
hand, were provoking the Afghans to a conflict. An armed  
hand, were provoking the Afghans to a conflict. An armed  
Line 6,747: Line 6,747:
it was widely believed that a war between Russia and  
it was widely believed that a war between Russia and  
Britain was inevitable, was long remembered in Europe.*7  
Britain was inevitable, was long remembered in Europe.*7  
The British navy received orders to be in combat read-
The British navy received orders to be in combat read
iness. Gladstone clamoured for military credits in Parlia-
iness. Gladstone clamoured for military credits in Parlia
ment. The situation grew tense. At that time, as noted by  
ment. The situation grew tense. At that time, as noted by  
Lenin, ‘“‘Russia was on the verge of war with England over  
Lenin, ‘"‘Russia was on the verge of war with England over  
division of the spoils in Central Asia’.48 But the sabre-rat-
division of the spoils in Central Asia’.48 But the sabre-rat
tling British government feared a war against Russia in the  
tling British government feared a war against Russia in the  
Middle East for many reasons. For Britain combat in Afgha-
Middle East for many reasons. For Britain combat in Afgha
nistan meant the risk of remaining face to face with Russia  
nistan meant the risk of remaining face to face with Russia  
in the remote parts of Asia. The threat to British rule in  
in the remote parts of Asia. The threat to British rule in  
Line 6,760: Line 6,760:
with Russia at the gate of that vast colony. The Russian  
with Russia at the gate of that vast colony. The Russian  
government, for its part, also had reasons for avoiding a  
government, for its part, also had reasons for avoiding a  
war with Britain ad agreed on the settlement of the con-
war with Britain ad agreed on the settlement of the con
flict through diplomatic negotiations.  
flict through diplomatic negotiations.  


A significant role was played in the peaceful outcome of  
A significant role was played in the peaceful outcome of  
the 1885 crisis by the resolute stand taken by Abdurrah-
the 1885 crisis by the resolute stand taken by Abdurrah
man Khan who refused to make any moves that could lead  
man Khan who refused to make any moves that could lead  
to a war with Russia. His position largely facilitated the  
to a war with Russia. His position largely facilitated the  
Line 6,776: Line 6,776:
Beginning with the late 1880's, after the border issues  
Beginning with the late 1880's, after the border issues  
with Russia were settled, Abdurrahman Khan focussed his  
with Russia were settled, Abdurrahman Khan focussed his  
attention on the southern frontier. However, there his polit-
attention on the southern frontier. However, there his polit
ical ambitions came up against the aggression of British colonialists who were advancing rapidly into regions populated by Pashtuns and Chitrals for the purpose of seiz-
ical ambitions came up against the aggression of British colonialists who were advancing rapidly into regions populated by Pashtuns and Chitrals for the purpose of seiz
ing the strategically important lands of the East Hindu  
ing the strategically important lands of the East Hindu  
Kush on the approaches to the Pamirs.  
Kush on the approaches to the Pamirs.  


Just a few years after the second Anglo-Afghan war the  
Just a few years after the second Anglo-Afghan war the  
British had already started aggressive action in the north-
British had already started aggressive action in the north
westem region of the border between British India and  
westem region of the border between British India and  
Afghanistan. Their aim was to seize the Hindu Kush and  
Afghanistan. Their aim was to seize the Hindu Kush and  
spread British influence to the Pamirs and the nearby terri-
spread British influence to the Pamirs and the nearby terri
tory. As a result of General Lockhart’s mission, a British  
tory. As a result of General Lockhart’s mission, a British  
protectorate was established over Chitral in 1885, and a  
protectorate was established over Chitral in 1885, and a  
Line 6,793: Line 6,793:
with the subsequent signing of agreements with the jirgas  
with the subsequent signing of agreements with the jirgas  
(councils) of the tribes. Beginning with the late 1880's,  
(councils) of the tribes. Beginning with the late 1880's,  
the British colonial policy-makers, relying on the Pesha-
the British colonial policy-makers, relying on the Pesha
war Province, on the one hand, and, on Chitral and Gil-
war Province, on the one hand, and, on Chitral and Gil


it, which had become dependent on Britain, on the other,  
it, which had become dependent on Britain, on the other,  
Line 6,804: Line 6,804:
Hindu Kush and the neighbouring mountain regions in  
Hindu Kush and the neighbouring mountain regions in  
1886-1888, Abdurrahman Khan was obstructed by extreme  
1886-1888, Abdurrahman Khan was obstructed by extreme  
‘ domestic complications in Afghanistan itself: the Ghil-
‘ domestic complications in Afghanistan itself: the Ghil
zai uprisings and the mutiny of Ishaq Khan, which present-
zai uprisings and the mutiny of Ishaq Khan, which present
ed a grave danger to him. Punitive expeditions and inces-
ed a grave danger to him. Punitive expeditions and inces
sant military actions in various parts of the country, com-
sant military actions in various parts of the country, com
bined with the emir’s efforts to overcome feudal interne-
bined with the emir’s efforts to overcome feudal interne
cine strife, and. particularly his policy of ruthless suppres-
cine strife, and. particularly his policy of ruthless suppres
sion of the discontent among the people and popular move-
sion of the discontent among the people and popular move
ments, were the most salient features in the history of  
ments, were the most salient features in the history of  
Afghanistan in the 1880's.  
Afghanistan in the 1880's.  
Line 6,818: Line 6,818:
country.49 The authorities’ arbitrary rule and the burden  
country.49 The authorities’ arbitrary rule and the burden  
of taxes sparked off uprisings among the Hazaras.5° The  
of taxes sparked off uprisings among the Hazaras.5° The  
disturbances assumed extensive proportions in Badakh-
disturbances assumed extensive proportions in Badakh
shan, and rebellions occurred repeatedly in Khost, in partic-
shan, and rebellions occurred repeatedly in Khost, in partic
ular among the Mangals, and also the Dzadzi and Hasan-
ular among the Mangals, and also the Dzadzi and Hasan
Khel and other tribes.51 The emir’s troops had to wage on a protracted struggle against the Shinwari tribe. Abdurrahman Khan came up against great difficulties in  
Khel and other tribes.51 The emir’s troops had to wage on a protracted struggle against the Shinwari tribe. Abdurrahman Khan came up against great difficulties in  
the Tegions (as in the Shinwari lands), that had not been  
the Tegions (as in the Shinwari lands), that had not been  
subject to regular taxation in the past. But difficulties  
subject to regular taxation in the past. But difficulties  
often arose to an equal extent in the regions, first and fore-
often arose to an equal extent in the regions, first and fore
most the Ghilzai lands, where taxes had been smal] and  
most the Ghilzai lands, where taxes had been smal] and  
where the land had not been measured.  
where the land had not been measured.  
Line 6,831: Line 6,831:
three of them very serious, which shook Abdurrahman  
three of them very serious, which shook Abdurrahman  
Khan’s power at different times. One of the chief causes  
Khan’s power at different times. One of the chief causes  
of the Ghilzai armed uprising was that they were taxed un-
of the Ghilzai armed uprising was that they were taxed un
der general regulations, in violation of tradition, on a par  
der general regulations, in violation of tradition, on a par  
with most rayats in the Afghan state. The Ghilzai tribes,  
with most rayats in the Afghan state. The Ghilzai tribes,  
Line 6,853: Line 6,853:
ot taxation system, under which one-third of the harvest  
ot taxation system, under which one-third of the harvest  
from the nahri lands, i.e., the lands irrigated by river water,  
from the nahri lands, i.e., the lands irrigated by river water,  
was to be handed over. The Ghilzais now had to pay govern-
was to be handed over. The Ghilzais now had to pay govern
ment taxes as well and various kinds of tributes. In 1881  
ment taxes as well and various kinds of tributes. In 1881  
their outbursts of protest had already led to terror, numer-
their outbursts of protest had already led to terror, numer
ous arrests, assassinations, and executions. The reprisals  
ous arrests, assassinations, and executions. The reprisals  
in 1881-1883 were mainly peel against the Ghilzai  
in 1881-1883 were mainly peel against the Ghilzai  
khans and the mullahs.  
khans and the mullahs.  


The abolition of tax privileses the emir’s policy of cen-
The abolition of tax privileses the emir’s policy of cen
tralisation, the toughness of his rule, and the harshness  
tralisation, the toughness of his rule, and the harshness  
of the reprisals made the majority of the Ghilzai nobility  
of the reprisals made the majority of the Ghilzai nobility  
the emir’s sworn enemies. As for the rank-and-file tribes-
the emir’s sworn enemies. As for the rank-and-file tribes
men, they were outraged to know that the government was  
men, they were outraged to know that the government was  
demanding of them much higher taxes than they used to  
demanding of them much higher taxes than they used to  
pay before. The Ghilzai chiefs influenced their tribesmen, reminding them of traditions and calling for tribal solidari- ty in the struggle to eliminate their unequal position and de-
pay before. The Ghilzai chiefs influenced their tribesmen, reminding them of traditions and calling for tribal solidarity in the struggle to eliminate their unequal position and de
manded the abolition of the privileges enjoyed by the Dur-
manded the abolition of the privileges enjoyed by the Dur
rani nobility. ; ars  
rani nobility. ; ars  


Line 6,875: Line 6,875:
last years of his life his vast landed possessions were taxed  
last years of his life his vast landed possessions were taxed  
for the first time, while the payments received by him and  
for the first time, while the payments received by him and  
his sons were cancelled by the emir. The abolition of land-
his sons were cancelled by the emir. The abolition of land
tax privileges and the persecution of the leaders of the an-
tax privileges and the persecution of the leaders of the an
ti-British struggle and Ghilzai dignitaries made Din Muham-
ti-British struggle and Ghilzai dignitaries made Din Muham
mad and his sons rise against Abdurrahman Khan. Ismatul-
mad and his sons rise against Abdurrahman Khan. Ismatul
lah Ghilzai was arrested in January 1882. The arrested was  
lah Ghilzai was arrested in January 1882. The arrested was  
a close associate of the mullah Din Muhammad who re-
a close associate of the mullah Din Muhammad who re
quested his release, but in vain. In October 1882, Isma-
quested his release, but in vain. In October 1882, Isma
tullah was hanged. The first major Ghilzai uprising was  
tullah was hanged. The first major Ghilzai uprising was  
started by the Andari tribe in the Mukur region in October  
started by the Andari tribe in the Mukur region in October  
1886. The emir’s troops could not suppress it, and it conti-
1886. The emir’s troops could not suppress it, and it conti
nued to spread, involving not only the Ghilzai tribes, but  
nued to spread, involving not only the Ghilzai tribes, but  
was also supported by the Kakars, the Wazirs, some tribes  
was also supported by the Kakars, the Wazirs, some tribes  
of Khost and part of the Hazarajat population.  
of Khost and part of the Hazarajat population.  


The emir tried to placate the insurgent Ghilzais by prom-
The emir tried to placate the insurgent Ghilzais by prom
ising concessions. He promised that the taxes to be paid  
ising concessions. He promised that the taxes to be paid  
by the Ghilzais would not exceed the amount they used  
by the Ghilzais would not exceed the amount they used  
to pay under Dost Muhammad Khan, and attested his pro-
to pay under Dost Muhammad Khan, and attested his pro
mise by a seal on the Koran. Abdurrahman Khan also tried  
mise by a seal on the Koran. Abdurrahman Khan also tried  
to influence the Ghilzai chiefs by appealing to their relig-
to influence the Ghilzai chiefs by appealing to their relig
ious sentiments and pointing out that, as Afghanistan’s  
ious sentiments and pointing out that, as Afghanistan’s  
neighbours were hostile heterodox states, an internal split  
neighbours were hostile heterodox states, an internal split  
in the country could do great harm to Islam. But all the  
in the country could do great harm to Islam. But all the  
promises and the persuasion proved to be of no avail. Dur-
promises and the persuasion proved to be of no avail. Dur
ing the Ghilzai uprising there was a considerable decline  
ing the Ghilzai uprising there was a considerable decline  
in the emir’s popularity in the country. So, he did not  
in the emir’s popularity in the country. So, he did not  
venture to announce a large-scale appeal for tribal volun-
venture to announce a large-scale appeal for tribal volun
teers to suppress the rebels.  
teers to suppress the rebels.  


However, he managed to improve relations with the Dur-
However, he managed to improve relations with the Dur
rani tribes, which largely helped his troops to suppress the  
rani tribes, which largely helped his troops to suppress the  
uprisings. This was of great political significance, although  
uprisings. This was of great political significance, although  
the feudal volunteer force provided by the Durranis was  
the feudal volunteer force provided by the Durranis was  
apparently of little value. The emir exploited the appre-
apparently of little value. The emir exploited the appre
hensions of the Durrani feudal lords over their privileges, should their traditional Ghilzai rivals succeed. The position of the emir’s troops also improved after the delivery of large  
hensions of the Durrani feudal lords over their privileges, should their traditional Ghilzai rivals succeed. The position of the emir’s troops also improved after the delivery of large  
amounts of materiel from Qandahar. In the spring of 1887,  
amounts of materiel from Qandahar. In the spring of 1887,  
Line 6,923: Line 6,923:
of 1887 all this created a critical situation in the country.  
of 1887 all this created a critical situation in the country.  
The persistent struggle against the Ghilzais and the other  
The persistent struggle against the Ghilzais and the other  
insurgents who backed them ultimately culminated in vic-
insurgents who backed them ultimately culminated in vic
tory for the emir. On the whole, the troops remained  
tory for the emir. On the whole, the troops remained  
loyal to Abdurrahman Khan. This, and also the superi-
loyal to Abdurrahman Khan. This, and also the superi
ority in material and military hardware resources of the reg-
ority in material and military hardware resources of the reg
ular army over the arms, and specifically the equipment  
ular army over the arms, and specifically the equipment  
and supplies of the insurgent units, which was largely due  
and supplies of the insurgent units, which was largely due  
Line 6,938: Line 6,938:
than the Ghilzai uprisings. Back in 1880 Muhammad Isha  
than the Ghilzai uprisings. Back in 1880 Muhammad Isha  
Khan had helped Abdurrahman Khan to come to power and  
Khan had helped Abdurrahman Khan to come to power and  
was appointed by him the administrator of Afghan Tur-
was appointed by him the administrator of Afghan Tur
kestan. His dependence on the emir was evidenced by the  
kestan. His dependence on the emir was evidenced by the  
regular deliveries of valuable presents to Kabul. From 1884  
regular deliveries of valuable presents to Kabul. From 1884  
onwards relations between them changed for the worse af-
onwards relations between them changed for the worse af
ter Muhammad Ishaq Khan began to ask the emir to grant  
ter Muhammad Ishaq Khan began to ask the emir to grant  
him the administration of Afghan Turkestan for life. This  
him the administration of Afghan Turkestan for life. This  
made the emir suspiciously alert.  
made the emir suspiciously alert.  


In Afghan Turkestan, where Uzbeks, Tajiks, and Turk-
In Afghan Turkestan, where Uzbeks, Tajiks, and Turk
mens made up the majority of the population, the people at  
mens made up the majority of the population, the people at  
large lived in extremely hard conditions. Muhammad Ishaq  
large lived in extremely hard conditions. Muhammad Ishaq  
Khan decided to exploit the situation in the province in his  
Khan decided to exploit the situation in the province in his  
own interests. While preparing to become an independent  
own interests. While preparing to become an independent  
ruler there, he sought popularity by trying to be “nice”
ruler there, he sought popularity by trying to be "nice"
to people and making some concessions to them.
to people and making some concessions to them.


He wanted to influence the religious feelings of the peo-
He wanted to influence the religious feelings of the peo
ple and to show himself to be a zealous Muslim during re-
ple and to show himself to be a zealous Muslim during re
ligious ceremonies, parading his belonging to the Naksh-
ligious ceremonies, parading his belonging to the Naksh
bandiya Dervish Order (he had joined it when in Samar-
bandiya Dervish Order (he had joined it when in Samar
kand), which enjoyed prestige among the local population,  
kand), which enjoyed prestige among the local population,  
particularly among the Turkmens. Ishaq Khan won over to  
particularly among the Turkmens. Ishaq Khan won over to  
his side the officers and men stationed in Afghan Turkes-
his side the officers and men stationed in Afghan Turkes
tan by paying them their salaries accurately and regular-
tan by paying them their salaries accurately and regular
ly, which was something unusual in Afghanistan at that  
ly, which was something unusual in Afghanistan at that  
time.  
time.  


The uprising began on July 30, 1888. On that da  
The uprising began on July 30, 1888. On that da  
Muhammad Ishaq Khan announced the separation of Af-
Muhammad Ishaq Khan announced the separation of Af
ghan Turkestan from Afghanistan to the troops and the  
ghan Turkestan from Afghanistan to the troops and the  
townsfolk gathered in Mazar-i-Sharif. The civilians and sol-
townsfolk gathered in Mazar-i-Sharif. The civilians and sol
diers swore allegiance to him; he put on a gold crown  
diers swore allegiance to him; he put on a gold crown  
(taj). That very day an envoy of Ishaq Khan went to see the  
(taj). That very day an envoy of Ishaq Khan went to see the  
commander of the Kerki garrison to inform him of the proc-
commander of the Kerki garrison to inform him of the proc
lamation of an independent domain “‘under the patronage  
lamation of an independent domain "‘under the patronage  
of Russia”. Then Ghulam Qadir Khan, the official ambas-
of Russia". Then Ghulam Qadir Khan, the official ambas
sador of Ishaq Khan, arrived in Kerki with generous gifts.  
sador of Ishaq Khan, arrived in Kerki with generous gifts.  
The Russian authorities pursued a policy of non-interfer-
The Russian authorities pursued a policy of non-interfer
ence. But the tsarist government ordered that the gover-
ence. But the tsarist government ordered that the gover
nor-general of Turkestan reinforce the troops along the  
nor-general of Turkestan reinforce the troops along the  
border with Afghanistan, just in case.  
border with Afghanistan, just in case.  


Since there had been no clashes with the emir’s main for-
Since there had been no clashes with the emir’s main for
ces before September 1888, Ishaq Khan was getting ready  
ces before September 1888, Ishaq Khan was getting ready  
for decisive events. Apart from military measures, he start-
for decisive events. Apart from military measures, he start
ed diplomatic activity in a bid to win over allies among the  
ed diplomatic activity in a bid to win over allies among the  
rulers of the countries and regions adjacent to Afghanistan.  
rulers of the countries and regions adjacent to Afghanistan.  
He sent out letters urging the rulers of Chitral, Dir, Bajaur,  
He sent out letters urging the rulers of Chitral, Dir, Bajaur,  
Swat and other areas to come out jointly against Abdur-
Swat and other areas to come out jointly against Abdur
rahman. Generous promises were made, should victory be  
rahman. Generous promises were made, should victory be  
gained. Availing himself of a brief respite, Muhammad  
gained. Availing himself of a brief respite, Muhammad  
Ishaq Khan occupied towns and villages along the Bamiyan  
Ishaq Khan occupied towns and villages along the Bamiyan  
road leading to Kabul and in some other regions. That  
road leading to Kabul and in some other regions. That  
placed Abdurrahman Khan, who was seriously ill, in a pre-
placed Abdurrahman Khan, who was seriously ill, in a pre
carious position. Ayub Khan appeared at the border. But  
carious position. Ayub Khan appeared at the border. But  
developments soon took a differént turn.  
developments soon took a differént turn.  
Line 6,997: Line 6,997:
Abdurrahman Khan’s troops launched an offensive on  
Abdurrahman Khan’s troops launched an offensive on  
Tash Kurgan. Having joined forces with the units of the  
Tash Kurgan. Having joined forces with the units of the  
emir’s deputy in Badakhshan, they fought a decisive bat-
emir’s deputy in Badakhshan, they fought a decisive bat
tle late in September at the village of Ghaznigak, 30 kilo-
tle late in September at the village of Ghaznigak, 30 kilo


metres south of Tash Kurgan. In spite of their fierce resis- tance, the rebels were routed. Ishaq Khan with his son and  
metres south of Tash Kurgan. In spite of their fierce resistance, the rebels were routed. Ishaq Khan with his son and  
retinue followed by several thousand soldiers fled to Rus-
retinue followed by several thousand soldiers fled to Rus
sian Central Asia, where they were given refuge.  
sian Central Asia, where they were given refuge.  


To put down popular uprisings and feudal mutinies,  
To put down popular uprisings and feudal mutinies,  
Abdurrahman Khan used to set volunteer armed forces of  
Abdurrahman Khan used to set volunteer armed forces of  
some tribes and peoples against others. Thus, in the strug-
some tribes and peoples against others. Thus, in the strug
gle against the insurgent Ghilzais in 1886-1888, he used Dur-
gle against the insurgent Ghilzais in 1886-1888, he used Dur
rani detachments, and in 1892-1893 the forces of Afghan  
rani detachments, and in 1892-1893 the forces of Afghan  
nomad tribes to quell the Hazara uprisings. Such a policy  
nomad tribes to quell the Hazara uprisings. Such a policy  
stirred animosity among tribes and nationalities of Afgha-
stirred animosity among tribes and nationalities of Afgha
nistan for many years to come.  
nistan for many years to come.  


Line 7,018: Line 7,018:
between India and Afghanistan. The British seized lands in  
between India and Afghanistan. The British seized lands in  
the southern part of this strip and also in the Kurram and  
the southern part of this strip and also in the Kurram and  
the Khyber Pass regions. But the majority of the indepen-
the Khyber Pass regions. But the majority of the indepen
dent Afghan tribes offered a stubborn resistance. Their  
dent Afghan tribes offered a stubborn resistance. Their  
sympathies were with Abdurrahman Khan, for they hoped  
sympathies were with Abdurrahman Khan, for they hoped  
for the Afghan state’s assistance in the struggle against the  
for the Afghan state’s assistance in the struggle against the  
British aggressors. The religious factor also Slaved quite an  
British aggressors. The religious factor also Slaved quite an  
important part. The religious-political treatise ““Taqwin
important part. The religious-political treatise ""Taqwin
ud-din” (The Strengthening of Religion) written by a  
ud-din" (The Strengthening of Religion) written by a  
group of ulemas by order of Abdurrahman Khan, and the  
group of ulemas by order of Abdurrahman Khan, and the  
numerous appeals distributed by the emir’s emissaries  
numerous appeals distributed by the emir’s emissaries  
among the border tribes propagated the teaching on jehad  
among the border tribes propagated the teaching on jehad  
and also the religious duty of all Muslims to obey the sov-
and also the religious duty of all Muslims to obey the sov
ereign of Islam and the zealous adherent of religion—the  
ereign of Islam and the zealous adherent of religion—the  
padishah of Afghanistan. In this way, Abdurrahman Khan  
padishah of Afghanistan. In this way, Abdurrahman Khan  
Line 7,036: Line 7,036:
The British colonial authorities were alarmed by the  
The British colonial authorities were alarmed by the  
news of the treaties concluded by the emir with the border  
news of the treaties concluded by the emir with the border  
tribes and sought an advantageous demarcation of the bor-
tribes and sought an advantageous demarcation of the bor
derline. But Abdurrahman declined invitations to go to In-
derline. But Abdurrahman declined invitations to go to In
dia for talks and refused to receive in Kabul the British  
dia for talks and refused to receive in Kabul the British  
mission headed by General Roberts, who was hated in Af-
mission headed by General Roberts, who was hated in Af
ghanistan for his outrageous deeds during the second  
ghanistan for his outrageous deeds during the second  
Anglo-Afghan war.  
Anglo-Afghan war.  


Very soon, however, weak spots became evident in  
Very soon, however, weak spots became evident in  
Abdurrahman Khan’s border policy. He was faced with con- siderable difficulties. His attempts to impose taxes on the tribes that tended to recognise his power caused growing  
Abdurrahman Khan’s border policy. He was faced with considerable difficulties. His attempts to impose taxes on the tribes that tended to recognise his power caused growing  
dissatisfaction developing into open uprisings. Quite often,  
dissatisfaction developing into open uprisings. Quite often,  
the Afghan emir would send his units against the insur-
the Afghan emir would send his units against the insur
gents and his soldiers would mercilessly put down a rebel-
gents and his soldiers would mercilessly put down a rebel
lion. Taking advantage of the weak spots in the border pol-
lion. Taking advantage of the weak spots in the border pol
icy of Abdurrahman Khan, the British smuggled their  
icy of Abdurrahman Khan, the British smuggled their  
agents in among the malcontents. The agents urged the local  
agents in among the malcontents. The agents urged the local  
Line 7,060: Line 7,060:
he succeed, to annex them to his state. But these plans  
he succeed, to annex them to his state. But these plans  
were obstructed by Umra Khan, the ruler of Jandol and  
were obstructed by Umra Khan, the ruler of Jandol and  
Bajaur, and later Dir, and a conflict with him seemed im-
Bajaur, and later Dir, and a conflict with him seemed im
minent. However, the British wamed the emir that they  
minent. However, the British wamed the emir that they  
would regard a clash with Umra Khan as an action against  
would regard a clash with Umra Khan as an action against  
British interests. Abdurrahman had to give up his plans with  
British interests. Abdurrahman had to give up his plans with  
regard to Bajaur and confirmed as his priority task the sei-
regard to Bajaur and confirmed as his priority task the sei
zure of Asmar. At-that time the domain of Asmar, which  
zure of Asmar. At-that time the domain of Asmar, which  
was in vassal dependence on the emir, could easily slip  
was in vassal dependence on the emir, could easily slip  
Line 7,071: Line 7,071:


In 1893 the relations between Afghanistan and Britain  
In 1893 the relations between Afghanistan and Britain  
reached a critical point. The British policy-makers demand-
reached a critical point. The British policy-makers demand
ed that Abdurrahman Khan should give up the struggle  
ed that Abdurrahman Khan should give up the struggle  
for the territory populated by the independent tribes and  
for the territory populated by the independent tribes and  
stop supporting them in their resistance to British colon-
stop supporting them in their resistance to British colon
ial expansion. Abdurrahman Khan began to get his troops  
ial expansion. Abdurrahman Khan began to get his troops  
ready to repel another British invasion. The war seemed  
ready to repel another British invasion. The war seemed  
Line 7,082: Line 7,082:
war with Afghanistan. It also took into account the power  
war with Afghanistan. It also took into account the power  
of resistance of the Afghan tribes in the border regions and the sad outcome of the previous invasions of Afghanistan which had set off popular wars against the aggressor. An  
of resistance of the Afghan tribes in the border regions and the sad outcome of the previous invasions of Afghanistan which had set off popular wars against the aggressor. An  
embassy headed by Sir Mortimer Durand, secretary for for-
embassy headed by Sir Mortimer Durand, secretary for for
eign affairs in the government of colonial India, was sent  
eign affairs in the government of colonial India, was sent  
to Kabul.  
to Kabul.  
Line 7,088: Line 7,088:
The period preceding the Durand mission was marked  
The period preceding the Durand mission was marked  
by Britain’s extreme diplomatic pressure on Afghanistan,  
by Britain’s extreme diplomatic pressure on Afghanistan,  
backed by military threats and claims to the territory pop-
backed by military threats and claims to the territory pop
ulated by the ‘‘independent” Afghan tribes. In such cir-
ulated by the ‘‘independent" Afghan tribes. In such cir
cumstances, negotiations were held between Abdurrah-
cumstances, negotiations were held between Abdurrah
man Khan and Mortimer Durand.  
man Khan and Mortimer Durand.  


On November 12, 1893, Abdurrahman Khan was com-
On November 12, 1893, Abdurrahman Khan was com
pelled to sign a seven-clause agreement that Durand had  
pelled to sign a seven-clause agreement that Durand had  
drafted. The emir relinquished to the British the greater part  
drafted. The emir relinquished to the British the greater part  
Line 7,108: Line 7,108:
the Asmar valley (by that time occupied by his troops) and  
the Asmar valley (by that time occupied by his troops) and  
the Birmal area in Waziristan. Provisions were made for  
the Birmal area in Waziristan. Provisions were made for  
increasing the annual subsidy paid by the British to Abdur-
increasing the annual subsidy paid by the British to Abdur
rahman Khan from 1,200,600 to {800,000 rupees. The  
rahman Khan from 1,200,600 to {800,000 rupees. The  
agreement included a promise that the British authorities  
agreement included a promise that the British authorities  
would not obstruct the import of military equipment in-
would not obstruct the import of military equipment in
to Afghanistan.  
to Afghanistan.  


Line 7,119: Line 7,119:


But all these concessions, plus the increased subsidy  
But all these concessions, plus the increased subsidy  
and the official recognition by the British of Abdurrah-
and the official recognition by the British of Abdurrah
man Khan’s right to purchase (in India and Europe)  
man Khan’s right to purchase (in India and Europe)  
weapons and military equipment and to transport them ac-
weapons and military equipment and to transport them ac
ross India were of infinitely smaller significance than the  
ross India were of infinitely smaller significance than the  
forced recognition of the colonialists’ power over the lands  
forced recognition of the colonialists’ power over the lands  
populated by the eastern Afghan tribes, and the fact that  
populated by the eastern Afghan tribes, and the fact that  
the new political borderline (the so-called “Durand line”) was at variance with the ethnic borderlines not only of the Afghan people as a whole, but of a number of large tribes  
the new political borderline (the so-called "Durand line") was at variance with the ethnic borderlines not only of the Afghan people as a whole, but of a number of large tribes  
(the Momands, for instance), which were divided by the  
(the Momands, for instance), which were divided by the  
“Durand line’.  
"Durand line’.  


After the conclusion of the agreement, the emir tried  
After the conclusion of the agreement, the emir tried  
to improve the difficult situation without ending the strug-
to improve the difficult situation without ending the strug
gle (primarily by pursuing a-religious policy) for influence  
gle (primarily by pursuing a-religious policy) for influence  
in the border strip populated by Afghan tribes and was  
in the border strip populated by Afghan tribes and was  
in no hurry to send his representatives for the demarca-
in no hurry to send his representatives for the demarca
tion commissions. Probably Abdurrahman Khan saw the  
tion commissions. Probably Abdurrahman Khan saw the  
agreement as a temporary forced concession and hoped for  
agreement as a temporary forced concession and hoped for  
an upsurge of the anti-British movement among the eastern  
an upsurge of the anti-British movement among the eastern  
Afghan tribes whose lands were to become part of the Brit-
Afghan tribes whose lands were to become part of the Brit
ish colonial domains under the agreement.  
ish colonial domains under the agreement.  


In actual fact the very first attempts by the British to  
In actual fact the very first attempts by the British to  
advance to the frontiers fixed between their domains in  
advance to the frontiers fixed between their domains in  
India and Afghanistan along the “Durand line” met with  
India and Afghanistan along the "Durand line" met with  
armed resistance on the part of many Afghan tribes. The up-
armed resistance on the part of many Afghan tribes. The up
risings were joined to a certain extent by the largest tribes  
risings were joined to a certain extent by the largest tribes  
in the border strip. The British insisted that Abdurrahman  
in the border strip. The British insisted that Abdurrahman  
Khan should send out a description of the agreed border-
Khan should send out a description of the agreed border
line to placate the population in those regions. The emir  
line to placate the population in those regions. The emir  
agreed to do so and informed the border tribes of the agree-
agreed to do so and informed the border tribes of the agree
ment with Durand. But at the same time his secret agents  
ment with Durand. But at the same time his secret agents  
continued to operate in the border regions which were to be  
continued to operate in the border regions which were to be  
joined to British possessions. Local mullahs who tumed for  
joined to British possessions. Local mullahs who tumed for  
help and instructions to Kabul as before, carried on anti-
help and instructions to Kabul as before, carried on anti
British propaganda under Muslim slogans. But this time the  
British propaganda under Muslim slogans. But this time the  
emir maintained ties with those taking part in the struggle  
emir maintained ties with those taking part in the struggle  
Line 7,159: Line 7,159:
advice and instructions of the Afghan emir not on behalf  
advice and instructions of the Afghan emir not on behalf  
of the government but on their own behalf. Simultaneously,  
of the government but on their own behalf. Simultaneously,  
Abdurrahman Khan attempted to influence the British p ol-
Abdurrahman Khan attempted to influence the British p ol
icy-makers and public opinion in Britain by “‘private” let-
icy-makers and public opinion in Britain by "‘private" let
ters to individuals.  
ters to individuals.  


The complications that arose in 1894 during the delimi-
The complications that arose in 1894 during the delimi
tation in the Momand lands developed into a new crisis  
tation in the Momand lands developed into a new crisis  
between Afghanistan and Britain early in 1895 around the  
between Afghanistan and Britain early in 1895 around the  
events in Chitral. The British colonial policy-makers speed-
events in Chitral. The British colonial policy-makers speed
ed up the planned offensive operations in the northern  
ed up the planned offensive operations in the northern  
part of the strip populated by the easter Afghan tribes in a bid to establish their domination there and assume complete control over Chitral and then to dictate their  
part of the strip populated by the easter Afghan tribes in a bid to establish their domination there and assume complete control over Chitral and then to dictate their  
own delimitation terms in the north to the intractable  
own delimitation terms in the north to the intractable  
Abdurrahman Khan. The British authorities’ decision to  
Abdurrahman Khan. The British authorities’ decision to  
go over to active offensive operations in the north was fol-
go over to active offensive operations in the north was fol
lowed by their setting up of the Dir, Swat and Chitral Agen-
lowed by their setting up of the Dir, Swat and Chitral Agen
cy in 1895. That administrative and political measure,  
cy in 1895. That administrative and political measure,  
which was an important step in the history of British colen-
which was an important step in the history of British colen
ial aggrandizement along the north-westem border of  
ial aggrandizement along the north-westem border of  
British India, was regarded by the last governor-general of  
British India, was regarded by the last governor-general of  
India’s north-westem border province as more significant  
India’s north-westem border province as more significant  
than, for instance, the occupation of Quetta and the crea-
than, for instance, the occupation of Quetta and the crea
tion of the province of British Baluchistan.53 Just as be-
tion of the province of British Baluchistan.53 Just as be
fore, the British colonialists justified the new expansion by  
fore, the British colonialists justified the new expansion by  
the need for defence against a non-existent Russian threat.  
the need for defence against a non-existent Russian threat.  
Line 7,195: Line 7,195:
seized by Nizam al-Mulk who had sritish leanings. Enjoying  
seized by Nizam al-Mulk who had sritish leanings. Enjoying  
no support among the population, he sought the aid of his  
no support among the population, he sought the aid of his  
patrons, asking them to establish a permanent British mis-
patrons, asking them to establish a permanent British mis
sion in Chitral. On January 1, 1895, Nizam al-Mulk was  
sion in Chitral. On January 1, 1895, Nizam al-Mulk was  
killed. His death was followed by a struggle for power. The  
killed. His death was followed by a struggle for power. The  
Line 7,203: Line 7,203:
out on the expedition, a proclamation was issued to the effect  
out on the expedition, a proclamation was issued to the effect  
that the British govemment had no intention of violating  
that the British govemment had no intention of violating  
the tribes” independence. Although the British managed to  
the tribes" independence. Although the British managed to  
win the maliks (elders) of some tribes over to their side,  
win the maliks (elders) of some tribes over to their side,  
detachments of the mountain tribes occupied the major  
detachments of the mountain tribes occupied the major  
Line 7,214: Line 7,214:
of Afghanistan at the end of the 19th century, ensuing from  
of Afghanistan at the end of the 19th century, ensuing from  
contradictions between the British and the: Russians was the  
contradictions between the British and the: Russians was the  
‘Pamirs issue’. The clash of interests between tsarist Rus-
‘Pamirs issue’. The clash of interests between tsarist Rus
sia and Britain over the Pamirs became most acute in the  
sia and Britain over the Pamirs became most acute in the  
late 188Gs and early 1890s and was for 4 few years central  
late 188Gs and early 1890s and was for 4 few years central  
to the Anglo-Russian rivalry in Central Asia. The Pamirs  
to the Anglo-Russian rivalry in Central Asia. The Pamirs  
border issues between Britain and Russia were resolved by  
border issues between Britain and Russia were resolved by  
diplomatic means on February 27, 1894, when the govern-
diplomatic means on February 27, 1894, when the govern
ments of both countries approved the borderline and de-
ments of both countries approved the borderline and de
fined the task of the mixed demarcation commission. In  
fined the task of the mixed demarcation commission. In  
particular, the transfer of the Wakhan Corridor to the  
particular, the transfer of the Wakhan Corridor to the  
Afghan emir was decided.  
Afghan emir was decided.  


In July 1895 the members of the demarcation commis-
In July 1895 the members of the demarcation commis
sions arrived in the Pamirs where they met with represen-
sions arrived in the Pamirs where they met with represen
tatives of Afghanistan. At the talks that followed the si-
tatives of Afghanistan. At the talks that followed the si
des signed a document on locating demarcation signs. The  
des signed a document on locating demarcation signs. The  
official Afghan sources say that the country’s representa-
official Afghan sources say that the country’s representa
tives, who regarded the work of the commissions with cau-
tives, who regarded the work of the commissions with cau
tion, refused to sign the document until relevant instruc-
tion, refused to sign the document until relevant instruc
tions had been received from the emir. Late in August 1895  
tions had been received from the emir. Late in August 1895  
the demarcation work in the east Pamirs was completed.  
the demarcation work in the east Pamirs was completed.  
After that, the frontiers in Shugnan were specified, ‘and  
After that, the frontiers in Shugnan were specified, ‘and  
all that is located to the south of the border went to Afgha-
all that is located to the south of the border went to Afgha
nistan and the area that lies to the north went to Russia”.  
nistan and the area that lies to the north went to Russia".  
On September 11, 1895, the mixed commission signed a  
On September 11, 1895, the mixed commission signed a  
demarcation map.54 ;  
demarcation map.54 ;  


In the summer of 1895, when the Pamir issue had been,  
In the summer of 1895, when the Pamir issue had been,  
on the whole, resolved, Abdurrahman Khan decided to con-
on the whole, resolved, Abdurrahman Khan decided to con
quer Kafiristan. The conquest of that territory was for the  
quer Kafiristan. The conquest of that territory was for the  
most part completed in 1896.55 The population was con-
most part completed in 1896.55 The population was con
verted to Islam and taxed. Soldiers were billeted and  
verted to Islam and taxed. Soldiers were billeted and  
mullahs were sent there. In the remote regions the opposi-
mullahs were sent there. In the remote regions the opposi
tion to the new order and new religion was more pronounced,  
tion to the new order and new religion was more pronounced,  
and old traditions proved more tenacious. A few thous-
and old traditions proved more tenacious. A few thous
and people fled to Chitral. Many were resettled in various  
and people fled to Chitral. Many were resettled in various  
regions of Afghanistan where they remained for a lon  
regions of Afghanistan where they remained for a lon  
time.56 After the Kafirs were converted to Islam, that fend  
time.56 After the Kafirs were converted to Islam, that fend  
was renamed Nuristan (‘‘the land of light’, meaning the  
was renamed Nuristan (‘‘the land of light’, meaning the  
light of Islamic religion). The conquest heightened the pres-
light of Islamic religion). The conquest heightened the pres
tige of Abdurrahman Khan among the Muslim population  
tige of Abdurrahman Khan among the Muslim population  
of Afghanistan and outside it. As a “warrior for faith” he acquired new big opportunities to uphold his repute as a Muslim sovereign, a zealous champion of true religion.  
of Afghanistan and outside it. As a "warrior for faith" he acquired new big opportunities to uphold his repute as a Muslim sovereign, a zealous champion of true religion.  
In 1896, he was given a new honorary title—‘‘ziya al-millat  
In 1896, he was given a new honorary title—‘‘ziya al-millat  
wa-d-din” (‘“‘the light of the nation and religion”).
wa-d-din" (‘"‘the light of the nation and religion").


After the settlement of the Pamirs issue and the con-
After the settlement of the Pamirs issue and the con
quest of the land of the Kafirs, Afghanistan’s modem fron-
quest of the land of the Kafirs, Afghanistan’s modem fron
tiers were finally fixed. By that time, a significant period  
tiers were finally fixed. By that time, a significant period  
in the country’s history, whose main element was thestreng-
in the country’s history, whose main element was thestreng
thening of the emir’s power and the centralisation of the  
thening of the emir’s power and the centralisation of the  
state, ended in the stabilisation of the absolute monarchy  
state, ended in the stabilisation of the absolute monarchy  
Line 7,269: Line 7,269:
In the 1878-1880 war against Britain the peoples of  
In the 1878-1880 war against Britain the peoples of  
Afghanistan suffered heavy losses, which were followed by  
Afghanistan suffered heavy losses, which were followed by  
the destruction of the productive forces. The cities, han-
the destruction of the productive forces. The cities, han
dicrafts and trade, and major oases suffered a good deal.  
dicrafts and trade, and major oases suffered a good deal.  
Meanwhile, the country’s development, hampered by co-
Meanwhile, the country’s development, hampered by co
lonialist oppression and forced isolation from the outside  
lonialist oppression and forced isolation from the outside  
world, making it impossible for Afghanistan to cast off the  
world, making it impossible for Afghanistan to cast off the  
heavy burden of mediaeval survivals, proceeded in difficult  
heavy burden of mediaeval survivals, proceeded in difficult  
conditions. Afghanistan’s seclusion did, to some extent,  
conditions. Afghanistan’s seclusion did, to some extent,  
meet the interests of the domestic policy of Abdurrah-
meet the interests of the domestic policy of Abdurrah
man Khan who feared the emergence of new trends in the  
man Khan who feared the emergence of new trends in the  
feudal state which could shake his despotic rule. He delib-
feudal state which could shake his despotic rule. He delib
erately obstructed primarily the population’s ideological  
erately obstructed primarily the population’s ideological  
and cultural ties with the outside world, limiting the contacts  
and cultural ties with the outside world, limiting the contacts  
Line 7,284: Line 7,284:
who left the country without a special permit (rahdart)  
who left the country without a special permit (rahdart)  
risked death penalty. If someone failed to return to the  
risked death penalty. If someone failed to return to the  
country after a trip abroad, his relatives were impris-
country after a trip abroad, his relatives were impris
oned and one of them, who had been selected as a “hos-
oned and one of them, who had been selected as a "hos
tage”, was executed. Apprehensive of the penetration of  
tage", was executed. Apprehensive of the penetration of  
British imperialism into the country, the emir was stubborn-
British imperialism into the country, the emir was stubborn
ly opposed to the British plans for building railways in  
ly opposed to the British plans for building railways in  
Afghanistan. Only a Muslim could be Britain’s diplomatic  
Afghanistan. Only a Muslim could be Britain’s diplomatic  
representative in Kabul (for liaison with the viceroy of In-
representative in Kabul (for liaison with the viceroy of In
dia); and even he was kept under the close surveillance of  
dia); and even he was kept under the close surveillance of  
the Afghan police. The emir’s subjects, who were known to  
the Afghan police. The emir’s subjects, who were known to  
Line 7,296: Line 7,296:


At the turn of the century Afghanistan was literally a  
At the turn of the century Afghanistan was literally a  
“forbidden country’. Very few Europeans managed to visit  
"forbidden country’. Very few Europeans managed to visit  
it. Sometimes officials went there for a brief period, but  
it. Sometimes officials went there for a brief period, but  
each of them had to have special permission from Abdur-
each of them had to have special permission from Abdur
rahman Khan. Only a few foreign experts, primarily British,  
rahman Khan. Only a few foreign experts, primarily British,  
who had been invited by the emir himself and were  
who had been invited by the emir himself and were  
employed for the construction and servicing of an arms fac-
employed for the construction and servicing of an arms fac
tory were permitted to stay there for a longer period.  
tory were permitted to stay there for a longer period.  


Line 7,307: Line 7,307:
after he came to power, taking measures to improve the  
after he came to power, taking measures to improve the  
state apparatus and the administrative andpolice machinery,  
state apparatus and the administrative andpolice machinery,  
concentrating on organising secret police and a far-flung net-
concentrating on organising secret police and a far-flung net
work of secret agents. Reports by military commanders and  
work of secret agents. Reports by military commanders and  
officials were verified by the information sent over by sec-
officials were verified by the information sent over by sec
ret informants who reported on the fulfilment of the emir’s  
ret informants who reported on the fulfilment of the emir’s  
orders and instructions in the provinces, on deviations from  
orders and instructions in the provinces, on deviations from  
his directives, and also on cases of disorder, atrocities, cor-
his directives, and also on cases of disorder, atrocities, cor
ruption, bribery, or embezzlement.  
ruption, bribery, or embezzlement.  


Line 7,321: Line 7,321:


In the late 1880s and early 1890s Abdurrahman Khan  
In the late 1880s and early 1890s Abdurrahman Khan  
set up a ramified administrative and police apparatus, ensur-
set up a ramified administrative and police apparatus, ensur
ing a more regular inflow of taxes into the treasury. The  
ing a more regular inflow of taxes into the treasury. The  
class character of the emir’s domestic policy was manifest  
class character of the emir’s domestic policy was manifest  
in the ruthless suppression of popular uprisings, in which  
in the ruthless suppression of popular uprisings, in which  
the chief role was played by the peasants. Varying in char-
the chief role was played by the peasants. Varying in char
acter, the actions against the emir’s power became espe-
acter, the actions against the emir’s power became espe
cially extensive and reached a high degree of intensity in  
cially extensive and reached a high degree of intensity in  
the latter half of the 1880s and in the early 1890s.  
the latter half of the 1880s and in the early 1890s.  


To consolidate his position, especially in the early per-
To consolidate his position, especially in the early per
iod of his rule, Abdurrahman Khan styled himself a cham-
iod of his rule, Abdurrahman Khan styled himself a cham
pion of ordinary people’s interests and of the tax-payers’  
pion of ordinary people’s interests and of the tax-payers’  
rights, and a fighter against arbitrary requisitions. In 1882,  
rights, and a fighter against arbitrary requisitions. In 1882,  
Line 7,339: Line 7,339:
said, this money had been illegally extorted from them by  
said, this money had been illegally extorted from them by  
the former governor. Later, he frequently referred to this  
the former governor. Later, he frequently referred to this  
incident, as showing him to be a fair sovereign who was con- cerned with the needs of the people. Although one of the main aims of his domestic policy was to ensure the unfail-
incident, as showing him to be a fair sovereign who was concerned with the needs of the people. Although one of the main aims of his domestic policy was to ensure the unfail
ing inflow of taxes in the treasury, the-emir did, according  
ing inflow of taxes in the treasury, the-emir did, according  
to some sources, sometimes reduce taxes for certain sec-
to some sources, sometimes reduce taxes for certain sec
tions of the population and shared his tax revenues with  
tions of the population and shared his tax revenues with  
influential persons or groups of persons, including Muslim  
influential persons or groups of persons, including Muslim  
Line 7,356: Line 7,356:
Under Abdurrahman Khan substantial changes occurred  
Under Abdurrahman Khan substantial changes occurred  
in the position of the Afghan tribes, partly because the part  
in the position of the Afghan tribes, partly because the part  
played by the nomadic traders (povindas) in the transpor-
played by the nomadic traders (povindas) in the transpor
tation of goods was diminished after the British built  
tation of goods was diminished after the British built  
railroads to the Khyber and Bolan mountain passes, and the  
railroads to the Khyber and Bolan mountain passes, and the  
Line 7,368: Line 7,368:
were predominant there. The policy pursued by the emir  
were predominant there. The policy pursued by the emir  
somewhat heightened the role of the national merchants  
somewhat heightened the role of the national merchants  
in the country’s trade. He tried to unify weights and measu-
in the country’s trade. He tried to unify weights and measu
res and to introduce a single monetary system. A mint was  
res and to introduce a single monetary system. A mint was  
built in Kabul where silver and copper coins were minted by  
built in Kabul where silver and copper coins were minted by  
machines. These measures did above all benefit the mer-
machines. These measures did above all benefit the mer
chants and the feudal lords engaged in trade.  
chants and the feudal lords engaged in trade.  


On the whole, Abdurrahman Khan’s domestic policy met  
On the whole, Abdurrahman Khan’s domestic policy met  
the interests of that part of the feudal class which, as dis-
the interests of that part of the feudal class which, as dis
ge ae sere (ule ee on the strength of  
ge ae sere (ule ee on the strength of  
in constant need of Seen cae aan in, bir  
in constant need of Seen cae aan in, bir  
ratusol Gidlesercca g centralised state with an appa-
ratusol Gidlesercca g centralised state with an appa
tie eagles an eae to ensure domination over  
tie eagles an eae to ensure domination over  
included military commanders, courtiers ast sons  
included military commanders, courtiers ast sons  
iwiied landiece” ate er ers, courtiers, and officials who granted to them or their ancestors for the services rendered.
iwiied landiece" ate er ers, courtiers, and officials who granted to them or their ancestors for the services rendered.


In foreign policy the emir sought to achieve the inde-
In foreign policy the emir sought to achieve the inde
pendence of his state by taking advantage of Anglo-Russlan  
pendence of his state by taking advantage of Anglo-Russlan  
contradictions. Diverting the emir’s attention from the  
contradictions. Diverting the emir’s attention from the  
struggle for the Afghan-populated border regions and hop-
struggle for the Afghan-populated border regions and hop
ing to use Afghanistan in the event of a war with tsarist  
ing to use Afghanistan in the event of a war with tsarist  
Russia, Britain encouraged him to expand his land posses-
Russia, Britain encouraged him to expand his land posses
sions in the north, provided him with arms, helped to build  
sions in the north, provided him with arms, helped to build  
an arsenal in Kabul and increased its subsidies to him, But  
an arsenal in Kabul and increased its subsidies to him, But  
Line 7,397: Line 7,397:
When speaking about Abdurrahman Khan as a historical  
When speaking about Abdurrahman Khan as a historical  
figure, ruler and person, it is noteworthy that his activities  
figure, ruler and person, it is noteworthy that his activities  
were contradictory. He was an extremely cruel ruler, es-
were contradictory. He was an extremely cruel ruler, es
pecially in the last years of his life, remembered in Afgha-
pecially in the last years of his life, remembered in Afgha
nistan as a merciless tyrant. The outstanding Soviet research-
nistan as a merciless tyrant. The outstanding Soviet research
er I. M. Reisner, noting that British aid “came in handy  
er I. M. Reisner, noting that British aid "came in handy  
for the energetic emir” during the final subjugation of the  
for the energetic emir" during the final subjugation of the  
outlying regions through ‘‘a policy of drastic centralisa-
outlying regions through ‘‘a policy of drastic centralisa
tion”, wrote the following about the activities of Abdurrah-
tion", wrote the following about the activities of Abdurrah
man Khan:  
man Khan:  


“Taking advantage of his position as the only intermed-
"Taking advantage of his position as the only intermed
iary between Afghanistan and the outside world and hav-
iary between Afghanistan and the outside world and hav
ing superiority in military equipment and a constant in-
ing superiority in military equipment and a constant in
flow of financial aid across the Indian border, the Kabul  
flow of financial aid across the Indian border, the Kabul  
emir decided to rise to the position of an Afghan sovereign:  
emir decided to rise to the position of an Afghan sovereign:  
the feudal chief of independent tribes wished to become a  
the feudal chief of independent tribes wished to become a  
true monarch. The absence of large cities and the poorly  
true monarch. The absence of large cities and the poorly  
developed trading capital deprived foun Afghan absolu-
developed trading capital deprived foun Afghan absolu
tism of the enlightenment aspect and lessened its historical  
tism of the enlightenment aspect and lessened its historical  
role. Another obstacle was the extremely motley composi-
role. Another obstacle was the extremely motley composi
tion of the various groups of the population making up  
tion of the various groups of the population making up  
Afghanistan.Referring to Abdurrahman Khan’s autobio-
Afghanistan." Referring to Abdurrahman Khan’s autobio
graphy, Reisner writes that the emir “went out of his way  
graphy, Reisner writes that the emir "went out of his way  
to present his activities in the manner of the best examples  
to present his activities in the manner of the best examples  
of 18th-century Europe’. But in actual fact he was “not
of 18th-century Europe’. But in actual fact he was "not
so much a profound reformer as he was a skilful military  
so much a profound reformer as he was a skilful military  
commander’”’.5  
commander’"’.5  


The measures effected by the emir facilitated the growth  
The measures effected by the emir facilitated the growth  
Line 7,430: Line 7,430:


Many aspects of his activities provided conditions for  
Many aspects of his activities provided conditions for  
future development. For instance, when modern machine-
future development. For instance, when modern machine
tools and mechanisms were installed at the Mashin-kha-
tools and mechanisms were installed at the Mashin-kha
na factory in Kabul, he had to employ and train the first  
na factory in Kabul, he had to employ and train the first  
industrial workers. Although these workers could not yet  
industrial workers. Although these workers could not yet  
be regarded as hired labour, for they were forced to work,  
be regarded as hired labour, for they were forced to work,  
and their status was similar to that of the serfs at the ma-
and their status was similar to that of the serfs at the ma
nufactories of pre-reform Russia rather than workers at  
nufactories of pre-reform Russia rather than workers at  
capitalist-type enterprises.  
capitalist-type enterprises.  


But the recognition of the objective historical conse-
But the recognition of the objective historical conse
quences of such aspects of Abdurrahman Khan’s activi-
quences of such aspects of Abdurrahman Khan’s activi
ties as the centralisation of the state and the strengthen-
ties as the centralisation of the state and the strengthen
ing of the emir’s power, achieved by draconian measures,  
ing of the emir’s power, achieved by draconian measures,  
by no means gives reasons for idealising him or his despo-
by no means gives reasons for idealising him or his despo
tic regime. The above-mentioned facts about him clearly  
tic regime. The above-mentioned facts about him clearly  
show that his foreign and domestic policies were extremely  
show that his foreign and domestic policies were extremely  
Line 7,451: Line 7,451:
At the outset of the 20th century Afghanistan was a  
At the outset of the 20th century Afghanistan was a  
semi-dependent (semi-colonial) state. When describing the  
semi-dependent (semi-colonial) state. When describing the  
position of such states, Lenin wrote: “‘The struggle for these  
position of such states, Lenin wrote: "‘The struggle for these  
semi-dependent countries should have become particular-
semi-dependent countries should have become particular
4 bitter in the epoch of finance capital when the rest of  
4 bitter in the epoch of finance capital when the rest of  
the world has already been divided up.’’5 8  
the world has already been divided up.’’5 8  
Line 7,461: Line 7,461:
through foreign trade, Afghanistan was not turned into an  
through foreign trade, Afghanistan was not turned into an  
object of the export of capital. It was not enmeshed in  
object of the export of capital. It was not enmeshed in  
foreign loans, and no foreign concessions existed on its ter-
foreign loans, and no foreign concessions existed on its ter
ritory. Afghanistan entered the 20th century as a country  
ritory. Afghanistan entered the 20th century as a country  
retaining independence in domestic affairs, but whose  
retaining independence in domestic affairs, but whose  
sovereignty was limited by prohibitions in the foreign polli-
sovereignty was limited by prohibitions in the foreign polli
cy sphere. It was still isolated from the world, an under-
cy sphere. It was still isolated from the world, an under
developed country with neither railways nor roads. Just as  
developed country with neither railways nor roads. Just as  
before, agriculture—crop growing and pasture livestock breed- ing—was the basic economic activity for the majority of the population. According to the merchants that were ar-
before, agriculture—crop growing and pasture livestock breeding—was the basic economic activity for the majority of the population. According to the merchants that were ar
riving in Central Asia from Afghanistan, the most fertile  
riving in Central Asia from Afghanistan, the most fertile  
regions “supplying farm produce not only to the local popu-
regions "supplying farm produce not only to the local popu
lation but also capable of exporting the surplus” were  
lation but also capable of exporting the surplus" were  
Badakhshan, Qunduz, Charvilayet, Herat, Farah, Qanda-
Badakhshan, Qunduz, Charvilayet, Herat, Farah, Qanda
har with Ghazni and the valley along the middle reaches of  
har with Ghazni and the valley along the middle reaches of  
the Kabul river.* Bread was often in short supply in the  
the Kabul river.* Bread was often in short supply in the  
Line 7,489: Line 7,489:
some regions it was the only possible way of cultivation.  
some regions it was the only possible way of cultivation.  
The water of rivers and springs was used for irrigation. In  
The water of rivers and springs was used for irrigation. In  
some regions kyariz irrigation was practised. The main agri-
some regions kyariz irrigation was practised. The main agri
cultural area in the country in the early 20th century was  
cultural area in the country in the early 20th century was  
Afghan Turkestan where mainly grain crops were grown on  
Afghan Turkestan where mainly grain crops were grown on  
Line 7,506: Line 7,506:
along the river banks with a rather thin layer of rocky soil  
along the river banks with a rather thin layer of rocky soil  
facilitated fruit growing. On the outskirts of Qandahar  
facilitated fruit growing. On the outskirts of Qandahar  
fruit and vegetable growing was developing apace. Pome-
fruit and vegetable growing was developing apace. Pome
granate groves stretched along the Arghandab.  
granate groves stretched along the Arghandab.  


Line 7,517: Line 7,517:
accumulated by the local farmers over the ages helped to  
accumulated by the local farmers over the ages helped to  
introduce some improvements into farming production.  
introduce some improvements into farming production.  
Various irrigation methods were adapted to the local con-
Various irrigation methods were adapted to the local con
ditions, the fields were well prepared for sowing, the soil  
ditions, the fields were well prepared for sowing, the soil  
was enriched by natural fertilisers, and proper care was  
was enriched by natural fertilisers, and proper care was  
taken of the plants.  
taken of the plants.  


But, on the whole, because of the unfavourable histori-
But, on the whole, because of the unfavourable histori
cal conditions at the beginning of the 20th century, agri-
cal conditions at the beginning of the 20th century, agri
culture in Afghanistan was based on manual labour and its  
culture in Afghanistan was based on manual labour and its  
output was low. Its development was primarily hampered  
output was low. Its development was primarily hampered  
by socio-economic conditions. Feudal relations were pre-
by socio-economic conditions. Feudal relations were pre
served and natural and semi-natural forms of agriculture pre-
served and natural and semi-natural forms of agriculture pre
vailed.  
vailed.  


At the turn of the century cotton growing was develop-
At the turn of the century cotton growing was develop
ing at a faster rate in the north (and on a smaller scale at  
ing at a faster rate in the north (and on a smaller scale at  
the Qandahar oasis) due to the increased cotton exports to  
the Qandahar oasis) due to the increased cotton exports to  
India and Or det to Russia. Other industrial crops cul-
India and Or det to Russia. Other industrial crops cul
tivated in the country included oil-bearing plants, mostly  
tivated in the country included oil-bearing plants, mostly  
flax and sesame (predominantly in the north); in some areas  
flax and sesame (predominantly in the north); in some areas  
Line 7,547: Line 7,547:
the growth of livestock breeding among the local Hazaras and  
the growth of livestock breeding among the local Hazaras and  
increased the inflow of nomads during seasonal migration.  
increased the inflow of nomads during seasonal migration.  
’ At the beginning of the 20th century nomad cattle breed-
’ At the beginning of the 20th century nomad cattle breed
ing still remained the main section of the economy in some  
ing still remained the main section of the economy in some  
large Afghan tribes. Among the Durrani tribes the nomad  
large Afghan tribes. Among the Durrani tribes the nomad  
Line 7,557: Line 7,557:
The nomads’ herds consisted mostly of sheep. The wool  
The nomads’ herds consisted mostly of sheep. The wool  
of white fat-rumped sheep, raised by the Ghilzais, was of  
of white fat-rumped sheep, raised by the Ghilzais, was of  
very high quality. The Afghans also bred camels (specifi-
very high quality. The Afghans also bred camels (specifi
cally in the Qandahar region), donkeys, zebu, and buffa-
cally in the Qandahar region), donkeys, zebu, and buffa
loes. Horse breeding was relatively poorly developed. In  
loes. Horse breeding was relatively poorly developed. In  
Hazarajat, whose population lived a setiled way of life for  
Hazarajat, whose population lived a setiled way of life for  
the most part, cattle were raised and fed on distant pas-
the most part, cattle were raised and fed on distant pas
tures, and livestock breeding was of ,a subsidiary nature.  
tures, and livestock breeding was of ,a subsidiary nature.  
Using the pastures on the mountain slopes, many families  
Using the pastures on the mountain slopes, many families  
Line 7,567: Line 7,567:
their settlements for a summer season and return home in  
their settlements for a summer season and return home in  
autumn for harvesting. Like Afghans, the Hazara livestock  
autumn for harvesting. Like Afghans, the Hazara livestock  
breeders were mainly occupied with sheep and goat breed-
breeders were mainly occupied with sheep and goat breed
ing.  
ing.  
From the end of the 19th century in the areas populated  
From the end of the 19th century in the areas populated  
Line 7,574: Line 7,574:
with the growth of astrakhan exports. :  
with the growth of astrakhan exports. :  


Cattle breeding was of great significance among the Jam-
Cattle breeding was of great significance among the Jam
shidis, Firuzkukhs, Taimanis and also part of the Uzbeks.  
shidis, Firuzkukhs, Taimanis and also part of the Uzbeks.  
Among the Tajiks it was nearly always subsidiary.  
Among the Tajiks it was nearly always subsidiary.  
Line 7,580: Line 7,580:
Many of the local industries consisted in processing  
Many of the local industries consisted in processing  
cattle-breeding products. While the manufacture of cotton  
cattle-breeding products. While the manufacture of cotton  
fabric output was small, and sheep breeding was given pri-
fabric output was small, and sheep breeding was given pri
mary attention, the domestic manufacture of various wool-
mary attention, the domestic manufacture of various wool
len articles became widespread in Afghanistan. Wool was  
len articles became widespread in Afghanistan. Wool was  
used for making cloth, felt, carpets and many other house-
used for making cloth, felt, carpets and many other house
hold items. Afghan nomads busied themselves with making  
hold items. Afghan nomads busied themselves with making  
coarse woollen cloth and blankets, with carpet weaving,  
coarse woollen cloth and blankets, with carpet weaving,  
feltmaking, knitting stockings, weaving lassos, etc. The Ha-
feltmaking, knitting stockings, weaving lassos, etc. The Ha
zajarat people were famous for their carpets and high-qual-
zajarat people were famous for their carpets and high-qual
ity woollen cloth. The majority of the population in Afgha-
ity woollen cloth. The majority of the population in Afgha
nistan wore clothing made from hand-woven Hazara cloth.  
nistan wore clothing made from hand-woven Hazara cloth.  
The people in the mountainous Tajik regions produced wool-
The people in the mountainous Tajik regions produced wool
len cloth used for making robes and carpets. The Uzbeks  
len cloth used for making robes and carpets. The Uzbeks  
manufactured coarse woollen cloth, carpets and_ bags.  
manufactured coarse woollen cloth, carpets and_ bags.  
Qandahar was famous for its felt outdoor clothing. Al-
Qandahar was famous for its felt outdoor clothing. Al
though the processing of hides and pelts, the curing and  
though the processing of hides and pelts, the curing and  
making of leather articles were done within the framework  
making of leather articles were done within the framework  
Line 7,600: Line 7,600:


The manufacture of cotton fabrics was less developed in Afghanistan. Homespun fabric (karbas) was produced on a large scale, specifically in the Tajik mountain regions. It was  
The manufacture of cotton fabrics was less developed in Afghanistan. Homespun fabric (karbas) was produced on a large scale, specifically in the Tajik mountain regions. It was  
used only by the poorest sections of the population. Uz-
used only by the poorest sections of the population. Uz
bek weavers made simple but hard-wearing cotton fabric  
bek weavers made simple but hard-wearing cotton fabric  
(alacha and mata). In some parts of the country the domes-
(alacha and mata). In some parts of the country the domes
tic silk industry existed. The centre of domestic crafts in  
tic silk industry existed. The centre of domestic crafts in  
Afghanistan was Kabul, followed by Qandahar.  
Afghanistan was Kabul, followed by Qandahar.  


The traditions of medieval guild production played a  
The traditions of medieval guild production played a  
considerable part in the life of the craftsmen. City crafts-
considerable part in the life of the craftsmen. City crafts
men of a common trade occupied whole districts or rows  
men of a common trade occupied whole districts or rows  
in a bazaar. In Qandahar, for instance, north of the Herat  
in a bazaar. In Qandahar, for instance, north of the Herat  
bazaar, there lived trunk makers and opposite to them tai-
bazaar, there lived trunk makers and opposite to them tai
lors and shoemakers. There was a bazaar in Kabul where  
lors and shoemakers. There was a bazaar in Kabul where  
copper household articles were not only sold but made.  
copper household articles were not only sold but made.  
The best craftsmen in Kabul were coppersmiths and also  
The best craftsmen in Kabul were coppersmiths and also  
wood carvers and jewellers. The main handicrafts in Quan-
wood carvers and jewellers. The main handicrafts in Quan
dahar were the making of felt clothes and other felt artic-
dahar were the making of felt clothes and other felt artic
les and silk processing. Qandahar craftsmen were famous for  
les and silk processing. Qandahar craftsmen were famous for  
embroidering felt clothes with silk, mostly for the rich.  
embroidering felt clothes with silk, mostly for the rich.  
Line 7,626: Line 7,626:
rooms, below the bazaar shops.  
rooms, below the bazaar shops.  


Early in the 20th century the economic and cultural de-
Early in the 20th century the economic and cultural de
velopment of Afghanistan was going ahead in difficult con-
velopment of Afghanistan was going ahead in difficult con
ditions. The political situation grew more stable after the  
ditions. The political situation grew more stable after the  
normalisation of the situation on the border with Russia.  
normalisation of the situation on the border with Russia.  
But, at the same time, after the 1893 agreement with Brit-
But, at the same time, after the 1893 agreement with Brit
ain the border with British India became a seat of incessant  
ain the border with British India became a seat of incessant  
conflicts. Military operations against the British invaders  
conflicts. Military operations against the British invaders  
hardly ever ended in the lands of the border Afghan (Pash-
hardly ever ended in the lands of the border Afghan (Pash
tun) tribes and disrupted the traditional commercial ties  
tun) tribes and disrupted the traditional commercial ties  
with India, although that country was the biggest part-
with India, although that country was the biggest part
ner in Afghanistan’s foreign trade.  
ner in Afghanistan’s foreign trade.  


Line 7,641: Line 7,641:
made the emir broaden contacts with Russia, even if only in  
made the emir broaden contacts with Russia, even if only in  
trade, the only form of relations that would not evoke an  
trade, the only form of relations that would not evoke an  
immediate conflict with Britain. In 1898-1900, Abdurrah-
immediate conflict with Britain. In 1898-1900, Abdurrah
man Khan tended more than before to expand trade with  
man Khan tended more than before to expand trade with  
Russia and Bokhara. For that reason, he reduced customs duties on imports of Russian sugar and textiles.61 The Rus- sian authorities and trade and industrial firms, for their part,  
Russia and Bokhara. For that reason, he reduced customs duties on imports of Russian sugar and textiles.61 The Russian authorities and trade and industrial firms, for their part,  
rendered considerable assistance in promoting the pattici-
rendered considerable assistance in promoting the pattici
pation of Afghans in trade between Russia and Afghanis-
pation of Afghans in trade between Russia and Afghanis
tan.  
tan.  


Line 7,654: Line 7,654:
death of a ruler. Abdurrahman Khan handed down to him  
death of a ruler. Abdurrahman Khan handed down to him  
the leadership of the major departments and granted him  
the leadership of the major departments and granted him  
the right to remove and appoint civilian and military offi-
the right to remove and appoint civilian and military offi
cials, so that, once on the throne, Habibullah Khan could  
cials, so that, once on the throne, Habibullah Khan could  
have the support of the army and immediately take power  
have the support of the army and immediately take power  
Line 7,664: Line 7,664:
emir and received an oath of allegiance from the members  
emir and received an oath of allegiance from the members  
of the ruling family and also from other influential persons  
of the ruling family and also from other influential persons  
and “ordinary men” who were present in Kabul. Habibullah  
and "ordinary men" who were present in Kabul. Habibullah  
Khan informed the viceroy of India of his ascension to the  
Khan informed the viceroy of India of his ascension to the  
throne in a letter, in which he declared his intention to fol-
throne in a letter, in which he declared his intention to fol
low in his father’s footsteps and promised to be “the friend  
low in his father’s footsteps and promised to be "the friend  
of his friends” and never to side with his enemies. The vice  
of his friends" and never to side with his enemies. The vice  
roy of India, Lord Curzon, immediately tried to wring  
roy of India, Lord Curzon, immediately tried to wring  
from the new emir additional concessions limiting the  
from the new emir additional concessions limiting the  
country’s sovereignty still more. Using the exchange of let  
country’s sovereignty still more. Using the exchange of let  
ters on the revision of the Anglo-Afghan agreements, which  
ters on the revision of the Anglo-Afghan agreements, which  
had just started, Curzon thought it advantageous to inter-
had just started, Curzon thought it advantageous to inter
pret them as treaties concluded personally with Abdur-
pret them as treaties concluded personally with Abdur
rahman Khan which therefore had to be resumed after his  
rahman Khan which therefore had to be resumed after his  
death. He informed Habibullah Khan that they could be  
death. He informed Habibullah Khan that they could be  
Line 7,691: Line 7,691:
followed up by famine. Then a cholera epidemic broke out.  
followed up by famine. Then a cholera epidemic broke out.  
In 1903, the Durranis-and the Ghilzais protested against  
In 1903, the Durranis-and the Ghilzais protested against  
the obligation to provide one soldier from every eight per-
the obligation to provide one soldier from every eight per
sons capable of carrying weapons. The emir made some  
sons capable of carrying weapons. The emir made some  
concessions for the Afghan tribes.  
concessions for the Afghan tribes.  
Line 7,701: Line 7,701:
prevent Afghanistan from breaking out of isolation. All  
prevent Afghanistan from breaking out of isolation. All  
attempts to establish direct Russo-Afghan contacts between  
attempts to establish direct Russo-Afghan contacts between  
the frontier authorities and to exchange trade represen-
the frontier authorities and to exchange trade represen
tatives between Russia and Afghanistan proved futile.  
tatives between Russia and Afghanistan proved futile.  


The British authorities conducted military preparations,  
The British authorities conducted military preparations,  
building up and reorganising the colonial army and con-
building up and reorganising the colonial army and con
structing railways in North India, and were getting ready to  
structing railways in North India, and were getting ready to  
continue their construction in Afghanistan in the event of  
continue their construction in Afghanistan in the event of  
Line 7,711: Line 7,711:
that in April 1904 the British negotiated with Habibullah  
that in April 1904 the British negotiated with Habibullah  


,Khan the “ceding” of Kunar to Britain for the construc-
,Khan the "ceding" of Kunar to Britain for the construc
tion of a railway along the Kunar river up to the Russian  
tion of a railway along the Kunar river up to the Russian  
frontier.63 ;  
frontier.63 ;  
Line 7,717: Line 7,717:
The international situation at the time (the setbacks  
The international situation at the time (the setbacks  
experienced by tsarist Russia in the war against Japan)  
experienced by tsarist Russia in the war against Japan)  
made it easier for British diplomacy to conduct large-
made it easier for British diplomacy to conduct large
scale activities in the Middle East. Trying to exploit that  
scale activities in the Middle East. Trying to exploit that  
situation for bolstering up their positions in Afghanistan,  
situation for bolstering up their positions in Afghanistan,  
the British sent a mission led by Sir Louis Dane to Kabul  
the British sent a mission led by Sir Louis Dane to Kabul  
for the purpose of signing a new treaty. Dane was instruct-
for the purpose of signing a new treaty. Dane was instruct
ed to ensure the preservation of complete control over  
ed to ensure the preservation of complete control over  
Afghanistan’s foreign policy by the British government and  
Afghanistan’s foreign policy by the British government and  
obtain the emir’s consent to construct railways in his terri-
obtain the emir’s consent to construct railways in his terri
tory linking his domains with India. According to the press,  
tory linking his domains with India. According to the press,  
Dane’s mission also raised the question of extending Indian  
Dane’s mission also raised the question of extending Indian  
Line 7,731: Line 7,731:
demanded replacement of the agent from among Indian  
demanded replacement of the agent from among Indian  
Muslims at the court by an official embassy as well. There  
Muslims at the court by an official embassy as well. There  
are reasons to believe that Dane tried to get the emir’s permission for British military engineers to arrive in the count- ry to supervise the building of fortifications along the  
are reasons to believe that Dane tried to get the emir’s permission for British military engineers to arrive in the country to supervise the building of fortifications along the  
Afghan-Russian border.  
Afghan-Russian border.  


Line 7,740: Line 7,740:
to Kabul a draft treaty elaborated by Curzon. Habibullah  
to Kabul a draft treaty elaborated by Curzon. Habibullah  
Khan rejected it and expressed his intense dissatisfaction  
Khan rejected it and expressed his intense dissatisfaction  
with the article providing for the limitation of arms delive-
with the article providing for the limitation of arms delive
ries to Afghanistan.  
ries to Afghanistan.  


The talks, which lasted from the end of 1904 till March  
The talks, which lasted from the end of 1904 till March  
1905, often ran into an impasse. On January 1, 1905, Habi-
1905, often ran into an impasse. On January 1, 1905, Habi
bullah Khan proposed his own draft treaty providing merely  
bullah Khan proposed his own draft treaty providing merely  
for extending the term of the agreements, signed previous-
for extending the term of the agreements, signed previous
ly by Abdurrahman Khan, till the end of his rule. The  
ly by Abdurrahman Khan, till the end of his rule. The  
draft was rejected by the colonial authorities of India. But  
draft was rejected by the colonial authorities of India. But  
Line 7,755: Line 7,755:
21, 1905.  
21, 1905.  


Habibullah Khan’s pride was satisfied to a certain ex-
Habibullah Khan’s pride was satisfied to a certain ex
tent by the recognition of his royal title. In the treaty he  
tent by the recognition of his royal title. In the treaty he  
was addressed as His Majesty Siraj al-Millat-Wa-d-Din Emir  
was addressed as His Majesty Siraj al-Millat-Wa-d-Din Emir  
Habibullah Khan, the Independent King of the Afghan  
Habibullah Khan, the Independent King of the Afghan  
State. The world “independent” did not of course mean  
State. The world "independent" did not of course mean  
that the British government had granted genuine indepen-
that the British government had granted genuine indepen
dence to Afghanistan, which was still deprived of the basic  
dence to Afghanistan, which was still deprived of the basic  
right of a sovereign state—the right to have independent  
right of a sovereign state—the right to have independent  
diplomatic contacts with other countries. The acceptance  
diplomatic contacts with other countries. The acceptance  
by Habibullah Khan of the obligations entered into with  
by Habibullah Khan of the obligations entered into with  
Britain by his father maintained British control over Afgha-
Britain by his father maintained British control over Afgha
nistan’s foreign policy. The new emir was rewarded by re-
nistan’s foreign policy. The new emir was rewarded by re
ceiving the same subsidy that had been granted to Abdur-
ceiving the same subsidy that had been granted to Abdur
rahman Khan.  
rahman Khan.  


Early in 1907, having accepted the invitation of viceroy  
Early in 1907, having accepted the invitation of viceroy  
Minto, Habibullah Khan made a trip to India. The Anglo-In-
Minto, Habibullah Khan made a trip to India. The Anglo-In
dian colonial authorities gave a spectacular reception for the  
dian colonial authorities gave a spectacular reception for the  
Afghan emir. He was presented the highest British awards,  
Afghan emir. He was presented the highest British awards,  
visited warships in Bombay, hunted tigers in the domain of  
visited warships in Bombay, hunted tigers in the domain of  
the maharaja of Gwalior, visited factories, museums, etc. in Calcutta and other cities. The emir took special interest in military affairs. During his trips to military camps he exam-
the maharaja of Gwalior, visited factories, museums, etc. in Calcutta and other cities. The emir took special interest in military affairs. During his trips to military camps he exam
ined artillery guns, watched the functioning of wireless  
ined artillery guns, watched the functioning of wireless  
telegraph, and even got into the gondola of a balloon. Back  
telegraph, and even got into the gondola of a balloon. Back  
Line 7,790: Line 7,790:
its gaze not only on Iran but also on Afghanistan, seeing it  
its gaze not only on Iran but also on Afghanistan, seeing it  
as the gate to India. German firms were selling artillery  
as the gate to India. German firms were selling artillery  
samples to the Afghan emir, according to which it was sup-
samples to the Afghan emir, according to which it was sup
posed to modemise arms manufacture at the Mashin-khana  
posed to modemise arms manufacture at the Mashin-khana  
factory in Kabul.  
factory in Kabul.  
Line 7,801: Line 7,801:
railway being used by the Hohenzollern army. This impelled  
railway being used by the Hohenzollern army. This impelled  
some British statesmen to demand a revision of Middle  
some British statesmen to demand a revision of Middle  
East policy. By 1906 the penetration of German imperial-
East policy. By 1906 the penetration of German imperial
ists into the Middle East and Iran intensified; and their eco-
ists into the Middle East and Iran intensified; and their eco
nomic onslaught was conducted in the same direction. The  
nomic onslaught was conducted in the same direction. The  
acute aggravation of contradictions between Britain and  
acute aggravation of contradictions between Britain and  
Germany, the revolution in Iran and the growing libera-
Germany, the revolution in Iran and the growing libera
tion movement in India created a new situation, which in-
tion movement in India created a new situation, which in
duced the British ruling circles to seek rapprochement with  
duced the British ruling circles to seek rapprochement with  
Russia.  
Russia.  


For some time, the tsarist government pursued a wait-
For some time, the tsarist government pursued a wait
and-see policy with regard to the intentions of British dip-
and-see policy with regard to the intentions of British dip
lomacy. But in the spring of 1906 it began to be inclined to  
lomacy. But in the spring of 1906 it began to be inclined to  
reach an agreement with Britain. That tumabout was motiv-
reach an agreement with Britain. That tumabout was motiv
ated by the desire to obtain from France and Britain the  
ated by the desire to obtain from France and Britain the  
loans so badly needed for propping up the tsarist regime en-
loans so badly needed for propping up the tsarist regime en
feebled by the defeat in the war against Japan and the 1905  
feebled by the defeat in the war against Japan and the 1905  
revolution in Russia. Entering into talks with Britain, tsar-
revolution in Russia. Entering into talks with Britain, tsar
ist diplomacy was prepared to forego its former position with regard to Afghanistan in retum for British assistance in the straits issue and in the Balkan policy. But, in making  
ist diplomacy was prepared to forego its former position with regard to Afghanistan in retum for British assistance in the straits issue and in the Balkan policy. But, in making  
concessions to Britain on major political issues concemming  
concessions to Britain on major political issues concemming  
Line 7,823: Line 7,823:
for developing Russo-Afghan trade.  
for developing Russo-Afghan trade.  


This is how Lenin characterised the essence of the agree-
This is how Lenin characterised the essence of the agree
ment between Britain and Russia on the division of the  
ment between Britain and Russia on the division of the  
spheres of influence, which had been signed on August  
spheres of influence, which had been signed on August  
31 (18 Old Style), 1907: “divide Persia, Afghanistan, Ti-
31 (18 Old Style), 1907: "divide Persia, Afghanistan, Ti
bet (preparing for war against Germany).6* Five articles  
bet (preparing for war against Germany)".6* Five articles  
in the agreement concemed Afghanistan. Article 1 expressed  
in the agreement concemed Afghanistan. Article 1 expressed  
the previous formula of recognising Afghanistan as a coun-
the previous formula of recognising Afghanistan as a coun
try lying outside of the sphere of Russian influence. Pre-
try lying outside of the sphere of Russian influence. Pre
viously, however, tsarist diplomacy had never mentioned  
viously, however, tsarist diplomacy had never mentioned  
preventing the Afghan emir from establishing relations with  
preventing the Afghan emir from establishing relations with  
other states, whereas now it pledged itself “to use the  
other states, whereas now it pledged itself "to use the  
mediation of the govemment of His British Majesty in all  
mediation of the govemment of His British Majesty in all  
its political relations with Afghanistan’’. The tsarist govern-
its political relations with Afghanistan’’. The tsarist govern
ment also agreed “not to send any agents to Afghanis-
ment also agreed "not to send any agents to Afghanis
tan”’.65  
tan"’.65  


In Article 2 the British government pledged itself neither  
In Article 2 the British government pledged itself neither  
Line 7,844: Line 7,844:
This hypocritical statement by the British government,  
This hypocritical statement by the British government,  
which rejected in its secret talks with Russia in 1907 any  
which rejected in its secret talks with Russia in 1907 any  
idea of limiting its freedom of action with regard to Afgha-
idea of limiting its freedom of action with regard to Afgha
nistan,66 was followed by a reservation that the Afghan  
nistan,66 was followed by a reservation that the Afghan  
emir had to fulfil his obligation to the British goverment as  
emir had to fulfil his obligation to the British goverment as  
a condition of exercising the British commitment regis-
a condition of exercising the British commitment regis
tered in that article.  
tered in that article.  


Article 3 stated that direct contacts were not prohibit-
Article 3 stated that direct contacts were not prohibit
ed for Russian and Afghan officials on the border and in  
ed for Russian and Afghan officials on the border and in  
the border areas for the purpose of settling non-political  
the border areas for the purpose of settling non-political  
local disputes. Article 4 recognised the principle of Bri-
local disputes. Article 4 recognised the principle of Bri
tain’s and Russia’s equality in trade in Afghanistan and said  
tain’s and Russia’s equality in trade in Afghanistan and said  
that in the event the growth of trade would require Russian  
that in the event the growth of trade would require Russian  
commercial agents in Afghanistan, the British and Russian  
commercial agents in Afghanistan, the British and Russian  
governments would agree between themselves on approp-
governments would agree between themselves on approp
riate measures to be taken. In Article 5 the coming into  
riate measures to be taken. In Article 5 the coming into  
force of the agreement with regard to Afghanistan was made  
force of the agreement with regard to Afghanistan was made  
Line 7,866: Line 7,866:
articles in the agreement that concemed Afghanistan in  
articles in the agreement that concemed Afghanistan in  
a letter dated September 10, 1907. In his reply the emir  
a letter dated September 10, 1907. In his reply the emir  
said that the State Council regarded the agreement as disad-
said that the State Council regarded the agreement as disad
vantageous to Afghanistan and as violating its indepen-
vantageous to Afghanistan and as violating its indepen
dence. Then he rejected the agreement in a public state-
dence. Then he rejected the agreement in a public state
ment. The emir had to reckon with the negative attitude  
ment. The emir had to reckon with the negative attitude  
to the agreement in the country, at any rate with the fact  
to the agreement in the country, at any rate with the fact  
Line 7,875: Line 7,875:


The rejection of the agreement by Habibullah Khan and  
The rejection of the agreement by Habibullah Khan and  
his policy in the subsequent period reduced the trade equal-
his policy in the subsequent period reduced the trade equal
ity of the sides to nil and also the prospect of “direct con-
ity of the sides to nil and also the prospect of "direct con
tacts” between the border authorities, and the admission of  
tacts" between the border authorities, and the admission of  
Russian commercial agents into Afghanistan—the provi-
Russian commercial agents into Afghanistan—the provi
sion haggled over by the tsarist diplomats from the Brit-
sion haggled over by the tsarist diplomats from the Brit
ish. Afghanistan still remained a “forbidden country”,  
ish. Afghanistan still remained a "forbidden country",  
above all for Russia.  
above all for Russia.  


The 1907 Anglo-Russian agreement weakened the posi-
The 1907 Anglo-Russian agreement weakened the posi
tions of Afghanistan, for its foreign political situation was  
tions of Afghanistan, for its foreign political situation was  
now far worse than in the preceding years, which dimin-
now far worse than in the preceding years, which dimin
ished the prospects for regaining its sovereignty. The possi-
ished the prospects for regaining its sovereignty. The possi
bility of exploiting Anglo-Russian contradictions, as it had  
bility of exploiting Anglo-Russian contradictions, as it had  
been done by Abdurrahman Khan, was now reduced to a  
been done by Abdurrahman Khan, was now reduced to a  
Line 7,898: Line 7,898:
which was under the despotic rule of the emir, consisted of  
which was under the despotic rule of the emir, consisted of  
nomads or semi-nomads, and feudal relations, archaic in  
nomads or semi-nomads, and feudal relations, archaic in  
the 20th century, still persisted. At the same time, depend-
the 20th century, still persisted. At the same time, depend
ing on Britain in terms of foreign policy, the emir was be-
ing on Britain in terms of foreign policy, the emir was be
coming increasingly dependent on it economically. Export-
coming increasingly dependent on it economically. Export
ing raw materials and importing industrial goods, Afgha-
ing raw materials and importing industrial goods, Afgha
nistan was gradually becoming an agrarian and raw-mater-
nistan was gradually becoming an agrarian and raw-mater
ial appendage of the capitalist world. Forced isolation and  
ial appendage of the capitalist world. Forced isolation and  
the heavy burden of medieval survivals acted as a brake on  
the heavy burden of medieval survivals acted as a brake on  
the country’s economic and cultural development. The peas-
the country’s economic and cultural development. The peas
ants were a tax-paying class which had to pay land and  
ants were a tax-paying class which had to pay land and  
other taxes to the emir’s treasury: The taxes were largely, or even primarily levied in kind. The peasants suffered from the severe arbitrary rule and extortion by the officials who  
other taxes to the emir’s treasury: The taxes were largely, or even primarily levied in kind. The peasants suffered from the severe arbitrary rule and extortion by the officials who  
Line 7,914: Line 7,914:
punishment, until he paid his tax. :  
punishment, until he paid his tax. :  


During Habibullah Khan’s rule people had to pay numer-
During Habibullah Khan’s rule people had to pay numer
ous taxes, as, for instance, the funeral tax or the wedding  
ous taxes, as, for instance, the funeral tax or the wedding  
tax, on top of the grain and livestock they had to give away  
tax, on top of the grain and livestock they had to give away  
as maliat and zakat—the main taxes. Forced labour was used  
as maliat and zakat—the main taxes. Forced labour was used  
in clearing state-owned irrigation ditches, in the mainten-
in clearing state-owned irrigation ditches, in the mainten
ance and building of roads, bridges, etc.The peasants’  
ance and building of roads, bridges, etc." The peasants’  
condition was especially hard in the northern and central  
condition was especially hard in the northern and central  
parts of the country Sengueres by the Afghan emirs, such  
parts of the country Sengueres by the Afghan emirs, such  
Line 7,944: Line 7,944:
expansion of their influence in Afghanistan.  
expansion of their influence in Afghanistan.  


_ The country mainly exported the products of sheep breed-
_ The country mainly exported the products of sheep breed
ing—astrakhan skins and sheep wool. In 1913-1914 exports  
ing—astrakhan skins and sheep wool. In 1913-1914 exports  
of wool and astrakhan accounted for nearly half the co  
of wool and astrakhan accounted for nearly half the co  
untry’s total exports to Britain (India) and Russia.68  
untry’s total exports to Britain (India) and Russia.68  
Habibullah Khan retained the monopoly of astrakhan ex-
Habibullah Khan retained the monopoly of astrakhan ex
ports, which had been introduced by Abdurrahman Khan.  
ports, which had been introduced by Abdurrahman Khan.  
By the beginning of World War I the astrakhan sheep pop-
By the beginning of World War I the astrakhan sheep pop
ulation in Afghanistan exceeded one million.69 Hiabibullah Khan conducted wholesale trade in other goods as well, spending a large part of the British subsidy on commer-
ulation in Afghanistan exceeded one million.69 Hiabibullah Khan conducted wholesale trade in other goods as well, spending a large part of the British subsidy on commer
cial purchases from India.  
cial purchases from India.  


At the beginning of his rule, Habibullah Khan effected  
At the beginning of his rule, Habibullah Khan effected  
several measures to strengthen the positions of the nation-
several measures to strengthen the positions of the nation
al merchants. But home trade was developing slowly.  
al merchants. But home trade was developing slowly.  
While the natural and semi-natural forms of economy persist-
While the natural and semi-natural forms of economy persist
ed, the medieval system of levying taxes in kind was pre-
ed, the medieval system of levying taxes in kind was pre
served, hampering the growth of commodity-money rela-
served, hampering the growth of commodity-money rela
tions. Nevertheless, major changes were setting in, although  
tions. Nevertheless, major changes were setting in, although  
slowly: the cities were growing, trade and handicrafts were  
slowly: the cities were growing, trade and handicrafts were  
developing, in some regions the irrigation network was ex-
developing, in some regions the irrigation network was ex
panding, the landlords now had stronger ties with the mar-
panding, the landlords now had stronger ties with the mar
ket, local merchants were playing a bigger part in large-
ket, local merchants were playing a bigger part in large
scale trade, and a national commercial bourgeoisie was tak-
scale trade, and a national commercial bourgeoisie was tak
ing shape. These changes had been facilitated by political  
ing shape. These changes had been facilitated by political  
consolidation, the increasing specialisation of agriculture,  
consolidation, the increasing specialisation of agriculture,  
Line 7,980: Line 7,980:
factory-type state-owned enterprises. The equipment and  
factory-type state-owned enterprises. The equipment and  
materials for the first Afghan hydroelectric power station  
materials for the first Afghan hydroelectric power station  
were imported primarily from the United States and the pro-
were imported primarily from the United States and the pro
ject was supervised by an American engineer. The construc-
ject was supervised by an American engineer. The construc
tion began in 1907, and it was only completed in 1919.  
tion began in 1907, and it was only completed in 1919.  


In 1903 a state-owned tanning and shoe-making factory  
In 1903 a state-owned tanning and shoe-making factory  
was commissioned in Kabul. Its output went almost entire-
was commissioned in Kabul. Its output went almost entire
ly to the Afghan army. By 1917 a Kabul cloth mill was  
ly to the Afghan army. By 1917 a Kabul cloth mill was  
built. The history of its construction shows very well what  
built. The history of its construction shows very well what  
difficulties Afghanistan was confronted with when it came  
difficulties Afghanistan was confronted with when it came  
to the building of industrial enterprises. Apart from the high  
to the building of industrial enterprises. Apart from the high  
cost of industrial equipment, its delivery Ey primitive trans-
cost of industrial equipment, its delivery Ey primitive trans
portation means in the mountainous country, which was  
portation means in the mountainous country, which was  
short of good roads, was extremely expensive. It took five  
short of good roads, was extremely expensive. It took five  
Line 8,002: Line 8,002:
their imports were extremely limited, there had to be  
their imports were extremely limited, there had to be  
qualified specialists with at least basic modern training  
qualified specialists with at least basic modern training  
behind them. The need for scientific and technical impro-
behind them. The need for scientific and technical impro
vements in the army made it abundantly clear to the emir  
vements in the army made it abundantly clear to the emir  
and his retinue that the army needed capable and educated  
and his retinue that the army needed capable and educated  
Line 8,014: Line 8,014:


The outward Europeanisation of the emir’s court was  
The outward Europeanisation of the emir’s court was  
limited to copying some elements of etiquette, to replen-
limited to copying some elements of etiquette, to replen
ishing the emir’s cuisine with some Western dishes, and to  
ishing the emir’s cuisine with some Western dishes, and to  
Habibullah Khan’s wearing a European uniform or tails at  
Habibullah Khan’s wearing a European uniform or tails at  
Line 8,020: Line 8,020:
in the clothes worm by high officials. Court activities now  
in the clothes worm by high officials. Court activities now  
included golf, tennis, and cricket. The emir and his retinue  
included golf, tennis, and cricket. The emir and his retinue  
began to use American fountain pens, and court clerks be-
began to use American fountain pens, and court clerks be
gan to use typewriters. Habibullah Khan was fond of taking  
gan to use typewriters. Habibullah Khan was fond of taking  
a drive and by the beginning of World WarI he had 58 cars  
a drive and by the beginning of World WarI he had 58 cars  
Line 8,026: Line 8,026:


The novelties in the daily life at court, and purchases of  
The novelties in the daily life at court, and purchases of  
foreign curiosities, chosen by Habibullah Khan from illus-
foreign curiosities, chosen by Habibullah Khan from illus
trated catalogues of European and American firms and or-
trated catalogues of European and American firms and or
dered through Bombay trade agents, remained, as a rule,  
dered through Bombay trade agents, remained, as a rule,  
within the palaces and were the privilege of the emir and the  
within the palaces and were the privilege of the emir and the  
few people close to him. Those novelties had no meaning-
few people close to him. Those novelties had no meaning
ful influence on the life of the people, or even on the life  
ful influence on the life of the people, or even on the life  
of the ruling class as a whole. Displaying great interest in  
of the ruling class as a whole. Displaying great interest in  
machines and equipment (military above all), the emir, nev-
machines and equipment (military above all), the emir, nev
ertheless, invariably believed orthodox Islam to be the chief  
ertheless, invariably believed orthodox Islam to be the chief  
instrument of his rule. He admitted, however, the need to  
instrument of his rule. He admitted, however, the need to  
update the education system and to study modern sci-
update the education system and to study modern sci
ences to acertain extent to preserve his state and strengthen  
ences to acertain extent to preserve his state and strengthen  
his power. Whereas he remained a typical Oriental despot, he assented to this, responding to the call of the times, but seeking to preserve intact the feudal foundations of so-
his power. Whereas he remained a typical Oriental despot, he assented to this, responding to the call of the times, but seeking to preserve intact the feudal foundations of so
ciety and thoroughly avoiding any political or socio-econom-
ciety and thoroughly avoiding any political or socio-econom
ic reforms, limited as they might be.  
ic reforms, limited as they might be.  


And yet the founding of the state civilian Habibiya Col-
And yet the founding of the state civilian Habibiya Col
lege in 1903 and of the Harbiya officers’ college by 1909  
lege in 1903 and of the Harbiya officers’ college by 1909  
marked the beginning of the emergence of a new Afghan  
marked the beginning of the emergence of a new Afghan  
intelligentsia (though not numerous at the start) which re-
intelligentsia (though not numerous at the start) which re
ceived modern education in a varying degree. This consider-
ceived modern education in a varying degree. This consider
ably promoted cultural development and the spread of  
ably promoted cultural development and the spread of  
new ideas in the country. The Habibiya College, the first  
new ideas in the country. The Habibiya College, the first  
Line 8,053: Line 8,053:
school similar to the Anglo-Indian colleges. It was meant for  
school similar to the Anglo-Indian colleges. It was meant for  
training officials. Almost all the pupils, aged between 12  
training officials. Almost all the pupils, aged between 12  
and 40, came from the nobility. The actual length of train-
and 40, came from the nobility. The actual length of train
ing usually exceeded 12 years,?1 and only a few managed  
ing usually exceeded 12 years,?1 and only a few managed  
to go through to the end.  
to go through to the end.  
Line 8,066: Line 8,066:
taught at European schools.  
taught at European schools.  


‘The curriculum for primary education included the fun-
‘The curriculum for primary education included the fun
damentals of the Muslim religion, the Farsi language, arith-
damentals of the Muslim religion, the Farsi language, arith
metic, geography, and calligraphy. At the second stage the  
metic, geography, and calligraphy. At the second stage the  
students continued to study the Muslim religion, geog-
students continued to study the Muslim religion, geog
raphy, Farsi and Pushtu, and also history, one foreign lan-
raphy, Farsi and Pushtu, and also history, one foreign lan
guage (English, Urdu, or Turkish), drawing, book-keeping,  
guage (English, Urdu, or Turkish), drawing, book-keeping,  
and hygiene and sanitation. At the third stage, they learned  
and hygiene and sanitation. At the third stage, they learned  
Line 8,079: Line 8,079:
The Harbiya military school had two stages: primary  
The Harbiya military school had two stages: primary  
(general educational) and special (military). Its curriculum  
(general educational) and special (military). Its curriculum  
included the Koran, calligraphy, arithmetic, geometry, al-
included the Koran, calligraphy, arithmetic, geometry, al
gebra, grammar, the history of Islam, general history, a  
gebra, grammar, the history of Islam, general history, a  
number of military subjects, gymnastics, and drill. The  
number of military subjects, gymnastics, and drill. The  
main military subjects at the college were taught by Tur- kish officers. But there were also Afghan teachers, including the enlightener Mahmud Beg Tarzi.  
main military subjects at the college were taught by Turkish officers. But there were also Afghan teachers, including the enlightener Mahmud Beg Tarzi.  


The opening of the Habibiya College, a major step in creat-
The opening of the Habibiya College, a major step in creat
ing an up-to-date educational system in Afghanistan, was of  
ing an up-to-date educational system in Afghanistan, was of  
great historical and cultural significance. The average  
great historical and cultural significance. The average  
Line 8,092: Line 8,092:
reached 900.74  
reached 900.74  


At the same time, an attempt was made to partially mo-
At the same time, an attempt was made to partially mo
dernise education at the traditional Muslim schools as well,  
dernise education at the traditional Muslim schools as well,  
although all the schools set up for the purpose in Kabul  
although all the schools set up for the purpose in Kabul  
Line 8,106: Line 8,106:
printing with movable type by the typesetting method and  
printing with movable type by the typesetting method and  
the improvement of printing machinery was doubtlessly of  
the improvement of printing machinery was doubtlessly of  
great cultural value. A “special” printing house with up-to-
great cultural value. A "special" printing house with up-to
date equipment was founded in 1911-1912 (named after  
date equipment was founded in 1911-1912 (named after  
Inayatullah Khan, the emir’s eldest son). This provided  
Inayatullah Khan, the emir’s eldest son). This provided  
Line 8,119: Line 8,119:
connected with the national liberation movement in their  
connected with the national liberation movement in their  
country. Apart from teachers, there were several technicians  
country. Apart from teachers, there were several technicians  
and gunsmiths working in Kabul. A number of revolutio-
and gunsmiths working in Kabul. A number of revolutio
nary émigrés fram India had also been given refuge there.  
nary émigrés fram India had also been given refuge there.  
The influence of the liberation movement in neighbouring  
The influence of the liberation movement in neighbouring  
Line 8,129: Line 8,129:


Afghanistan’s isolation from the outside world was not  
Afghanistan’s isolation from the outside world was not  
total at the beginning of the 20th century. Relations be-
total at the beginning of the 20th century. Relations be
tween the population of Afghanistan and Iran were far from  
tween the population of Afghanistan and Iran were far from  
being discontinued and, in spite of the absence of perma-
being discontinued and, in spite of the absence of perma
nent high-level diplomatic relations, the traditional neigh-
nent high-level diplomatic relations, the traditional neigh
bourly Afghan-Iranian trade and cultural ties were main-
bourly Afghan-Iranian trade and cultural ties were main
tained even during the Iranian revolution. This was a source  
tained even during the Iranian revolution. This was a source  
of great concern to the Afghan authorities, particularly  
of great concern to the Afghan authorities, particularly  
in the Herat province, who feared the influence of the  
in the Herat province, who feared the influence of the  
revolutionary developments in Iran and took measures to  
revolutionary developments in Iran and took measures to  
close the border, prevent the smuggling ‘in of Iranian news-
close the border, prevent the smuggling ‘in of Iranian news
papers etc.75 But, despite all the restrictions and bans, news  
papers etc.75 But, despite all the restrictions and bans, news  
of the revolutionary events in Iran kept coming in across the  
of the revolutionary events in Iran kept coming in across the  
Line 8,158: Line 8,158:
They were filtering into Afghanistan not only from Iran  
They were filtering into Afghanistan not only from Iran  
‘and British India, but also from Central Asia, which was  
‘and British India, but also from Central Asia, which was  
directly influenced by the revolutionary events of 1905-
directly influenced by the revolutionary events of 1905
1907, and from Turkey as well.  
1907, and from Turkey as well.  


Line 8,169: Line 8,169:
struggle against British imperialists, for independence. The  
struggle against British imperialists, for independence. The  
Habibiya College, where the best Afghan intellectuals and  
Habibiya College, where the best Afghan intellectuals and  
Indian teachers worked, became a centre of the first se- cret organisation whose goal was to achieve reforms and the adoption of a constitution in Afghanistan. Evidently the first  
Indian teachers worked, became a centre of the first secret organisation whose goal was to achieve reforms and the adoption of a constitution in Afghanistan. Evidently the first  
group of that organisation was set up in Kabul at the end  
group of that organisation was set up in Kabul at the end  
of 1906. The first proponents of the liberation ideas in the  
of 1906. The first proponents of the liberation ideas in the  
20th century are called Old Constitutionalists in Afghanis-
20th century are called Old Constitutionalists in Afghanis
tan.  
tan.  


Among those who set up this organisation was Dr. Ab-
Among those who set up this organisation was Dr. Ab
dul Ghani, who probably headed it at the initial stages. Sub-
dul Ghani, who probably headed it at the initial stages. Sub
sequently, it was headed by Afghans (Muhammad Sarwar  
sequently, it was headed by Afghans (Muhammad Sarwar  
Qandahari and others). The members of the first organisa-
Qandahari and others). The members of the first organisa
tion of constitutionalists called for winning complete inde-
tion of constitutionalists called for winning complete inde
pendence for Afghanistan, for carrying through domestic  
pendence for Afghanistan, for carrying through domestic  
reforms, in particular, for introducing constitutional rule in  
reforms, in particular, for introducing constitutional rule in  
Line 8,193: Line 8,193:
chief of the Kabul police who also supervised the prisons  
chief of the Kabul police who also supervised the prisons  
of Kabul, presented to Habibullah Khan the activities of the  
of Kabul, presented to Habibullah Khan the activities of the  
organisation as an extremely dangerous plot aimed pri-
organisation as an extremely dangerous plot aimed pri
marily against the emir. As evidenced by ‘Abdul Ghani, Mir-
marily against the emir. As evidenced by ‘Abdul Ghani, Mir
za Muhammad Husayn insisted on the death sentence for  
za Muhammad Husayn insisted on the death sentence for  
all the constitutionalists, alleging that they had been linked  
all the constitutionalists, alleging that they had been linked  
Line 8,200: Line 8,200:
Turkestan and Persia.?? Seven members of the group were  
Turkestan and Persia.?? Seven members of the group were  
executed, and about 60, including Abdul Ghani, were sent  
executed, and about 60, including Abdul Ghani, were sent  
to prison. The list of the active participants in the con-
to prison. The list of the active participants in the con
stitutionalist movement, subjected to reprisals in 1909, and  
stitutionalist movement, subjected to reprisals in 1909, and  
some information about them are given in the book Afgha-
some information about them are given in the book Afgha
nistan dar Masir-i tarikh by Afghan historian Mir Ghulam  
nistan dar Masir-i tarikh by Afghan historian Mir Ghulam  
Muhammad Ghubar. He says that, apart from the educated  
Muhammad Ghubar. He says that, apart from the educated  
Line 8,212: Line 8,212:
The punitive actions by the emir were not limited to  
The punitive actions by the emir were not limited to  
the arrest of the Kabul Old Constitutionalists; reprisals  
the arrest of the Kabul Old Constitutionalists; reprisals  
were levelled against all those who were suspected of taking part in the reform movement, and not only in Kabul and Ja- lalabad but also in Herat and Qandahar. The emir feared  
were levelled against all those who were suspected of taking part in the reform movement, and not only in Kabul and Jalalabad but also in Herat and Qandahar. The emir feared  
the spread of reformatory and revolutionary ideas in the ar-
the spread of reformatory and revolutionary ideas in the ar
my, which is shown by the threatening orders sent to the  
my, which is shown by the threatening orders sent to the  
garrisons.  
garrisons.  
Line 8,220: Line 8,220:
the subsequent period were for the most part educated  
the subsequent period were for the most part educated  
people from among the Afghan nobility, there was also a  
people from among the Afghan nobility, there was also a  
relatively small number of people from among the new in-
relatively small number of people from among the new in
telligentsia of Afghanistan, progressive army officers, and  
telligentsia of Afghanistan, progressive army officers, and  
merchants. Though they set themselves the aim of winning  
merchants. Though they set themselves the aim of winning  
Line 8,228: Line 8,228:
wanted reforms that could not be carried out effectively  
wanted reforms that could not be carried out effectively  
owing to the medieval survivals. Although such reforms were  
owing to the medieval survivals. Although such reforms were  
in keeping with the vital interests of the whole popula-
in keeping with the vital interests of the whole popula
tion, their carrying out “from above” could benefit, above  
tion, their carrying out "from above" could benefit, above  
all, the merchants and the landowners linked with commer-
all, the merchants and the landowners linked with commer
cial farming. Serve, it was mainly their interests that  
cial farming. Serve, it was mainly their interests that  
were expressed by the Young Afghans, who pinned much  
were expressed by the Young Afghans, who pinned much  
Line 8,243: Line 8,243:
Mahmud Tarzi was a descendant of the Qandahar branch  
Mahmud Tarzi was a descendant of the Qandahar branch  
of the Barakzai family of the Muhammadazais, to which the  
of the Barakzai family of the Muhammadazais, to which the  
ruling dynasty also belonged. His father, Ghulam Muham-
ruling dynasty also belonged. His father, Ghulam Muham
mad Khan, was a famous poet and was gifted in other arts.  
mad Khan, was a famous poet and was gifted in other arts.  
He wrote his poetry under the pen name of Tarzi (meaning  
He wrote his poetry under the pen name of Tarzi (meaning  
Line 8,249: Line 8,249:
name, too. In 1881 or 1882, soon after Abdurrahman Khan  
name, too. In 1881 or 1882, soon after Abdurrahman Khan  
came to power, Ghulam Muhammad Khan Tarzi, who shared  
came to power, Ghulam Muhammad Khan Tarzi, who shared  
the lot of many of his eminent countrymen, was subject-
the lot of many of his eminent countrymen, was subject
ed to reprisals by the new emir and was banished from  
ed to reprisals by the new emir and was banished from  
Afghanistan together with his family. He went to India and  
Afghanistan together with his family. He went to India and  
Line 8,260: Line 8,260:
er and began to write verses at an early age, showing a  
er and began to write verses at an early age, showing a  
talent for poetry. The young poet studied new Turkish  
talent for poetry. The young poet studied new Turkish  
literature and progressive ideas and tumed to civic and so-
literature and progressive ideas and tumed to civic and so
cial subjects. He refused to follow the fettering traditions,  
cial subjects. He refused to follow the fettering traditions,  
in accordance with which the depth of meaning was often  
in accordance with which the depth of meaning was often  
sacrificed to sophisticated style. He was also attracted by  
sacrificed to sophisticated style. He was also attracted by  
the literature of the West (he read European authors in Turk-
the literature of the West (he read European authors in Turk
ish translation). °  
ish translation). °  


Line 8,270: Line 8,270:
people and having broadened his outlook (he travelled a  
people and having broadened his outlook (he travelled a  
good deal), Mahmud Tarzi decided to devote his life to the  
good deal), Mahmud Tarzi decided to devote his life to the  
struggle for the independence of his country and for its re-
struggle for the independence of his country and for its re
novation. He had already begun writing when still abroad,  
novation. He had already begun writing when still abroad,  
but found it practically impossible to get his writings pub-
but found it practically impossible to get his writings pub
lished there. Only upon his return to Afghanistan was he  
lished there. Only upon his return to Afghanistan was he  
able to have his works published. Mahmud Tarzi also  
able to have his works published. Mahmud Tarzi also  
Line 8,287: Line 8,287:


Later on Tarzi worked as a writer, publicist, translator,  
Later on Tarzi worked as a writer, publicist, translator,  
teacher and educator, and was a herald of modern knowl-
teacher and educator, and was a herald of modern knowl
edge and sciences, an ardent proponent of enlightenment  
edge and sciences, an ardent proponent of enlightenment  
and a champion of the struggle for Afghanistan’s liberation.  
and a champion of the struggle for Afghanistan’s liberation.  
Line 8,302: Line 8,302:
numerous translations came out in separate editions. Of his  
numerous translations came out in separate editions. Of his  


translations published by 1917 most noteworthy are a num- ber of novels by Jules Verne (Cing semaines en ballon,  
translations published by 1917 most noteworthy are a number of novels by Jules Verne (Cing semaines en ballon,  
Vingt mille lieues sous les mers, and others). Those adven-
Vingt mille lieues sous les mers, and others). Those adven
ture stories not only told Afghan readers about the advan-
ture stories not only told Afghan readers about the advan
ces in science and engineering in the 19th century, which  
ces in science and engineering in the 19th century, which  
was of great educational significance, but also gave them an  
was of great educational significance, but also gave them an  
Line 8,310: Line 8,310:
left-wing, socialist trend.  
left-wing, socialist trend.  


Among the works by Mahmud Tarzi there are The Gar-
Among the works by Mahmud Tarzi there are The Gar
den of Maxims, Miscellany, A Collection of Poems, Refine-
den of Maxims, Miscellany, A Collection of Poems, Refine
ment in the Arts. A Journey in 29 Days on Three Conti-
ment in the Arts. A Journey in 29 Days on Three Conti
nents, Asia, Europe and Africa, works of fiction, scien-
nents, Asia, Europe and Africa, works of fiction, scien
tific and publicist writings in prose and verse, as well as  
tific and publicist writings in prose and verse, as well as  
many separate poems and articles published in perio icals,  
many separate poems and articles published in perio icals,  
Line 8,319: Line 8,319:


The first printed newspaper in Afghanistan in the 20th  
The first printed newspaper in Afghanistan in the 20th  
century was Siraj al-Akhbar-i Afghanistan, whose only is-
century was Siraj al-Akhbar-i Afghanistan, whose only is
sue came out in 1905. Five years later, in October 1911,  
sue came out in 1905. Five years later, in October 1911,  
Mahmud Tarzi began to publish Straj al-Akhbar-t Afghaniya.  
Mahmud Tarzi began to publish Straj al-Akhbar-t Afghaniya.  
Line 8,325: Line 8,325:
paper’s programme and the editor’s opinion on the noble  
paper’s programme and the editor’s opinion on the noble  
mission of the press. Tarzi called newspapers a powerful  
mission of the press. Tarzi called newspapers a powerful  
means of information, “a mirror of the world’, a guide to  
means of information, "a mirror of the world’, a guide to  
fiction and a highly effective weapon in the struggle against  
fiction and a highly effective weapon in the struggle against  
the ill-wishers of the motherland (in this connection he  
the ill-wishers of the motherland (in this connection he  
Line 8,334: Line 8,334:
did not merely abstractly advocate science, extol knowledge  
did not merely abstractly advocate science, extol knowledge  
and condemn ignorance, but did much to spread specific  
and condemn ignorance, but did much to spread specific  
information on modem sciences, and technological achieve-
information on modem sciences, and technological achieve
ments and inventions, introducing the reader to the big  
ments and inventions, introducing the reader to the big  
new world around isolated Afghanistan.  
new world around isolated Afghanistan.  
Line 8,345: Line 8,345:
a group of educated people who did not belong to the class  
a group of educated people who did not belong to the class  
of ministers of religion by occupation or social status dared  
of ministers of religion by occupation or social status dared  
to state their interpretation of the Koran publicly, inter-
to state their interpretation of the Koran publicly, inter
vening in the sphere of the Muslim ulemas’ exclusive privi- leges was fairly important. In keeping with their views Mahmud Tarzi and his followers declared that their plans  
vening in the sphere of the Muslim ulemas’ exclusive privileges was fairly important. In keeping with their views Mahmud Tarzi and his followers declared that their plans  
for the renovation of the country did not in the least  
for the renovation of the country did not in the least  
contradict Islam; on the contrary, they were fully in accord  
contradict Islam; on the contrary, they were fully in accord  
Line 8,355: Line 8,355:
special attention should be paid to theoretical articles. Using  
special attention should be paid to theoretical articles. Using  
easily understandable language they gave the reader a  
easily understandable language they gave the reader a  
general idea of modem sciences, such as philosophy, poli-
general idea of modem sciences, such as philosophy, poli
tical economy and international law, and of such institu-
tical economy and international law, and of such institu
tions as urban self-administration, of the joint-stock compa-
tions as urban self-administration, of the joint-stock compa
ny and its significance, and the like, leading Afghan readers  
ny and its significance, and the like, leading Afghan readers  
to the understanding of many phenomena previously  
to the understanding of many phenomena previously  
Line 8,366: Line 8,366:
knowledge as archaeology, history, and philology. It also  
knowledge as archaeology, history, and philology. It also  
carried articles on art. The paper occasionally carried  
carried articles on art. The paper occasionally carried  
information about the latest results of research and explo-
information about the latest results of research and explo
ration by Western scientists. It gave basic facts about the  
ration by Western scientists. It gave basic facts about the  
history of modem sciences and their attainments, and descri-
history of modem sciences and their attainments, and descri
bed major discoveries and inventions. It devoted much space  
bed major discoveries and inventions. It devoted much space  
to technical achievements, citing data on the development of  
to technical achievements, citing data on the development of  
Line 8,376: Line 8,376:


Hundreds of different articles opened up before the  
Hundreds of different articles opened up before the  
reader a picture of scientific and technological achieve-
reader a picture of scientific and technological achieve
ments of the beginning of the 20th century.  
ments of the beginning of the 20th century.  


In general terms, the newspaper contained the following  
In general terms, the newspaper contained the following  
columns: 1) an editorial on political, philosophical or re-
columns: 1) an editorial on political, philosophical or re
ligious questions; 2) reports on developments in the country;  
ligious questions; 2) reports on developments in the country;  
3) reports on events abroad, mostly in Muslim countries,  
3) reports on events abroad, mostly in Muslim countries,  
and also in other countries of Asia and Europe; 4) a litera-
and also in other countries of Asia and Europe; 4) a litera
ry column including verses by modem poets of Afghanis-
ry column including verses by modem poets of Afghanis
tan; 5) a column on science and technology mainly con-
tan; 5) a column on science and technology mainly con
taining a translation of articles from foreign periodicals;  
taining a translation of articles from foreign periodicals;  
6) feuilleton; this column included translations of fiction  
6) feuilleton; this column included translations of fiction  
(in the fifth year of the newspaper the column was closed  
(in the fifth year of the newspaper the column was closed  
to give more space for home and foreign news); 7) mis- cellancous material and brief reports; 8) announcements.  
to give more space for home and foreign news); 7) miscellancous material and brief reports; 8) announcements.  


When calling for reforms in the country, Mahmud Tarai  
When calling for reforms in the country, Mahmud Tarai  
and his associates tried to explain the reasons for the back-
and his associates tried to explain the reasons for the back
wardness of Afghanistan and other Muslim countries in  
wardness of Afghanistan and other Muslim countries in  
modern times. The history of the Afghans, according to Tarzi,  
modern times. The history of the Afghans, according to Tarzi,  
showed that one of the main causes of their backward-
showed that one of the main causes of their backward
ness was disregard for education and science. He noted bit-
ness was disregard for education and science. He noted bit
terly that many generations of Afghans had had no capable  
terly that many generations of Afghans had had no capable  
and educated teachers. Traditions and superstition reigned  
and educated teachers. Traditions and superstition reigned  
Line 8,403: Line 8,403:
resources.  
resources.  


The newspaper also published vicws on the need to de-
The newspaper also published vicws on the need to de
velop efficient agriculture, modern industry (with priori-
velop efficient agriculture, modern industry (with priori
ty given to mining and building factories for processing lo-
ty given to mining and building factories for processing lo
cal agricultural raw materials), trade, road building, and  
cal agricultural raw materials), trade, road building, and  
transport. Tarzi and his followers appealed to the emir and  
transport. Tarzi and his followers appealed to the emir and  
the ruling elite, settinghopes on the “enlightened monarch”.  
the ruling elite, settinghopes on the "enlightened monarch".  
They expected that the reforms would be carried out quick-
They expected that the reforms would be carried out quick
ly “from above”, mainly in education and the dissemina-
ly "from above", mainly in education and the dissemina
tion of scientific and technical knowledge, which, they be-
tion of scientific and technical knowledge, which, they be
lieved, were bound to bring about improvements in eco-
lieved, were bound to bring about improvements in eco
nomic and social life. Mahmud Tarzi and those who sup-
nomic and social life. Mahmud Tarzi and those who sup
ported him sought to adapt the Afghan monarchy to the  
ported him sought to adapt the Afghan monarchy to the  
requirements of their time, seeing in it an instrument for  
requirements of their time, seeing in it an instrument for  
Line 8,424: Line 8,424:
imperialism. Mahmud Tarzi himself took an active part in  
imperialism. Mahmud Tarzi himself took an active part in  
the struggle for independence at its different stages. His  
the struggle for independence at its different stages. His  
ideology was based on religion. He was a reformer of Is-
ideology was based on religion. He was a reformer of Is
lam in his country and he borrowed many ideas from the  
lam in his country and he borrowed many ideas from the  
Arab and Turkish reformers of Islam of the latter half of  
Arab and Turkish reformers of Islam of the latter half of  
the 19th century. Stating the religious basis of his ideology,  
the 19th century. Stating the religious basis of his ideology,  
it must be stressed that his consistent struggle against reli-
it must be stressed that his consistent struggle against reli
gious restrictions had progressive influence on Afghanis-
gious restrictions had progressive influence on Afghanis
tan. The Straj atAkhbar advocated the strengthening of  
tan. The Straj atAkhbar advocated the strengthening of  
relations with other Muslim countries. Although it propa-
relations with other Muslim countries. Although it propa
gated the ideas of Muslim unity within the framework of  
gated the ideas of Muslim unity within the framework of  
the pan-Islamic concept, the propaganda of relations with more advanced Oriental countries in order to assimilate the fundamentals of new enlightenment and new culture was  
the pan-Islamic concept, the propaganda of relations with more advanced Oriental countries in order to assimilate the fundamentals of new enlightenment and new culture was  
in itself progressive for Afghanistan where the medieval  
in itself progressive for Afghanistan where the medieval  
way of life was preserved. The Afghans were urged to fol-
way of life was preserved. The Afghans were urged to fol
low the example of such Muslim countries as the Ottoman  
low the example of such Muslim countries as the Ottoman  
empire and Persia, and also non-Muslim Japan on the hard  
empire and Persia, and also non-Muslim Japan on the hard  
path of progress, without which it was impossible to effec-
path of progress, without which it was impossible to effec
tively confront modem armies and to overcome the tech-
tively confront modem armies and to overcome the tech
nical superiority of the European countries.  
nical superiority of the European countries.  


Mahmud Tarzi’s views were influenced by the national-
Mahmud Tarzi’s views were influenced by the national
bourgeois ideas of the Young Turks. This was also reflected  
bourgeois ideas of the Young Turks. This was also reflected  
in the content of the Straj al-Akhbar, which not only  
in the content of the Straj al-Akhbar, which not only  
Line 8,456: Line 8,456:
1912 gave the following assessment of the 1911 Chinese  
1912 gave the following assessment of the 1911 Chinese  
revolution and the proclamation of a republic in China:  
revolution and the proclamation of a republic in China:  
“This event merits great attention. It is becoming clear that  
"This event merits great attention. It is becoming clear that  
the Chinese nation has woken up and its national feelings  
the Chinese nation has woken up and its national feelings  
have come to the boil.The approval of the revolution,  
have come to the boil." The approval of the revolution,  
which was called ‘‘great” and was characterised as an event  
which was called ‘‘great" and was characterised as an event  
of extreme importance in a newspaper issued in feudal-
of extreme importance in a newspaper issued in feudal
monarchic Afghanistan, was highly significant in itself.  
monarchic Afghanistan, was highly significant in itself.  


Line 8,466: Line 8,466:
with far greater caution. Much of the home news column  
with far greater caution. Much of the home news column  
was devoted to court life, contained pictures of the emir  
was devoted to court life, contained pictures of the emir  
hunting, etc. The paper informed the reader of new devel-
hunting, etc. The paper informed the reader of new devel
opments in machinery and equipment used in the emir’s  
opments in machinery and equipment used in the emir’s  
palace and in the country in general and carried brief re-
palace and in the country in general and carried brief re
ports on the construction of industrial enterprises, the dig-
ports on the construction of industrial enterprises, the dig
ging of canals, the building and repair of roads and bridges,  
ging of canals, the building and repair of roads and bridges,  
and so on.  
and so on.  
Line 8,482: Line 8,482:


Anti-British sentiments were strong in Afghanistan,  
Anti-British sentiments were strong in Afghanistan,  
especially among the border tribes. The situation was large-
especially among the border tribes. The situation was large
ly influenced by Turkey’s joining the war in October 1914,  
ly influenced by Turkey’s joining the war in October 1914,  
and by the manifesto issued by the Turkish sultan declar-
and by the manifesto issued by the Turkish sultan declar
ing a jzhad against Britain and Russia. The pro-Turkish and  
ing a jzhad against Britain and Russia. The pro-Turkish and  
anti-British sentiments were strong at court among the reac-
anti-British sentiments were strong at court among the reac
tionary conservatives and opponents of change, the Old  
tionary conservatives and opponents of change, the Old  
Afghans, and still stronger among the Young Afghans.  
Afghans, and still stronger among the Young Afghans.  


To win over Afghanistan as an ally, the German imperi-
To win over Afghanistan as an ally, the German imperi
alists attempted to exploit the religious prestige of the Turk-
alists attempted to exploit the religious prestige of the Turk
ish sultan. German and Turkish propaganda presented the  
ish sultan. German and Turkish propaganda presented the  
Kaiser’s Germany as a disinterested friend of the Muslims,  
Kaiser’s Germany as a disinterested friend of the Muslims,  
and spread all kinds of inventions like a report saying that  
and spread all kinds of inventions like a report saying that  
Wilhelm IT of Germany had adopted Islam. A German-Turk-
Wilhelm IT of Germany had adopted Islam. A German-Turk
ish mission was set up in Turkey to induce the Afghan  
ish mission was set up in Turkey to induce the Afghan  
emir to enter the war on the side of Germany and its allies.  
emir to enter the war on the side of Germany and its allies.  
Line 8,510: Line 8,510:
to Turkey a group of officers headed by Senior Lieutenant  
to Turkey a group of officers headed by Senior Lieutenant  
Oskar von Niedermeyer. He had a good command of the  
Oskar von Niedermeyer. He had a good command of the  
Persian language and had taken part in a German expedi-
Persian language and had taken part in a German expedi
tion to Iran and India a few years before. The German  
tion to Iran and India a few years before. The German  
foreign ministry attached to the mission W. O. von Hentig,  
foreign ministry attached to the mission W. O. von Hentig,  
Line 8,520: Line 8,520:
At the end of March 1915, the expedition set out from  
At the end of March 1915, the expedition set out from  
Baghdad in three groups, moving to the east during the  
Baghdad in three groups, moving to the east during the  
nighttime. The Russians and the British knew that the expe-
nighttime. The Russians and the British knew that the expe
dition was approaching the Afghan border and assigned mounted detachments to patrol the border regions. The mis- sion managed, though with great difficulty, to cross the Iran-
dition was approaching the Afghan border and assigned mounted detachments to patrol the border regions. The mission managed, though with great difficulty, to cross the Iran
ian-Afghan border. Chased by a Russian Cossack detachment,  
ian-Afghan border. Chased by a Russian Cossack detachment,  
it had to forgo its baggage and gold. After August 20, 1915,  
it had to forgo its baggage and gold. After August 20, 1915,  
the mission arrived in Herat, where it was received with hono-
the mission arrived in Herat, where it was received with hono
urs. Then, accompanied by an escort, it went to Kabul.79  
urs. Then, accompanied by an escort, it went to Kabul.79  


On receiving the news of the mission crossing the Iranian-
On receiving the news of the mission crossing the Iranian
Afghan border, Hardinge, viceroy of India, forwarded a let-
Afghan border, Hardinge, viceroy of India, forwarded a let
ter to Habibullah Khan expressing confidence that the  
ter to Habibullah Khan expressing confidence that the  
emir would prove the sincerity of his promise to observe  
emir would prove the sincerity of his promise to observe  
strict neutrality.89 According to the information received  
strict neutrality.89 According to the information received  
by Russian diplomats from the British authorities in India,  
by Russian diplomats from the British authorities in India,  
in his reply to the viceroy the Afghan emir made a “solemn
in his reply to the viceroy the Afghan emir made a "solemn
promise” to order that all the members of the mission be  
promise" to order that all the members of the mission be  
disarmed and detained, and then in a letter received by the  
disarmed and detained, and then in a letter received by the  
viceroy on September 17, 1915, he allegedly wrote about  
viceroy on September 17, 1915, he allegedly wrote about  
Line 8,549: Line 8,549:
During the talk the Afghan emir was handed a letter from  
During the talk the Afghan emir was handed a letter from  
the Turkish sultan proposing that the emir should come out  
the Turkish sultan proposing that the emir should come out  
with Germany and its allies against Britain and Russia un-
with Germany and its allies against Britain and Russia un
der the banner of jihad, and also a personal message from  
der the banner of jihad, and also a personal message from  
Kaiser Wilhelm II. The Kaiser reiterated the version about  
Kaiser Wilhelm II. The Kaiser reiterated the version about  
Line 8,556: Line 8,556:
the Muslims in future as well.  
the Muslims in future as well.  


The attitude of the emir to the mission and the treat-
The attitude of the emir to the mission and the treat
ment of its members were very uneven. During the talks  
ment of its members were very uneven. During the talks  
Habibullah Khan was suspiciously alert. In January 1916  
Habibullah Khan was suspiciously alert. In January 1916  
Line 8,562: Line 8,562:
a draft treaty with Germany. After that he allowed the  
a draft treaty with Germany. After that he allowed the  
members of the mission to take part in reorganising the  
members of the mission to take part in reorganising the  
army. But during the subsequent talks, whenever the lead-
army. But during the subsequent talks, whenever the lead
ers of the mission mentioned Afghanistan’s joining the  
ers of the mission mentioned Afghanistan’s joining the  
war, the answers were vague and evasive, stipulated by pre-
war, the answers were vague and evasive, stipulated by pre
liminary conditions. At one meeting Habibullah Khan de- clared that Afghanistan would come out against Britain, only if Russia’s neutrality would be ensured. At another  
liminary conditions. At one meeting Habibullah Khan declared that Afghanistan would come out against Britain, only if Russia’s neutrality would be ensured. At another  
meeting he made his joining the war conditional on the  
meeting he made his joining the war conditional on the  
arrival from Germany of 20,000 troops, 100,000 rifles and  
arrival from Germany of 20,000 troops, 100,000 rifles and  
Line 8,580: Line 8,580:
In these circumstances, the British hastened to tell the  
In these circumstances, the British hastened to tell the  
emir about the events of the war to persuade him to keep  
emir about the events of the war to persuade him to keep  
to the policy of neutrality and informed him of the sei-
to the policy of neutrality and informed him of the sei
zure of Erzerum by Russian troops. They left no chance  
zure of Erzerum by Russian troops. They left no chance  
unused to discredit the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission in the  
unused to discredit the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission in the  
eyes of the emir, informing him of intercepted letters testify-
eyes of the emir, informing him of intercepted letters testify
ing to the intentions of the mission’s members to stage a  
ing to the intentions of the mission’s members to stage a  
coup in Afghanistan and, if Habibullah Khan further delayed  
coup in Afghanistan and, if Habibullah Khan further delayed  
Line 8,592: Line 8,592:


There were a number of reasons for the failure of the  
There were a number of reasons for the failure of the  
Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. The Afghan emir was inter-
Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. The Afghan emir was inter
ested in observing neutrality, for he continued to receive an  
ested in observing neutrality, for he continued to receive an  
annual subsidy from the British and hoped for its promised  
annual subsidy from the British and hoped for its promised  
Line 8,598: Line 8,598:
a lump sum of 5,000,000 rupees to be paid additionally  
a lump sum of 5,000,000 rupees to be paid additionally  
after the war.83 But, when reviewing the policy of the  
after the war.83 But, when reviewing the policy of the  
Afghan government in 1914-1916, the attitude of Habibul-
Afghan government in 1914-1916, the attitude of Habibul
lah Khan to neutrality in general and neutrality as applied  
lah Khan to neutrality in general and neutrality as applied  
to Afghanistan in particular, clearly expressed in his public  
to Afghanistan in particular, clearly expressed in his public  
speeches, must be taken into account. Addressing a durbar  
speeches, must be taken into account. Addressing a durbar  
in the spring of 1915, he described war as “‘the greatest of  
in the spring of 1915, he described war as "‘the greatest of  
calamities” and noted that, in spite of the losses incurred by  
calamities" and noted that, in spite of the losses incurred by  
the belligerent countries, they “‘have achieved no results so  
the belligerent countries, they "‘have achieved no results so  
far. This goes to show,he declared, “‘that at present only  
far. This goes to show," he declared, "‘that at present only  
the neutral states are happy, and that strict neutrality is a  
the neutral states are happy, and that strict neutrality is a  
great blessing for Afghanistan.”84 Examining the neutrali-
great blessing for Afghanistan."84 Examining the neutrali
ty of the Afghan government and Britain’s policy with re- gard to Afghanistan during World War I, it is essential to stress the immense significance of the conclusions and assess-
ty of the Afghan government and Britain’s policy with regard to Afghanistan during World War I, it is essential to stress the immense significance of the conclusions and assess
ments made by Lenin concerning this range of questions.  
ments made by Lenin concerning this range of questions.  
Lenin paid much attention to the eastern countries, in par-
Lenin paid much attention to the eastern countries, in par
ticular to Iran, and also to Afghanistan. Drawing on various  
ticular to Iran, and also to Afghanistan. Drawing on various  
well studied sources, Lenin brought out the specific fea-
well studied sources, Lenin brought out the specific fea
tures of the policy pursued by Britain with regard to Afgha-
tures of the policy pursued by Britain with regard to Afgha
nistan during World War I. The British, he said, did not be-
nistan during World War I. The British, he said, did not be
lieve that the Afghans were, in military terms, the kind of  
lieve that the Afghans were, in military terms, the kind of  
adversaries to be underestimated and stressed that Britain  
adversaries to be underestimated and stressed that Britain  
“treats them with the greatest caution”’.85 To prove his  
"treats them with the greatest caution"’.85 To prove his  
point Lenin cited the following extract from a book by  
point Lenin cited the following extract from a book by  
T. Jaeger (Weimar, 1916) concerning relations between the  
T. Jaeger (Weimar, 1916) concerning relations between the  
British and the Afghan emir Habibullah Khan: “In this one  
British and the Afghan emir Habibullah Khan: "In this one  
sees the wisdom of Britain’s ‘velvet glove’ policy, for the  
sees the wisdom of Britain’s ‘velvet glove’ policy, for the  
British could not behave to anyone more tolerantly and  
British could not behave to anyone more tolerantly and  
cautiously than they have to him.”86
cautiously than they have to him."86


The British government was greatly concerned over the  
The British government was greatly concerned over the  
activities of the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. But viceroy  
activities of the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. But viceroy  
of India Hardinge refrained (contrary to the advice by the  
of India Hardinge refrained (contrary to the advice by the  
London leadership) from any attempts to induce the Af-
London leadership) from any attempts to induce the Af
ghan emir to give up that mission to the British.87 The  
ghan emir to give up that mission to the British.87 The  
British policy-makers, who wished to avoid a conflict with  
British policy-makers, who wished to avoid a conflict with  
Afghanistan also because they did not wish to let Russia  
Afghanistan also because they did not wish to let Russia  
take part in solving the ‘“‘Afghan issue’ (which was believed  
take part in solving the ‘"‘Afghan issue’ (which was believed  
to be inevitable if Afghanistan ceased to be neutral), were  
to be inevitable if Afghanistan ceased to be neutral), were  
extremely wary in relation to Habibullah Khan; this was of-
extremely wary in relation to Habibullah Khan; this was of
ten evident in their taking a milder approach in various  
ten evident in their taking a milder approach in various  
questions related to border disputes.  
questions related to border disputes.  


Meanwhile, the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission on the bor-
Meanwhile, the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission on the bor
der with India did not end its anti-British activities, even  
der with India did not end its anti-British activities, even  
when most of its members had left Afghanistan, and the de-
when most of its members had left Afghanistan, and the de
velopments in the border regions populated by Afghan  
velopments in the border regions populated by Afghan  
tribes had already taken a bad turn for the British: a large  
tribes had already taken a bad turn for the British: a large  
Line 8,663: Line 8,663:
of the Afghan tribes abroad was one of the main reasons for  
of the Afghan tribes abroad was one of the main reasons for  
dissatisfaction with his rule. The anti-British armed actions  
dissatisfaction with his rule. The anti-British armed actions  
of these tribes’ volunteer forces were in some instances sup-
of these tribes’ volunteer forces were in some instances sup
ported by the Khost tribes and other subjects of the emir.  
ported by the Khost tribes and other subjects of the emir.  
From 1915 onwards these actions became more intense.9  
From 1915 onwards these actions became more intense.9  
In 1916-1917, Habibullah Khan rendered assistance to the  
In 1916-1917, Habibullah Khan rendered assistance to the  
British colonial authorities in their attempts to localise the  
British colonial authorities in their attempts to localise the  
seats of insurrection among the Afghan tribes and to pre-
seats of insurrection among the Afghan tribes and to pre
vent their spreading in the regions along the north-western  
vent their spreading in the regions along the north-western  
border of India. The actions of the emir and his officials  
border of India. The actions of the emir and his officials  
set off a tide of indignation in Afghanistan. The emir be-
set off a tide of indignation in Afghanistan. The emir be
gan to receive anonymous letters in which he was accused of  
gan to receive anonymous letters in which he was accused of  
treason and betrayal of Islam. Afghan intellectuals were  
treason and betrayal of Islam. Afghan intellectuals were  
Line 8,681: Line 8,681:
The explosive situation at home and abroad compelled  
The explosive situation at home and abroad compelled  
the emir to build up his armed forces and improve the entire  
the emir to build up his armed forces and improve the entire  
military machine. In 1916-1917, reforms were being carried out in the Afghan army and measures were being taken to improve military training “in case of internal complica-
military machine. In 1916-1917, reforms were being carried out in the Afghan army and measures were being taken to improve military training "in case of internal complica
tions’”.90  
tions’".90  


Unsubdued Afghanistan was kept in isolation by British  
Unsubdued Afghanistan was kept in isolation by British  
imperialism. But the freedom-loving traditions of the Af-
imperialism. But the freedom-loving traditions of the Af
ghan tribes on both sides of the Indian-Afghan border,  
ghan tribes on both sides of the Indian-Afghan border,  
the tribes, which in many areas were not yet totally enslaved  
the tribes, which in many areas were not yet totally enslaved  
by khans and landowners, the fact that part of the pop-
by khans and landowners, the fact that part of the pop
ulation still possessed amns, the hatred of foreign enslavers  
ulation still possessed amns, the hatred of foreign enslavers  
which had fermented through the ages, and the striving for  
which had fermented through the ages, and the striving for  
independence, had all set the stage for launching a national  
independence, had all set the stage for launching a national  
liberation struggle in favourable circumstances. Such cir-
liberation struggle in favourable circumstances. Such cir
cumstances were created by the victorious Great October  
cumstances were created by the victorious Great October  
Socialist Revolution in Russia, which radically changed the  
Socialist Revolution in Russia, which radically changed the  
Line 8,701: Line 8,701:


=== Independence Restored ===
=== Independence Restored ===
The Great October Revolution in Russia had a tremen
dous impact on the national liberation movement in the
East. The Leninist foreign policy principles of the young
Soviet state, proclaimed in the Decree on Peace, defined So
viet policy with regard to Afghanistan. The appeal addressed
by the Council of People’s Commissars of the Russian Fed
eration ‘To All the Working Muslims of Russia and the
East", which affirmed the right of all Muslim peoples to be
the masters of their fate,! evoked a broad response in
Afghanistan. It constituted, in effect, Soviet recognition of
Afghanistan as a sovereign and independent state. The posi
tion adopted by the Soviet Government was given official
expression in the Brest-Litovsk Treaty, signed in the spring
of 1918. Article 7 of the treaty declared that "Persia and
Afghanistan are free and independent states"’.
Considering that the establishment of diplomatic rela
tions with Afghanistan would help the Afghans in their lib
eration struggle, the Soviet government proposed in July
1918 that a Soviet mission be set up in that country. Yield
ing to British pressure, Emir Habibullah Khan rejected the
proposal. At the end of 1918 the Soviet side repeated its
proposal, which again came up against the Emir’s opposi
tion.
Meanwhile dissatisfaction with the policy of Habibul
lah Khan was spreading in Afghanistan. Levies and taxes
were increased, call-up campaigns became more frequent,
and the attitude of the authorities towards the population
became increasingly arbitrary and despotic. All power, in
fact, was now in the hands of the Emir’s favourite, Muham
mad Husayn, Minister of Finance, who represented the
emerging compradore circles and was, in essence, an agent
of British capital and did all he could to help spread British
influence in the country. The Emir led an extravagant life, ignoring the rapidly changing situation. His stubborn unwillingness to establish direct contacts with the So
viet Republic, that is, to take the opportunity to achieve
independence for Afghanistan, only brought nearer the do
mestic crisis which spelled the end of his rule.
In the summer of 1918 British troops invaded Soviet
Turkestan and seized Kushka, a town on the border with
Afghanistan. Thus, Afghanistan found itself surrounded by
the British on three sides (by that time the British also had
unlimited influence in Persia). The country’s political iso
lation from the rest of the world, imposed by the British
colonialists and perpetuated by the policy of Habibullah
Khan, was tuming into territorial isolation, sustained by
the presence of the British troops on the northern and
southern borders. Drastic measures were needed if the coun
try was to emerge from this difficult position.
As a result of the complex domestic and international
situation, opposition in the country was mounting rapid
ly. An attempt on the Emir’s life in the summer of 1918 led
to massive repressions which, combined with serious econom
ic difficulties, only served to further aggravate the gener
al dissatisfaction with the regime. On the night of February
20, 1919 Habibullah Khan was assassinated near Jalala
bad. For a few days there was dual power in the country.
The Emir’s brother, Nasrullah Khan, who was in Jalalabad
at the time, proclaimed himself the Emir. At the same time,
Amanullah Khan, the third son of Habibullah Khan (in his
father’s absence he was the vicegerent in Kabul), supported
by a part of the Kabul garrison and the city population, al
so declared himself the Emir. He announced that his imme
diate goal was to free the country from dependence on Brit
ain. The political sympathies of the population were with
the young prince. Soon Nasrullah Khan and some of his
supporters were arrested.3 Muhammad Husayn was hanged.
Amanullah Khan became the new Emir. The attempt by
the conservatives to seize power had failed.
The refusal of the British colonial authorities to rec
ognise Afghan independence led to armed clashes between
the Afghan army and British troops in May 1919. The
Afghans offered stubborn resistance, despite the numeri
cal superiority and better technical equipment of the Brit
ish army. The rout of the British invaders beyond the Caspian Sea and the armed uprising of the Pashtun tribes in the North-Western Border Province helped Afghanistan in the
struggle for independence. Britain was compelled to agree
to peace with Afghanistan, and a preliminary peace treaty
was signed in Rawalpindi on August 8, 1919. In the treaty
the British officially recognised the complete independence
of Afghanistan, which ended the long period of its semi
colonial dependence on British imperialism.
The Soviet Government was the first to recognise Afgha
nistan’s independence in March 1919, and this was of great
assistance to the Afghan people in their struggle. In a let
ter to Amanullah Khan, Lenin greeted the independent Af
ghan people and confirmed the Soviet Government’s inten
tion to establish friendly relations between the two states.
The Soviet-Afghan Friendship Treaty, signed on February
28, 1921, paved the way for friendly relations for many
years to come and served as a major factor in strengthening
the national sovereignty of Afghanistan.


=== Afghanistan in 1919–1929 ===
=== Afghanistan in 1919–1929 ===
Having won independence, the new government set about
introducing a series of reforms to overcome economic back
wardness and achieve social progress.
One of the most significant of these reforms was the
adoption in 1923 of the first Afghan constitution, which
confirmed the country’s independence, declared the Emir
to be the supreme ruler and proclaimed a certain number of
civil liberties. At the same time the State Council (a con
sultative body under the Emir), the Loy Jirgah (the Afghan
assembly of tribal chiefs and Muslim clergy), the Durbar-i
Ali (a council of government officials), and the government,
which held executive power, were established.
Economic changes were an important part of the pro
gramme of reforms carried out by the Amanullah Khan
government. In 1920, it passed the land-tax law under
which taxes in kind were replaced by taxes paid in money.
This speeded up the development of commodity-money rela
tions. In 1923, it issued the livestock-tax act unifying taxation
for all livestock breeders and abolishing additional taxes.
But the most significant innovation of all, and one which greatly influenced the subsequent evolution of the forms of ownership and, consequently, the pattern of social rela
tions in the countryside, was the Regulations for the Sale of
State Land in Afghanistan, adopted in 1924. This act legal
ised the private ownership of land, which was a powerful
stimulus to the growth of landed estates. Nearly all the land
was sold off to landlords, officials and money-lenders. Oth
er economic measures involved the resettlement of some of
the nomads in the northern regions of the country and the
confiscation and sale of land owned by clergymen. Cus
toms duties were introduced and a law encouraging indus
trial development was adopted.
The reforms effected by the new regime were aimed, on
the whole, at eliminating the inost archaic forms of feud
alism and speeding up the development of a new socio-eco
nomic system. They met, to a great extent, the interests
of the nascent classes—the "new" landowners and the na
tional commercial bourgeoisie—which were still small in
numbers and whose economic significance was as yet mini
mal. Most of the reforms damaged the position of conserv
ative sections of society: the orthodox elite of the Muslim
clergy, tribal khans, and big feudal landowners. The re
forms did not improve the position of the peasants, the
largest productive class, for they did not free them from
feudal exploitation, but only speeded up the process by
which they were being dispossessed of land, and made more
dependent on money-lenders and landlords.
Discontent with the reforms developed into an anti
government rebellion by the Khost tribes led by mullahs in
the spring of 1924. The rebels demanded that the new leg
islation be repealed, that free trade with British India be
restored and that the reforms (mostly concerning social is
sues and way of life), condemned by the mullahs for contra
dicting Islam, be cancelled. The rebellious tribes received aid
from the British colonialists, who sought to weaken the new
Afghan regime. The British even attempted to put their
stooge Abdul Karim, the son of former Emir Yaqub Khan,
at the head of the movement.
Unable to suppress the rebellion of the southern tribes, the
government agreed to a compromise: at the Loy Jirgah held
eae: of 1924 it was compelled to cancel some of
the reforms. The socio-economic restructuring of the country was slowed down considerably. The formation of a new politico-economic structure in
the country required the expansion of Afghan foreign rela
tions. After national independence had been restored and
political isolation ended, the government of Amanullah
Khan took vigorous measures to establish relations with a
large number of countries. By 1924 Afghanistan had estab
lished relations with the Russian Federation, Britain, Italy,
France, Germany, Poland, Belgium, Turkey, Egypt, and
Iran. The 1926 Soviet-Afghan Treaty of Neutrality and
Mutual Non-Aggression was an important milestone in the
history of relations between the two countries, and Afgha
nistan’s now traditional policy of neutrality was thus legal
ly confirmed. In order to further expand Afghanistan’s
foreign relations and bolster up its international prestige,
King Amanullah Khan,* accompanied by some of his min
isters and advisers, set out on an extended tour abroad.
His itinerary included visits to India, Egypt, Italy, France,
Germany, Britain, the Soviet Union, Turkey, and Iran.
When in India, the king urged Muslims and Hindus to unite
in the struggle for freedom. His anti-colonialist speeches
greatly alarmed the British colonial authorities. In Egypt,
which was, in effect, under British control, he spoke of de
fending national independence. The main purpose of his
stay in Italy was the purchase of arms. When in France he
examined large factories and reached an agreement on deliv
eries of French weapons. The visit by the Afghan King to ,
Germany had economic motives. Amanullah Khan signed
preliminary agreements on granting German industrialists
concessions to construct railways in Afghanistan, and in
vited German engineers and technicians to his country.
During his stay in Britain the British authorities tried to
exert pressure on him and, demonstrating their industrial
and military might, tried to persuade him to establish clos
er contacts with Britain to the detriment of Afghan-So
viet relations. But Amanullah Khan rejected all those at
tempts.
The king arrived in Moscow in May 1928 and was warm
ly received by Soviet government leaders. During his two weeks in the USSR he was acquainted with the economic and cultural achievements of the Soviet people. The two
sides signed documents on expanding economic and cul
tural cooperation between the two countries. ;
The visit by Amanullah Khan to Turkey and Iran result
ed in the signing of friendship treaties with these coun
tries, which strengthened their position in the face of con
tinuing political and economic expansion of Western im
perialism.
On the whole, the tour of the King of Afghanistan proved
fruitful. It strengthened Afghanistan’s foreign ties and of
fered it new opportunities to carry out further important
changes in its economic and political life.
Back home, Amanullah Khan began preparing a new
series of reforms to eradicate the outdated feudal system.
Late in August 1928 he put a draft of new reforms before
the Loy Jirgah session in Pagman. These reforms included
the cancellation of various privileges enjoyed by feudal
lords and tribal leaders and they also weakened the politi
cal position of the conservative Muslim clergy who were
opposing the government policy of reforms. Secular courts
of justice were instituted. All mullahs were to be recertified.
The king and his supporters made attempts to modernise
family and marital relations, and to fix a minimum age for
marriage. Here, however, they failed. At a durbar in
October, the supporters of Amanullah Khan advanced new
draft reforms affecting social and daily life. They included
mixed education at schools, sending Afghan young people
to study abroad, the banning of polygamy, the abolition of
the yashmak, etc.5
In the new programme put forward by the Young Afghan
Government, a great deal of emphasis was placed on econom
ic development. In a bid to limit the economic influence
of foreign (Anglo-Indian) capital, which had monopolised
the foreign and, in part, the domestic trade of Afghanistan,
the government of Amanullah Khan began pursuing a pro
tectionist policy with regard to local merchants. In the
1920s, the first joint-stock companies (sherkats) appeared,
with shares held also by members of the ruling circles,
including the Emir. :
Attempts to pool national capital in the sherkats were
intensified in the late 1920s, by which time the country had about 20 trade companies with a total capital of 5.5-6 million afghanis.6 The sherkats were granted monopoly
rights to procure and market staple commodities. As a
result, the position of foreign merchants in the country was
somewhat weakened. By the end of the 1920s national cap
ital accounted for nearly 40 per cent of all foreign trade
transactions.? At the Loy Jirgah session in August 1928,
Amanullah Khan informed the deputies about his talks
with Western industrialists and about the signing of conces
sional agreements with them. He proposed that a state bank
be set up, with a view to using merchant capital for the needs
of the state. But the merchants, who feared to trust their
money to the state, demanded that the bank be private, and
did not support the proposal.
The reform programme also provided for important mea
sures to ‘develop the military forces of the country. Plan
ning to reorganise the Afghan army on the European mod
el, Amanullah Khan insisted on the introduction of univers
al military service in place of the voluntary system, on the
extension of compulsory military service from 2 to 3 years,
and on a ban on the practice of recruit replacement or re
"lease through payment. Since the purchase of arms abroad
demanded considerable state expenditure, Amanullah
Khan introduced, in the autumn of 1928, an additional ex
traordinary tax—5 afghanis from every individual.
The government also paid considerable attention to com
bating deeply rooted social evils, particularly red-tape, bri
bery and smuggling. However it did not go farther than ap
peals and impracticable plans. What was needed was a radi
cal change of the social structure of the state, which was
not the intention of the Young Afghans. It was also pro
posed that the state administration system be reorganised.
Amanullah Khan suggested that a national council—the
prototype of a future parliament—be set up in place of the
State Council (which was a mere consultative body at court).
However, this proposal also proved impossible to implement
at the time because of the mounting opposition of various
_ sections of the population to the reforms being introduced
by the regime.
Signs of growing political tension in the country became
apparent during the Loy Jirgah session in the heated debate
over the bills, and could be seen in the direct pressure exerted by Amanullah Khan and his retinue on the deputies, and in the poorly disguised unwillingness of the latter to back
up the reforms. Among the people close to the king there
was increasing disagreement over.the scope and depth of
socio-economic change; there was no political unity, and the
rivalry among various leaders was growing more acute. The
radicalism of the reforms proposed by Amanullah Khan
increased the number of his adversaries. The king’s attempt
to form a party—Istiqlal wa tajaddod (Independence and
Renovation)—as a political basis for modernisation came up
against resistance on the part of influential leaders of the
Young Afghan movement, who held moderate views. Fear
ing opposition in the higher echelons of power, Amanullah
Khan carried out a purge of the state apparatus and some
prominent national figures who supported Young Afghan
views lost their posts. Among those who resigned were
Mahmud-Beg Tarzi, Minister of Foreign Affairs and the
ideologist of the Young Afghan movement, and Minister
of Defence Muhammad Wali Khan, one of the king’s closest
advisers, the man who headed the first Afghan diplomatic
mission to Moscow in 1919.9 They were seplacsa by people
without definite political orientation who had managed to
win the king’s trust. Some of them did not even conceal
their hostility towards the reforms. Among the people close
to Amanullah Khan there was an atmosphere of intrigue,
distrust, enmity and factional conflict.


=== Afghanistan in 1930–1945 ===
The alignment of class forces in the country in the
autumn of 1928 showed that opposition sentiments had
grown to mass proportions. The opponents of the policy
of reforms were joined by the reactionary elite of the Mus
lim clergy dissatisfied with the new regime. They were dis
pleased by many of the innovations introduced by the gov
ernment, primarily by attempts to-belittle the mullahs’
public and political role, secularise many aspects of social
life, and place the mullahs’ activities under the control of
the secular authorities. Muslim fundamentalists were most
indignant at the reforms in the social area and every-day
life, for they limited their traditional monopoly in family
and marital matters. It was precisely the reforms affect
ing family life that came under the sharpest attack. Ama
nullah Khan was declared "godless", a "heretic" flouting
the sacred principles of Islam, a man led by the "‘faithless". The elite of the Muslim clergy—the most fervent opponents of bourgeois reforms—became the ideologists of
the anti-government movement. They were joined by feudal
landowners and tribal khans displeased with the restriction
of their power in their localities, with the loss of their tra
ditional privileges, and with the drop in their duty-free
trade (smuggling, in fact) with British India.
 
The peasants, the poor stock breeders. and handicrafts
men, also joined in the movement. Some of the social mea
sures of the Amanullah Khan government, in particular,
abolition of various additional taxes and requisitions, elim
ination of slavery, and proclamation of religious equali
ty eased feudal oppression on these sections of the popula
tion, but on the whole they had got no direct benefits from
the reforms. On the contrary, at the initial stage of the
country’s transition to bourgeois development, their eco
nomic situation deteriorated seriously. The land tax in
creased to reach 45 per cent of the harvest cost by the end
of the 1920s. 19 For the most part, the government reforms
were carried out at the expense of the peasants. Expendi
ture on the king’s foreign tour and on the purchase of weap
ons, machines and equipment abroad were a heavy burden
on the peasants. And, last but not least, replacement of
taxes in kind with taxes in cash, and legalisation of private
landownership directly affected the position of the peas
antry, causing major changes in the subsequent evolution
of the peasant farming and social relationships in the coun
tryside. Having no ready money to pay taxes, the peasant
had to borrow from money-lender or a landowner on the
security of the future harvest from his plot of land, and thus
he found himself in debt. (The expropriation of peasant
lands left more and more peasants landless, and this exprop
riation continued right up to the April 1978 revolution.)
In the end, the peasants, who were dependent on feudal
lords and khans, came out in protest against reforms which
made their conditions still worse, and against the new re
gime, constituting the main driving force of the anti-govern
ment movement.
 
The first signs of. the impending socio-political crisis
became obvious in the autumn of 1928, when bands appear
ed north of Kabul robbing the local rich. This was stilla
spontaneous form of social protest by the peasants, driven to desperation by excessive requisitions and the local authorities’ arbitrary rule. One such band of robbers was led by
Habibullah, known as Bacha-i Saqao (the son of a water
carrier), a non-commissioned officer who had deserted
from the army. His band soon began to attack members of
the local administration. He shared part of the stolen goods
with the poor. The activity of Bacha-i Saqao in the North
erm Province and the support he received from the local
peasants alarmed the government, which was compelled to
take measures to neutralise him, though without obvious
success.
 
In that same period, in November 1928, some of the
Pashtun tribes in the Eastern Province rose up in arms
against the government. The uprising quickly spread to
many other regions. The governor of the province announced
that military units would be called in and tribal volunteers
raised, and simultaneously called upon the insurgents to end
the rebellion. The central authorities dispatched reinforce
ments to the insurgent province and by the end of
November the army units and the insurgents were involved
in serious clashes.
 
The leaders of the uprising—Muhammad Alam and Mu
hammad Afzal, the religious leaders of: the Shinwari tribe—
issued a manifesto setting forth the insurgents’ goals. The
uprising, the manifesto said, was an attempt ‘‘to change the
method of administering the country and to remove rul
ers guilty of bribery and corruption, who issue laws contra
dicting Sharia’’. The territories controlled by the insurgents,
the manifesto went on, were administered ‘in keeping with
the laws of Sharia and the ulemas are their genuine rulers".
The chief cause of the uprising, said the authors of the ma
nifesto, lay in the "pagan reforms" of Amanullah Khan. The
manifesto called for the king to be overthrown.1! On De
cember 9 a 10-day truce was concluded between the rebels
and a government delegation. A few days later, however,
the conflict broke out again and the imsurgents besieged
Jalalabad, the centre of the province.
 
In the meantime the anti-government activity of Bacha-i
Saqao was gaining momentum. His broad popularity in the
Northern Province attracted the opposition, primarily reac
tionary Muslim leaders, who decided to use Bacha-i Saqao
in the struggle against Amanullah Khan’s regime. At a meeting of khans, held on December 12 in the village of Kalakan (the birthplace of Bacha-i Saqao), he was proclaimed
the emir of Afghanistan under the name of Habibullah
Ghazi. On the same day he attacked the city of Saraj Hoja
and disarmed the local garrison. His comrade-in-arms Said
Husayn, a small landowner, seized the town of Jabal Os
Saraj and the town’s garrison surrendered without a shot.
Bacha-i Saqao prepared to take Kabul.
 
The king and his retinue found themselves in a difficult
situation. The ruling elite was in a state of confusion and
fear. Some statesmen were secretly establishing contacts
with Bacha-i Saqao. Hazrat-i Shor Bazaar Mujaddidi, an
outstanding Muslim theologian who had been banished
from the country by Amanullah Khan and now lived in
exile in British India, stepped up his activity against the
Afghan king. Disturbances spilled over to other provinces of
Afghanistan.
 
The general discontent affected the army, which for
the most part consisted of people from oppressed national
minorities. Most of the officers, who did not, approve of
radical reforms, were also opposed to the king. Desertion from
the army reached mass proportions. On December 13 a
3,000-strong unit of Bacha-i Saqao’s forces launchedanattack
on Kabul, which was repelled only with enormous effort.
 
On Decemher 29 the reactionary Muslim leaders, using
Bacha-i Saqao as their representative, issued a religious edict
in which they attempted to prove the legality of Bacha-i Sa
qao’s claims to the throne. The-edict attacked the govern
ment’s political and social reforms, accused the king of "‘god
lessness" and declared him to be dethroned. Bacha-iSaqao was
proposed for the post of the emir. The edict’s authors promi
sed he would rule the country in keeping with Sharia./2
 
Having lost the support of the main social forces, Ama
nullah Khan tumed for aid to his own Durrani tribe, but its
leaders refused to support him in the struggle against the
rebellious eastem tribes, and called upon him to observe
the rules of Sharia. In despair, the king sent his relative,
Ali Ahmad Khan, the governor of Kabul, who secretly shared
the views of the opposition and himself aspired to the
throne, to Jalalabad to negotiate with the insurgents. Early
in January 1929 he managed to conclude an armistice. The
jirgah of local tribes, held in Jalalabad on: January 5, put forward its own demands, which included, among other things, complete restoration of the Sharia laws, reduction of
taxes, representation of the mullahs in the state appara
tus, deportation of foreien missions, and repeal of the new
criminal procedure code. 13 :
 
The mounting political crisis in Afghanistan was accom
panied by greater activity by British imperialism in the re
gion. Long before the uprising, the British authorities in
India began to erect fortifications and build communica
tion lines along the border with Afghanistan, along which a
large armed force had been concentrated. In November 1928,
Anglo-Indian troops started military exercises in the area.
 
At that time Colonel T. E. Lawrence of the British intelli
gence service appeared in the border region. He was engaged
in subversive activities among the tribes in the region. The
Afghan government issued an order to arrest him if found
on Afghan territory.
 
The British started open interference in Afghan affairs.
British planes repeatedly violated the air space over Afgha
nistan. Mr. Humphreys, British envoy in Kabul, met with
Bacha-i Saqao, to assure him of his sympathy. The explosive
situation in Kabul led the British to evacuate their diplo
matic mission. However their plots against the regime of
Amanullah Khan did not stop. On December 22, Muham.
mad Omar Khan, a grandson of former Emir Sher Ali
Khan, who lived in Allahabad on financial aid supplied by
the British authorities, left for Afghanistan, where he tried
to make his way into the area affected by the uprising and
lead the tribes against Amanullah Khan, who did not suit
the British.
 
As it found itself increasingly isolated, the regime surren
dered: on January 9, 1929, it issued a firman repealing
a number of major reforms pertaining to social and every
day life. Universal military service was cancelled; the
mullahs’ rights were restored, and a senate was set up from
among "well-known ulemas, sardars, khans and some offi
cials". But it was too late. Even this move could not win
Amanullah Khan time. The regime was doomed: Kabul was
besieged by the insurgent troops of Bacha-i Saqao.
 
On January 14, 1929, Amanullah Khan abdicated in favour of his elder brother, Inayatullah Khan, and left the
capital for Qandahar. Bacha-i Saqao refused to accept the armistice offered by the new emir, captured Kabul, and was proclaimed the emir of Afghanistan on January 19. Inaya
tullah Khan left for Peshawar on board a British plane and
later joined Amanullah Khan in Qandahar.
 
Thus ended an important period in the independent devel
opment of Afghanistan. The failure of the policy of re
forms and the fall of the Amanullah Khan regime came
as a result of the complex process of class struggle reflecting
the clash of old and new social forces—the young national
bourgeoisie and feudal reaction. The chief manifestation of
class activity in the late 1920s was the spontaneous move
ment among working sections of the population, who pro
tested against their worsening conditions. The mass actions
by peasants and poor livestock breeders were used in the
struggle against the Young Afghan regime by feudal reac
tion backed up by British imperialism.
 
The new authorities in Kabul, with Emir Bacha-i Saqao
at their head, were supported by conservative circles com
prising feudal lords and reactionary Muslim leaders, the op
 
onents of reforms. Having accused Amanullah Khan of vio
ating the laws of Sharia, the new regime annulled all the
reforms that damaged the interests of the reactionary oppo
sition. The abolition of universal compulsory military ser
vice suited the separatist-minded tribal khans. At the same
time, the emir, who wished to retain the support of the
peasants, the main driving force behind the uprising, can
celled the debt arrears of the preceding years and all addi
tional requisitions and dues.
 
Immediately after coming to power, Bacha-i Saqao set
about to removing rival claimants to the throne. His troops
subdued the North, the Herat Province, and in May 1929
even seized Qandahar. But a number of regions remained
independent’ and their recognition of the power of Kabul
was merely nominal.
 
With the annulment of the main reforms introduced by
the former regime, Afghanistan regressed in terms of so
cial and economic development. Schools were closed and
education was now controlled by the mullahs, the minis
tries of education and justice were abolished, justice was
now controlled by Sharia courts, and women were deprived
even of the rudimentary rights they had received under
Amanullah Khan. In the very first days of the new regime a new legislative body—the Islamiya—was set up. It consisted of mullahs and the most important khans.
 
The economy, too, suffered a serious reversal. Bacha-i
Saqao began large-scale confiscation and plunder of proper
ty belonging not only to the supporters of Amanullah Khan
but also to a large number of merchants. Foreign and do
mestic trade was paralysed. Banditry became fréquent. Na
tional industry declined. The prices of staple products shot
up. The events of 1928 caused the utter disruption of state
finances. To replenish the treasury Bacha-i Saqao increased
taxes, thereby contradicting his own declarations. The
deceived peasants gradually turned away from the ruler in
Kabul. They received no protection against the arbitrary
behaviour and extortion of state tax collectors, usually the
same men who had collected taxes under Amanullah Khan.
 
The new regime also failed in its foreign policy. Not a
single state recognised it officially. Most of the foreign
diplomatic missions had left Kabul in January and Feb
ruary 1929. Only the Turkish, German and Soviet mis
sions remained in the Afghan capital. The government of
Bacha-i Saqao showed no interest in promoting Soviet
Afghan relations, which grew far worse at that period be
cause of the spread of the anti-Soviet basmachi movement in
Afghanistan. The Kabul emir gave every encouragement
to the actions of basmachi gangs who made frequent incur
sions into the Soviet territory, assaulting representatives of
Soviet power and the local population. Despite the repeat
ed protests of the Soviet Government, the Kabul regime
did nothing to stop these anti-Soviet activities.
 
Throughout the rule of Bacha-i Saqao the struggle for
power continued in Afghanistan. Former Kabul governor
Ali Ahmad Khan, who was in Jalalabad, exploited the sit
uation and, having enlisted the support of army units and
some of the rebellious tribes, declared himself the emir
of the Eastern Province on January 20.14 He abolished
all the remaining reforms introduced by Amanullah Khan
and cancelled tax debts. But as he needed money, he made
the Indian merchants of Jalalabad pay him their debts to
the government of Amanullah Khan and began collecting
taxes from the population three months in advance. Hoping
for British assistance, Ali Ahmad Khan asked the British for
financial and military aid. His attempt to seize Kabul failed due to massive desertion and also as a result of inter-tribal discord. Left without any support, he fled to Peshawar.
 
Meanwhile Amanullah Khan had arrived in Qandahar. As
soon as he learnt about the flight of Inayatullah Khan he
annulled his abdication and began preparations for an ex
pedition to Kabul. The population of the province respond
ed with reluctance to his appeal for support in the strug
gle for power. However, he soon formed a small army and
on March 26 set out from Qandahar to Ghazni, where the
largest concentration of Bacha-i Saqao’s troops was de
ployed. By the middle of April the troops of the former king
reached Ghazni and engaged in battle with the army of Ba
cha-i Saqao. But here, too, Amanullah Khan suffered a set
back. His army was poorly supplied and its morale was very
low. Moreover, Bacha-i Saqao was supported by the Ghil
zai tribes, the old rivals of the Durranis. J.ate in April the
army of Amanullah Khan began a disordered retreat. On
May 23 the former king announced a ceasefire and left
Afghanistan together with his family.* His defeat was inev
itable, since his programme of struggle had remained un
changed and therefore did not enjoy wide support.
 
In April 1929, Ghulam Nabi Khan, former Afghan Am
bassador in Moscow, gathered together a sizeable detach
ment of Uzbeks and Hazaras and seized Mazar-i-Sharif in
a surprise attack. He declared himself to be a supporter of
Amanullah Khan and made no claim to the throne. Soon
he controlled the whole of Northern Afghanistan. After
the defeat of Amanullah Khan, however, his position grew
weaker, and he left Afghanistan in early June.
 
In the spring of 1929, General Muhammad Nadir Khan,
ex-minister of war, joined the struggle for the throne. He
had been removed from his ministerial post for his opposi
tion to the radicalism of Amanullah Khan’s reforms and had
been appointed ambassador to France. In 1927, he retired
on pension and lived privately in Nice. When Bacha-i Saqao
came to power he returmed home with his brothers, Shah
Wali Khan and Hashim Khan, and declared he would oppose
the emir, who had seized power illegally. At that time Na
dir Khan refused to support Amanullah Khan, as he intend
ed to form an independent movement. He disguised his quest for power by "asking his countrymen to abstain from the bloodshed and civil war".15
 
In March 1929, Nadir Khan arrived in Khost and began
to gather tribal volunteer forces. At first his struggle against
Bacha-i Saqao was unsuccessful. In the tribal area inter
tribal strife was spreading and separatist sentiments pre
vailed. The peasants still believed Bacha-i Saqao’s promises
to relieve their tax burden. Nadir Khan began his military
political campaign in the spring, when the farmers were
busy in the fields, and he also experienced serious financial
difficulties.
 
By the end of the summer, however, the situation had
changed. The policy of Bacha-i Saqao led the country into
an economic impasse and caused political anarchy. The peas
ants no longer supported the regime. The slump in trade,
arbitrary rule and repression caused the merchants to join
the emir’s enemies. Loss of central control hit the country
and there was the danger of civil war and a weakening of
sovereignty, which could bring about state dependence.
Spontaneous disturbances among the working people con
tinued. As a result, various sections of the ruling classes who
at the beginning had supported Bacha-i Saqao, now tumed
their backs on him, which gave Nadir Khan abundant scope
for action. He was assisted by the British, with whom he
had long maintained close contacts. His attempts to sup
press the spontaneous popular movement, to unite the lead
ers of the ruling classes and establish a firm government
suited them very well. Early in September 1929, a few thous
and people from the Wazir and Mahsud tribes living in Bri
tish India joined Nadir’s army, largely due to the efforts of
the British colonial authorities.1® Later, when he came to
power, Nadir Khan received free financial aid from the Brit
ish government to the tune of £175,000.1


=== Afghanistan After the Second World War ===
At the end of September, Nadir Khan ie his supporters
began a serious military campaign. On October 8, his army
routed the emir’s troops and occupied Kabul. Unable to
offer effective resistance, Bacha-i Saqao fled from the cap
ital, but was captured. On November 2, 1929 he was exec
uted together with his closest supporters.


=== The Anti-Monarchist Coup and the Proclamation of a Republic ===
On October 15, Nadir Khan entered the capital. At a
meeting of his associates and supporters he was pro
claimed the Padishah of Afghanistan.
 
=== Afghanistan in 1930–1945 ===
Nadir Shah was supported by the former enemies of
Amanullah Khan—feudal lords, sardars, tribal khans, and
conservative orthodox mullahs—and also by members of
the new social strata—liberal landowners, merchants and
money-lenders. Some saw him as fairly conservative, since
he had been opposed to Amanullah Khan’s radical reforms,
while others saw him as a man supporting economic pro
gress and a moderate degree of modernisation. Ee was op
posed by many influential supporters of Amanullah Khan.
Nadir Shah ruthlessly stamped out any opposition. Muham
mad Wali Khan, one of the closest associates of the for
mer king, was arrested and executed. Ghulam Nabi Khan,
who returned from exile in 1932, was soon arrested on
charges of organising an anti-Nadir plot among the Khost
tribes and executed. His brother, Ghulam Ghilani Khan,
was executed some time later. Many Amanullah’s supporters
were arrested and some deported. The peasants, national
minorities, and poor livestock breeders from the Pashtun
tribes continued their protest actions unrelated with the
interests of any of the political groupings or claimants to the
throne. Though Nadir Shah and the ruling elite, frightened
by the extent of popular discontent, instructed that "some
allowances are to be made in recovering arrears", the tax
system remained unchanged, and requisitions and oppres
sion by local officials. continued. The rural economy had
suffered enormously during the events of 1928-1929.
 
By November 1929 peasant disturbances had already
broken out in Qohdaman, north of Kabul. On November
30, about 10,000 insurgents captured the city of Charikar
and attacked Jabal Os-Saraj. The peasant movement was
ruthlessly suppressed.
 
In June 1930, an uprising flared up again in the region.
The insurgent Tajik population was joined by some of the
Pashtun peasants who were dissatisfied with the govern
ment’s tax policy. When regular army units failed to defeat
the insurgents, Nadir Shah used voluntary armed forces re
cruited from the tribes. He promised the 25,000 Pashtun
voiunteers who gathered in Kabul in August to reduce
taxes, or cancel them altogether. As a result of this the up
rising was drowned in blood.
 
In October 1932, disturbances began in Khost. The in
surgents were protesting against the government’s tax polli
cy and accused Nadir Shah of going back on his promise to
reduce taxation. The uprising was led by mullah Lewanai,
who had risen from the lower ranks of the clergy (the tribal
elite remained loyal to the government). The uprising lasted
for more than six months. Nadir Shah requested the Bri
tish authorities in India to prevent the Wazir and Muh
sud tribes living in India from joining the movement. The
British backed up Nadir Shah and the insurgents were de
feated.
 
All those actions: were part of the class struggle that had
developed over the preceding years. Though they did not
have the same scope as the social clashes which occurred in
the preceding period, they had a new class content, showing
that the peasants had grown ‘more mature politically and
socially. Therefore the exploiter classes considered the move
ment even more dangerous than the radicalism of the
Young Afghan reformers, and this induced them to rally
round Nadir Shah and his regime.
 
In the summer of 1931, the Afghan army crushed what
remained of the basmachi groups, which had not only crossed
the Soviet border but robbed people in Afghan territory.
Having formed a government from among his relatives and
closest supporters, Nadir Shah issued a declaration on No
vember 16, 1929, setting forth the main principles of his
domestic and foreign policies. The main emphasis was on
the idea of a "class alliance", as the cornerstone of the so
cial structure of the state. Nadir Shah also promised to im
prove the tax system and combat embezzlement.
 
Nadir Shah’s programme also allotted an important role
to Islam. The mullahs’ rights and privileges, which had been
restored and extended by the Bacha-i Saqao regime, were
left unchanged, and they had the opportunity to influence
important decisions in state matters through the Ulema
Council, set up within the framework of the Ministry of
Justice. The provisions of the civil and criminal code were
brought in line with the norms of the Sharia law. Women
were obliged to wear the yashmak, women’s schools were
closed down and polygamy was restored.
 
The main principles of Nadir Shah’s regime, set forth in
his declaration, were enshrined in the constitution adopted at the Loy Jirgah session in October 1931. Its chief purpose was to consolidate the power of the ruling classes and guard
their interests against the social dangers resulting from pop
ular actions in 1928 and 1929. However, the regime
could not afford to ignore the growing influence of the
bourgeois classes who also sought to secure their interests °
in state administration and who were most interested in
strengthening state sovereignty and putting an end to feudal
fragmentation. The constitution proclaimed equality of all
people before the law, granted them a number of civil
liberties, and abolished feudal estate disabilities. It also
proclaimed freedom of trade, industrial and agricultural
activity, and also the inviolability of private property.
 
The greater part of the 1931 constitutional provisions were
determined by the predominance of feudal relations in the
economy. They fixed the rights and privileges of the Muslim
clergy. The rights of Afghan subjects, the constitution said,
were regulated not only by civil laws, but also by the laws
of Sharia. The mullahs received considerable freedom of ac
tion in the sphere of education. Islamic law was now freely
taught and the Sharia courts of justice were granted au
tonomy.
 
The modified social structure of power, which now in
cluded members of the bourgeois classes, also determined
the form of state administration. The functions of the Loy
Jirgah (in which the ulemas and the tribal elite were broadly
represented) were extended in matters relating to financial,
specifically taxation, policy. At the same time the constitu
tion provided for the participation of traders and landown
ers in state organs. A parliament was established consisting
of two houses: the upper house, or the Council of the
Nobility (Senate), and the lower house, the National
Assembly. The majority of the members of the upper house
were appointed by the shah from among the owners of
large estates, tribal khans and the upper muslim clergy.
The National Assembly was elective. Its members had to be
educated persons aged between 30 and 70 with a reputation
for "honesty and fairness", which gave the ruling elite a
chance to turn down undesirable candidates for political
reasons. The right to take part in elections was denied to
women, landless peasants moving about the country in search
of jobs, and to small nomad tribes. The functions of the National Assembly included approving legislation and the state budget, granting stock-exchange companies benefits and
privileges, and considering questions related to domestic and
foreign loans. Cabinet members were formally responsible to
the parliament. The National Assembly had, in fact, very
limited opportunities to influence the government’s policy.
The greater part of the constitution was devoted to the
prerogatives and privileges of Nadir Shah and his dynasty.
According to the constitution, the shah had the right
to approve the composition of the cabinet of ministers,
veto bills, conduct foreign policy, declare war, and conclude
peace. Having consolidated the position of the conservative
strata in the constitution and extended the political. rights
of the bourgeois classes, who were playing an increasingly
important role in the economy, the regime gave legal shape
to the ruling bloc of landowners and the bourgeoisie, and
this largely determined the subsequent evolution of the state
power structure in Afghanistan.
The Nadir Shah regime was confronted with the difficult
pat of economic development. The events of 1928-1929
ad exhausted state resources. In addition, the world eco
nomic crisis had a negative effect on Afghanistan’s economy.
The price of astrakhan, Afghanistan’s main export item,
dropped on the world market. The reduction of the price
of silver on foreign markets led to a devaluation of the
Afghan national currency. Seeking to replenish the treasury,
the regime launched upon large-scale confiscation of property
ibelonging to supporters of Bacha-i Saqao and started a campa
jign of reprisals. But the money collected was chiefly used to
prop up the tribal khans who fought against Bacha-i Saqao.
The new regime was assisted financially by the Kabul
merchants, who made generous donations to the state
treasury and proposed a number of economic reforms. Their
programme was drawn up by Abdul Majid Zabuli, one of
the richest merchants in the country, who proposed that
the development of agriculture and industry should begin
without delay. As the ruling circles continued Amanullah
Khan’s policy of pooling isolated nation capitals in sherkats,
the trading bourgeoisie, which had gone through dramatic
upheavals during the 1928-1929 political crisis, sought a closer
alliance with the ruling elite which had defended its interests.
In contrast with the previous period, the merchants were, on the whole, in favour of the idea of sherkats, all the more so as the sherkats improved their position in the competi
tion with foreign capital. The functioning of joint-stock com
panies required the establishment of a national credit insti
tution which would help control the country’s monetary
and foreign trade markets. The first bank, Sherkat-i Ashami,
with a capital exceeding 5 million afghanis, of which 4.5
million belonged to the state and the rest to Afghan mer
chants, was opened in Kabul in January 1931. The bank was
to stabilise the exchange rate of the national currency and
grant credit to merchants.*" A year later a monopoly of
the procurement and export of astrakhan was introduced
and then transferred to the Afghan National Bank, an im
proved version of Sherkat-i Ashami. It was, in fact, a joint
stock company which, in addition to regulating money
circulation in the country, was engaged in commercial trans
actions and had the monopoly of the export and import
of certain goods.
 
Having established a national bank, the government set
about organising sherkats with the direct participation of
the Afghan National Bank, which was to become a sharehold
er. In the early 1930s, more than thirty large sherkats
emerged in the country, bringing together a considerable
part of national c ee Exercising a monopoly over the ex
port and import of many goods, the bank and the sherkats
sapped the trading power of foreign merchants. Afghan
merchants, organised in sherkats, were granted numerous
privileges. The unification of national trading capital in joint
stock companies speeded oe the growth of internal capital
accumulation. In 1936-1937, the total capital of the larger
sherkats exceeded 90 million ‘afghanis.
 
In the foreign sphere, the government declared a policy
of neutrality and equitable relations with all countries,
which was registered in the 1931 constitution.
 
At the same time the regime of Nadir Shah was rather
closely oriented on Britain. As has been already mentioned,
Britain had supported Nadir Shah from the time he joined
the struggle for the throne. With his coming to power his
contacts with the British colonial authorities in India had
grown still closer. This was seen in his negative attitude to
the national liberation movement in the North-Western
Border Province of India, which grew into an anti-colonial uprising in Peshawar in 1930. The regime of Nadir Shah prevented the Pashtun tribes in the border area of Afgha
nistan from joining the uprising and thereby helped the Brit
ish colonial troops to suppress it. Nadir Shah feared that
the anti-colonial movement in India, which could be de
scribed as democratic, could dangerously influence the
situation in Afghanistan. Britain, for its part, rewarded
Nadir Shah’s services with military and financial aid.
 
However, Afghanistan, which had gone through an agonis
ing political crisis, needed support for its national indepen
dence. That support came from the Soviet Union. On June
24, 1931, the Soviet-Afghan Treaty of Neutrality and Mu
tual Non-Aggression was signed in Kabul for a term of five
years, to be prolonged automatically every year. The treaty
provided for non-interference by each country in the intem
al affairs of the other, mutual neutrality, should one of
them be involved in a war, and settlement of disputes by
peaceful means.
 
The treaty took pride of place in relations between the
two countries, for it was a major international document
imbued with a spirit of friendship and goodneighbourliness.
It helped to expand Soviet-Afghan trade and economic rela
tions. During the world economic crisis, when the volume of
Afghan trade with capitalist countries fell sharply, its trade
with the Soviet Union increased considerably. By 1932 the
USSR had topped the list of the countries importing Afghan
goods and was second biggest exporter to Afghanistan.?1
Furthermore, trade with the Soviet Union had a favourable
effect on the country’s economic growth, since the USSR
purchased Afghan goods at fixed prices, regardless of changes
on the world market. This helped Afghanistan to avoid
the heavy losses which could otherwise have resulted from
the general worsening of foreign trade conditions.
 
_ Afghanistan developed also its relations with other count
ries. The regime of Nadir Shah was especially interested in
maintaining close contacts with Turkey and Iran, and signed
friendship treaties with them in 1932. It established
diplomatic relations with Saudi Arabia and Iraq. Attempts
were made to consolidate ties with Germany and France,
and to use their economic potential. Little progress was
made in this direction, however, after Afghanistan refused
to grant them concessions. In 1930, a friendship treaty was signed with Japan, which, however, did not generate broad contacts between the two countries. The regime made an
attempt to attract US capital to Afghanistan, and an Afghan
mission was sent to the United States. But the US industrial
ists, concerned over their own economic difficulties at that
time, showed no-interest in Afghanistan. The period of ac
tive economic and political US expansion in Afghanistan
began later, after World War II.
 
Socio-political life in the country revived. The system of
administration was reorganised. A medical school was opened
in 1932, which soon developed into a medical faculty and
the nucleus of the future Kabul University. Newspapers and
magazines made their appearance. However, the political sit
uation in the country remained unstable. Severe persecu
tion of the former associates of Amanullah Khan caused
retaliatory actions by the opposition. In November 1933,
Nadir Shah was assassinated by an Amanullah supporter,
and power went to his son; Muhammad Zahir Shah.
 
Under. the new shah the cabinet of ministers, headed by
Nadir Shah’s brother, Muhammad Hashim Khan, remained
unchanged, and so did the guidelines of government policy.
Concentration and centralisation of national capital was
continuing apace. The activities of the en National
Bank and the sherkats, in which only han nationals
could be shareholders, totally eieanel the role of
foreign capital in Afghanistan’s foreign trade. Foreign busi
nessmen could not even act as intermediaries in Afghan fo
reign trade.
 
In the latter half of the 1930s, large sherkats were
springing up in Kabul, Herat, Qandahar, Mazar-i-Sharif, and
other cities. With the participation of the Afghan National
Bank several sherkats were set up to conduct trade with
the Soviet Union. By 1936 most of the merchants in the
country had been shareholders in the sherkats, though
they continued independent commercial activities of their
own. In the late 1930s, the Afghan National Bank began to
play a much greater role as a regulator of foreign trade op
erations. Consequently, the top men in national trading
capital began to exert increasing political influence. Their
leader, Abdul Majid, the bank’s president, was appointed
Minister of Economics. The bank aetna abandoned
trade operations and began to invest capit in sherkats and to grant credits to them. The accumulation of capital was carried out through the Afghan National Bank and its
subsidiary sherkats, whose activity now extended to a con
siderable part of trade operations on the home market and
to practically the whole of foreign trade.
 
Private capital was entering the sphere of production
with reluctance, preferring trade, which was more profitable.
Therefore in the 1930s, when the meagre state finances
were being consumed mainly by non-productive spending,
industrial development was very slow. The largest alloca
_ tions from the state budget went into the building of roads
and small irrigation systems. Of the few industrial enterprises
 
built in that period, the most important were the cotton
mill in Jabal Os-Saraj and the silk spinning factory in Qanda
har, both fitted out with equipment purchased back in 1928
by Amanullah Khan, and also the textile combine in Pol-e
Khomri, whose construction was financed by the govern
ment and the trade-industrial sherkat Nasaji, and a few small
electricity plants.
‘ In those years considerable aid to Afghanistan in build
ing its national industry came from the Soviet Union. The
cotton-cleaning plants in the north—in Qunduz, Mazar-i-Sha
rif, Imam Sahib and other cities—were built with Soviet
assistance.22 Soviet-Afghan relations, based on the princi
ples of goodneighbourliness, mutual respect and non-inter
ference in each other’s internal affairs, were becoming in
creasingly significant for Afghanistan. Trade between the
two countries was growing rapidly. The trade policy pursued
by the Soviet Union was favourable to Afghanistan. The
USSR. also assisted Afghanistan in the development of
agriculture, and specifically in combating agricultural pests.
 
In the late 1930s, international tension escalated. Consider
ing Afghanistan’s geographical proximity to the Soviet Union,
Nazi Germany and the other countries of the "‘axis" sought to
expand their influence there. To that end, wide use was made
of Germany’s economic contacts with Afghanistan. In 1936,
for instance, Afghanistan received credit to the value of 27
million marks for the purchase of German goods, Germany
also provided Afghanistan with military equipment. Nazi
agents penetrated Afghan state establishments and industry,
and also the Afghan National Bank, under the guise of
"advisers", "consultants", and "experts"’.23
 
While expanding relations with Germany and its allies,
the regime of Muhammad Zahir Shah assumed no military
political obligations, and in September 1939, soon after the
start of the Second World War, Afghanistan officially announ
ced its neutrality. Despite this, however, Germany sought
to turn Afghanistan into a bridgehead for military actions
against the USSR and British India. Its agents infiltrated the
area of the Pashtun tribes in the south of Afghanistan and
in the north-westem strip of Indian territory, supplying
them with weapons and money. In 1940, Germany asked
the Afghan government to organise an uprising of the tribes
in north-west India against the British authorities to force
Britain to withdraw some of its troops from Europe. In
retum, Afghanistan was to annex a number of north-westem
regions of India, in particular Sind, Baluchistan, the West
Punjab and Kashmir.24 However, the Afghan government
tumed down the proposal.
 
Nonetheless, Kabul’s policy of manoeuvring between
the imperialist powers created a favourable situation for
nazi agents. Operating in Afghanistan as experts and busi
nessmen, they were engaged in extensive anti-Soviet activi
ties, forming sabotage groups from among counter-revolu
tionary emigrés of the early days of Soviet power and smug
gling them over to Soviet territory.
 
After the treacherous attack of nazi Germany on the
Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, the actions of nazi agents
in Afghanistan created a real threat to Afghan neutrality
and contradicted the terms of the 1931 Soviet-Afghan
Treaty on Neutrality and Mutual Non-Aggression. In October
1941, the Soviet Government sent the Govemment of Af
ghanistan a note requesting that the latter curb anti-Soviet
activities by nazi agents. A similar request was made by the
British Government. The Afghan Government then decided *
to expel from the country all German and Italian nationals,
except for officials at diplomatic missions, and soon they
left Afghanistan.
 
In November 1941, a Loy jirgah session was held in Ka
bul to decide upon the foreign policy to be pursued in the
complex conditions created by the Second World War, and
it reaffirmed the country’s policy of complete neutrality.
 
The Second World War seriously damaged Afghanistan’s
economy. The disruption of world economic ties brought about an increase in world prices and inflation. The volume of Afghanistan’s foreign trade was sharply reduced. Brit
ish India, from which the main deliveries of consumer goods
for Afghanistan were coming, had, in fact,amonopoly of Af
ghan imports. The geography of Afghan exports also shrank
noticeably. The marketing of traditional export goods now
involved enormous difficulties. Availing itself of that sit
uation, trading capital shifted the burden of declining
foreign trade onto the producers of exports and the consum
ers of imported goods. The trading bourgeoisie was literal
ly robbing them by widening the gap between procurement
and marketing prices.25 The Afghan National Bank and the
sherkats associated with it now held a monopoly of Afghan
exports and greatly increased their capital. The reduction
in the amount of goods coming from abroad caused a steep
rise in prices and inflation.
 
The war and the economic difficulties it brought in its
wake frustrated Afghanistan’s attempts to fulfil its first
five-year plan of economic development, adopted in 1940.
During the war the rate of industrial construction slowed
down and the volume of work at various irrigation projects
was reduced.
 
In the countryside the landowners, money-lenders, mer
chants and local officials continued to buy up the land
owned by peasants and the state with the result that more
and more peasants were becoming landless.
 
The general worsening of the economic situation in the
country, which hit the working people, artisans and the
small bourgeoisie the hardest, provoked dissatisfaction
among various sections of the population. In 1944-1945,
there were frequent uprisings among Pashtun peasants and
poor livestock breeders which were suppressed by troops.
 
The political situation in the country was growing in
creasingly tense. By the end of the war first signs of social
conflict appeared, caused by the increasing contradiction
between, on the one hand, the largest possessors of trading
and credit capital and the feudal landowners associated with
them, who in the grim years of the war acted in their own
self-seeking interests, and, on the other, the broad mass
of working people and the democratic sections of society
who carried all the burden of wartime. The rout of nazi
Germany and the emergence of People’s Democracies in
Europe had a telling effect on public sentiments in Afgha
nistan, causing the growth of political activity. Social discon
tent now involved not only politically activeintellectuals, but
also a large part of democratically-minded masses.
 
=== Afghanistan After the Second World War ===
The economic difficulties caused by the war resulted in a serious deterioration of the economic position of the
bulk of the population. The policy pursued by the ruling
circles—feudal landowners and top merchants linked with
land, whose chief interest lay in profitable commerce—was
ever more in contradiction with the economic interests of
numerous sections of the middle and petty bourgeoisie and
the part of the intelligentsia closely related to them. The
growing economic potential of the large sherkats added to
their political influence. At the same time there was an in
creasing tendency for them to monopolise political power.
 
The emergence of the world socialist system, the rising
tide of the national liberation movement in Asia and Afri
ca, and the continuirig disintegration of the colonial sys
tem also had a great impact on the political situation in
Afghanistan. :
 
The aggravation of social contradictions compelled the
authorities to take some measures. In particular, they re
stricted some of the monopoly rights of the large sherkats
to foreign trade, and set up elective town councils. But
these superficial measures did not affect the socio-politi
cal structure, and so, popular discontent continued to spread.
 
The worsening of the economic situation was accompa
nied by the large-scale penetration of US monopolies in
to Afghanistan. This process started with the signing in
1946 of a governmental agreement with the American
Morrison-Knudsen company on the construction of an
irrigation system in the south of the country, on prospect
ing for mineral resources, road building, personnel training,
and on small construction projects. But the planned con
struction was not done in time and the expenses exceeded
the calculated costs. Afghanistan had to seek foreign loans.
 
The increasing political tensions in the country, combined with economic, and later political pressure by the USA, complicated the situation still further. In 1946, the
government of Muhammad Hashim Khan resigned. The
new cabinet was headed by Shah Mahmud Khan, the king’s
another uncle. The widening rift between the bourgeoisie
and the landowners, on the one hand, and the small producers
in town and country, on the other, gave rise to oppositional
sentiments, which found expression in various political
movements and groups defending the interests of the broad
middle sections of the urban population, and to some ex
tent of the poor sections. '
 
The principal demands put forward by these movements
included abolition of economic privileges for large mo
nopoly trading associations, democratisation of socio-polit
ical life, adoption of a new constitution, and better oppor
tunities for the petty and middle bourgeoisie.
 
The spread of ideas reflecting the interests of the mid
dle strata of society led to the formation of the political
organisation Wikh-i Zalmaiyan (Awakened Youth). Its social
ly variegated membership did not exceed 100. It included
people from among the petty bourgeoisie, clerks, intellec
tuals and Muslim clergy. The organisation was headed by
Muhammad Rasul Khan Pushtun, a small landowner from
Qandahar. Among the most active members of the move
ment. were Nur Muhammad Taraki, who headed its rad
ical left wing, Abdurrauf Benawa, Abdulhai Habibi and Gul
Pacha Ulfat. At the initial stage its members were engaged
mainly in educational activities, but in the late 1940s they
joined the political struggle and took part in the 1949
parliamentary elections. As a result, in the National Assem
bly of the seventh convocation there appeared a group of
deputies whose activities were based on the ideas of the
Awakened Youth. They used parliament as a platform from
which to fight for their demands, and at the same time,
they sought to turn the National Assembly into an effective
organ of power which would regulate the work of the state
apparatus.
 
Radical circles demanded freedom of the press in or
der to propagate the ideas of -the opposition. In January
1951, the government adopted a new law on the press,
allowing the publication of private newspapers and ma
gazines. Immediately following the promulgation of the new law there appeared private newspapers calling themselves national.
 
The appearance of the private press led to a polarisa
tion of the political forces brought together by common
 
 
oppositional views. A short while before the private news
papers appeared, other political groupings were beginning
to emerge in addition to the Awakened Youth, though with
a similar political orientation. Most significant among them
were Nida-yi Khalq (The Voice’ of the People) and Watan
(Homeland). In 1951, they began to issue their own news
 
 
papers under the same names.
 
Prior to this, Wikh-i Zalmaiyan had begun to put out its
own newspaper. The first issue of Angar, so named after
its publisher and editor Faiz Muhammad Angar, an official
of the Ministry of Economics, came off the press on March
1, 1950. Angar was described as "a national, literary, social,
and political newspaper". Its first editorial said it would
serve the people, helping them overcome their age-old back
wardness. The paper, said the editorial, had to seek, with
the help of "educated individuals sympathetic to the peo
ple and the awakened youth", to identify the causes of the
people’s backwardness, to enlighten them and find ways
of eliminating the backwardness". The authors of the lead
ing articles, which contained political criticism, were the
leaders of the movement. The first issue carried an article
by Taraki entitled "The Wish of the People. What Do We
Want?"’. It expressed the main demands of the opposition:
"bread, clothes (later with the addition of the word "hous
ing" this became ‘the chief slogan of the People’s Demo
cratic Party of Afghanistan), work, and equal opportunities
for all in terms of social services".
 
The publishers saw their mission in devoted service to
"the backward nation" in the struggle against "traitors and
oppressors", who "do harm to the people, by sacrificing
its interests to their personal benefit", and in the struggle
against racial discrimination, and for national unity. They
believed that these goals could be attained through awak
ening and unification of the nation, establishment of a con
stitutional monarchical regime, formation of a national
government responsible to parliament, and participation
of all classes in public affairs.26 Social progress and the
-improvement of the living standards of the people, the publishers believed, could be achieved only if the people took an active part in socio-political and economic life, and also in
state affairs, through their own political parties. One of the
main tasks to be accomplished, wrote A. Mahmudi, the
author of the article "What Do We Want? (Aspirations of
the People)", was the formation of a "truly democrat
ic government", which would "put the destiny of the
people into their own hands". "The primary condition of
genuinely democratic government is the creation of na
tional-democratic parties, and on their basis the holding of
free elections, and the election of deputies trusted by the
people. Since these deputies would then form the govern
ment, a majority rule would prevail and, consequently,
vital problems would be solved according to the will of
the people, and thus their happiness would be ensured."2?
These objectives were to be achieved within the frame
work of constitutional monarchy.
 
The economic part of the programme contained main
ly criticism of the existing state of affairs, but made no
clear-cut proposals. It drew special attention to the con
ditions of the poor sections and demanded the abolition
of forced labour (begar). It also suggested ways of improv
ing the national economy. For instance, Babrak Gostali,
the author of an article in the Angar, proposed to cut the
import of luxuries and increase spending on the develop
ment of local industry, to care more for the workers, to
combat unemployment, and go over to planned economic
development, with the opinion of the "toiling people"
duly taken into account.28 Some members of the liberal
wing in the movement, while speaking about the people’s
poverty, pinned their hopes on the monarch’s good will.
Thus Abdurrauf Benawa wrote in one of his articles: "Those
who are used to sitting in a walnut chair and looking at
the world through the windows of their cars, have no idea
who ‘the people’ are. And if they are told that the people
go barefooted, they would reply that it is more comforta
ble to pray that way. But if they came to know the people
better, they would see that ordinary people walk barefoot
ed because of their poverty. They don’t even know that
there is not a single person out of a hundred who is sati
sfied :with his conditions. The only hope of the people
is the beloved and democratic king. Therefore all patriots, the awakened youth and other enlightened people see in the shah the only and true servant of the nation, and its
leader."29
 
The paper gave much prominence to the role of youth in
society. In the "Appeal to the Afghan Youth" it called for
the younger generation to awaken and rally together in the
struggle to win happiness for the people.2° Great significance
was attached to the Students’ Union, founded in 1950,
which contributed to the general enlightenment effort.
 
Thus, the programme of the Wikh-i Zalmaiyan movement
basically contained a demand that state political institu
tions be démocratised, and criticism of the people’s eco
nomic conditions.
 
Another group, Watan, which emerged in 1950, adopted
a similar position, but advanced a broader spectrum of so
cial, political and economic demands. Its social make-up
was also variegated, including people from various sections
of the petty bourgeoisie, clerks and intellectuals. The lead
ers of the movement were Mir Muhammad Siddiq Farhang,
its ideologist, Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar and Ahmad
Ali Kohzad, both well-known historians, and General Fateh.
The Watan group had over 100 members.
 
In March 1951, it began to issue the newspaper Watan.
Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar became its publisher and
Ali Horush, its chief editor. The latter was soon replaced by
M. M. S. Farhang. The first editorial announced the aims
of the movement: to popularise the principles of democracy
under a constitutional monarchy in every sphere of public
life, and to achieve a number of bourgeois liberties, such
as freedom to form political organisations, freedom to
choose a profession and freedom of movement, personal
immunity, and religious and national equality. The paper
called for accelerated economic growth and was opposed
to "the concentration of capital in private hands". The
latter can hardly be viewed as a rejection of private pro
perty. Rather it was a call to restrict the economic priv
ileges of large private companies. A speech by Mir Ghu
lam Muhammad Ghubar in parliament shows this only too
well. "Private monopoly exists in the country," he said,
"and the profits from it, obtained through the exploita
tion of the masses, have been pocketed by a few money
lenders and monopolists. This means that monopoly must be taken out of private hands and given to the state. As a result of 20 years of economic activity by a number of
monopolist sherkats, capital has been concentrated in the
hands of a few individuals. The middle sections of the
merchants are being brought to ruin."31 Demanding a
restriction. of the economic power of large trading capi
tal, the members of the Watan movement insisted on the
provision of favourable conditions for the enterprise of
the small and middle bourgeoisie, and the development of
the domestic crafts.
 
The paper’s publishers paid particular attention to so
cial problems, analysing the social structure of the pop
ulation and assessing the position of its various sections.
It wrote a good deal about the conditions of the peasants,
who accounted for 90 per cent of the population. "Speak
ing in terms of material and cultural conditions, the
Afghan peasant is at the lowest possible level. He is il
literate, sick, sometimes hungry, and always barefooted. He
has many debts and no work implements,"32 wrote Far
ae in the article "Consolidating the Peasantry"’.
 
Identifying the causes of the impoverished living con
ditions of the peasants, he pointed to large-scale, private
landownership and usury. The author remonstrated against
the situation in the countryside and suggested ways of im
proving it by setting up peasant cooperatives and found
ing an agricultural bank to grant credits to the peasants.
He proposed also that the size of privately-owned land
should be limited and the landownership system revised.33
He considered a change in ownership system to be the
central reform. However, he wanted it effected not through
political struggle for the peasants’ rights, but through
the adoption of relevant legislation by the good will-of the
government.34
 
An important element in the programme of the Watan
group, as it was in those of other similar movements, was
political demands, the main one being a change in the gov
ermment system through the adoption of "praper’’ laws
and adherence to them. "We are for constitutional mon
archy," wrote Ghubar in his article ‘The Rusting Body of
the State’. "But if we want to preserve territorial integri
ty, independence, security and progress, and to preclude
all kinds of disturbances and anarchy, which only cause dislocation and intensify reaction, we must have a government answerable to the people, and trusted by the
people."35 The idea of forming such a government, the
paper stressed, was backed up by the people, which was
confirmed by the paper’s reader Yar Muhammad Khan
Pushtun. "Our people," he said, "are for constitutional
monarchy. They sincerely respect the Shah. But the people
want only a people’s government, that is, a government
elected from the people and for the people."’36
 
The paper’s publishers came out vigorously in favoyr of
democratisation of political institutions by revising and
renovating the constitution, approving a new law on the
press, ensuring free parliamentary elections, granting the
right to form political parties and trade unions, changing
the legal procedure, and separating the three powers—le
gislative, executive and judicial.
 
In contrast to the Wikh-i Zalmaiyan, the Watan movement
attached great significance to foreign policy. Its paper
carried a world events column, not merely stating facts
but also voicing support for national liberation move
ments and struggle against colonialism, in particular the
struggle for the nationalisation of the Suez Canal and
Iranian oil. Its contributors linked the strengthening of inde
pendence, peace and security with major social problems:
guarantees of social justice and democracy, development of
education and health protection, elimination of illiteracy
and opposition to despotism, and broader participation
by the people in the running of the state.3?
 
In this period there was yet another group in the coun
try which published the newspaper Nida-yi Khalq (The
Voice of the People), Judging by its social composition, it
gtavitated more towards the democratic strata of society:
intellectuals, low-ranking officials, handicraftsmen and
shop-keepers—not more than 200 members. Its founder,
leader and ideologist was Dr, Abdurrahman Mahmudi.
The group’s leadership included Maulana Khan Muhammad
Hasta of Mazari Sharif; Muhammad Naim Shayan, an official
at the Ministry of Finance; engineer Wali Ahmad Atai; and
Mahmudi’s brothers, Lieutenant Muhammad Aman, Muham
mad Rahim, a physician, and Muhammad Azim, an official.
 
Dr. Abdurrahman Mahmudi ‘was the publisher and the
author of most of the articles printed in Nida-yi Khalq, while Wali Ahmad Atai was the editor. The first editorial was devoted to the aims of the movement, declaring that
it was "the servant and leader of the people, and basing it
self on the principles of democracy and the struggle for the
people’s rights". Appealing to the people’s interests, the
paper set itself the task of showing them "the way to achieve
government by the people and for the people". Like the
other groupings that had been founded on the basis of the
Wikh-i Zalmaiyan, the Nida-yi Khalq group based its political
programme on the slogans of democracy and social justice,
which amounted to demands for "the establishment of a
free parliament, free parliamentary elections, an equilib
rium between the legislative, executive and judicial pow
ers", and the introduction of a number of bourgeois lib
erties: freedom of the press, and freedom of expression,
personal immunity and the inviolability of the home.
 
Rejecting armed struggle, the Nida-yi Khalq group believed
that democracy could be guaranteed by promulgating
democratic laws, by ensuring that the people knew and de
fended their rights. Denouncing despotism and tyranny,
the paper declared that it was its duty to struggle "against
exploitation and the enemies of the people’s interests’’.38
It suggested that the people should take part in running the
country through political parties. The party of the majori
ty in parliament should form a government trusted by the
people. In parliament it would be confronted by a left-wing
minority, which was to act as a regulator of government
activity, should the latter begin to "play with the will of
the people".39 In other words, it proposed fighting for a
bourgeois-democratic form of government, which in that
phase of the country’s historical development would be a
step foreward in the evolution of its political system.
 
In the Nida-yi Khalq’s programme considerable empha
sis was on social problems, and the articles on these prob
lems were sharp and to the point. It levelled strong criticism
at the existing situation, exposing the country’s social ills.
The archaic system of government, arbitrary rule by offi
cials, poverty among ordinary people, bribery and embez
zlement in the bureaucratic apparatus, forced labour, eco
nomic stagnation, and the total illiteracy of the population
were all targets of attack. As there was strict censorship, the newspaper presented its material from different points of view in editorials, and in commentaries on various facts, in readers’ letters and even in the reports by an agency
called Del-i Haq (The Heart of the Truth). This enabled it to
bypass the obstacles erected by censorship and to speak in
defence of the people’s rights. Thus, in the article ‘The
~ Rights of the People!!!" Dr. Mahmudi wrote: "If we tell
the people that they have the right, without fear and without
interference by the authorities, to elect its representatives
to parliament, to form a parliament and a government
responsible to the people, that is, to make state affairs
and parliamentary debates public, then, naturally, the peo
ple will start to fight for their rights. But since the struggle
by the people for their rights is regarded here as a violation
of security and a threat to national unity... I must apologise
to the reader for not saying any more on this matter."40
 
Like the other groups, Nida-yi Khalq came out against the
large-scale entrepreneurs’ monopoly of economic power.
Having named countries in which the key sectors of the
economy had been nationalised, the paper urged the need to
do away with the privileges of a handful of millionaires,
"exercising their sway in ihe sphere of astrakhan, sugar and
petrol’. The publishers saw one of the causes of the
people’s impoverishment in the fact that "money and land
are being concentrated in the hands of a limited number
of people, i.e., becoming their private monopoly".#1
 
The paper also wrote on foreign policy issues. The Af
ghan-Pakistani relations were deteriorating, and this was
being exploited by international reaction in order to bring
pressure to bear on Afghanistan. The paper declared that
the struggle should be aimed not only at strengthening po
litical independence, but also at "ensuring economic and so
cial independence". It attacked the policy of Pakistan’s
ruling circles whom it called ‘servants of despotism and co
lonialism’’ who, resorting to "intrigues and deceit, bring
discord and schism into the camp of the champions of
progress and national unity’".42
 
Advancing demands similar to those of other groups,
Nida-yi Khalg displayed at the same time a greater degree
of radicalism in raising the most urgent problems related to
the country’s socio-economic development.
 
One of the forms of opposition by the bourgeois demo
crats at the end of the 1940s and the beginning of the 1950s was their parliamentary activity. A group of oppositionally-minded deputies had emerged within parliament in
1949. The Angar group was represented by Gul Pacha Ul
fat, Abdulhai Habibi, and Faiz Muhammad Angar; Watan
was represented by Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar, and
Nida-yt Khalqg, by Abdurrahman Mahmudi—all formally
united in the National Front. Though they belonged to dif
ferent political trends, they all adopted the same or a sim
ilar position on the main issues. In their speeches in par
liament they accused the ‘government of violating the
constitution. The most heated debate was over the requi
sitioning of grain from the population, which was extreme
ly harsh for the peasants. Despite a decision by the major
ity of the deputies to reject the relevant bill, the govern
ment still demanded that the population sell grain to the
state at low prices. Another violation of the constitution
was the widespread practice of forced labour (begar), mainly
in construction and road building. The opposition castigated
the state organs for breaking the law banning begar. Many
speeches were made on the activities of US monopolies
in Afghanistan. Deputy Abdurrahman Mahmudi expressed
the common view of the opposition when he declared: "The
agreement with the Morrison-Knudsen company has done
great harm to the people and to the country’s economy."
The activity of the opposition, however, did not bring
about any substantial changes in state administration or in
the economic structure. However, due to the activities of
the opposition groups and their representatives in parlia
ment, the chief demands of the opposition were instru
mental in determining the main direction of the political
struggle waged by various forces in society. One of the re
sults of the opposition’s parliamentary activity was a more
clear-cut formulation of the basic tasks of the deputies de
fending the people’s interests. Such a formulation was
published by the Watan leadership and included the follow-.
ing demands: implementation of the principles of de
mocracy; amendment and extension of the constitution;
elaboration of a new and democratic election law; separa
tion of the three powers; freedom to form political parties
and organisations; elimination of obstacles in the way of
developing a free press; abolition of begar; a ban on private
and bank monopolies; creation of an agricultural bank and peasant cooperatives; development of industry; consolidation of national unity by cancelling illegitimate priv
ileges; and application of the principles of equality and
brotherhood.
 
In 1951, another private newspaper of a national-bour
geois trend, Wulus (People) was issued by the publisher
Gul Pacha Ulfat. The paper exposed plunder committed by
the ruling circles and analysed the appalling living condi
tions of the people. However, it proposed nothing concrete
to change the situation, only appealing to the reason of
the powers that be, in an attempt to make them respond to
the people’s sufferings.45 The publishers expressed loyalty
to the king, who was portrayed -as defender of national in
terests.
 
In the summer of 1951, despite the lack of corresponding
legislation, the leaders of the Nida-yi Khalg trend made an
attempt to organise their followers into a political party
to be named Khalq (The People), and in the last issue of
their newspaper they published their programme. Having
taken as its basis general principles of democracy, the par
ty declared that it was committed to "forming a people’s
government, elected by the people and acting in the in
terests of the people". The Khalq supporters saw the achieve
ment of social justice via the elimination of oppression
and. exploitation as one of the chief ways of winning de
mocracy. It paid great attention to observing and propa
gating Islam principles. In the opinion of the party’s ideolog
ists, free elections to parliament, election of genuinely
popular representatives, formation of a new government
which would be responsible to parliament, a revision of the
constitution and adoption of fair laws, were the main
stages in attaining the basic objectives of its programme.
 
The founder and leader of the Khalq party was Dr. Mah
mudi who headed its ten-member leadership. The party was
small and had no broad ties with the masses, its leaders con
ducting their propaganda work primarily among students at
the law:and medical faculties of Kabul University. In the
spring of 1952 the party ceased to exist.
 
In the late 1940s, students in Kabul joined in political
activity. In April 1950, the Students’ Union of Kabul Uni
versity was set up whose purpose was-to bring about the
political awakening of intellectuals .and students. Its members used the stage and held various conferences to spread their views. They demanded refornis in'socio-econom*
ic and cultural life and in the sphere of state administra
tion, and also freedom of speech and freedom of the press.
The student movement was clearly influenced by the
oppositional bourgeois-democratic groups. ** '
 
-Some of the oppositional ‘trends ‘tied religious slogans.
One of these was the illegal group headed by Haji Naim,
commandant of Kabul. It included officers and minor
officials, members of national and religious minorities, and
religious fanatics. Their aim was to smash the outdated ab
solute monarchy and establish a caliphate. In March 1950,
the group was discovered by the authorities and disbanded;
more than 20 of its activists were sentenced to long terms
in prison. ;
 
Together with various bourgeois-democratic trends, oppo
sitional activity began in those strata of the ruling class
which were compelled to reckon with the growing demands
of'the miiddle and petty bourgeoisie now emerging onto the
political? scene. They banded together to form the Na
tional Club whose founder and president was Sardar Mu
hammad Daoud, the king’s cousin. The club was financed
by Minister of Economics Abdul Majid Zabuli, the richest
merchant in Afghanistan. The oppositional activity of the
Dadud "group did not go beyond attempts to weaken the
position. of the government of Shah Mahmud Khan and to
Bive'his’ post of prime minister to Daoud himself. However,
When the National Club members failed to win over national
patriotic leaders, they attempted to split the opposition.
 
The activity of various oppositional groups reached its
peak in 1952. In the election to the parliament of the eighth
convocation, held in April that year, not a single candidate
of the opposition was retumed. The leaders of the bour
geois-democratic groups responded by staging a massive de
monstration of protest in Kabul against the falsification of
the parliamentary election and interference by the author
ities in the election campaign. The demonstrators were
joined by Kabul students, headed by Babrak Karmal, a
student at the law faculty of the university. The demonstra
tion was dispersed by troops.
 
Shortly thereafter the authorities launched a large-scale
offensive against the opposition movement. The private newspapers Angar, Watan and Nida-yt Khalq were banned, the oppositional groups dispersed, and their leaders impris
oned. Nur Muhammad Taraki was sent to the United States
as press attaché at the Afghan embassy. Abdulhai Habi
bi left the country some time before these events and set
tled in Pakistan, where he issued the journal Azad A fgha
nistan (Free Afghanistan) criticising the royal regime. At
home he was labelled a traitor and was deprived of Afghan
nationality. Abdurrauf Benawa was deported to India.
Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar was sentenced to four
years’ imprisonment. Dr. Mahmudi was sentenced to nine
years. In 1962 he was released, but he soon died of tuber
culosis. Many activists and supporters of the opposition
were sent to prison, Babrak Karmal among them.
 
The opposition, short-lived as it was, greatly influenced
the country’s social development. The growing demands
of various sections of the middle and petty bourgeoisie,
and the middle urban strata, reflected in the programmes of
a number of opposition movements, showed that the pol
icy pursued by the government, which catered only for the
interests of large landowners and the top echelons of trad
ing capital, was a failure.
 
After the Second World War the foreign policy of Afghan
istan changed somewhat. Strategically important, Afgha
nistan figured prominently in US plans for economic pe
netration into the countries of the Middle East. Lnme
diately after the war the United States won a monopo
ly position in Afghan foreign trade, specifically in the
export of astrakhan, by imposing its own terms of trade
on Afghanistan. Other spheres of the Afghan economy were
also involved. As has already been mentioned, in 1946
the US embassy imposed an agreement with the US Mor
rison-Knudsen firm. But the firm failed to meet its com
mitments and key projects were not completed by the agreed
time, i.e., by 1949. Furthermore, the original estimate of $17,5
million was exceeded. The Afghan government had to turn
for aid to the US government. In 1949, Afghanistan recei
ved a US loan to the tune of $21 million, having agreed
to prolong the terms of the agreement with Morrison
Knudsen which, . in turn, insisted on vastly increased '
allocations on its projects.46 The construction of irriga
tion facilities dragged on for many years, delaying land reclamation and bringing into question the ultimate results of the firm’s activities which thus became, in fact, a major
channel of US economic penetration, which enmeshed
the country in various obligations and debts. To rein
force its position in Afghanistan, in 1951 the USA concluded
an agreement with it on technical cooperation under the
Truman Programme. So Afghanistan found itself entangled
in highly destructive obligations.
 
The action of Morrison-Knudsen evoked an angry outcry
in the country. The issue was debated in the press and in
parliament. The state commission set up in 1950 revealed
numerous facts proving that the company had caused great
harm to the Afghan economy.
 
In the political sphere, the USA aimed at drawing the
country into its zone of influence and undermining its
traditional course of neutrality. In the early 1950s the USA
increased its efforts to involve Afghanistan in the agegres
sive military-political groupings being set up at the time.
 
Western imperialism used the Pashtun issue as a means
of pressure on Afghanistan. A short while before the forma
tion of the states of India and Pakistan (August 1947)
Afghanistan raised the question of the future of the Pash-.
tun population in the north-west of British India. The Af
ghan government, backed up by public opinion, demanded
self-determination for the Pashtuns living beyond the
Afghan borders. But Britain refused to consider the matter.
After the formation of the state of Pakistan its ruling cir
cles, denying the Pashtun the right to self-determination,
suppressed the Pashtun national movement, which wors
ened relations with Afghanistan.
 
In the postwar years, when the imperialist colonial sys
tem was falling apart and national liberation movements
were gaining in strength and scope, the Soviet Union finn
ly pursued a policy of expanding relations with Aghan
istan. In 1946, an agreement was signed on border ques
tions, demonstrating the Soviet Government’s wish to
develop bilateral ties. In 1950, an inter-governmental
. trade-and-payments agreement was concluded and this
served as a basis for the subsequent trade relations between
the two countries.
 
The expansion of goodneighbourly relations with the
Soviet Union helped to strengthen Afghanistan’s sovereignty and created a favourable opportunity for stepping up its foreign policy efforts. In November 1946, Afghanistan
joined the United Nations and supported the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. In 1950, it signed friend
ship treaties with India and Lebanon, established politi
cal contacts with Syria, and recognised the People’s Re
public of China. In 1950-1951, efforts were made to resolve
Afghan-Iranian differences on the use of the Helmand
River waters.
 
Meanwhile the economic situation in the country was
going from bad to worse, particularly in agriculture. The
prevalence of pre-capitalist forms of exploitation in the
countryside hampered the growth of the productive forces.
The increasing marketability of agricultural output in those
conditions caused a still greater differentiation of the peas
antry. Usurious operations, gaining in scope, led to the ex
propriation of peasant land. The migration of landless peas
ants to the towns became a constant process, but the ab
sence of developed industry offered little opportunity of
employment and the migrant peasants joined the army of
the unemployed. Government attempts to take, the edge
off the agrarian problem by resettling farmers and semi
nomads from southem to northern regions with large re
sources of arable land failed to produce the expected eco
nomic and social effect, and only caused grave political and
national friction. The government’s hopes that large areas
of land would soon come under cultivation in the basin of
the rivers Helmand and Arghandab, where irrigation work
by Morrison-Knudsen was planned, were also dashed.
 
The worsening situation as regards Afghan exports, a
result of US attempts to monopolise Afghan foreign trade,
and the difficulties of transporting export goods across
Pakistan because of Afghan-Pakistani tension, badly affec
ted the economic situation in the country. Heavy spending
on the import of consumer goods impaired home trade. The
government’s efforts to find more resources by increasing
taxes on small-scale production, livestock, etc. caused a rise
in prices, particularly on food. Hopes that large trading
sherkats would take part in the seven-year economic devel
opment plan, announced in 1946, were not justified. The
sherkats, receiving financial and other privileges as part of
the measures to stimulate their industrial activity, preferred more profitable.trade and carefully avoided investment in industrial development. The acute food crisis
made the government turn for aid to the USA, which
granted Afghanistan a loan in 1953 for the purchase of
American grain. Thus, Afghanistan found itself in ever
greater economic dependence on the USA.
 
In a situation of economic setbacks and political instab
ility the Shah Mahmud government resigned. The new
cabinet was formed by Sardar Muhammad Daoud, the
king’s cousin. The character of political power did not
change, but new people were brought into state adminis
tration bodies, people who took into account the opinion
of the politically active sections of society and the changed
international situation, and who were prepared to effect
certain changes to bolster up the positions of the exploit
er upper crust. However, such changes were impossible
without developing the economy and the productive forces.
On the whole, the programme of the Daoud cabinet was
designed to promote the growth of capitalist relations,
with the increasing participation of the state in economic
activity. The policy of so-called guided economy announced
by Muhammad Daoud offered a chance to expand the
social base of the regime.
 
Among the first measures taken by the government was a
change in the credit system, made through the banks new
ly established in 1954. Middle and small businessmen were
now able to receive credit. The creation of the agricultu
ral bank, which granted loans at lower interest rates than
the money-lenders, revived agricultural production and
somewhat restricted money-lending activity, though it was
unable to compete successfully with the latter as the bank’s
resources were too meagre. The purchasing prices of astra
khan, wool, and industrial crops were increased, and so
were the loans granted to the producers. Credit coopera
tives were set up to facilitate commercial activities in agricul
ture. Though all these ‘measures concemed only the upper
stratum of the peasantry, they nevertheless stimulated to
some extent the growth of agricultural production. The
establishment of banks with mixed capital, which then took
part in the activities of the bigger trade-industrial sherkats,
increased state participation in economic development.
 
By 1954 the government was making wider use of foreign capital to develop the national economy. Foreign companies, primarily American, West German, and Japanese,
which sought ways of investing their capital directly, be
came more active in the country. The Afghan intemational
airlines company, Aryana, was set up in 1954 with the par
ticipation of Panamerican capital. In the same year the
West German electrotechnical company Siemens moved
into the Afghan market, flooded the country with its goods
and opened a maintenance and repair plant. Japanese and
West German companies took part in the construction of
the Franklin printing press for the Ministry of Education.
A ceramics factory was built in the city of Qunduz with
the help of Japanese capital. According to the law on for
eign investment, adopted in April 1954, not less than 51
per cent of the shares in mixed companies with foreign
capital went to the Afghan side.*
 
To increase the revenues from domestic resources, new
laws were devised on income tax paid by private indus
trialists and trade-industrial companies, and measures were
taken to improve the accounting system. In particular, a
school of accountancy was opened in 1953, together with
courses for accounting clerks.
 
In 1954, preparatory work began prior to drawing up
economic development plans. To this end, a consultative
council was set up at the Ministry of Finance. It included
economic, commercial, financial and technical experts and
was headed by General Abdurrahim-zai, adviser to the Daoud
cabinet. After a protracted analysis of the economic situa
tion in the country, and consultations at the Ministry of
Finance, various committees were set up to deal with fi
nance, trade, mining, agriculture, transport and communi
cations. The committees were to draw up specific proposals
to be included in the general economic development plan.*®
In addition, a department of economics was set up at the
same Ministry to draw up a state budget and supervise
state spending. To stimulate foreign trade, the Pashtany Te
jaraty Bank (Afghan Commercial Bank) was opened, with
an authorised capital of 125 million afghanis,49 and the
so-called building fund, which lent money to officials
with housing problems, was reorganised into construction
and hypothecary bank financing civil construction.
 
During the Muhammad Daoud govemment trading and transport companies mushroomed all over the country: by the start of the 1960s there had already been 185 private
and mixed firms, with 1,900 largeand middle-scale traders
operating in home and foreign trade.5°
 
The economic policy announced by the Daoud govern
ment suited the purposes of the ruling circles, which was to
develop capitalism in the country under the state’s uncon
ditional control. ;
 
In the early 1950s, Afghanistan was still experiencing
economic difficulties, which compelled it to tum to the
USA for aid. In 1954, the US government granted Afgha
nistan a loan of $18.5 million to finance the delayed con
struction of the Helmand Project,51, thereby increasing its
influence in the country. Disillusionment was spreading in
Afghanistan over the activities of the Western monopo
lies, which were of almost no use to the Afghan economy
but only derived huge benefits for themselves.
 
In this situation, economic and trade ties with the So
viet Union were becoming ever more important. In 1954,
agreements were signed between the two countries on the
construction of a large bakery and an asphalt and con
crete-mixing factory in Kabul. The construction of these two
large enterprises was. highly appreciated by the Afghan pub
lic, which noted the Soviet contribution to the development
of the Afghan economy. Soviet-Afghan cooperation proved
to be a major factor strengthening the national sovereign
ty of Afghanistan and its international position in a situa
tion of incessant pressure from the West, which wanted to
force Afghanistan to follow in the wake of its policies. The
expansion of relations with the USSR and other socialist
countries* was significant for Afghanistan in that the sit
uation in the Middle East in the mid-1950s was causing
great damage to the interests of that country in the area.
The fact that in 1954 a US-Pakistani treaty on American
military aid to Pakistan was signed alarmed public opin
ion and the ruling circles in Afghanistan, which regarded it
as a threat to peace and security in the region. After the
conclusion of the Turkish-Pakistani pact under US aegis in 1954, Afghanistan was increasingly pressurised into joining the pact and giving up its neutrality. At the same time
wide use was made of the anti-Soviet propaganda ploy
of a "threat from the north’. However, Afghanistan clearly
stated that it was not going to join any military-political blocs.
 
The stepping up of US military-strategic efforts pro
voked a negative response in Afghanistan. The military aid
given by US imperialism to Pakistan was regarded there as
an attempt to turn the North-Western Border Province of
Pakistan, populated mostly by Pashtuns, into a bridge
head for anti-Afghan strategic schemes. In Afghanistan;
calls for support to the Pashtun national liberation move
ment in that province became ever more insistent. The
population on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border
had much in common in ethnic terms. The idea of the na
tional unity of all Pashtuns was in the air, which showed
that, as the bourgeois nation was taking shape, a nation
al-bourgeois ideology was emerging in Afghanistan. Ac
tions in support of the Pashtuns’ right to self-determination
were now often accompanied by anti-colonial statements,
which were becoming part of public thinking. The move
ment of the Pashtuns across the border in Pakistan was
viewed as part and parcel of the international anti-colonial .
and anti-imperialist movement.
 
In 1954, the Daoud government announced the termi
nation of the 1921 Anglo-Afghan treaty. In the summer of
1954, the elders of some of the Pashtun tribes living on
both sides of the border, to whom the Afghan authorities
promised every support in their struggle for national rights,
held a meeting. Afghanistan’s official position on the Pash
tun issue amounted to the demand that the Pashtuns liv
ing in the territory of Pakistan should be granted the right
to self-determination. It was stressed that the Afghan offi
cial circles were prepared to settle this matter with Pakis
tan through peaceful, political negotiations.
 
The Afghan posture on the Pashtun issue was a major
component of its neutrality and non-participation in mili
tary blocs as expressed in Afghanistan’s negative attitude
to the Baghdad Pact set up in 1955 and in its active role
in the Bandung Conference of Afro-Asian countries, at
which it joined the countries that championed peace and
international cooperation.
 
Tension over the Pashtun issue built up after the Pakis
tani government decided in 1955 to create a single province
of West Pakistan, which was to comprise all the administra
tive units that existed in the western part of that state,
including those populated by Pashtuns. The national or
ganisations of the Pakistani Pashtuns regarded this action
as a further infringement of their right to national au
tonomy.
 
The creation of the West Pakistan Province set off a tide
of indignation in Afghanistan. The Daoud government
issued an official protest. Meetings and demonstrations
were held in many Afghan cities, denouncing the, suppres
sion of the Pashtun national movement by the Pakis
tani ruling circles.
 
The imperialists in the West sought to use the worsen
ing of Afghan-Pakistani relations as a means of pressure on
Afghanistan, tried to undermine its foreign policy course
and bring the country within the sphere of their influence.
Pakistan severed political and trade relations with Afgha
nistan in May 1955; all Afghan consulates and trade
missions were closed down and goods in transit across Pa
kistani territory were stopped. The sharp reduction in
foreign trade had a grave effect on the Afghan economy.
Amidst the rising tension in its relations with Pakistan, the
Afghan government announced a state of emergency and
general mobilisation in May 1955.53 Simultaneously, Ka
bul supported the mediatory efforts of some Middle East
countries to settle the Afghan-Pakistani conflict. Those
efforts, however, were resented in the USA, which saw
them as a threat to its imperialist plans. The Pakistani gov
ernment, for its part, dragged out the settlement, demand
ing that Afghanistan should discontinue its support to the
Pashtun movement. The ban on the shipment of goods ac
ross Pakistan méant, in fact, an economic blockade of Af
ghanistan and, in the view of ‘those who had organised it,
was to force Afghanistan to make concessions.
 
At that hour of trial Afghanistan turned for help to the
Soviet Union and sent a delegation to Moscow in May 1955.
In June that year a Soviet-Afghan treaty was signed on the
shipment of goods across the territory of both countries.
The economic blockade of Afghanistan was thus breached.
The treaty proved important in that it strengthened the international position of Afghanistan and helped it to cope with its economic difficulties.
 
After they failed in their attempts to exert crude pres
sure on Afghanistan, the imperialists, who had kindled the
Afghan-Pakistani conflict, had to seek ways of settling it.
In September 1955, an understanding was reached on nor
malising relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan, af
ter which Afghan consulates and trade missions were re
opened in Pakistan and the shipment of foreign trade goods
to Afghanistan across Pakistani territory was resumed.?*
 
In November 1955, a special parliamentary session was
followed by a Loy Jirgah meeting. The participants in the
meeting spoke in favour of continued support of the move
ment of the Pashtuns in Pakistan, of not recognising Pash
tunistan as part of Pakistan without the consent of the
Pashtuns, and called for a build-up of Afghanistan’s de
fence potential.55
 
The development in the region made even the section of
the Afghan ruling classes, who advocated the bourgeois evo
lution of the country, increasingly aware of the true essence
of the neocolonialist policy pursued by Western imperial
ist states with regard to Afghanistan, a policy which under
mined the foundations of its independence. Foreign policy
was reappraised and, as a consequence, there was a shift
from the orientation on the capitalist West. The national
patriotic forces of Afghan society saw that the Soviet Union
and other socialist countries were their sincere friends, and
so they looked for assistance from them in improving the
national economy and strengthening of Afghanistan’s in
ternational position.
 
In December 1955, a Soviet Government delegation ar
rived in Kabul at the invitation of the Afghan Government.
After the talks, both sides declared their intention to ex
pand Soviet-Afghan relations and decided to prolong the
term of the 1931 Treaty on Neutrality and Mutual Non
Aggression. The joint communiqué said the Soviet Union
was prepared to grant Afghanistan credit to the value of
$100 million on easy terms for economic development. An
agreement to that effect was signed in January 1956.
 
From 1957 onwards the Soviet Union began to assist
Afghanistan in geological survey and in training native per
sonnel. Under the agreement on expanding Soviet-Afghan technical and economic cooperation, signed in Moscow in 1959, the Soviet Union helped Afghanistan in the con
struction of the 680-kilometre highway pane pues
 
andahar. During the same period friendly re
Le ilodamet also beirig established with other socialist
countries: Bulgaria, Poland, Czechoslovakia and the SDE
 
Relying on financial aid from the Soviet Union,
the Afghan Government drew up the first five-year plan of
social and economic development (1956/1957-1960 /1961).
The plan envisaged the priority development of agriculture,
primarily irrigation, and also of power engineering, trans
port and communications, to be financed by the state. The
total sum of state investment earmarked for the first five
year plan was 10.6 billion afghanis.57
 
To make a fuller use of internal resources, a system of
revenues from various incomes was devised, and taxes and
customs duties were increased. The bulk of the allocations—
about _75 per cent—was to come by way of foreign aid and
loans.58
 
Soviet technical and economic aid greatly contributed to
the achievement of the main objectives of the first five
year plan. At that time it accounted for more than 70 per
cent of the entire foreign aid to Afghanistan. With Soviet
assistance Afghanistan started the construction of its larg
est economic projects, which constituted the basis of the
developing public sector: the 100,000-kilowatt Naghlu
hydroelectric power station; the Jangalak motor repair
plant in Kabul; the Jalalabad irrigation system, a motor
way across the Hindu Kush, and the Sher Khan river port
on the Amu Darya. Some time later an understanding was
reached on assistance in prospecting and geological survey
for construction.
 
The main emphasis in the five-year plan was on agricul
ture, in which 85 per cent of the population were then
employed. As many as 2.3 billion afghanis were allocated to
agriculture, of this, about 1,060 million to be spent on con
tinuing the construction of the Helmand project.59 The
programme of social development in the countryside was
drawn up and the first steps taken to implement it, with
considerable emphasis on combating agricultural pests, on
irrigation and rural road building, and also on developing
primary education. All of these measures suited the ruling circles, which wanted to adapt the existing agrarian relations to the needs of capitalist development. At the same
time such a policy did not change the form of landown
ership. The landowners’ total monopoly of land helped
preserve the feudal exploitation of the peasants.
 
The results of the fulfilment of the first five-year plan
as regards its main objectives proved to be below the set
targets. The average annual growth rate of the gross social
product was 1.5 per cent.69 But the existence of a number
of large new enterprises in the public sector of the economy,
including some in the infrastructure, created conditions for
more rapid progress in the next period.
 
In the latter half of the 1950s, the number of primary,
secondary and vocational schools increased. As it was in
the interest of the state developing along bourgeois lines to
draw women into public affairs, the obligatory wearing of
the yashmak by women was cancelled in 1959—a measure
that was backed by broad sections of the Afghan youth and
women. This enabled women to do socially useful work.
According to Afghan researcher G, D. Panjsheri, the first
groups of nurses kegan working in several outpatient hospi
tals as early as 1959; several women were employed at the
state-owned printing press, and by 1962 about 500 women
were working in various sectors of the state apparatus.
 
Certain changes were taking place in the socio-class
structure of Afghan society. The wide scope of money-lend
ing operations in the countryside helped to increase the
number of private estates and furthered social differen
tiation among the peasants.
 
The economic policy of the Daoud govemment, which
expanded state participation and state control over the
major spheres of production, somewhat limited the mo
nopoly of the larger trade sherkats of commercial activity,
including foreign trade. Therefore it was supported by a
considerable section of the bourgeoisie. However, petty
bourgeois circles were, on the whole, opposition-minded,
though, in contrast to the period from the late 1940s to
the early 1950s, these sentiments did not grow into -an
opposition movement. Within the framework of state
capitalist policy pursued by the Daoud government, the
petty bourgeoisie was not given sufficient opportunity to ex
pand its business. In addition, the existing political system restricted its participation in public affairs.
 
The number of industrial enterprises was growing, as was
the number of workers. In the early 1960s, the working
class included 15,800 people employed at factory-type en
terprises. :
 
However as it was numerically small and unorganised and
as the level of its political awareness was still low, it was a
long way from occupying a place of its own in public life.
 
The policy of strengthening central power, backed up
by major economic measures, limited the power of separat
ist-minded tribal khans and elders. But despite resistance,
covert and overt, on the part of the khans, who were si
multaneously rich landowners, the ruling circles man
aged to carry out a number of administrative, economic
and cultural measures in the area populated by the tribes.
 
The Muslim clerical elite appeared to be the most conser
vative social force which, allied with the landed aristocra
cy, opposed socio-economic change. However the changes
taking place in the country could not but influence the
positions of that social estate as a whole. There emerged
a social stratum which gradually began to call for a re
newal of many outworn traditional attitudes in an attempt
to adapt Islam to the needs of the time. Seeking to use
religion for its own purposes, the government backed loyal
members of the Muslim clergy, appointing some of them to
key posts in the state apparatus, in education and in courts.
 
Afghanistan’s equitable and mutually beneficial relations
with the socialist countries helped it to strengthen its na
tional sovereignty and consolidate its international posi
tion, forcing the imperialist powers to manoeuvre and seek
new ways and means of implementing their schemes with
regard to that country. In 1956, the USA agreed to assist
Afghanistan in developing its agriculture, mining industry
and education. In 1958, Pakistan granted Afghanistan the
right to ship goods across Pakistani territory. In the late
1950s, West German monopolies stepped up their activi
ties by taking part in the construction of power plants and
factories in the manufacturing industry.
 
In 1962, Afghanistan launched the second five-year plan
for social and economic development (1962-1967). The
main stress was on the development of the basic sectors
of the economy: mining, power engineering, transport, and agriculture. Much attention was given to building factories for the light industry. It was also planned to com
plete the construction of a number of projects in the commu
nications started during the first five-year plan. An impor
tant part of the new plan was personnel training. The total
sum of capital investment under the new plan was 25 billion
afghanis. As before, provision was made for the extensive
use of foreign aid (to the sum of 18 billion afghanis).62 Of
the 7 billion afghanis allocated from local sources, only
400 million were invested by the private sector, the rest
being invested by the state.63 Though the second five-year
plan was named the "industrialisation plan", much empha
sis, as before, was on developing agriculture. Capital in
vestment in agriculture was increased by 240 per cent as
compared with the first five-year plan, and amounted to
4.4 billion afghanis,64 with the main emphasis on the de
velopment of those sectors which were to develop the raw
material and export base.
 
As in the period of the first five-year plan, the Soviet
Union offered substantial aid to Afghanistan in its efforts
to fulfil the second five-year plan. The Soviet-Afghan agree
ment on technical cooperation, signed in 1961 in Moscow,
provided for Soviet assistance, in geological survey, pros
pecting for, and extraction of, oil and gas, the building
of chemical plants, road building, the development of ag
riculture, and personnel training. In 1962, an understand
ing was reached on. assistance in housing construction.
 
The attitude of Western countries to assisting Afgha
nistan in the fulfilment of its second five-year plan hinged
on the general goals of the imperialist countries in the
region. The USA, contrary to its former statements, re
fused to offer substantial aid and cooperation on the basis
of long-term programmes, and agreed merely to participate
in the construction of a few projects. A similar stance was
taken by some other Western countries. The reduction of
Western aid made it harder for Afghanistan to complete its
main projects and called into question the practicability of
the five-year plan as a whole.
 
Afghanistan’s policy of positive neutrality ran coun
ter to the plans of the imperialist powers and weakened
their influence in that part of Asia. In the early 1960s,
the Western imperialists resumed their attempts to undermine the country’s foreign policy, which did not suit them. The Western press distorted the essence of Soviet
Afghan relations and issued absurd allegations that the
USSR was using its aid to Afghanistan for its own political
ends in the region. It even alleged that the Soviet Union was
<nowiki>;</nowiki> attempting to "invade India". But as the flyblown assertions
about a "Soviet threat" proved ineffective, Western pro
paganda set about discrediting Afghanistan’s policy of
neutralism. Afghan positive neutrality, it was alleged, might
isolate the country in the region, which presented a danger
to its "traditional classes". This propaganda campaign was
‘accompanied by pressure on Afghanistan.
 
The main pressure point was still the differences be
tween Afghanistan and Pakistan over the Pashtun issue. By
the beginning of 1961 tension had again increased on the
Afghan-Pakistani border. Afghan Ambassador to Washing
ton, M. H. Maiwandwal, protested to the US Government
against US weapon deliveries to Pakistan. In September
1961, the Pakistani Government again closed Afghan
consulates and trade missions on its territory, which
resulted in the suspension of Afghan export shipment ac
ross Pakistan. This led to the rupture of diplomatic rela
tions between the two countries. In the difficult economic
situation caused by the suspension of shipments, the West
ern imperialists were building up pressure on Afghanistan,
insistently reiterating the‘idea that its conflict with Pa
kistan could be settled only along the lines of cooperation
with the West and the member countries of military-polit
ical groupings. In 1962, an Iranian-Afghan agreement on
transit deliveries of Afghan goods across Iran was signed.
 
The economic and social measures being implemented in
Afghanistan influenced the evolution of social relations.
The ‘‘guided-economy" policy was designed to restrict ar
chaic social relations and provide broader opportunities for
the business activities of the middle and petty bourgeoisie.
However, the ruling circles did not carry through any
measures designed to meet the interests of the working
people. The class character of government policy was most
pronounced in agrarian relations. The planned adaptation of
existing feudal institutions to the requirements of the de
veloping capitalist sector in agriculture did not contradict
the economic and social interests of big landowners. Insignificant measures, such as the increase in state credits, the creation of credit cooperatives, and a rise in the purchas
ing prices of farm produce, did not change the form of
land ownership and social relations in the countryside..
Underdeveloped agriculture limited the economic possi
bility of carrying through the planned measures and ham
pered the business activity of the petty and middle bour
geoisie. The agonising and perverse character of capital
ist evolution had a negative effect on the economic posi
tion of the direct agricultural producers, above all the
poor peasants.
 
The numerical growth of the industrial proletariat, that
is, of workers employed in modern factories, and its devel
opment into an independent class, gave rise to contradic
tions between labour and capital—a new phenomenon
in the sphere of social relations in Afghanistan. The slow
rate of industrial growth combined with continuing agra
rian overpopulation increased the number of the unem
ployed. The ruling circles were confronted with the need
to solve the problems attecting the working class. Most
important among them were the unsettled relations between
workers and employers, the civil rights of workers, their role
in social production, and the rational distribution of labour
resources. However, the National Employment Committee,
set up in 1962, confined itself merely to studying these
problems.
 
The state-capitalist measures taken by the government,
and its social programme of "supra-class unity" stimulated
activity among some of the middle sections of society, as
a result of which the social base of the regime became a
little broader. A larger expansion of that base was impossi
ble because of the class character of the government’s poli
cy which, on the whole, was aimed at defending the inter
ests of the ruling upper crust.
 
The country’s. economic and social advancement was
slowed down a great deal by the preservation of outdated
political institutions, a fact which provoked dissatisfaction
among the champions of change. During its rule the Daoud
government did not satisfy a smgle demand concerning the
reform of state administration as proposed by the opposi
tion in the early 1950s. All of this left a negative imprint
on the political situation in the country.
 
The class limitations of the regime’s domestic policy,
combined with its weakness in the sphere of foreign poli
cy, undermined its stability. The Afghan-Pakistani conflict,
which had grown acute in the early 1960s, and the worsen
ing of relations with Western imperialist circles, caused
concern among the conservatives who, naturally, preferred
the traditional ways of political and economic devel
opment. They saw the situation as the result of the lack of
flexibility in government policies, which had, narrowed
down Afghanistan’s possibility for manoeuvre in its rela
tions with other countries. Oriented on Western support,
these forces attacked the foreign policy of the Daoud govem
ment. In March 1963, the Daoud government had to resign.
 
The new cabinet was formed by Muhammad Yusuf, who
had been the Minister of Mining and Industry under Daoud.
On the whole, the class set-up of state power did not chan
ge, but the advent of anew govemment marked the beginn
ing of political changes in keeping with the growing require
ments of the country’s economic evolution.
 
In its economic programme the Yusuf government an
nounced that it would continue the former "guided econ
omy" policy, but would give greater support to private ini
tiative.
 
In the political area the government intended to intro
duce certain changes in state administration. It announced,
in particular, that a new constitution would be drawn up
to extend civil rights, a new election law would be passed,
and political parties organised.
 
Simultaneously efforts were made to normalise Afghan
Pakistani relations. Both countries held talks in the spring
of 1963 through the mediation of Iran. As a result, diplo
matic relations between them were restored, the consu
lates were reopened in both countries, and Afghanistan was
given the right to‘ship its goods through Pakistan.
 
The programme put forward by the new govemnment,
and its practical measures were welcomed by the public
at large, which began to give increasing support to state-po
litical change. Though a large section of the public adhered
to a national-bourgeois position, bourgeois-democratic de
mands, typical only of a small number of opposition groups
in the late 1940s and early 1950s, were gradually expanding
in scope. Now they were advanced at the national level. As there was no private press, nor any political organisations at that time, public views were expressed in the semi-official
press, which began to carry an increasing number of articles
on agricultural problems and the position of the peas
ants, to criticise the dominance of money-lenders in the
countryside, to focus public attention on the continued
impoverishment of the peasants and examine the problem
of agrarian overpopulation. The debt bondage of the peas
ants was named as one of the main factors intensifying so
cial contradictions in rural areas.6
 
Public concern was also aroused by the many unsolved
‘social problems faced by the urban population. The indus
‘trial proletariat was growing, and so was the number of trans
port, construction and agricultural workers, and the nation
al press pointed to the need to solve the social problems of
these categories of working people, which also warranted
public attention. The most important of these problems
were, as was noted before, the unsettled relations between
hired labour and employers and also the problem of the la
bour market. After insistent demands that an attempt be
made to resolve these problems, the draft of a new labour
law was drawn up in 1965, and it was necommended that it
be extended to the private sector as well.§
 
At a time when the working people i not advance
independent ideological and political programmes, their
demands were included in the programmes of the bourgeois
democratic forces, that is, the petty and middle bourgeoisie
and the intelligentsia. The struggle by the radical members
of these forces for the earliest possible democratisation of
state-political institutions, in opposition of those who ad
vocated a gradual adaptation of the existing political system
to the needs of bourgeois development, largely determined
the general direction of Afghanistan’s domestic political
activity in those years.
 
With the appearance of more developed forms of social
awareness and a higher level of political activity among var
ious sections of society, the domestic political practice of.
the ruling circles also changed. In the official press there
appeared more frequent calls for a democratisation of pub
lic life on the principles of the "unity and cooperation"
of all classes, with the emphasis often placed on"improving
the living conditions of the masses". Popular support for government measures was regarded as an earnest of their successful implementation.. Therefore many government
declarations had a "social aspect". Official propaganda at
tached special significance to influencing intellectuals and
students who, in the opinion of government circles, were to
play the important role of a link between the government
and the masses in implementing the policy of change. Know
ing that radical views were widespread among students,
the ruling circles, in an attempt to enlist their cooperation
and also to retain control over all forms of political activi
ty in the country, called upon the public to prevent mani
festations of "fanaticism and free-thinking" and ‘"‘to respect
law and order".67
 
In its economic policy the Yusuf government planned to
expand the activity of private capital. On the one hand, the
authorities made persistent efforts to establish tighter con
trol over large groups of entrepreneurs who sought to
satisfy their own narrow, self-seeking interests, and to make
more effective use of their capital in order to fulfil the eco
nomic development plans. On the other hand, the govern
ment wanted to grant benefits to the private sector in or
der to stimulate its participation in the expansion of indus
trial construction. Great attention was paid to mixed state
and private enterprises in the framework of the "guided
mixed economy’’. Having undertaken to finance the devel
opment of key sectors of the economy (power engineering,
transport, and mining), the state provided the private sec
tor with the opportunity to invest more in other industries
that were less capital-intensive and brought a quick return.
At the same time the areas and amounts of private capital
investment were taken into account in the overall plans for
the country’s economic development. The heightened at
tention given to the development of private enterprise was
backed up by the demand to hand over a number of state
enterprises to the private sector. However, those measures
did not substantially expand participation by private
capital in industrial construction. Private capital still pre
ferred more profitable commerce.
 
Under the programme of socio-economic measures, a
new constitution was drafted and discussed by the Coun
cil of Ministers late in 1963. In August 1964, afier it had
been completed and approved by the government, the draft was published; in September that year it was approved at Loy Jirgah sessions and in October, by the king.
The new Basic Law confirmed the preservation of a con
stitutional monarchy in Afghanistan, with the king having
supreme executive, legislative and judicial powers. Mem
bers of the royal family were not allowed to occupy posts
in parliament, the government and the Supreme Court.
Provision was made for the separation of the three powers.
The constitution confirmed the principles of national
sovereignty and civil rights and liberties: the inviolability
of the home and property; freedom of speech, of the
press and of assembly; the equality of all citizens before
the law; and freedom of residence and movement. An im
portant new provision ‘ii the constitution was the dec
lared right to form societies and political parties, with a
reservation that their activities and aims should not con
tradict the Basic Law. pee ae
Pashtu and Dari were declared the official languages
of Afghanistan, with Pashtu being the national language,
which was in keeping with the spirit of the developing na
tional-bourgeois ideology (Pashtun nationalisin). ‘Islam’ of
the Khanifite variety was declared the state religion. At thé
same time the Basic Law limited the influence .of the Mus
lim clergy, specifically in education-and legal procedure,
which were placed under the direct control of the state.
Changes were introduced in the constitutional -provi
sions regarding parliament. The deputies to its lower house—
the National Assembly—were now to be elected by direct
vote for a term of four years. Its chairman was to be elect
ed from among the deputies. In the upper house—the Se
nate—two-thirds of the deputies were appointed by the king
and one-third was elected. Its chairman was also appoint
ed by the king. The government was individually and
collectively answerable to the National Assembly, whose
deputies could demand that the cabinet of ministers report
on their work. The lower house could declare a vote of no
confidence in the government. However, the king had the
right to dissolve parliament, thereby limiting its control over
the government.
_ Thus, the broader functions given to parliament accord
ing to the constitution, together with the right to form
political organisations, provided more opportunities for politically active sections of the population to participate in state and public affairs.
 
On the whole, the 1964 constitution, which was largely
bourgeois in character, was designed to protect the inter
ests of the ruling classes and reflected the general need to
update the state structure. But the ruling circles that were
carrying out the constitutional reform could not ignore
public demands for democratic changes.
 
The adoption of the constitution was a significant event
in the life of the country. The rights and liberties proclaimed
in it, the formal limitation of the prerogatives of the royal
family, the extension of parliamentary functions, the
freedom to form political organisations, the restriction of
the sphere of influence of the orthodox theologians, and
other legislative changes served to stimulate the activity of
public movements reflecting various political trends, in
cluding the general democratic trend. Following the adoption
of the new constitution, the campaign by those forces de
manding further democratic reforms had a growing in
fluence on the political situation in the country.
 
The period from the adoption of the constitution to a
parliamentary election was declared transitional, and during
that period legislative power was in the hands of the govern
ment. A new election law, which for the first time gave
women the right to vote in elections; came into force in
May 1965.
 
The election campaign revealed the growing interest of
people from various social strata in the work of legislative
bodies. The nominees got the opportunity to address the
electorate, though under the supervision of the authorities.
The election was held in August and September 1965. The
majority of the 216 deputies58 elected to the lower house
of parliament were supporters of the government pro
gramme of reforms. For the first time a small group of
representatives of democratic circles, including those of the
radical trend, were elected to parliament.
 
At one of its first sessions, on October 24, 1965, par
liament was expected to pass a vote of confidence in the gov
ernment formed, with royal assent, by Muhammad Yusuf.
However, on that day thousands of people, many of them
students from Kabul University, gathered at the parliament
building (some even managed to get inside) demanding permission to be present at the parliamentary session. The session was adjourned. On the following day, large demonstra
tions in Kabul ended in clashes with the police. The dem
onstrators demanded changes in the proposed cabinet and
accused a number of ministers of corruption and bribery.
The authorities used force against the demonstrators and
some of the students were injured. Kabul University and
schools were closed for a week.
 
The Yusuf government was supported by the majority
of the deputies and was then approved by the king. On Oc
tober 26, the head of the new cabinet set forth the govern
ment programme, stressing faithfulness to the spirit of the
constitution, and called for social measures to improve re
lations between landowners and peasants, between employ
ers and workers. The government confirmed the policy of
developing the "guided mixed economy’ on a planned
basis. In foreign policy, the principles of non-alignment
and positive neutrality remained unchanged.
 
At the same time the government said nothing about the
dramatic events of October 24 and 25, and this was viewed
as disregard for public sentiments. Student disturbances in
Kabul continued. On October 29, the Yusuf government
resigned.
 
The new cabinet was headed by Muhammad Hashim
Maiwandwal, who had been the Minister of Information and
the Press in the previous government. According to the
members of the new cabinet, its programme could be
summed up as encouragement to the population to take part
in political affairs. Speaking about his desire to promote
progress, the new prime minister stressed that the govern
ment intended to give more thought to the conditions of
workers and small farmers, and to create the conditions nec
essary for the free functioning of political parties and the
press. The main lines of economic and foreign policy re
mained almost unchanged.
 
In its proclamations the Maiwandwal government focused
on problems concerning the position of students, though
the main aim was to pacify them. However, student protest
actions did not abate, often going beyond purely academic
demands. In December 1965, demonstrations and meetings
were held at Kabul University, and leaflets were distributed.
Some of the students involved were arrested.
 
Meanwhile the newly elected parliament approved, af
ter prolonged debate and in accordance with the consti
tution, the bill on political parties. This was doubtlessly
a major gain for the democratic forces, as it made it possible
to organise political action. However, under the law, po
litical parties were placed under government control, which
restricted open political and ideological struggle.*
 
The 1960s saw an acceleration of economic growth in
the framework of the second five-year plan (1962-1967).
Thanks to Soviet technical aid large industrial enterprises
and economic infrastructure projects were either complet
ed or were under construction: the 680-kilometre-long
motor highway linking Kushka, Herat and Qandahar (1965);
the 470-kilometre highway between Kabul and port Sher
Khan, built in. difficult conditions across the Hindu Kush
 
range (1966); the Naghlu hydroelectric power station with
‘a capacity of 100,000 kilowatts, the biggest of its kind in
Afghanistan (1967); the Jalalabad irrigation system with
the Darunta power station (1965), which made it possible
to establish four farms in the region in subsequent years;
gas fields in the north, and a 365-kilometre gas pipeline
between Afghanistan and Soviet Central Asia (1968), af
ter which Afghanistan began. to export gas to the Soviet
Union; and the Kabul Polytechnic (1968), to mention just
a few. The number of small artisan enterprises increased
considerably. Many of them were fitted out with primitive
machines and equipment. The role of private capital,
which was encouraged by the government, somewhat in
creased. The attraction of foreign loans and credits for
financing Afghan five-year plans was followed by arise in for
eign capital investments, and this process was further promo
ted by the 1967 law on private foreign capital investments.
 
While the economic assistance given to Afghanistan by
the Soviet Union and other socialist countries was expand
ing, the Western states, the USA above all, were cutting
back their financial participation in the construction proj
ects for the public sector of the Afghan economy. The
general talk by the ruling circles in the imperialist countries about their economic aid to Afghanistan was not followed by practical assistance, which betrayed their unwilling
ness to facilitate accelerated economic growth in the coun
try. The protracted construction of the irrigation system in
the Helmand valley was a case in point, and the prospects
for the completion of the project were bleak.
 
With the fulfilment of the two first five-year plans,
the public sector in the economy expanded considerably.
State investment in economic development accounted for
almost all the total allocations for both five-year plans (90.3
and 98.3 per cent respectively). The structure of the public
sector also changed. New industries emerged: motor repair,
gas, chemical, cement and house building. The output of
state-owned enterprises increased 4.4-fold over the period:
of the two five-year plans.69 Industrial construction went
hand in hand with the training of national personnel, for
the most part industrial workers and technicians. The ma
jority of Afghan skilled workers were trained at major proj
ects built with the technical and economic assistance of the
Soviet Union. The number of workers and technicians
trained by 1967 totalled 30,000.79
 
The changes in the economy caused by the construction
of industrial projects in the public sector, were followed by
a growth inthe productive forces, which inevitably influenced
the social make-up and, consequently, the alignment of
major class forces. In the process of the national-bourgeois
evolution, those sections of the population whose activity
was one way or another linked with the nascent capitalist
structures were expanding and gaining in strength, These
were the national bourgeoisie, the industrial proletariat, the
technical intelligentsia, the officials, a part of the petty
bourgeoisie, and the students. In the mid-1960s the first
ideological trends emerged, reflecting the interests of those
social strata. Later on those trends grew into independent
political parties and groups. In a situationin which the pop:
ulation was for the most part illiterate, especially the rural
population, which was disunited and psychologically con
servative, the political struggle in the towns became particu
larly tense.
 
The radical sections of the intelligentsia and students,
the most educated and politically conscious part of the
population, was in the van of the political movement. At the initial stage of the formation of political parties differing in ideological and political programmes (the mid-1960s),
the publications in privately issued newspapers and perio
dicals were the chief form of political activity. Private news
papers appeared after the new law on the press was ap
proved by parliament in 1965. Most of the publications were
critical or debated possible ways of achieving the social, eco
nomic and political development of the country. Most of
the private newspapers served as the ideological and organi
sational nuclei of future political parties.
 
As more and more political groups emerged, the ruling
circles presented their own programme as a universal means
of satisfying the interests of the entire population. Such a
policy, it was stressed, would be based on drawing various
social groups, united in a "front of progressive forces", into
the common effort to ensure social progress and democ
racy.’1 These views gave rise to the idea of forming a
political party which, guided by the interests of the ruling
classes and supported by the government, would control
social and political activity and have a monopoly of influence
over public opinion. Prime Minister Maiwandwal tried to
create such a party.
 
In a speech delivered on Independence Day in August
1966 the Prime Minister set forth the main provisions of
his party’s programme, which were designed to implement
"progressive and democratic ideals". Therefore the party
was named the Progressive Democratic Party. The aims and
the tactics of the progressive democratic movement were
described in detail in its newspaper Mossawat (Equality),
first published in January 1967. The chief aim of the party,
the paper wrote, was to "open up the way to economic re
forms (on the basis of the "guided economy") and to posi
tive reforms in social, cultural and intellectual life’. The
current task of the party was "the struggle in the name of
the principles of Islam, constitutional monarchy, national
ism, democracy, and socialism", "for economic, political
and social democracy; for the rights of the dispossessed and
oppressed classes; against poor living conditions, social in
justice and the remains of feudalism"? 2
 
In, advancing this reformist programme, the Progressive
Democrats declared that it should be carried out through a
"silent", or "lawful" revolution, with the laws and the constitution strictly observed. Elaborating on this thought, the paper wrote: ‘‘By supporting the ideas of progressive de
mocracy, it is possible, in a peaceful and lawful way and in
accordance with historical reality, to break the chains of
oppression and build an edifice of freedom and genuine
equality".73 As for practical ways of eliminating social
injustice, the party’s ideologists proposed that new labour
legislation be worked out to grant the workers the right to
participate in administering enterprises and receiving a part
of their profit.?4 Concerning the exploiter classes, the pub
lishers of the newspaper recommended admonition and
exhortation. Explanatory work must be conducted among
them, the paper wrote, for "they make mistakes, and we
sympathise with them, explain their mistakes to them ina
peaceful, brotherly way, so that they could reform".?5
 
"The Mossawat paid special attention to the desperate
plight of the poor peasants. In its publications on this issue,
it adhered to the position of social criticism. Here is what
it wrote in an article entitled "Our Peasants": "The posi
tion of our peasants is the worst manifestation of the
epoch of feudalism in our age. Hardships and misery are the
peasant’s eternal lot. He works, creates values, but the fruit
of his labour is misappropriated by his masters. He has
nothing!"’? 6 Acting as champions of social justice, the Progres
sive Democrats proposed that an agrarian reform be carried
out, which would not, however, change social relations in
the countryside or theforms of landownership, but introduce
a few superficial measures to somewhat improve the eco
nomic conditions of the peasants. The reform envisaged an
insignificant limitation on landownership, a revision of the
terms of land lease, the distribution to peasants of state
owned and newly-reclaimed land, the setting up of state farms
and peasant marketing and consumer cooperatives, and aid
to farmers by providing them with seeds, farm implements
and fertilisers. The refusal to abolish feudal landownership—
the basis of social inequality in the countryside—doubtless
ly detracted from the effectiveness of the proposed measures.
 
The programme of the Progressive Democratic Party
lacked a clear-cut ideological platform. Having joined to
gether incompatible principles (as, for instance, monarchy
and socialism), the party failed to become the political
spokesman of any one section of society or class and remained a small group of people supporting the ideas of Muhammad Hashim Maiwandwal. Furthermore, Mai
wandwal’s programme" and his far-reaching promises, which
did not, however, provide for radical measures, found no
broad support among the public due to the mounting strug
gle to ensure the implementation of the main provisions of
the constitution. In 1967, the Maiwandwal govemment re
signed. In the years that followed his party did not win any
significant influence and was preoccupied more with an in
depth analysis of the sophisticated details of its conception
than with practical activity. Its newspaper Mossawat, how
ever, proved viable and existed till the end of 1971.
 
The situation in Afghanistan in the mid-1960s was
increasingly influenced by major international factors. The
strengthening of the socialist world system, the powerful
growth of the national liberation movement, the collapse of
the colonial system and the emergence of new independent
states brought about substantial changes in the world. Left
wing radical elements, who reflected both the national and
the social aspirations of the people, gained ground within
the national iiberation movement. The spontaneous pro-so
cialist drive of the working people, who were fighting for a
better life, created favourable conditions for the dissemina
tion of the ideas of scientific socialism. These ideas were
spreading throughout the developing countries.
 
As the Afghan working class was small and politically
immature, the ideas of scientific socialism were propound
ed by members of the left-radical, progressive section of
the petty bourgeoisie, in particular the petty-bourgeois in
telligentsia. In 1965, separate Marxist circles and socialist
groups of democratic intellectuals united together in the
People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). Its
First (founding) Congress was held illegally on January 1,
1965 in Kabul. The Congress elected the party’s Central
Committee which consisted of seven members: Nur Mu
hammad Taraki (who was elected its General Secretary),
Babrak Karmal, S. A. Keshtmand, and others. In April
1966, the PDPA founded the newspaper Khalq (The People) and published its programme in its first two issues.
 
The programme contained an analysis of the international
and domestic situation and stressed that the main cause of
‘the slow-down in the development of the productive forces
and the disastrous economic position of the people was the
economic and political domination of the feudal class, the
wealthy local and compradore merchants, the bureaucrats
and agents of international monopolies whose class interests
ran counter to the interests of the popular masses in Afgha
nistan"’.?? The PDPA, the programme said, undertook
to solve these problems by forming a national-democratic
government supported by "‘the united national front of
all progressive, democratic and patriotic forces, i.e.,
workers, peasants, progressive intellectuals, handicrafts
men, and the petty and national bourgeoisie, fighting for
national independence, the democratisation of public life
and the victorious conclusion of the anti-feudal and anti
imperialist struggle". At the stage of national-democratic
development, the paper said, the feudal system should be
smashed and the country should move over to the path of
non-capitalist development.
 
Describing the political goals of a national-democratic
government, the PDPA programme envisaged establish
ment of genuine democracy, achievement of economic
independence and national sovereignty, democratisation of
the legal system and provision of political rights: freedom of
speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom
to form political organisations and tradeunions, and freedom
to strike and organise demonstrations. It also promised to
seek a democratic solution to the nationalities question.
 
The economic policy of a national-democratic govern
ment, the paper stressed, should be directed at the planned
development of the public sector. ‘The public sector," wrote
Khalq, ‘"‘which is anti-feudal, anti-colonial and anti-imper
ialist, will form the basis for the development of the econ
omy and true democracy".’8 This policy also provided
for the accelerated industrialisation of Aghanistan.
 
The agrarian policy, the programme said, should be aimed
at liquidating feudalism through the implementation of a
democratic land reform in the interest of landless and land
hungry peasants and with their direct participation, through
the cancellation of debts to money-lenders, and the creation of peasant cooperatives, with the state giving them every possible assistance.
 
The PDPA programme provided for the accomplishment
of a number of major social tasks, including introduction
of a 42-hour working week, paid leave, a reduced working
day for arduous or hazardous jobs, old-age pensions and
free medical service, prohibition of child labour, creation
of trade unions, conclusion of collective labour agree
ments, construction of cheap housing for all the dispos
sessed, extension of women’s rights, measures to combat
arbitrary rule and lawlessness, and also a large number of
cultural measures, above all to combat illiteracy.
 
In the foreign policy sphere, the PDPA adhered to a
peaceful policy of positive neutrality, and supported the
struggle for peace and peaceful coexistence and the na
tional liberation movement, and fought against colonialism
and neocolonialism.
 
At the end of its programme, the Party briefly outlined
its tactics and strategy: "Coming out in support of the
constitution and fighting, openly and peacefully at this
stage, for the formation of a national-democratic govern
ment and a non-capitalist path of development on the
basis of an advanced ideology and world outlook, we never
forget our responsibility to the people, to the working
people of Afghanistan, or our ultimate goal—the building
of a new, socialist society."79
 
This democratic programme expressed the ideological
platform of the PDPA. In the subsequent issues Khalq
 
‘set forth the class essence of the Party and the goals of
the newspaper itself, which were "‘to rally all the progres
sive, patriotic and democratic forces into one national
democratic organisation which would defend the interests
of the people, and to form the nucleus of the organisation’s
ideological unity".8° Describing the class nature of the
Party, the paper wrote that this "new type of political orga
nisation in Afghanistan will consist of the vanguard of the
working class and, acting as a guiding force in the democrat
ic movement, will work together with the peasants and
progressive intellectuals. This force has set itself the goal
of uniting the people in the struggle against despotism and
reaction, and showing the working people how to build
a free and democratic society, of awakening the nation, broadening the movement against feudalism and imperialism, establishing a constitutional-democratic system, and
liquidating the absolutist forces and obsolete relations of
production.’’81
 
The publications carried in Khalq initiated the vigorous
dissemination of the ideas of scientific socialism among
various sections of the intelligentsia and the working people.
At the same time, they became the object of fierce attacks
by the rightist circles. Some press organs, including semi
official ones, hit out at the Khalq. Some of the private
newspapers strove to discredit the basic provisions of the
democratic programme published in Khalg, contrasting
them against the idea of the unity of all classes and assert
ing that "the class struggle is a drag on progress and re
vival’?.82
 
The authorities did not confine themselves to attacks
on Khalq in the press but also charged the newspaper
with violating the constitution. In May 1966, the govern
ment banned the newspaper. Only six issues of Khalg had
come out.
 
Among the other papers demanding the implementation
of constitutional provisions was Peyame Emruz (Today’s
News), which began publication in February 1966. The
paper pointed to the main social evils and shortcomings,
resolutely defending the right of the people to take part in
political and public affairs. In May 1966, it was also banned,
though its publication was resumed six months later.
 
The newspaper Seda-i Awam (The Voice of the Masses),
which adopted the position of petty-bourgeois radicalism,
was close to Khalq in spirit and in the subject-matter of
its publications. Its first issue came off the press in March
1968. The paper was greatly influenced by Khalg’s ideas,
as could be seen even in its political terminology.
 
Describing their aims, the publishers of Seda-1-Awam
wrote in their first editorial that the newspaper served the
interests of the working people, was searching for "new
ways of liberating them from poverty and injustice and
struggling to ensure their social well-being". They grouped
all the social strata and classes in two opposing camps.
One of them, the camp of poverty and oppression, included
‘progressive intellectuals, intellectual workers, teachers,
the progressive youth,. office employees in the middle bracket, manual workers, land-hungry and landless peasants, small landowners, nomads, handicraftsmen, small em
ployers"’, i.e.,’ all the working people, who accounted for
98 per cent of the population. The second camp, the one
of oppression and exploitation, included ‘large landowners,
capitalists and a handful of ruling oppressors".83 Examin
ing the position of the working people, the paper stressed
that they were deprived not only of economic benefits,
but even of social and political rights. Proclaiming a struggle
for the "provision of rights and the emancipation of all
working masses", the ideologists of Seda-t Awam put
forward a programme for that struggle which envisaged
the formation of a national-democratic government by
‘handing’ political and economic power to the people,
in accordance with the will of the people" and by effecting
a series of socio-economic reforms for the benefit of the
working people and along non-capitalist lines. The public
sector, it said, would be enlarged and strengthened, more
effective economic planning would be introduced, agri
culture would be mechanised, and the public health system
expanded.8* The forms of struggle to attain these goals
were not specified, though it was supposed that it would
be legal activity based on the unity and solidarity of the
working people.
 
For all their positive content, the Seda-i Awam slogans
did not go beyond general declarations.85 The paper did
not mention the ways and means of implementing the
proposed reforms in the socio-political structure of the
state.86 Incidentally, one of the slogans proclaimed by
the paper—"Food, Clothing and Housing’—was sub
sequently widely used and became central to the program
me of socio-economic, change carried out by the PDPA.
 
In the late 1960s, there emerged a trend whose ideolo
gists were petty-bourgeois extremists. The ideas propounded
by the leaders of this group, whose members called them
selves "new democrats", enjoyed support among a part
of the petty bourgeoisie, some toiling intellectuals and
semi-proletarians, all of whom were most susceptible to
extreme radicalism. In 1968, they began to publish the
newspaper Shitla-yi Jawed ("The Eternal Flame") mirroring
the basic theoretical conceptions of Afghan leftist extre
mists. The ideologists of the group, ignoring the class struggle in the capitalist countries and belittling the signifcance of contradictions between the socialist world system
and imperialism, regarded the national liberation movement
in the developing eOUD TSS as the vanguard of the world
revolutionary process.87 Their theories were clearly bor
rowed from Maoist ideology. The publishers of Shula-yi
jawed minimised the role of the working class’’ and
called the peasantry the leading class capable of rallying
round itself other democratic and semi-democratic social
strata.8 9
 
In a bid to discredit the PDPA programme and split
the democratic movement, the Afghan Maoists directed
their attack against its main principles. They rejected the
PDPA’s idea of transition to non-capitalist development,
accusing the Party of conciliation with the bourgeoisie
and of attempts to lead the oppressed people away from
the class struggle. The ideologists of: Shula-yi Jawed held
that a national front of the progressive and democratic
forces could not be established so long as the exploiter
classes exercised political domination. They were likewise
opposed to the principles of peaceful coexistence.
 
The newspaper hit out at the public sector which, it
alleged, only helped to bolster the economic position of
the bourgeoisie and was a means of exploiting the working
people.2! On the whole, the ideological concepts of the
Afghan Maoists were designed to smear the ideas of scien
tific socialism and hamstring the democratic movement
in the country. The ‘new democrats", who were headed
by Dr. Hadi Mahmudi and engineer Muhammad Osman,
had the greatest influence among Kabul students and
schoolchildren. The Afghan Maoists conducted also exten
sive propaganda work among the national minorities,
particularly in Herat and Hazarajat. Having no representa
tives in parliament and guided by the Maoist slogan "The
rifle brings power", the Afghan leftist extremists brought
to the political struggle an element of disorder, anarchy and
unjustified conflict with the authorities. Thus, in May 1968,
members of the Shula-y: Jawed group provoked a clash
between participants ina meeting and the police. As a result,
the Maoist leaders were arrested and sent to prison and their
newspaper was closed down.
 
A noteworthy phenomenon in the political life of fhe country in the latter-half of the 1960s was the publication of the private newspaper Afghan Mellat (Afghan Nation),
which united the proponents of bourgeois nationalist ideas,
who proclaimed themselves social-democrats. Their leader
and chief ideologist was Ghulam Muhammad Farhad, pub
lisher of the newspaper, president of the energy department,
and later the mayor of Kabul. His political views were
influenced to some extent by his years of study in nazi
Germany, and he had borrowed many of his ideas from
national;socialism. The newspaper’s recurrent theme was
the creation of a "common spirit of the nation" —a panacea
for all social ills. It insisted on the idea of "uniting all the
peoples, races and tribes of Afghanistan into one nation,
and the traditions and social and legal factors which made
up their material and cultural life into one culture". The
publishers of the paper saw this idea as a means of "attain
ing the common goal determined by the common wishes
of the nation, the common spirit and common concepts"’.92
But they saw the idea of a single nation through the prism
of the national interests of the ethnic majority—the Pash
tuns, to the detriment of the national minorities. The
Pashtun nationalism of Afghan Mellat was nourished by
the ideas of the "Afghan spirit" which was allegedly in
herent in the nation and determined its route towards
social and political advancement. Exploiting democratism,
the paper appealed to the workers and peasants, suggesting
to them the best way of freeing themselves from "poverty,
unemployment and injustice’. "There is only one way,"
it declared, "which is unity: the unity of place, the unity
of colour, and the unity‘of thought under the protection
of the nation and for the benefit of the nation. And until
nationalism becomes' rooted among the various classes,
your destiny, workers, will remain unchanged."93 Ignoring,
in effect, the class nature of society, the so-called social
democrats produced no positive economic programme and
confined themselves merely to general declarations.
 
The private newspaper Wahdat (Unity) adhered to the si
milar ideological position. Expressing its concern over the so
cio-economic disorder in society, it called for the unity of all
classes, for "‘class harmony" in the struggle for social justice
(by social justice it implied a situation in which the inter
ests of both the propertied classes and the working people would be satisfied). The way to this kind of justice, the paper declared, was the improvement of the existing socio
political system within the framework of the law. The
Wahdat publishers denounced class struggle in any form.
Class struggle, they maintained, could only lead to distur
bances and the disruption of public order.9
 
The process of ideological and political polarisation
also involved the Muslim theologians. The conservative
clergy, who defended the obsolete socio-economic order
in the latter half of the 1960s, felt that their influence was
waning in various spheres of government and political
activity. By the end of the 1960s, the Muslim clergy
whose number ranged between 220,000 and 230,000,298
were a heterogeneous estate in terms of property status
and political views. Some of them (mostly people from
the middle urban strata who had received a modern theolog
ical education abroad or at home) began to preach the
idea of renovating Islam, of modernising it and adapting
it to the political views of their time. Their political views
were influenced by various bourgeois theories and also by
socialist ideas, which had become comparatively wide
spread in Afghanistan, especially after the emergence of
the PDPA. The Islamic modernists had assimilated some of
these views. Having found in early Islam ideas consonant
with some socialist categories (as, for instance, equality and
justice), they tried to prove that the teaching of Muhammad
and socialism were compatible and called their conception
"Islamic socialism". Censuring greed, avarice and the use
of wealth by the powers that be for their own selfish ends,
the supporters of "Islamic socialim" sought the means of
achieving social justice in self-perfection and in pursuing the
path of Islam. Their number though was small.
 
The conservative section of the Afghan Muslim clergy,
represented by outstanding doctors of Muslim law, heads
of religious sects and orders, and the imams of large mosques
economically linked with feudal landownership and big
trade capital, continued to oppose any reforms that could
undermine traditional principles.
 
Criticising capitalism and its vices, and rejecting social
ism, the right-wing. clergy proposed a path of special,
Islamic social development, and styled themselves the
defenders of "religious, social, political and national freedom". They published their material in the private newspaper Gahiz (Morning), which first appeared in January
1969. Denouncing the vices of Western bourgeois civilisa
tion, mostly its outward manifestations (night clubs, al
coholic drinks, pomography, etc.), the publishers of the
newspaper also opposed the ideas of scientific socialism.
They were particularly outraged at socialism’s denial of
private ownership of the means of production, which, in
their view, made the socialist system unacceptable for
Muslim countries.27-98 Rejecting socialism and socialist
ideas, the Gahiz .publishers were opposed to any form
of class struggle which, they alleged, was brought about
by the "infidels" and led to "pessimism, discord, wrath and
hatred". The slogans and ideas proclaimed by the paper
showed that the forces that grouped round Gahiz were in
the extreme right wing of the political struggle, diametrical
ly opposed to all the left-wing and democratic trends.
The ideological principles of the paper* made up the main
part of the programme of the extreme right political groups—
the Muslim Brothers and the Muslim Youth.
 
The ideological struggle over the choice of possible
courses of national development involved ever larger sec
tions of the population, particularly the nascent working
class, with the PDPA acting as its vanguard. The formation
of a working-class party in Afghanistan proceeded in dif
ficult conditions. The classes had not yet taken their final
shape in the framework of the multi-structural economy.
The working class was numerically small, territorially dis
united and politically immature. It had not yet reached
that level of organisation which would enable it to act as
an independent political force. The peasantry was totally
illiterate and was under the strong influence of the so
called traditional leaders—the Muslim clergy, khans and
tribal elders. In these conditions the newly emergent PDPA
had to conduct its work mainly among the democratic part
of the intelligentsia and the students—a politically active
but. socially heterogeneous section of the population, a
large part of which was influenced by petty-bourgeois
radicalism and nationalistic prejudices. Moreover, it had
no legal status and could not use the various usual forms and methods of political struggle. Nor did it have broad intemational ties. The PDPA came under attacks from the
reactionaries and the right and leftist extremists and was
subjected to repression by the authorities. Its composition,
which was not uniform, also affected its activities. The
majority of its members were intellectuals, mostly teachers,
students, minor officials and junior officers. Due to all
these objective and subjective factors, the Party went
through growing pains at the initial stage of its formation.
 
The differences within the Party, mostly over tactical
issues, disrupted its organisational unity in 1966, and in
1967 the PDPA found itself split into two factions. One of
them was headed by Babrak Karmal, whose supporters
were in favour of a wider use of legal means of struggle
(later this faction assumed the name of the Party newspaper
Parcham |The Flag], which first appeared in 1968). The
other faction was headed by Nur Muhammad Taraki, and
took the name Khalq. Both factions had one and the same
programme and rules and pursued the same goals. In the
Party Rules, published illegally in 1967, the PDPA declared
itself "the vanguard of the working class and all working
people" and said that its activities were based on the princi
ples of Marxism-Leninism.
 
Parcham took over from Khalq the subject-matter and
ideological thrust of its publications. It specified and
developed the main provisions of the PDPA programme, set
the current tasks and formulated the ultimate goal of the
struggle. A revolution in Afghanistan, said the Parcham
leaders, should go through two stages: the national-demo
cratic stage and the stage of socialist transformations. During
the first stage a national-democratic government would be
formed to represent the progressive and patriotic forces
united in a national front: workers, peasants, intellectuals,
and the petty and national bourgeoisie. The movement
should be led by the proletariat, the most revolutionary
class, allied with the peasantry. The main task at the stage
of the national-democratic revolution would be the struggle
against feudalism along the lines of non-capitalist develop
ment. Inthe course of that struggle, the stage would be
set for socialist changes.99
 
The paper devoted much attention to an analysis of the
class structure of the population and the economic conditions of the working people. It informed its readers about political actions by the working masses. Parcham was
published until April 1970, when it was closed down by
the authorities in response to demands by reactionary
mullahs after the publication in the paper ofa considerabie
volume of material to mark the centenary of Lenin’s birth.
 
The revival of political activity, which was assuming
more diverse forms, reflected growing tension in the sphere
of social relations. Though the economic potential of the
country had grown somewhat over the period of the two
five-year plans, the conditions of the main categories of
workers had not been improved. In 1967, the third five-year
plan of socio-economic development (1967-1972) was
drawn up. As distinct from the previous two plans, in which
the main emphasis had been on the infrastructure, the bulk
of capital investment under the third five-year plan went
to industry and farming. More than 70 per cent of the in
vestment required was covered by foreign aid.t9° All in all,
33 billion afghanis were earmarked for development under
the third five-year plan, of which 32.4 per cent was ear
marked for industry, 29.4 per cent for agriculture, 16.7 per
cent for education and medical care, and 12.4 per cent for
transport and communications.!91 As before, the main
portion of the investment (31 billion afghanis) came from
the public sector.192
 
The elaboration of the third five-year plan raised the
problem of financing industry and agriculture—the main
aspect of the government’s economic policy. As the number
of large and medium-scale industrial enterprises in Afghani
stan was small and their returns were low, taxation became
the main source of state revenue. The taxation system had
not undergone any serious change for decades. As a result,
in the early 1960s the land-tax accounted for a mere 2 per
cent of the budget revenues. The government attempted to
revise the tax system, to introduce progressive taxation and
to increase taxation on large landowners and livestock
breeders. Its proposals to this effect sparked off heated
debate at the parliament session of the 12th convocation.
The parliamentary majority, which was made up of large
landowners and mullahs (the latter constituted 20 per cent
of the deputies in the lower house! 93, i.e., the social groups
associated with large landed estates and the pre-capitalist mode of production, rejected the bills on taxation proposed by the government and other measures to increase state
revenue, seeing in them an encroachment on their class
interests.
 
Consistent socio-economic transformations to suit the
interests of the working people were demanded in parlia
ment by the deputies of the PDPA faction headed by Babrak
Karmal, and by other groups. They insisted on a radical agrar
ian reform which would change the form of landownership.
 
The parliamentary centre, speaking for the national
bourgeoisie, proved unable clearly to define its position
and to resist the conservative majority, and this revealed
the weakness of the bourgeois elements in the political
structure of the state. In the end, all attempts by the gov
ermment to get parliament approve its major bills, which
could have secured a more successful fulfilment of the
five-year plan, were blocked by the right-wing deputies.
This was equally true of the discussion on the draft of
the third five-year plan. .
 
As the five-year period progressed, it became clear that
the amount of foreign financial aid was a good deal less
than expected (about 80 per cent in the first two years and
51 per cent‘in the third year).19¢ The govemment was
thus compelled to revise the draft as a whole and to offer
a new draft for parliament’s consideration. In the end,
the draft of the third-five year plan was not fully approved
by parliament. The friction between parliament and the
government extended over a wide range of problems. The
conservatism of the majority of the deputies acted as a
brake on any, even fairly moderate, changes within the
framework of ‘regulated’? economic and social evolution.
The Maiwandwal govemment, which was trying to use
the Progressive Democratic Party it had formed to win
parliamentary support for its social measures, came
under fierce criticism and in the autumn of 1967 it had
to resign.
 
The next government, headed by Nur Ahmad Etemadi,
failed to introduce any substantial changes in the relations
between the legislative and executive organs of power.
The tension between them, often taking the form of latent
conflict, made itself felt for a number of years. By 1969
the Etemadi government, continuing the efforts of its predecessors to find new sources of revenue, elaborated a programme of measures by regulating and increasing taxa
tion on cattle and land, raising the prices of petrol, increas
ing road tolls, etc. These measures were expected to bring
in a further 362 million afghanis.195 However, this pro
gramme was also blocked by parliament. The government
resorted to floating a large internal loan, which only served
to increase inflation. On the whole, as a result of the shor
tage of domestic revenue and the reduction of foreign finan
cial aid, the actual fulfilment of the third five-year plan in
terms of capital investment amounted to 20,8 billion
afghanis as against the 33 billion afghanis,!2° initially
planned. The rate of economic growth during the third
five-year plan was less than 3 per cent, which was slower
than in the preceding period. The country’s forcion, debt
was growing rapidly to reach $600 million by 1973.19?
 
In 1971, with the general deterioration of the economic
situation, (rapidly increasing prices, declining industrial
output, the increasing numbers of smali entrepreneurs and
handicraftsmen ruined, unemployment rising steeply), and
the intensification of the political struggle, the Etemadi
government resigned, to be succeeded by the cabinet of
Abdul Zahir.
 
The democratic forces, represented in parliament by
only a few deputies, had little opportunity to influence
the decisions taken by the legislature. Therefore, using par
liament as a legal means of struggle against the ruling
circles in defence of the working people’s interests, they
simultaneously stepped up their activities, legal and illegal,
outside parliament.
 
The democratic forces were led by the PDPA, represented
by the two groups, Khalq and Parcham, the most consistent
defenders of the working people’s interests.
 
The nationalistic group Setem-i Melli (Against National
Oppression), formed in 1968 by Taher Badakhshi, who
had left the PDPA, adopted the slogan "Emancipate the
national minorities". However, this only added to na
tional strife, and thus acted in the interest of the proper
tied classes in regions populated by national minorities.
 
The various sections of the amorphous Afghan bourgeoi
sie also had their political groups. One such group was
Karwan (Caravan), whose news were represented in a liberal bourgeois newspaper issued under the same name. They had close links with national big business and had
ample financial resources. They advocated reforms within
the framework of national-bourgeois development. An
other such group was called Ittihad-i Melli (National Unity),
which brought together the champions of limited reforms
that preserved traditional Islamic norms in social life.
The group of Progressive Democrats also continued to
function. It was oriented on bourgeois reforms in the spirit
of "Islamic socialism". Another rather active group was
the Afghan Mellat, adherents of Pashtun nationalism
propagating the ideas of a "national revival of great Af
ghanistan".
 
In the late 1960s, the Muslim Brothers organisation
emerged on the extreme right wing of the political struggle.
It was the spokesman of the most reactionary part of the
large landowners and the Muslim clerical elite, the circles
which had economic ties with the compradore section of
the big bourgeoisie. This organisation, and also the Muslim
Youth, an offshoot of the Muslim Brothers, whose members
were fanatical students and schoolchildren, proclaimed a
battle to the end against left-wing forces.
 
The 1960s ended with a powerful upsurge of the class
struggle, the first indication and the focal point of a general
national crisis. The struggle involved practically all sections
of the working population, and in 1968 the largest demon
strations extended to the whole country. The main partic
ipant was the young working class, which was emerging
onto the scene of s.cuggle as a significant component of
the country’s social structure. According to the democratic
press, there were 880,000 hired workers in the country
in 1968, including 32,000 industrial proletarians employed
at modern factories.1 98
 
The economic conditions of the working class had se
riously deteriorated by the end of the 1960s. With the com
pletion of large projects in the infrastructure, on which the
bulk of building workers had been employed, the majority
of the workers lost their jobs. The wage level of the workers
was far below their real family expenditure. According to
Parcham, between 1962 and 1967 workers’ wages increased
by 47 per cent, while food prices more than doubled over
the same period.199 The press reported on the arduous conditions of work, severe exploitation, the violation of workers’ trade-union rights and poor living conditions.
The conditions of other categories of working people—
handicraftsmen, shop-keepers, farm labourers, and day
labourers—were no better. This accounted for the active
participation of the broad masses of the city poor, with
the working class at their head, in the class battles—in
demonstrations, strikes, meetings and protest marches.
 
The students of the Kabul school of mechanics were
the first to go on strike in April 1968. Then the workers of
the Jangalak motor repair plant in Kabul called a strike.
That year a large May Day demonstration was held in the
capital, the first in the country’s history. The people who
gathered at the meetings that day demanded that May Day
should be made a national holiday and called for a campaign
to establish labour unions. In May, a wave of workers’
demonstrations swept the country: meetings and demonstra
tions held by workers at Gulbahar, who were joined by
peasants and secondary school pupils; a march by oilmen
in Shibirghan and workers at cement and textile factories
in Pol-e Khomzyi, and strikes by the workers at the Jangalak
plant and the workers at the state-run printing house in
Kabul. Most of the workers’ demonstrations, which contin
ued all through 1968, were spontaneous, without adequate
political leadership. The PDPA and other left-wing organi
sations, which did not yet enjoy broad political influence
among the workers, could not lead the strike actions at
the initial stage, though:many PDPA members took an
active part in the strikes and demonstrations, acquiring
their first experience of the class struggle. Altogether the
demonstrations involved industrial. workers, clerical staff
and minor officials, students, schoolchildren, peasants,
small traders, and the soldiers of the Labour Corps. From
April till August in 1968, about 30,000 people took part
in more than 40 strikes.116
 
The strikes were staged at both private and state enter
prises, with the most active strike campaign being conduct
ed by workers at the larger industrial enterprises: the
Jangalak motor repair plant, the Spinzar textile company
in Qunduz, the textile mills of the Nasaji Company, the
textile combine in Gulbahar, the gas fields in Shibirghan,
and the Kabul integrated house-building factory. The industrial workers were supported by building workers.
 
On June 9, 1968, a large demonstration was held by workers
building the road between Pol-e Khomri and Shibirghan.
In the summer the unemployed marched in a demonstra
tion in’ Herat, and in October seasonal workers went on
strike in Qandahar. Class actions by the working people
assumed nationwide proportions.
 
At this stage in the strike movement economic demands
prevailed. The workers demanded higher wages, paid leave,
better working conditions, medical services, social security,
and the right to form trade unions. The local and central
authorities responded with repression: many of those taking
part in the strikes and demonstrations were sacked or ar
rested. But in some instances the strikes were successful
and the management of enterprises and the local authorities
were compelled to meet the strikers’ demands. On the
whole, the strike movement in 1968 demonstrated the
growing political maturity of the workers and the ability
of the working class to become the vanguard of the demo
cratic movement, tuming it into a class movement.
However, without political leadership this movement
remained spontaneuos, disunited and_ disorganised,
which doomed a large number of the demonstrations
to failure.
 
In 1969, the political struggle was joined by students
from Kabul University and the Polytechnic, which was
opened in 1968. Student action started back in mid-1968.
The students were protesting against the meagre sums
allocated by the government for public education, and
against its discrimination against workers during enrolment
at educational establishments. Many school leavers and
university graduates could not find jobs. Elementary schools
were attended by only 14.5 per cent of school-age children,
secondary schools by 4.6 per cent, and lycées by 2.8 per
cent.111 The schools were understaffed. The education
system was obsolete. The pupils at secondary schools and
lycées went out into the streets demanding more attention
to the needs of education. In the autumn of 1968, demon
strations were held by students in Kabul protesting against
the way the higher education system was run, concentrating
their criticism on the 1968 law pruhibiting students from
taking part in political activities. The students also demanded the extension of the civil rights and liberties proclaimed in the 1964 constitution. In their protest actions they were
often joined by teachers.
 
The student actions were largely spontaneous and often
ended in clashes with the police who on many occasions
burst into the university campus to make arrests. The in
volvement of the students in the political struggle in 1968
1969 showed they had become a radical political force
capable of independent action.
 
In 1971-1972, at the second stage of the student move
ment, their actions became more purposeful and acquired
a class character. In August 1971, the Kabul University
Student League was formed and adopted its statute. The
League declared it would fight for "the provision and
protection of the professional, democratic, personal and
social rights of students’, "in support of the liberation
movement, for a just peace and intolerance of reactionary
activity", that they would "struggle against exploitation
and colonialism", and "resist any oppression, violence and
discrimination".112 Thus student action became organised.
The League elected a Supreme Council, in which the major
ity was held by members of the Maoist grouping Shula-yi
Jawed. The Supreme Council was the leading, regulating
and coordinating centre of the student movement. In accord
with a Supreme Council decision taken on November 13,
1971, the students of Kabul University called a large strike,
which was later joined by students of diverse political
leanings.
 
The Supreme Council, however, failed to elaborate a
common programme of action and therefore could not
lead the student movement. Separate student groups acted
in support of various political groups. The greatest influence
among Kabul University students in the early 1970s was
exercised by Khalq, Parcham, Shula-yi Jawed and the
Muslim Youth. During the November strike by Polytechnic
students, a Union of Teachers was set up with Khalq mem
bers winning the majority. The student movement, opposi
tional by character, was becoming increasingly hetero
geneous in terms of class affiliation. The process of polit
ical delimitation among the students had reached such
a degree that supporters of various political groups engaged
in a sharp ideological struggle. Students and representatives of other social groups often acted together on the basis of the slogans of one or other groups.* In this way the
political activity by students and schoolchildren merged
with demonstrations by the working people to create a
single national campaign by the broad masses of the popula
tion against the policy of the ruling circles. That campaign
was becoming part and parcel of the political struggle in
Afghanistan at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of
the 1970s. It was a sign of the oncoming crisis in the pollit
ical system which was less and less suited to the socio
economic development level of the country.
 
The democratic movement had gained momentum by the
late 1960s and was joined by working people on a large
scale; the PDPA was conducting an active political struggle
and becoming the vanguard of the working people; the ideas
of scientific socialism were becoming increasingly wide
spread. All of this added to the intensity of the class strug
gle. The right-wing extremists, with the Muslim Brothers
as their political vanguard, became an increasingly im
portant factor. In May 1970, they organised meetings and
marches in Kabul. They issued leaflets demanding that
the spread of communist ideas be prevented and that
women be forbidden to work in state establishments.
Some of the leaflets called for a "holy war" against all
progressives.
 
The democratic forces, the PDPA above all, were the
object of the fiercest attacks. Right-wing activity, which
threatened to cause violence and disorder in Kabul, forced
the government to use severe measures against them. Some
of the fanatics were arrested, others were deported from
the city.
 
The actions organised by right-wing religious forces
spilled over to other towns. They were most acute in
Jalalabad. Here the organisers were joined by some elders
of the Shinwari tribe, small traders, handicraftsmen and
artisans. The demonstrations, followed by violence, involved
about 5,000 people. The protesters destroyed the Spinghar
Hotel, the largest in the city, and troops were called in to
quell them.
 
These events were exploited by the top Muslim clergy
to pressurise the government into renouncing its liberalisa
tion plans and taking strong action against the democratic
forces. One of the major aims of the rightists was to worsen
Soviet-Afghan relations. Anti-government demonstrations .
by the right-wing clergy also took place in 1971, in response
to the country’s first May Daydemonstrations organised
by the PDPA and other democratic forces.
 
In 1971-1972, another wave of strike action swept
Afghanistan, again involving mainly the workers at the
largest industrial enterprises. As in 1968, the class demon
strations of the early 1970s were characterised by their
broad social composition. Now the struggle was often
joined by peasants and handicraftsmen, though industrial
workers and Kabul students were in the van, as before.
These demonstrations were more organised and were headed
by the leaders of democratic political groups. The political
leadership of the strike movement ensured a fairly high
level of consciousness among the strikers and ensured the
prevalence of political demands related to the struggle
against tyranny, exploitation, and neocolonialism, and
to the campaign for democratic rights and freedoms, and
for the unity of the working people. The strike movement
was intensifying and often could not be controlled by
the authorities.
 
Political instability in the country increased as the
economic situation deteriorated followmg two successive
severe draughts (in 1970/71 and 1971/72), which caused
loss of crops and livestock. The food shortage that ensued
could not be compensated for by domestic resources,
since by the late 1960s the deficit of marketable grain in the
country has reached 200,000 tons and was covered by grain
deliveries from the USA, the USSR and Pakistan.113 The
government had to ask other countries for aid.
 
However, food imports were insufficient to eliminate
the acute shortage of foodstuffs. Some of the remote re
gions were hit by famine. Food prices soared; and large
scale commerce profiteered. Many members of the ruling
circles also benefited from the hardships of the people.
The food coming from abroad was often misappropriated,
particularly during distribution. In March 1972, protest
demonstrations against high prices were staged in many provinces. By the early 1970s the food crisis had exposed many social vices. Embezzlement, bribery, corruption, and
smuggling were rampant. Over one million head of livestock
were smuggled into Iran annually, and illegal trading in
astrakhan exceeded the volume of official foreign trade
operations.114
 
The growth of class demonstrations, combined with
economic disorder, made radical social and economic
measures imperative. However, the parliament of the 13th
convocation, which opened in 1969 and whose deputies
were, for the most part, large estate owners, and conserva
tive-minded theologians, again strongly opposed any at
tempts to carry out the socio-economic reforms proposed
by the more far-sighted members of the ruling classes.
Only the small PDPA faction headed by Babrak Karmal
and the deputies from other democratic groups that sup
ported it came out resolutely in defence of the vital in
terests of the people, castigating the egoism and inconsis
tency of the leaders of the right-wing and pro-government
camp. Speeches by deputies were broadcast over the radio
and so became known to the public. The conflict between
the legislative and executive branches of power was widen
ing, causing the critical political situation in the country
to deteriorate still further.
 
The inability and unwillingness of the monarchy to solve
urgent socio-economic problems, the deepening economic
crisis, the mounting class struggle by the working people,
and the growing confrontation between different social
forces both within parliament and outside it were followed
by serious differences within the ruling classes. Fearing
possible class upheavals which could shake the entire system
of the feudal-monarchic state, the more far-sighted members
of the ruling classes opposed the monarchical regime, which
was unable to speed up the national-bourgeois evolution.
The monarchy, which had considerable legislative and exec
utive powers invariably hampered the introduction of any
reforms, even the most limited programmes of social change.
The governments that succeeded each other* proved in
capable’ of winning parliamentary approval for most of their
bills. Serious differences in parliament itself rendered its work ineffective, which resulted in a crisis of state power.
 
The acute social contradictions which manifested them
selves at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the
1970s also affected the army, and in particular the officers.
The Afghan armed forces, with 90,000 officers and men,
had undergone considerable modernisation in the 1960s,
The measures taken to update military technology and
training had affected the social composition of the officer
corps, which underwent the intensive political polarisation
typical of all sections of society in that period. The senior
officers, most of whom were from families belonging to
the feudal aristocracy, the wealthy merchant estate and
the top bureaucracy, supported the existing social system,
while most of the junior officers came from the urban
population and partly from among the working people.
Many of them had been trained abroad where they became
acquainted with other socio-political systems and ideologies
and could compare the level of socio-economic develop
ment in their own country and in other countries. On re
tuming home they saw the backwardness of Afghanistan
andthe miserable conditions of its people, and came gradually
to realise that the ruling elite was riddled with corruption.
 
Despite the brainwashing of servicemen in the spirit
of loyalty to the monarchy, oppositional political views
were spreading among the officers. The polarisation among
them was accelerated by the struggle of ideas going on
outside the army. In the early 1970s, many officers gravi
tated towards democratic political groups and supported
them. In particular, in’ ‘the late 1960s an underground
PDPA organisation was formed in the army and brought
together progressive-minded officers.
 
In a situation of general political instability, the Abdul
Zahir government survived a mere year and a half, bringing
nothing new either in political administration or in the
economic system. The political leaders who succeeded each ,
other did not possess any real power. None of them could
become the prime: minister without the king’s support.
Therefore the head of the government, even if he was a
reformist, was unable to put forward a programme that
ran counter to the interests of the monarchy. Musa Shafiq,
who headed the new cabinet in December 1972, was exactly
such a leader.
 
=== The Anti-Monarchist Coup and the Proclamation of a Republic ===
The critical situation in Afghanistan called for radical
changes that would affect the entire structure of the socio
political institutions and the economic foundations of
society;. As there was no political party in the country that
would enjoy mass support and could head a strong opposi
tion, it was the army that toppled the doomed regime.
On the night of July 16, 1973, a group of officers led by
former Prime Minister Muhammad Daoud, staged a virtual
ly bloodless coup. The monarchy was overthrown and
Afghanistan was proclaimed a republic. The new regime
was immediately supported by the garrisons and the popu
lation of most of the big cities, which demonstrated once
again the total lack of popular support for the overthrown
monarchy. King Muhammad Zahir Shah, who was staying
in Italy at the time of the coup, abdicated from the throne
a month later. The supreme body of state power was ‘now
the Central Committee of the Republic. Most of the officers
who took part in or led the coup became members of the
council.
 
The coup had been prepared and carried through, among
others, by members of several political organisations.
Among them were supporters of the PDPA, who formed
the left wing in the republican regime. In the government
formed in August 1973 four ministerial posts were occupied
by members and supporters of the PDPA. At the same time,
people who represented the interests of the ruling classes,
who were opposed to the monarchical regime and who
wanted reforms to speed up the national-bourgeois revolu
tion, which was expected to strengthen the class basis
of their power, occupied a strong position in the state
apparatus and in the army. This group was headed by
Muhammad Daoud and his brother Muhammad Naim. Thus,
the governing bodies of the republic were composed of a
socially heterogeneous but at the first stage politically
united group.
 
On July 17 Muhammad Daoud addressed the nation over
the radio to explain the aims of the coup. Conditions should
be created, he said, in which the people, "especially the
poorer sections of the population and the youth", could contribute to the country’s development. That was his "only goal", he declared, and one which could be attained
by establishing "genuine and reasonable democracy".
The basis of that democracy, according to Daoud, should
be "the granting of all rights to the people and a full re
cognition of the principles of national sovereignty". He
accused the toppléd monarchical regime of violating the
principles of the constitution and announced the creation
of a "new, republican system that fully accorded with the
spirit of Islam". The struggle for peace, non-alignment,
and friendship with’ all nations was proclaimed the main
principle of foreign policy.
 
In the first days following the coup the Central Com
mittee of the Republic published decrees abrogating the
1964 constitution and dissolving parliament. The publica
tion of private newspapers and magazines was suspended.
 
On August 23, Muhammad Daoud, who by the decision
of the Central Committee of the Republic became the
Prime Minister and the head, of state, made his Appeal
to the Afghan People, in which he set forth the main
principles of the government programme. It contained
a pledge to carry out "radical reforms in the economic,
social and political life of the country". He denounced the
economic policy of the toppled regime, which had taken
no account of the needs of the nation and catered only
for the narrow interests of the ruling elite. In agriculture,
the programme said, there prevailed "backward relations
of production and extremely primitive methods of farming
which caused the impoverishment of the peasants, a curtail
ment of the national market and a shortage of agricultural
products". In the political sphere the programme set the
task of "concentrating power in the hands of the people
and strengthening national sovereignty"; provisions were
made for ensuring "equal rights for all people and popular
participation in government". The programme promised
to guarantee and expand democratic rights and freedoms,
and also provided for the adoption of a new, republican
constitution. The nationalities question, the programme
pointed out, must be solved on the basis of the principles
of "equality, brotherhood and friendship" among all the
peoples of Afghanistan, and "‘all forms and types of dis
crimination" must be abolished.
 
As regards the economy, the main emphasis was on the
priority development of the heavy industry, with every
encouragement for private initiative and on efforts to
combat competition by foreign capital and goods. A land
reform "in the interest of the majority of the people, and
the setting up of cooperatives" were to be the most im
portant measures in agriculture. The programme contained
promises to improve working conditions for office em
ployees and workers. To that end, new labour legislation
was.to be drawn up. The programme also envisaged a num
ber of measures to improve the system of education, devel
op national culture and democratise public life. The basic
principles of foreign policy did not undergo any substantial
change in the programme. It was announced that the
Republic of Afghanistan would "take part in the struggle
to ensure peace and security, settle international conflicts
and secure ‘the success of the policy of detente". In the
concluding part the programme formulated its main task,
which was to "put an end to social inequality and to elimi
nate the poverty and backwardness which had existed in
the country for centuries and obstructed the strengthening
of political, and the achievement of economic independence
for the state". It also stated that the reforms should be
carried out without "haste and excesses, putting one’s
faith in God and avoiding delusions". It was impossible to
accomplish this task, the programme said, unless "all the
national progressive and patriotic forces in the country
are united in one broad front".116
 
Thus, the programme of Daoud’s republican government,
vague and. declarative as it was in parts, reflected many of
the demands put forward by the democratic forces of the
country before the coup. Therefore it was widely supported
by the population, which saw in it a way to major reforms
for the benefit of the working people and to the democrat
isation of public life. The participation of the democratic
forces, including the radical left, in the higher echelons
of power largely determined the content of the programme.
 
In the first months after the abolition of the monarchy
the republican government carried through a number of
important measures in the socio-economic sphere, which
affected a considerable part of the population. This was
done on the initiative of the left forces and with their active support. The government made efforts to stabilise prices of prime necessity goods. District committees of the
poor were set up in Kabul with the aid of the PDPA to
combat profiteering and control trading operations of
small shop-keepers. The central authorities fixed the prices
on staple foodstuffs and price-lists were put up in every
shop. The police were instructed to see that the regulations
governing retail trade be observed and profiteering preven
ted. A campaign was launched to combat bribery, corrup
tion and smuggling.
 
During this initial period the government also announced
plans to draw up new labour legislation. Some measures
to improve the conditions of workers and clerical staff
were taken even before the new labour legislation was
adopted. The 7.5-hour working day and maximum 45
hour working week were introduced at state-owned enter
prises. Overtime work was to receive additional remunera
tion. The government doubled the minimum wage for
industrial workers (from 450 to 900 afghanis). Apprentices
at industrial enterprises began to receive wages. The right
to paid leave and social insurance was legalised and the
pension fund was increased.
 
The Supreme Economic Council, set up late in 1973,
was to deal with long-term planning and to coordinate the
work of key industries and farming. In that period some
private industrial companies charged with embezzlement,
bribery and smuggling were nationalised. Among them was
Spinzar, a major textile company. In the autumn of 1973
the Industrial Development Bank of Afghanistan was
founded. In 1974 a new law was adopted regulating foreign
and local investment and limiting the operation of local
private and foreign capital to the light and food industries,
with the share of foreign capital in those industries not
to exceed 49 per cent.1!8 Under this same law easier terms
were provided for local entrepreneurs. In 1974 all private
banks in the country were nationalised.119 In 1973-1974
some measures began to be effected in the financial sphere.
In 1974 direct taxes were increased by 60 per cent as
against 1972 and accounted for 11 per cent of the budget
revenue. After the adoption of a new law on customs and
on tightening control over foreign trade, which became the
monopoly of the state, customs duties on imports also increased in 1974 by 60 per cent over the 1972 level.120
 
In place of the previously adopted five-year plan for
the 1973-1977 period, the government drew up a new,
seven-year plan for the period from 1976 to 1982. It envis
aged the construction of over 200 socio-economic proj
ects, with priority given to the building of large dams,
irrigation systems, hydro-electric power stations and roads,
to the mechanisation of farming, and to mining mineral
deposits.121
 
In agriculture the republican government began work
on a draft land reform law. Before the law was adopted,
landless and land-hungry peasants were given plots from
state-owned newly-irrigated land. Land was received by
slightly more than 5,000 peasant families, that is less than
1 per cent of the peasants who, according to official data,
either had no land at all, or owned tiny plots and lived in
poverty. The Law on Land Reform was promulgated on
August 6, 1975, and announced the restriction of land
ownership to 20 hectares of irrigated land. The surplus
was to be handed over to the peasants for a ransom.!22
 
The initial period of the republican regime saw attempts
to reform the education system. The main emphasis was on
increasing the number of schools, on reorganising secondary
education and promoting vocational training. The govern
ment increased allocations for primary education. A na
tional department to combat illiteracy was set up. All
private schools, including those functioning at mosques,
were placed under state control.
 
However, the republican regime began gradually to de
part from its initial programme. Muhammad Daoud and his
rightist associates felt that the presence of representatives of
democratic forces in the higher echelons of power was a
burden on them, for their activity naturally led to the
expansion of democratic changes in the interests of broad
sections of the population and undermined or weakened
the economic and political positions of the traditional
ruling classes closely associated with the feudal-monarchical
structure. '
 
As the regime stabilised politically, the personal posi
tions of Muhammad Daoud and his closest associates grew
stronger. Having occupied the posts of head of state, prime
minister, foreign minister and minister of defence, and capitalising on democratic slogans, Muhammad Daoud managed to win the support of various sections of society.
He was trusted by many entrepreneurs and the new bureau
crats, who were undisturbed by his shallow reforms, which
did not exceed the limits of the bourgeois system. At the
same time the democratic purport of the government
programme appealed to liberal-minded intellectuals and
the petty bourgeoisie. The promises to carry out a land
reform "in the interest of the majority" won Muhammad
Daoud the support of a large part of the peasantry. And,
last but not least, the army, especially young officers who
after the coup felt to be an influential political force, were
on his side.
 
Having thus obtained real political power and strength
ened his influence among various sections of the population,
Muhammad Daoud began, with the support of the rightists,
gradually to oust the leftists, who did not enjoy wide
support among the masses and lacked unity, from the state
apparatus. In March 1974, Pacha Gul Wafadar, Minister of
Frontier Affairs, was removed from his post and appointed
ambassador to Bulgaria,!23 and a month later Abdul Hamid
Mohtad, Minister of Communications, was dismissed and
removed from the Central Committee of the Republic.124
Both were supporters of Khalq. Faiz Muhammad (a sup
porter of Parcham), a leader of the anti-monarchist coup
and then the Minister of the Interior, was first appointed
Minister of Frontier Affairs and then ambassador to Indo
nesia. Some time later, Minister of Agriculture Ghilani Ba
khtari was removed from the government and Chief of
Military Police Mauladad and Chief of the Republican
Guard Ahmad Ziya were dismissed from their posts. All
of them were Parcham supporters. An increasing role in
the Central Committee of thie Republic, the state appara
tus and the army was now played by Muhammad Naim,
Daoud’s brother, who had links with the Muslim Brothers
and was a leader of the rightists, by Sayed Abdulillah,
Minister of Finance, General Ghulam Haider Rasuli, Com
mander of the Central Forces, known for his anti-commu
nist views, and others. In November 1975 the king’s son-in
law, General Abdul Wali, former Commander of the Central
Forces, who before the events of July 17, 1973, had been
preparing a fascist-type coup, and his closest associates, all rabid monarchists who had been prosecuted, were released from prison. They were given the opportunity to
emigrate to Italy, where they joined the royal family.
 
During the initial period of republican rule, when a
number of the reforms envisaged in the government pro
gramme were under way, some members of the ruling classes
began to express doubts regarding the government’s policy.
Some of the big landowners and tribal khans, rich com
prador merchants and a part of the conservative Muslim
clergy, alarmed by the radical character of the programme
proclaimed by the regime and its first practical measures,
came out against the reforms. Dissatisfied at the leftists’
influence in the apparatus of central power, those forces
embarked, immediately after the overthrow of the monar
chy, on organised anti-government actions.
 
A plot, led by former prime minister Maiwandwal,
to overthrow the republican government, was discovered
in September 1973. Among those involved were top army
officers and members of the wealthy commercial bourgeoi
sie. The conspirators were arrested. According to official
press reports, Maiwandwal committed suicide in prison.
Another coup was attempted in December 1973. Its leader
was Habibullah Rahman, former chief of the security ser
vice. After the plot had been discovered, those involved
were arrested and five of its leaders were executed.!
 
July 1975 saw the largest anti-government action—an
armed rebellion which spread to a number of the eastern
regions. At the centre of the plot were the Muslim Brothers
and the Muslim Youth, who declared that their aim was
to topple the republican government and create an Islamic
state. They were joined by Shula-yi Jawed and Setem-i
Melli. Army units were used to quell the rebellion. Offic
ial quarters in Kabul voiced their opinion that certain
forces in the CENTO bloc, who wished to put an end to
the democratic changes in Afghanistan, had a hand in the
plot. The weapons taken away from the rebels were of
US and Chinese make.
 
As he squashed the rightist opposition, Daoud also
built up pressure on the left forces. Central and local
government bodies were purged of left and democrat
ic elements. The Daoud regime was gradually showing its
class essence. It went back on its main promises contained in the government programme. Thus, the 1974 labour legislation did not grant the working people the right to
form trade unions. The Land Reform Law, promulgated
in 1975, burdened the peasants with many years of re
demption payments for the redistributed landowners’
lands. On the other hand, big landowners were granted all
kinds of benefits. No time limit was set for implementing
the reform, which called in question the effectiveness of
the planned agrarian changes, all the more so as many of
the landowners began to-divide their land among relatives
and confidential agents. The seven-year plan for social and
economic development adopted in 1976 envisaged the
growth of agricultural and industrial output, but failed to
create conditions for a radical change of social relations
in the country. Abandoning the idea of mustering domestic
resources to fulfil government plans, Muhammad Daoud, just
like his predecessors, relied mainly on foreign financial aid.
Beginning with the mid-1970s the growing social contra
dictions began seriously to affect the foreign policy of the
ruling quarters in Afghanistan. Alarmed iy the growing
activity of the democratic public and by mounting popular
discontent, they established closer contacts with foreign
reaction. Without discontinuing economic cooperation with
the Soviet Union and other socialist countries, the Daoud
regime extended its contacts with the ruling quarters in
some Middle Eastern countries, above all with the shah’s
regime in Iran. Some of the major economic programmes
now hinged on financial aid from the oil-producing coun
tries of the Persian Gulf which cooperated closely with
neocolonialist forces. Iran agreed to grant Afghanistan
a lavish loan (about $2,000 million) for the construction
of economic projects. It was planned, for example, to build
a trans-Afghan railway from the Iranian-Afghan border,
through Herat, Qandahar and Kabul, to Peshawar. The
project had been designed by French experts. Official
quarters in Kabul, prompted by Iranian leaders, even sug
gested that a branch line towards the Indian Ocean might
possibly be built. The stratagem of Iranian quarters asso
ciated with the West was to sap traditional Afghan-Soviet
cooperation and draw Afghanistan into the orbit of the
political influence of imperialism and its allies in the region.
Continuing their persecution of the left, Muhammad Daoud and his closest associates increasingly concentrated political power in their hands. At the end of 1976, in order
to legally justify the ban on progressive groups, the ruling
quarters announced the formation of the National Revolu
tion Party, which was given a monopoly of political activity.
In November 1976, Muhammad Daoud announced the crea
tion of the party’s Central Council which consisted of
five rightist cabinet ministers.
 
The Loy Jirgah session held in Kabul in January 1977
marked the turning point in the evolution of the structure
of the republican power. The Loy Jirgah elected Muham
mad Daoud President of the Republic and approved a new,
republican constitution. The people and the progressive
forces were not allowed to take part in the elaboration and
discussion of the draft. The new Constitution legalised the
power of the dominating classes and the structure of power
that took shape after the 1973 coup. Important legislative
and executive functions were given to the President. The
constitutional extension of the powers of the head of state
was to some extent motivated by the political ambitions
of Muhammad Daoud, who sought to concentrate all
power in his own hands. Article 40 of the Constitution
proclaimed a one-party system in Afghanistan, with the
National Revolution Party (NRP) being the ruling party.
The party was given exceptional prerogatives: only mem
bers of the NRP could be presidential nominees or elected
to parliament. The National Revolution Party was given the
right to determine the main directions of domestic and
. foreign policy and te control the activities of all sections
of the state apparatus. Since the NRP was not a mass or
ganisation, all political power was actually concentrated
in the hands of Muhammad Daoud and his closest associates.
In other words, the 1977 Constitution legalised the
political power that had taken shape by that time—the
regime of the personal dictatorship of the Muhammad
Daoud.
 
The Constitution proclaimed the formation of a one
chamber parliament, elections to which were scheduled
for 1979. By postponing parliamentary elections for two
years, Daoud gave himself more opportunity to take per
sonal legislative decisions, thus legalising the authoritarian
form of government. Despite the relatively democratic character of both the election mechanism and the composition of parliament (under the Constitution, 50 per cent
of its deputies were to represent the workers and peasants),
its functions were limited to taking decisions concerning
the budget, ratifying state treaties and sending armed
forces abroad. At the head of the government was the
President, who was simultaneously the Commander-in
Chief of the Armed Forces. Judicial power was also con
trolled by the President, who now had the right to ap
point judges.
 
Thus, the Constitution, having formalised the exception
ally broad rights and prerogatives of the President in the
absence of a parliament, public organisations, political
parties and a free press, legalised his dictatorial rule. Daoud’s
power was to be further consolidated by the direct subordi
nation of the army to the President and by its participation
in state policy-making through the Supreme Council of
the Army, also headed by Muhammad Daoud. Deprived
of a right to legislative initiative, the Central Committee
of the Republic continued a purely formal existence.
 
The introduction of a one-party system meant a ban on
all other political parties and groups. The PDPA had to go
underground. Faced with a real threat not only to its ac
tivities but to its very existence, both its groups—Khalq
and Parcham—set about building up party unity. In March
1977, representatives of both groups met to discuss ways
of settling their differences and achieving unity. The unity
conference of the PDPA Central Committee, held in July
1977, was attended by the leaders of both factions. It passed
a decision to elaborate a programme of action and to
carry through the organisational merger of the two groups.
The conference elected a new Central Committee which
consisted of 30 members. As at the First Congress of the
Party, Nur Muhammad Taraki was elected General Secretary
and Babrak Karmal, Secretary of the Central Committee.
The question of putting an end to the dictatorship of Mu
hammad Daoud was put on the’ agenda for the first time
at the plenary meeting.
 
After the conference the party, overcoming the split
and rallying its members, began a campaign to mobilise
the working people and all progressive forces for the strug
gle against the anti-people, pseudo-republican regime.
 
Party membership was growing rapidly, and so was its
prestige among the people. The network of party cells was
expanding in the capital and in the provinces. The party
paid special attention to work among servicemen, and there
fore it created and strengthened its party organisation in
the army. Apart from patriotic officers taking part in party
work were sergeants and soldiers.
 
The virtual refusal of the Daoud regime to carry through
the radical reforms proclaimed in its programme led to a
deterioration in the economic conditions of the urban and
rural working people. Despite the output growth in in
dustry and farming, the living standards of the overwhelm
ing majority of the population continued to drop because
the Daoud regime had left unchanged the forms of owner
ship and the system of income distribution.
 
Afghanistan remained one of the world’s poorest and
most underdeveloped countries: in 1977 its per capita
national income was a mere 162 dollars. The greater part
of the GNP was produced in the traditional natural and
small-scale commodity sectors of the national economy.
The modern branches of the manufacturing industry were
producing only 3.3 per cent of the GNP. Nearly 70 per cent
of the able-bodied population were engaged in agriculture,
but due to the extremely low level of the productive forces
and the persisting vestiges of the pre-capitalist relations of
production, more than half of the arable land was left
uncultivated. Afghanistan had to import 85 per cent of
its sugar, and a large part of its requirements in grain
and fats were met through imports. A great number of
farmers were deep in debt to money-lenders, paying
them annual interest of up to 45 per cent. About one
third of peasant families had no land of their own. Almost
2.5 million people in the country were nomads or semi
nomads.
 
The archaic feudal and semi-feudal forms of landowner
ship, unrestrained usury which brought misery to millions
of peasants, and growing agrarian overpopulation led to
the further impoverishment of the peasants. In 1977 there
were over 600,000 peasant families that either worked for
landowners as sharecroppers or owned small plots of land
not larger than:0.5 hectare. About 40,000 big landowners
owned the greater part of all the cultivated land, and the best at that. The unresolved agrarian problem added to the tensions in the countryside.
 
Various regions in Afghanistan were at different de
velopment levels. For instance, Badakhshan, Hazarajat,
Kunar and the region populated by the Pashtun tribes in
the south-east and the south lagged far behind Kabul,
Herat and some other provinces in economic, social and
cultural development.127 Other signs of backwardness
were numerous groups among the rural and urban popu
lation closely linked with pre-capitalist economic struc
tures and retaining many features of the traditional social
organisation; the numerically small and weak industrial
proletariat, which hardly numbered 50,000; the tenacious
vestiges and traditions of communal and patriarchal (tribal)
organisation, particularly among the Pashtuns and also
among the Baluchis and Braguis inhabiting the southern
regions; and, as a result, the considerable influence still
enjoyed among the local population by the so-called tradi
tional leaders, such as tribal khans, maliks and sardars,
and by the Muslim clergy.
 
This uneven development of various regions was com
pounded by the national (ethnic) heterogeneity of the
population and the ages-old tensions between the upper
strata of the Pashtuns (Afghans) and the national-ethnic
minorities, particularly in the northern and central parts
of the country. In some regions, as in Hazarajat and Bada
khshan, the national tensions were aggravated by sectarian
differences between the Sunnites (Pashtuns) and Shiites,
and also the Ismaelites who made up a significant part of
the population in Hazarajat and Badakhshan.
 
In industrial development the main stress still was on
foreign aid, which was used for the most part for the
expansion of the economic infrastructure, thereby facili
tating private capitalist enterprise. Part of foreign loans
and credits, as a result of inadequate accounting and their
poorly organised distribution, was pocketed by the ruling
elite infected with the corruption that had marked it under
‘the monarchy. Afghanistan’s foreign debt was rising every
year, to reach $1,000 million in 1977. Accordingly, the
total sum of payments to clear off the debt was increasing
and accounted for a considerable portion of the state
budget spending.
 
The traditional system of state administration, with
its characteristic red tape, bribery, embezzlement and cor
ruption, offered the ruling classes ample opportunities to
plunder the country. The big bourgeoisie and the land
owners were transferring a large part of their income abroad.
The ruling elite was no better. The royal family, which
lived abroad and had hundreds of millions of dollars depos
ited in West European and American banks, received a
monthly pension and income from its property, including
property in land, which the Daoud regime did not touch.
 
Most of Afghanistan’s population were engaged in hard
labour and lived on the verge of starvation assailed by want,
ignorance and disease. About 88 per cent of the people
were illiterate and only 28.8 per cent of children attended
schools, 70 per cent of which were in a dilapidated state.
There were only 71 hospitals with 3,600 beds per 16 mil
lion of the population and 84 per cent of the physicians
were employed in Kabul.
 
Political parties were banned, and labour unions and
other organisations of the working people did not exist.
 
The Daoud regime came out to eliminate the gains of the
republic’s initial period, sweeping away whatever there
remained of democracy. At the end of 1977 and early in
1978 the political situation in the country grew explosive
after the regime launched severe repression against the left.
In December 1977 arrests were made among PDPA members
and supporters. The ruling elite, with Daoud at its head,
rallied the rightist forces around themselves in a bid to
check the spreading dissatisfaction with dictatorial rule.
A number of influential persons close to Daoud maintained
close contacts with the Muslim Brothers and other reac
tionary groups. The last patriots were removed from the
government. Muhammad Hasan Shark, first deputy Presi
dent, who was respected by the progressive public, was
dismissed from his post and appointed ambassador to
Japan.
 
The mounting discontent was expressed in different
ways. Spontaneous protest actions by the population and
rebellions among the Pashtun tribes flared up now and
again, many of those actions culminated in clashes with
the army. The situation was aggravated by frequent in
stances of arson, robbery and terrorism. On November 16, 1977, Ali Ahmad Khuram, Minister of Planning, one of the most efficient cabinet ministers, was assassinated
in the centre of Kabul.
 
Unable to cope with the rising tide of popular discon
tent and to root out the causes of the extremely acute
social contradictions, the authorities increasingly resorted
to violence.
 
The political crisis culminated in the assassination, on
 
. April 17, 1978, of Mir Akbar Khyber, a PDPA leader who
enjoyed great popularity among the workers, an organiser
of the first mutual-aid funds, the prototype of the future
trade unions, at Kabul industrial enterprises. This political
assassination evoked strong indignation among the Kabul
population. The funeral, which took place on April 19,
1978, grew into a political demonstration. The funeral
procession was joined by thousands of people from all
walks of life—workers, peasants from nearby villages, stu
dents, handicraftsmen, white-collar workers and numerous
progressive intellectuals. The procession was led by PDPA
leaders. The people who took part in the demonstration
carried red banners and posters saying "Down with tyranny!"
and "Long live democracy!". The funeral train passed
through the central streets. A meeting was held in front of
the presidential palace and the US embassy. The speakers
at the meeting lashed the regime’s policy and protested
against political terror. The fact that a large number of
people attended the funeral of Mir Akbar Khyber testified
to the growing prestige and influence of the PDPA among
the popular masses.
 
Aware of the broad popularity of the PDPA, which, in
fact, had become a nucleus of organised opposition to the
regime, Daoud and his men decided to remove the party
leadership and the activists. On April 25, the PDPA leaders
Nur Muhammad .Taraki, Babrak Karmal, Nur Ahmad Nur,
Anahita Ratebzad, Ghulam Dastagir Panjsheri and dozens
of party activists were arrested on false charges of criminal
actions against the state.
 
The PDPA supporel: responded by raising to revolu
tionary action the army units loyal to them on April 27,
1978 (Saur 7, 1357, according to the Afghan calendar).
The insurgents were soon joined by the rest of the Afghan
army.
 
As a result of their effective action, the Daoud regime
was overthrown and power went to the Revolutionary
Council of the Armed Forces of Afghanistan.


=== The Victory of the National-Democratic April Revolution and the Foundation of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan ===
=== The Victory of the National-Democratic April Revolution and the Foundation of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan ===
[[Category:Empty library pages]]
The national-democratic revolution on April 27, 1978,
was the logical and inevitable result of the mounting antag
onistic contradictions between the overwhelming majority
of the population and a handful of exploiters who for
centuries had misappropriated the fruits of their labour.
 
The PDPA, which led the armed uprising, sought to
resolve in practice and in the interest of all the peoples
of Afghanistan, big and small, the pressing problems of
national development; to eliminate the national inequality
inherited from the past; and to provide conditions for grad
ually drawing the country’s peoples ever closer together
on the basis of equal rights, economic and cultural prog
ress and joint participation in building a new Afghanistan.
 
The goals, proclaimed by the Party way back in 1966,
could be acliieved only as a result of the April Revolution
which made the PDPA the ruling party. The realisation of
these goals met the vital interests of the absolute majority
of the population, including the national bourgeoisie,
the greater part of the officials, the Muslim clergy, and
the army—officers and men. Therefore the revolution met
actually no resistance. Even the commanding officers of
the Central Corps’ divisions quartered near Kabul did noth
ing to support the Daoud government, and the call for help
by the Minister of Defence, General G. H. Rasuli, was
ignored.
 
No one in the country, either among the civilian popu
lation, in the police or the army, came to the defence of the
authoritarian Daoud regime which had fully discredited
itself and met the egoistic interests of a handful of rich
landlords (mostly Pashtuns) and the big bourgeoisie, merchants for the most part, having close ties with foreign capital. That is why the PDPA-led revolutionary uprising
on April 27 ended in victory.
 
In the evening on that day the Kabul radio broadcast
the statement by the Revolutionary Council of the Armed
Forces of Afghanistan that all power in the country had
passed to the people and the armed forces had taken it
upon themselves to defend the country and ensure the
national independence of its people.
 
The first decree of the Revolutionary Council of the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, published on April
29, 1978, said that the revolutionary uprising of the patriot
ic officers and men of Afghanistan, which had taken place
by the will of the people on Saur 7, 1357, which signalled
the start of the national democratic ‘revolution, put an end
to the despotic Daoud regime within less than 24 hours and
laid the foundations of a national-democratic system in
Afghanistan.
 
In order that the revolution accomplish its tasks fully
and effectively, the Revolutionary Council of the Armed
Forces handed down its powers to the Revolutionary
Council of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and
itself became part of it.
 
The Revolutionary Council proclaimed the Democratic
Republic of Afghanistan (DRA) and elected General Secre
tary of the PDPA Central Committee Nur Muhammad
Taraki President of the Revolutionary Council and Prime
Minister of the DRA. Babrak Karmal, who was a Political
Bureau member and Secretary of the PDPA Central Com
mittee, occupied the posts of Deputy Chairman of the Rev
olutionary ‘Council and Deputy Prime Minister. Colonel
Abdul Qader, commander and chief-of-staff of the air
force and anti-aircraft defence, who headed the Revolution
ary Council of the Armed Forces which exercised direct
leadership of the revolutionary action, was appointed
Minister of National Defence.
 
The Revolutionary Council appointed new governors and
armed forces commanders. All the property that belonged
to the members of the family of the former kings Nadir
Shah and Zahir Shah and ex-President Muhammad Daoud
was confiscated.
 
On May 1, the Revolutionary Council approved the list of the new government, the highest executive body. State activity began to be regulated by decrees of the Revolution
ary Council and decisions of the DRA Government.
 
The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan received broad
international recognition. The first to recognise the new
revolutionary government were the Soviet Union, Bulgaria,
India, Mongolia, Czechoslovakia, Cuba and Poland. On
May 5, 1978, NurMuhammad Taraki was visited by Pakistani
Ambassador in Kabul Ali Arshed who announced his
country’s recognition of the Democratic Republic of
Afghanistan. On that day the DRA was recognised by Tur
key, the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen, Vietnam,
Yugoslavia and Iran. On May 6, recognition of the DRA
was announced on behalf of their governments by Theodore
L. Eliot, Jr., Ambassador of the USA, and by K. R. Crook,
Ambassador of Great Britain; by the GDR, the FRG and
Italy. A few days later the DRA was recognised by the
People’s Republic of China, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Syria,
Bangladesh, Japan, Canada, Australia, Nepal, Iraq, Egypt,
Ethiopia, Greece, Lebanon, Sweden, Denmark, Belgium,
Norway, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Kuwait, Jordan
and other countries. On May 9, recognition of the DRA
by Libya was announced to the Afghan government by a
special envoy who had arrived in Kabul with a message
from Muammar Kaddafi.
 
On May 9 that year the government issued the Main
Directions of the Revolutionary Tasks of the DRA Govern
ment. Under that programme major progressive reforms
began to be effected in Afghanistan.
 
The revolutionary government announced that its top
priority task was to defend the country’s territorial integri
ty, national sovereigi.cy and independence and the gains
of the April Revolution, and to build the unity of all na
tional progressive and patriotic forces.
 
In home policy the emphasis was on eliminating eco
nomic backwardness, building an independent national
economy, developing industry, modemising agriculture,
and raising the living standards of the population. To that
end, a number of radical social and economic reforms
were planned—a democratic land reform for the benefit
of working peasants and the abolition, with their help, of
feudal and pre-feudal relations, the strengthening of the public sector in the economy through planning and by exercising effective control over the use of natural resources,
democratisation of public life and solution of the na
tional question in a democratic way. It was announced that
the state apparatus should be purged of counter-revolutiona
ries and the army be strengthened. Provisions were made
for guaranteeing democratic rights and fréedoms and
securing the political and economic interests of workers,
peasants, officers, soldiers, handicraftsmen, intellectuals
and other sections of the population. Measures were envis
aged to introduce general compulsory and free primary
education, to launch an effective campaign to combat
illiteracy, to train scientific and technical personnel by
expanding free secondary and higher education and voca
tional training, and to create a free public health service.
 
In foreign policy it was decided to pursue an independ
ent policy of peace and positive and active neutrality
and non-alignment on principles of peaceful coexistence;
to promote goodneighbourly relations, friendship and co
operation with all neighbouring countries; to expand in
every way the relations with the Soviet Union, to promote
friendly relations with India; and to ensure friendly ties
with Iran, Pakistan and China. The DRA supported the
maintenance of world peace, general disarmament, dis
mantling military bases on foreign territory, and promotion
of international detente.
 
The system of state adininistration was being restructured
in the centre and in the periphery: new heads of divisions
and districts and chiefs of government services were bein
appointed. The officials found guilty of embezzlement and
corruption were removed from the organs of power.
 
Labour unions and women’s and youth organisations
were being formed. The low-paid brackets of workers and
other employees received a pay rise. A decree was issued
to introduce a new and fair system of distributing food
among the workers and other employees of state-run
industrial enterprises and offices and among servicemen.
People’s power took effective measures to lower the prices
of foodstuffs and consumer goods.
 
Much prominence was given to measures on eliminating
unemployment. The construction of new and expansion
of the existing agricultural projects was expected to provide a large number of jobs. Already in the first months after the revolution the Ministry of Education offered jobs to
5,000 unemployed teachers. Housing construction was
under way. ‘
 
The government introduced free first medical aid and
allocated considerable sums for purchasing the equipment
and medicines required.
 
Juridical commissions were being set up to supervise
the work to ensure democratic rights for the people. Aided
by democratic social organisations, the courts and procura
tor’s offices conducted investigation of the civil and crimi
nal cases left after the Daoud regime. Nearly 10,000 people
were released from prisons (many of them had been in
detention without trial for 10 to 15 years).
 
Implementing the programme of compulsory and free
school education, the revolutionary government returned
to schools thousands of senior pupils who had been expelled
under the Daoud regime. About 600 new schools and a few
colleges were opened and hundreds of thousands of text
books were printed and distributed among schoolchildren.
A plan was drawn up for setting up new educational estab
lishments of all types, in towns and in rural areas. Free lit
eracy courses were established at many state offices in
Kabul and in the provinces. More scientists, technicians and
teachers were being trained. The Soviet Union assisted
Afghanistan in accomplishing this important task.
 
Considerable attention was paid to cultural reforms:
a national academy of sciences was set up and new news
papers and magazines were issued (not onlv in Pashtu and
Dari but also in other languages spoken in the country).
 
Drawing women in socially useful work, the government
paid special attention to eliminating illiteracy among them.
Women were granted equal rights with men. The revolu
tionary authorities prohibited early marriages and payment
of brideemoney. A decision was passed on celebrating
Women’s Day on March 8 to commemorate the struggle
for women’s equality. More women became teachers,
medical workers and office employees.
 
The Revolutionary Council issued a decree on easing
the burden of debts to usurers for 11 million landless and
land-hungry peasants. In the rural areas committees were
set up from among representatives of the PDPA, local administrations and poor farmers for preparing and carrying out agrarian reforms. The state extended financial and
technical aid to the peasants who wished to join in all
kinds of farm cooperatives. Measures were taken to improve
the life of impoverished nomads.
 
In November 1978, a plenary meeting of the PDPA Cen
tral Committee discussed and unanimously approved the bill
on a land reform. An end was put to big landownership;
no family in Afghanistan was allowed to own more than
30 jeribs (six hectares) of land. The surplus land was divided
among landless and land-hungry peasants and farm labourers.
As a result, about 290,000 peasant families received land
plots free.
 
A five-year plan for social and economic development
was drawn up and put into operation.
 
The revolutionary reforms being effected by the govern
ment were welcomed by the peasants, workers, handicrafts
men, impoverished nomads, small traders, intellectuals,
patriotic sections of the national bourgeoisie, Muslim
theologians and others.
 
All the reforms were being carried out with the active
support and direct and voluntary participation of all
patriots of Afghanistan, the national and religious customs
and traditions of the peoples and tribes being observed.
During the first year of the revolution the working people
and numerous members of the national bourgeoisie donated
hundreds of millions of afghanis to various funds established
to carry through the democratic reforms.
 
Many outstanding Muslim theologians in the country
voiced unreserved support for the Democratic Republic,
the revolutionary government and the measures it had set
out to effect.
 
There emerged new public movements, such as the vol
untary labour movement, and competitions among facto
ries and city districts.
 
The consistent pursuance by the PDPA and the goverm
ment of the foreign policy of peace helped to strengthen
the international positions of the Democratic Republic of
Afghanistan.
 
In September 1979, a DRA delegation headed by Nur
Muhammad Taraki attended a summit conference of non
aligned countries in Havana.
 
 
The April Revolution offered good opportunities for
expanding the relations. of friendship and fruitful coopera
tion with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries:
Bulgaria, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic
Republic, Hungary, Mongolia, Poland, Romania, and the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam. On January 9, 1979, the
DRA officially recognised the People’s Revolutionary Coun
cil of Kampuchea.
 
The DRA’s cooperation with the Soviet Union and other
socialist countries in trade, economy, science, technology
and culture was developing on a stable long-term basis, to the
mutual benefit of the sides, and acquired a new dimension.
 
In the economic and technical cooperation with the
USSR the construction and servicing of over 120 projects
continued practically in every sphere of the national econ
omy; and so did designing and prospecting. The share of
the USSR in assistance to Afghanistan exceeded 50 per cent.
In 1979, the volume of Afghan-Soviet trade increased by
more than 30 per cent and mounted to 323,900,000 roubles,
against 215 million roubles in 1978.
 
The official friendly visit to the USSR of a DRA party
and government delegation headed by Nur Muhammad
Taraki on December 4-7, 1978, proved to be an outstanding
event in the history of relations between the two countries.
During that visit the sides signed the Treaty of Friendship,
Good-Neighbourliness and Cooperation between the USSR
and the DRA. The significance of this Treaty, signed for the
benefit of both countries and in the interest of peace in
Asia and the rest of the world, for the protection of the
independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of
Afghanistan and the revolutionary gains of its people came
to the fore when the DRA became the target of undeclared
aggression launched by imtermational imperialism and
reaction. The sides signed also an agreement on setting up
a standing inter-governmental Soviet-Afghan commission
on economic cooperation.
 
During the Moscow talks the Soviet and Afghan sides
reaffirmed their determination to carry on the struggle
for peace and intemmational security, for general and com
plete disarmament, for detente. They demonstrated the
common views of the USSR and the DRA and their com
mon approach to a large number of major international issues.
 
However, as progressive changes were being made, the
revolution came up against serious difficulties caused by
various factors. Some of these have been already men
tioned earlier in the book: the extreme poverty and back
wardness of Afghanistan; the absence of an experienced
and sufficiently numerous working class steeled in class
battles; and acute shortage of the required number of
skilled personnel and leaders on all levels.
 
As was pointed out by the PDPA Central Committee in April 1980, in the post-revolutionary period "the tradi
tions of democratic centralism and collective leadership
were not adequately developed in the party. Therefore,
important decisions were often made without thorough
preliminary preparations."428 The party, which for many
years before the revolution had had to do underground
work and had been subjected to severe repression and
persecution by the reactionaries, lacked experience in ad
ministering the state and in economic and cultural develop
ment. ‘
The PDPA jacked unity: there had emerged a group
headed by Hafizullah Amin who after the victory of the
revolution occupied the posts of Deputy Prime Minister
and Minister of Foreign Affairs. Amin sought to place his
supporters in the key positions in the party and the govern
ment. Kindling factional struggle, he succeeded, in the
summer and autumn of 1978, in removing from the leader
ship a large group of party leaders who were faithful to the
revolution. In March 1979 he managed to take over the
post of Prime Minister and early in 1979 he became the
Minister of Defence. In September that same year Hafizul
lah Amin forcibly removed and then killed Nur Muhammad
Taraki, after which he seized the posts of General Secretary
of the PDPA Central Committee and President of the Revo
lutionary Council.
 
Amin and his men used inadmissible methods in carrying
out major reforms, such as the agrarian reform and the
elimination of illiteracy among the adult population, dis
torting their progressive meaning. The traditions and reli
gious beliefs of people were ignored and revolutionary
law was grossly violated.
 
The difficulties experienced by the country were com
 
pounded many times over by the criminal actions of Amin
and his group and were skilfully used by reactionaries at
home and abroad.}29 Backed up by conservative and right
wing sections in some of the neighbouring states, who
feared that the revolutionary events in Afghanistan would
have a negative effect on the situation in their own coun
tries, they began a vigorous struggle against the April Revolu
tion and the goals it had proclaimed. A massive campaign
was launched to misinform the population and many
politically inexperienced and illiterate people believed that
misinformation.
The Amin administration subjected peaceful residents,
specifically in the border regions, to unjustified repressions.
Thousands of refugees fled across the Afghan borders.
Armed counter-revolutionary detachments were being
formed and trained, with Afghan counter-revolutionary
leaders receiving lavish material, financial and other as
sistance from various governmental and non-governmental
organisations in the USA, some other Western countries
and Muslim states. The activities of these detachments
against the DRA, according to the information available,
were not curbed but encouraged by the authorities of the
countries in whose territory they had been formed and from
where they made armed incursions into Afghanistan.
 
The April 1978 Revolution in Afghanistan (and the
subsequent events in Iran and the collapse of the aggressive
CENTO alliance), having exposed the weakness and vulner
ability of the positions of international imperialism in the
Middle East, considerably influenced the policy of the
imperialists and their allies in that part of the world. The
anti-popular and reactionary thrust of this policy and its
aggressiveness increased. Its inspirers and organisers stepped
up their efforts to form a united front of imperialist and
pro-imperialist forces in the Middle East, spearheaded
against the growing national liberation movement in the
region.
 
The forces of international imperialism, having rapidly
expanded their military presence in the Middle Fast and
launched an unheard-of propagandist, psychological war
against the DRA and its friends (against the Soviet Union,
above all), pursued far-reaching goals. They were trying (and they still do) to reverse the revolutionary social, economic and political changes in the region. Their goal
is to bring the peoples that have carried out a revolution
back into the orbit of imperialist, neocolonialist influence
and exploitation, to use them as an instrument of their
reactionary global and regional strategy and policy. They
seek to turn the countries of the region, which have broken
away from the trammels of the imperialist anti-popular
policy, into an instrument of torpedoing detente, increasing
international tensions, and -stepping up the arms race.
They want to turn the region into an anti-Soviet bridgehead.
 
Thus, two opposite attitudes to the events in the country
were clearly manifest practically right after the April Revolu
tion and the formation of the Democratic Republic of Afgha
nistan. The forces of imperialism and its reactionary allies
assumed a hostile attitude to the revolutionary developments
in Afghanistan. The Soviet Union and other peace-loving
peoples came resolutely to the aid of the DRA and its people.
 
As is seen from the evidence provided by numerous
eyewitnesses and from the research done by outstanding
Orientalists, the first camps for training terrorists and
saboteurs against revolutionary Afghanistan were set up by
. Afghan reactionary emigrés in the north-western part of
 
Pakistan already a few weeks after the April Revolution.
 
In March 1979 the right-wingers staged a rebellion in
Herat, the third largest city in Afghanistan, and seized
army barracks, the arsenal, and food storehouses. Counter
revolutionary armed actions continued even after the re
bellion was put down.
 
The obtaining situation could not only lead to the loss
of the revolutionary gains by the Afghan people. It also
threatened the territorial integrity and state sovereignty
of Afghanistan.
 
By the end of 1979 armed counter-revolutionary de
tachments operated in 18 of Afghanistan’s 26 provinces.
Their acts of sabotage and terror caused heavy damage to
the economy, thwarted progressive reforms launched soon
after the revolution, and brought suffering and death to
vast numbers of people. During 1979 the sown area in the
country shrank by almost 9 per cent, the output of cereals
dropped by 10 per cent, and that of industrial crops, by
25-30 per cent.130 The national per capitaincome for that year went down by almost 14 per cent and amounted to as little as $139.
 
Analysing the situation taking shape in Afghanistan
and along its south-eastern borders as a result of the activity
of armed counter-revolutionary groups which had infiltrated
from abroad, many observers and analysts concluded that
"it was becoming increasingly dangerous not only for the
destiny of the April Revolution, but also for the unity of
Afghanistan. There is no doubt that the extensive aid and
support rendered to the counter-revolutionaries from abroad
were not only interference into the DRA’s internal affairs
but were tantamount to aggression as it is defined in the
widely known documents adopted by the United Nations.
 
The danger looming over the April Revolution and the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan was seen clearly not
only by foreign political scientists, but also by Afghan
leaders who, proceeding from the provisions of the Treaty
of Friendship, Good-Neighbourliness and Cooperation,
signed between the USSR and the DRA on December 5, |
1978, and in keeping with Article 51 of the UN Charter,
repeatedly requested the Soviet Union during 1979 to send
Soviet Army units into the DRA. In response to these
repeated requests a limited contingent of Soviet troops
was sent to Afghanistan.
 
The situation which obtained in Afghanistan at the end
of 1978 and all through 1979 caused growing concern and
protest among many leading and rank-and-file members
of the PDPA and among non-party patriotic-minded people
from every section of Afghan society. Dissatisfaction with
the activities of Hafizullah Amin was spreading. It was
becoming obvious that only by overthrowing the Amin
regime would it be possible to translate into practice the
ideals of the April Revolution and improve the situation
in the PDPA and in the whole of the country. By the end
of 1979, left without support in the PDPA, in the army and
among the people, Amin found himself in complete isola
tion. On December 27, 1979, the patriotic majority in the
PDPA, in the Revolutionary Council and in the armed
forces overthrew the Amin regime. That action, which was received with understanding by the world progressive and peace-loving public, and which was welcomed by all genuine
patriots in Afghanistan, foiled the schemes of the imperialists
and their reactionary allies in the region and prevented them
from isolating the DRA, from leaving it all alone, without
international aid, confronted with’ the joint forces of
reactionaries abroad and counter-revolutionaries at home.
If it were not for the timely Soviet help, Babrak Karmal
noted later, there would be no free, independent and sover
eign Afghanistan today.
 
On December 28, 1979, a new Revolutionary Council
Presidium and a-:new government were formed..The posts
of the President of the Revolutionary Council and Prime
Minister were occupied by Babrak Karmal, the newly
elected General Secretary of the PDPA Central Committee.
Among the ministers in the new government were PDPA
members and non-party people. Shortly before that, many
of the ministers had been released from prisons, while
others had re-emerged after being underground.
 
The events of December 27-28, 1979, signalled the start
of a new stage in the April Revolution. As a result, the
popular and progressive character of the national-demo
cratic revolution, as was pointed out by the PDPA Central .
Committee, grew stronger and obtained new and better
conditions for development. The necessary prerequisites
were created for restoring the organisational, political and
ideological unity of the PDPA undermined by the divisive
actions of Hafizullah Amin, and for restoring in the party
an atmosphere ofrevolutionaryprinciples, sincerity and trust.
It became possible to ensure democratic liberties for the
peoples of Afghanistan andgenuine respect for their traditions
and religious beliefs, and to improve their living standards.
 
The new stage of the April Revolution also provided
the opportunity for implementing the main‘ provisions of
the PDPA programme envisaging the merger of all patriotic,
progressive and democratic forces in the country to form
a broad Fatherland Front.
 
Already in the first weeks after the start of the new stage
of the April Revolution, the PDPA Central Committee, the
Revolutionary Council and the DRA government set the
main tasks and objectives in economic, social, cultural and
foreign policies with a view to protecting the gains of the
 
April Revolution, state sovereignty and territorial integri
ty of the DRA.
 
In the political and social sphere the tasks and objectives
were:
 
—to consolidate the unity of all peoples—big and small—
and .tribes in Afghanistan; to eliminate completely any dis
crimination against the citizens of Afghanistan on grounds
of their nationality, language, race, tribe, sect, origins,
education, sex, residence, or property status;
 
—gradually to overcome the existing differences in the
levels of economic, social and cultural development of
various regions;
 
—to ensure for the Muslims of Afghanistan all the neces
sary conditions, full freedom and reliable protection in per
forming the religious rites of Islam, render assistance to the
ulemas in exercising their duties;
 
—to promote democracy on principles of collective
leadership and democratic centralism; steadily to expand
the participation of the working people and their organi
sations that are united in the broad Fatherland Front under
the leadership of the PDPA, in running the state and so
ciety;
 
fully to eradicate such vestiges of the past as despotism,
corruption, lawlessness, arbitrariness, bureaucracy, em
bezzlement, chauvinism, and local nationalism;
 
—constantly to improve the work of the bodies charged
with state security and law and order so as to provide
conditions for the peaceful life and work of the peoples
of Afghanistan,
 
—to strengthen the DRA Armed Forces in every way.
 
In the economic sphere the following tasks and objec
tives were set:
 
—to develop the economy with a view to raising the
living standards and well-being of the peoples of every
family, and every working man;
 
—to promote various forms of collective labour, their
organisation and gradual introduction in all the key sectors
of the economy;
 
—to improve the living and working conditions of the
working class and other working people; to provide jobs
to the unemployed, especially young people;
 
—to give every assistance to the national private sector in light industry, handicrafts, trade, transport, agriculture, and livestock breeding, and to protect it from the ruinous
competition of foreign capital.
 
In the cultural area the main tasks and objectives were:
 
—to raise in every way the educational, cultural, profes
sional and technical level of the popular masses;
 
—to preserve and develop everything that is best and
most valuable in the rich cultural heritage of the peoples
of Afghanistan;
 
—to provide favourable conditions for the creative work
of the Afghan intelligentsia.
 
In foreign policy the tasks and goals of the DRA at
this new stage of the April Revolution envisaged consistent
adherence to the principles of peaceful coexistence, non
alignment, positive neutrality and international solidarity
and cooperation with the Soviet Union and other socialist
countries and with the revolutionary forces of our time.
 
The DRA reaffirmed its being interested in promoting
every form of bilateral, regional and international cooper
ation, its preparedness to settle its relations with neigh
bouring states in accordance with the generally recognised
principles and norms of peaceful coexistence, and its
resolve to respect the purposes and principles of the UN
Charter in the efforts of the United Nations to ensure a
lasting world peace, halt the arms race and end the danger
ous escalation of international tensions.
 
The PDPA Central Committee, the Revolutionary Coun
cil and the DRA Government affirmed that the revolu
tionary changes taking place in the country were irreversible,
and expressed their resolve to ensure the advancement of
Afghanistan from backwardness to progress.
 
The tasks and objectives put forward by the PDPA
Central Committee, the Revolutionary Council and the
DRA Government were formulated following an analysis
of the social, economic and political situation in the country
at the initial stage of the national-democratic revolution.
Their purpose was to eliminate the harmful consequences
of the blunders and crimes committed by Amin, gradually
to overcome the harsh legacy of the pre-revolutionary past,
to improve the living, educational and cultural standards
of the Afghan people, and to establish a firm political
alliance (within the framework of the broad and united Fatherland Front) between the working class and the peasants, handicraftsmen, intellectuals, other sections of
the working people and also all patriotic forces favouring
social progress and anti-imperialism. Measures were taken
to improve the living conditions of the Afghan working
people, and wages were increased considerably for low
paid workers. The state allocated considerable funds to
provide free meals for the workers and other employees
in the low-income bracket employed in the public sector
of the national economy, and effected measures to regulate
the prices of food and other vital consumer goods and
medicines.
 
The tasks and objectives advanced by the People’s Dem
ocratic Party and the revolutionary government of Afghan
istan were intended to repulse internal and international
counter-revolution and reaction, the rightand left-wing
extremists and adventurers, to ensure peace in the country
in order to carry out large-scale general democratic reforms
with the active participation of the working people’s organi
sations and under their control and, on that basis, to ac
complish the tasks and attain the goals of the April Rev
olution.
 
Comparatively little time has passed since the onset
of the new stage in the April Revolution. However, despite
the considerable difficulties experienced by the country,
extensive ‘work has been done to attain the tasks and goals
listed above. Of great importance in this respect were
measures to rectify the criminal violations of revolutionary
law perpetrated by Amin.13
 
The activity of the Afghan working people and their
organisations was stepped up and began to play a growing
role in the public and political life of society.
 
Early in the summer of 1980, trade unions functioning
under PDPA guidance were set up at all state-owned and
also at large mixed and private enterprises, both in Kabul
and in the provinces.
 
At the end of May 1980, the first congress of Afghan
teachers was held -in Kabul. It concentrated, among other things, on measures to combat illiteracy. It was noted at the congress that over 30,000 literacy courses already
functioning in the country were being attended by hundreds
of thousands of workers, peasants and handicraftsmen.
 
The medical congress held in June 1980 passed a resolu
tion on solving urgent problems involved in the develop
ment of the public health system.
 
In July 1980, the Central Council of the Trade Unions
of Afghanistan held its first plenary meeting, which called
on all Afghan working people to defend their country from
the enemies of the April Revolution, to increase labour
efficiency, build up the unity of all working people in the
country, and to strengthen solidarity with the Soviet
Union and all progressive forces in the world.
 
In August 1980, the Political Bureau of the PDPA Central
Committee passed a resolution On the Role and Tasks
of the Trade Unions of the Democratic Republic of Afghan
istan. It outlined the main directions and forms of trade
union activities and instructed the Central Council of the
Afghan Trade Unions to elaborate and adopt the Rules of
the DRA Trade Unions and the Statute on the Rights of
Primary Trade Union Organistations. The resolution made
it binding on all PDPA organisations, on ministries and
state-run and mixed enterprises and institutions to render
assistance in setting up primary trade union organisations.
It helped to step up, expand and normalise the activities of
the Afghan trade unions and to strengthen their ties with
the working people.
 
The first congress of the Afghan trade unions, held
early in March 1981, was attended by over 500 delegates
from the provinces and by guests from 20 countries, includ
ing the Soviet Union. The congress discussed the results
of the work done by the Central Council of the Trade
Unions, approved their rules, emblem and flag and outlined
prospects for the trade union movement in Afghanistan.
 
-It adopted a resolution: strongly denouncing the actions
of international reaction and imperialism against the DRA
and the April Revolution.
 
Over the time passed since the start of the new stage
in the April Revolution the Afghan trade unions have be
come a large and influential mass organisation functioning
under the guidance of the PDPA.132 Now they have a bigger role to play in the solution of problems related to the social and economic advancement of Afghanistan. Trade
union members are active in forming groups to maintain
law and order and to combat the counter-revolutionary
elements and terrorist and sabotage groups infiltrated into
the DRA. The trade unions help to set up libraries at
industrial enterprises, and literacy courses. Special atten
tion is paid to forming a "movement for voluntary labour"
for the benefit of the revolution, which has been joined by
tens, of thousands of working people. The trade unions
render considerable material aid to low-income and large
families of factory and office workers.
 
The meeting of the Democratic Youth Organisation of
Afghanistan (DYOA), heldin July 1980, resolved to strength
en the unity and promote influence of this organisation
primarily among workers and peasants. The first national
conference of the DYOA late in September 1980 was
attended by guests from 50 countries, including the Soviet
Union. The conference called on all DYOA members to
join law-and-order groups and armed youth detachments
and to consider the rout of counter-revolutionary forces
the chief goal of the younger generation. .The newspaper
Darafshe Jawanan, which began to.be published with the
DYOA’s assistance in the autumn of 1980, came to play
no mean role in mobilising Afghan young people for the
defence of the revolution.
 
DYOA members, effective assistants of the PDPA in
defending the revolution and effecting progressive reforms,
explained to the working people the policy pursued by the
PDPA and the DRA Govemment and fought against the
forces of counter-revolution. The first Young Pioneer
organisations were set up in the autumn of 1980 at the
initiative of the DYOA and under its leadership. By the
summer next year the total membership of the Young
Pioneer organisations exceeded 20,000 members. Young
Fioneer camps were set up for the poor families for the
first time in the country.
 
In mid-September 1980 the founding congress of the
Union of Journalists of Afghanistan was held in Kabul.
It was attended by nearly 450 delegates from newspapers,
magazines, radio, television, publishing houses, and the
Bakhtar news agency.
 
The Union of Artists, set up in October 1980, united
artists, actors, musicians, film makers and architects. Its
foundation congress was attended by nearly 1,000 people.
Around the same time, over 500 Afghan men of letters
representing all the nationalities and ethnic groups of Afghan
istan, met at the foundation congress of the Union of
Writers.133 The formation of these creative unions, as
delegates to these congresses pointed out, helped to rally
the Afghan public in support of the April Revolution.
 
The PDPA, the Revolutionary Council and the Govermn
ment of the DRA, and also patriotic organisations paid
much attention to ways and means of improving agriculture
and solving the food problem (which is only natural for a
country where the majority of the population are peasants
and the economy is based on agriculture and the processing
of farm produce). During the second stage of the land re
form, planned for a term of three years, the state guaranteed
the ownership of land and water by the peasants. Measures
were taken to mechanise, with Soviet aid, the production
of cotton, wheat and sugar beet. Farm-machine hiring
stations were set up. The state helped to organise supply
and-marketing, producer and other cooperatives in the
countryside. Measures were taken to reclaim arable land
and increase crop yields. The purchasing prices of cotton
and sugar beet were increased by 25 to 30 per cent. The
state distributed seeds and chemical fertilisers among
peasants at reduced prices (on credit to the poor) and helped
them purchase farm implements. The first Cooperative
Institute was set up. Teams formed in large cities by the
DYOA went to the countryside to help the peasants.
Self-defence detachments were formed from among the
peasants.
 
The country’s first congress of rural cooperators, at
tended by 650 delegates, was convened in December 1980.
It discussed the development of the cooperative move
ment, ways of overcoming economic and cultural back
wardness in the Afghan countryside, improving the living
and working conditions of peasants and handicraftsmen,
boosting agricultural production, turing Afghan fanning
into a highly developed and effective branch of the national
economy, reforming agrarian relations and, in the process,
eliminating poverty and backwardness among peasants.
 
At the new stage of the April Revolution the revolutionary authorities of Afghanistan drew up a programme of
progressive reforms to be implemented in Afghan agri
culture for a few years, taking due account of the interests
of peasants, the traditions and specific conditions of differ
ent regions, and the customs long established among the
people. On June 20, 1981, the PDPA Central Committee
and the DRA Council of Ministers passed a resolution On
the Land Reform in the DRA to help improve the living
conditions of peasants, regulate land tenure, and boost
agricultural production.
 
As it was noted late in 1981 at the plenary meeting of
the Central Council of Agricultural Cooperatives, the
people’s authorities assist the cooperatives a good deal,
helping them to attract new members. The state provides .
the cooperatives with credits, fertilisers, seeds and farm
implements (at reduced prices). The peasants were shown
the advantages of agricultural production with the use
of modern methods and instruments of labour.
 
The first machine and tractor stations have been set up
in the country. Following a decision of the Revolutionary
Council the debt to the state for 1978-81 was cancelled
for 860,000 peasant families. Large sums have been ear
marked for the repair and construction of irrigation canals
and other hydrotechnical projects in Badakhshan, Qunduz,
Parvan, WNimroz and other provinces, thereby enabling
the country to irrigate tens of thousands of hectares of dry
and virgin lands. As a result, the total harvest of the main
crops in 1981 exceeded the 1980 results. The share of these
crops increased in the Afghan exports, which is evidenced
by the DRA’s trade agreements with the USSR and also
with India, the GDR, Czechoslovakia, Britain, Japan, the
Netherlands and other countries.
 
The decision of the Revolutionary Council to set up
the Chief Board of Islamic Affairs at the DRA Council
of Ministers contributed to the normalisation of the situa
tion in the country. This decision was approved at Afghani
stan’s first conference of ulemas, held late in June and
early in July’ 1980 and attended by over 800 people. The
delegates to the conference voiced their support for the
constructive processes going on in Afghanistan at the new
stage of the April Revolution and denounced the campaign of misinformation on the position of Islam in the DRA conducted by the mass media in a number of countries.
The conference was addressed by Babrak Karmal, who said
that a new Muslim association was being established on the
basis of profound respect for Islam and its principles of
justice and equality. The decree issued by the Revolutionary
Council in August 1981 allotted to Muslim religious insti
tutions their ‘ands and other property (so-called waqfs)
and allowed the ulemas to retain the land surplus they had.
The major positive changes that had occurred in the
country were legalised in the Fundamental Principles of the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, approved by the
Revolutionary Council, the supreme body of state power
in the DRA, on April 20-21, 1980. The Fundamental
Principles of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
consist of 68 articles grouped into 10 chapters. Chapter One
points out that the DRA "‘is an independent democratic
_ State belonging to all Muslim working people’; that the
state "shall make efforts to ensure for the people a pros
perous, happy, peaceful, secure and tranquil life"; that
_ the power of the working people of the DRA" is based on
the vast national fatherland front’’. Article 4 of the Funda
mental Principles defines the PDPA as ‘"‘the party of the
working class and all the toilers of the country" and as
"the guiding and mobilising force of society and state"
Article 28 says that "the equality of rights among the
citizens is ensured in all economic, political, social and
cultural fields".
 
The Fundamental Principles point out that "respect,
observance and preservation of Islam as a sacred religion
will be ensured" in the country and all Muslims are en
sured "freedom of religious rites" (Article 5). Articles 17,
18, 19, 21, and 22 say that "‘the state preserves and pro
tects all forms of ownership", and that it will preserve and
protect private ownership according to law"’; it ‘"‘will encour
age, protect and control private enterprises’’; it "respects
and guarantees ownership of the peasants and other land
holders ... according to the provisions of law"’; that the state
encourages the participation of national entrepreneurs in
the development of industry, the services, transport and
agriculture and guarantees, "in accordance with law, the
security of private investments with a view to developing national economy". It is pointed out also that property cannot be expropriated from its owner, the exception being
"expropriation of private property against payment in
accord with social justice and law".155
 
The consistent efforts of the PDPA, the Revolutionary
Council, the DRA Government, and patriotic mass organisa
tions working under their leadership to insplement the
ideals and attain the goals of the April Revolution, helped
to stabilise the political situation in Afghanistan and to
rally the working people and all patriotic forces (includ
ing the influential sections of the national bourgeoisie,
the Muslim clergy and many tribal elders) round the revo
lutionary leadership headed by Babrak Karmal. The social
base for counter-revolutionary activity was narrowed down.
All this made it possible to withdraw some of the units
of the limited contingent of Soviet troops sent in the
country in December 1979, as their presence there was no
longer necessary. This decision was published on June 22,
1980, and implemented at the end of the month.
 
Thanks to the PDPA’s efforts to bring together and
mobilise all patriotic, progressive and national-democratic
forces of Afghanistan in defence of the April Revolution,
it became possible to convene a conference of national
patriotic forces in Kabul in December 1980. The conference
was attended by almost 2,000 delegates of the PDPA, the
trade unions, agricultural cooperatives, the Democratic
Youth Organisation of Afghanistan, the Democratic Organi
sation of Afghan Women, the unions of writers, journalists
and artists, and other social organisations, the business
circles of the country (the Chambers of Commerce and
Industry) Muslim theologians, and the Pashtun tribes.
 
The conference decided to form a National Fatherland
Front and to set up a supreme organising commission in
order to prepare and convene its inauguration congress.
 
The inauguration congress was held on June 15, 1981,
in Kabul. It was attended by 940 delegates from all classes
and sections of Afghan society. Of them, 340 represented
workers and peasants. The congress was addressed by Babrak Karmal with a report on the tasks and objectives of the National Fatherland Front (NFF).
 
The delegates to the inauguration congress unanimously
approved the Rules of the National Fatherland Front and
elected its leading bodies—the National Committee (95
members) and the Executive Committee (21 members).
Saleh Muhammad Zeray, Political Bureau Member and
Secretary of the PDPA Central Committee, was unanimous
ly elected NFF Chairman. Four vice-chairmen were elected
(among them Sayed Afghani, Chairman of the Supreme
Council of the Ulema of Afghanistan).
 
The formation of the National Fatherland Front was
widely supported in the country. Public meetings were
held, welcoming the formation of the Front and funds were
raised to be donated to the Front’s branches set up in the
localities.
 
The significance and irreversible character of the posi
tive changes in Afghanistan were noted by the delegates
of the International Meeting of Solidarity with the Afghan
.People held in Kabul in June 1980. The meeting, sponsored
by the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity Organisation was
attended by delegates from 22 countries and many inter
national non-governmental and _ religious organisations,
as the World Fellowship of Buddhists and the World Peace
Council. The meeting expressed support for the Afghan
people carrying on the struggle for peace and progress
and for a political settlement of the situation in the region.
 
The peoples of developing countries reaffirmed their
solidarity with the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
at the 10th session of the Presidium of the Afro-Asian
Peoples’ Solidarity Organisation held in November 1981
in Kabul.
 
The major positive changes that occurred in the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan at the new stage of the
national-democratic April Revolution are the result of the
consistently revolutionary, creative activity and guidance
by the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan. A major
event in the party’s history was the adoption of the new Rules, which define the PDPA as the highest form of political organisation, a new type of party, and the van
guard of the working class and all working people in the
republic. The PDPA Rules say that the party’s activity
is based on principles of scientific revolutionary theory,
and expresses and defends the interests of the working
people of Afghanistan.
 
At the new stage of the revolution the PDPA has over
come many difficulties and temporary setbacks and rallied
the more politically active and advanced patriotic sections
of society for the defence of the country and the revolu
 
. tion. The successful undertakings of the party were facili
tated by the constant efforts of its leadership to restore
the atmosphere of trust, unity and revolutionary principles
in the PDPA, to find new organisational methods of work,
to raise the ideological and political level of the party
cadres and strengthen discipline in the party at all levels.
 
Besides, the consistent implementation of the resolution
on ensuring observance of revolutionary law in Afghanistan,
adopted by the Political Bureau of the PDPA Central Com
mittee in November 1980, helped achieve the goals set for
the new stage of the April Revolution.
 
The PDPA Central Committee has concentrated re
lentlessly on strengthening party leadership and building
up the country’s armed forces, border troops, security
service, and detachments for the defence of the revolution,
increasing their efficiency, and improving their material
and technical supplies and steeling them ideologically and
politically.
 
Addressing the fifth plenary meeting of the PDPA Central
Committee in March 1981, Babrak Karmal, General Sec
retary of the Central Committee, said that when the new
stage began in the April Revolution, the party grew stronger
organisationally and numerically (largely due to the inflow
of new members from among workers and peasants), its
social base expanded, the party functionaries grew more
experienced and efficient and the number of its politically
educated activists increased. The PDPA’s prestige among
the popular masses had grown. During the latter half of
1981 about 10,000 candidate members became members.
Of these, 40 per cent were workers, handicraftsmen and
peasants (in the economically advanced regions of the country the figure was 75 per cent). January and February 1982 saw the preparations for
the first national conference of the PDPA (its convocation
had been announced at the seventh plenary meeting of
the PDPA Central Committee in December 1981). That
party forum was to adopt the PDPA Action Programme—
a basic document of revolutionary power for the near
future. Party conferences were held in the towns and in
the provinces. Delegates to the PDPA conference were
elected.
 
The conference was convened on March 14, 1982 in
Kabul. It was attended by delegates of workers, peasants,
intellectuals, servicemen—of all sections of Afghan society,
of all its peoples. The 841 delegates to the conference
represented 62,800 members and candidate members united
in 1,656 party organisations.
 
Addressing the conference with an opening speech,
Babrak Karmal told those present that the conference had
received messages of greeting from fraternal revolutionary
parties. He fed out the greeting from the Central Commit
tee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which said
that the CPSU Central Committee and all Soviet people,
following the profound traditions of Soviet-Afghan friend
ship and guided by the principle of international solidarity,
resolutely supported the revolutionary people of Afghani
stan in their striving to build a new society.
 
In the report on the draft of the PDPA Action Programme
and the tasks of strengthening the party and consolidat
ing its ties with the people, Babrak Karmal told the con
ference that the main strategic goal of the first PDPA
Programme (adopted in 1966)—the winning of political
power—was achieved. Now, he said, the party was faced
with new tasks which were to be formulated and ways
of their solution were to be found. This was the ‘chief
purpose of the conference. To that end, the party needed
a new policy document, an action programme which would
serve as the basis for rallying the party members still closer
and mustering all forces for accomplishing the tasks of the
national-democratic revolution and defending its gains.
 
The report noted the historic importance of the social, .
economic and political changes that had occurred in Afgha
nistan after the April Revolution, The domination by a handful of oppressors—the richest landlord aristocracy and usurers—had been abolished.
 
The main political achievement of the April Revolu
tion was revolutionary people’s power. This power, Babrak
Karmal said, was at the same time the chief political instru
ment of the revolution, for it ensured its expansion and
deepening in the interest of the broad popular masses and
a reliable protection of the revolution from encroachments
by domestic and foreign counter-revolution and reaction.
 
The April Revolution, he said, had laid the foundations
of an entirely new political system in Afghanistan. This
system incorporated (apart from state bodies) the National
Fatherland Front—a support for the working people’s
power in Afghanistan.
 
The report said that the backwardness and underdevel
opment of Afghanistan were temporary. Effecting pro
gressive economic improvements in the interest of the
people and with their direct participation and carrying
through a programme of deep-going social and cultural
reforms, the PDPA was convinced that the Democratic
aa dere of Afghanistan would become an economically
 
socially advanced state in the foreseeable future. To
achieve this, the party intended, in keeping with its Action
Programme, to pursue steadily the course towards a dem
ocratic solution of the agrarian question and to build
advanced industry.
 
The purpose of the Action Programme is that during
its implementation the vital interests of the whole people
should be met. The PDPA’s goal is that all the peoples
and tribes of Afghanistan, big and small, should be drawn in
material and cultural progress for the first time in the long
history of Afghanistan, that all of them should be guaran
teed full equality and be given opportunities for an all-round
economic, social and cultural development. The PDPA
deems it imperative that all that is best and most valuable
in their rich cultural and historical legacy should be pre
served and developed and their religious, cultural and
historical traditions be respected.
 
Since a great part of the population in Afghanistan is
illiterate, or almost illiterate, the educational work done
by the party and the social organisations which are members
of the National Fatherland Front is of great importance, for it helps to spread political awareness among the working people, build up their patriotic unity, wipe out illiteracy,
and draw broad masses of the population in the defence
of the gains of the April Revolution.
 
The main direction in the PDPA’s political activities
is the maintenance of close ties between the party and the
people. Herein is the source of the PDPA’s power and vitali
ty. In approving its Action Programme, the PDPA is guided
by a clear and simple goal—to make the people happy and
their motherland flourishing. This is the purpose of the
April Revolution and of the PDPA’s activities.
 
The revolution in Afghanistan, Babrak Karmal went on,
caused frenzy and frantic resistance on the part of imper
ialism and reaction. People are dying in Afghanistan because
of the fratricidal war provoked by the counter-revolution
aries and acts of violence and terror committed by them in
the country, and because of the large-scale outside inter
ference and the unprovoked and undeclared war and aggres
sion being waged against the DRA for the restoration in
the country of the rule by a handful of exploiters over
thrown by the people. All this hampers urgent social and
economic reforms. Therefore, the primary task facing
the party and revolutionary power today, stressed Babrak
Karmal, was to complete the rout of the armed counter
revolution, to establish and reliably secure the revolutionary
power in the localities and ensure a lasting civil peace in
the country.
 
The normalisation of the situation in Afghanistan, the
strengthening of the revolutionary regime and the defeat
of the armed counter-revolution will greatly contribute
to the stabilisation of the situation in the region, in the
whole of Asia, and in the rest of the world. This would
help provide conditions for peaceful coexistence among
states and mutually beneficial cooperation among thein,
for the benefit of all the peoples.
 
The main aspects in the approach of the PDPA and the
DRA Goverment to international issues are consistent
actions for peace in the Middle East and South Asia and
in the whole world. In this context, said Babrak Karmal,
the state sovereignty and independence of the DRA and
its people could be reliably secured only if fraternal friend
ship and fruitful cooperation with the Soviet Union continued and grew stronger. The PDPA and the revolutionary government of the DRA lay much stress on promoting re
lations and cooperation with all countries of the socialist
community, strictly observe the Charter of the United
Nations, reaffirm their invariable adherence to the princi
ples of the non-aligned movement and, at the same time,
express determination to shape its relations with all states
on the basis of mutual respect for state sovereignty and
independence, equality and non-interference in the internal
affairs of other countries.
 
The PDPA and the DRA Government will work consis
tently for building up the unity of all peoples in the com
mon struggle for peace, detente, disarmament, prohibition
and ultimate liquidation of nuclear arms, for friendship
among peoples, democracy, human rights and social prog
ress, for creating a lasting atmosphere of cooperation and
trust in the world, and for the solidarity of the peoples
in the struggle against the forces of imperialism, aggression
and reaction.
 
The PDPA and the DRA Government will do all they can
to promote friendship and cooperation with Muslim coun
tries and peoples. To that end they continue the search for
peaceful ways, through negotiations with its neighbours—
Pakistan and Iran— of solving the international problems
facing Afghanistan today.
 
All the speakers at the conference who joined the dis
cussion of the report by Babrak Karmal unanimously
backed up the proposals and conclusions it contained.
The participants in the national conference of the PDPA
unanimously adopted the party’s Action Programme and
the appeal to the people of Afghanistan.
 
The Action Programme says that it is aimed at turning
the DRA into a modern prosperous state with developed
agriculture, at building a sound and fast-growing industry
in Afghanistan, and at strengthening and expanding the
public sector. The working class of Afghanistan is a sec
tion of society which is more rapidly increasing and is
better organised, while the peasants constitute the largest
section taking part in progressive reforms and fighting
vigorously for the revolution.
 
The Action Programme stresses the need to establish
one comprehensive system of defending the revolution and the people, comprising the army, the border troops, the security service, militia, detachments for the defence of
the revolution, and tribal volunteer corps.
 
The defence of the territorial integrity, sovereignty
and independence of Afghanistan is the chief goal of the
PDPA’s foreign policy. The comerstone of this policy
is promotion of close friendship and traditional coopera
tion with the Soviet Union and the other countries of the
socialist community.
 
During the time passed since the national conference
of the PDPA the role of the party has increased in Afghan
society and state. By the summer of 1983 its membership
exceeded 90,000 (65 per cent of the PDPA members and
candidate members were aged under 30). Speaking at the
12th Plenary Meeting of the PDPA Central Committee on
July 3, 1983, Babrak Karmal noted that a new factor—a
‘ far-flung system of party organisations and committees—
had been created in the DRA and was functioning well,
constantly increasing its role.
 
Despite the positive changes that occurred since the
start of the new stage in the April Revolution, the situa
tion in Afghanistan remained tense. This was caused mainly
by the stepping up of undeclared aggression launched
against the republic by the forces of counter-revolution,
intemational imperialist reaction and its allies.
 
In 1980-83, armed revolutionary units, extensively aided
from abroad, operated in Nangarhar, Gilmend, Herat,
Parvan, Farah, Baglan, Badakhshan, Qunduz, Balkh, Jowjan,
Faryab, Badghis, Qandahar, Kabul, Bamian, Logar, Kapisa,
Samangan, Wardak, Takhar, Nimruz, Ghor, Kunar, Zabol,
and Paktia.
 
Counter-revolutionaries destroyed crops, granaries, and
killed livestock; burned farm buildings and dwelling houses,
food storages, and ruined irrigation systems, which had
been built through generations. As estimated by Afghan
experts, the total damage caused by counter-revolution
aries to agriculture exceeded 1,500 million afghanis in 1981
alone.
 
They burned down several lycées and about 1,200 schools, blew up bridges, attacked truck -columns which
carried food, clothes and medicines to the civilian popula
tion. Attempts were made to hijack Afghan airliners.
Bombs were planted and exploded in the premises of Kabul
University. Factories and mines were raided, boring ma
chines, diesel power stations and radio stations were put
out of operation. Oil and gas pipelines were blown up.
 
Striking on the sly, mostly at uight, counter-revolution
ary terroristic and sabotage groups killed activists of the
PDPA and progressive mass organisations, high-ranking
party and government officials, teachers, students, school
children and the ulemas who had refused to cooperate
with them, and other people. The terrorists wanted to
create an atmosphere of fear and insecurity in the
country, to frustrate progressive social, economic and
cultural reforms and prevent a stabilisation of the situation
in Afghanistan.
 
Some outstanding public figures, organisers and leaders
of the National Fatherland Front fell victim to the ter
rorists. The terrorists murdered retired general Fateh
Muhammad Farkemishr (who had spent over 20 years in
prisons before the revolution) and Maulana Abdul Hamid,
imam at one of the largest Kabul mosques, a well-known
alim in the country. They killed Sayed Muhammad Amin,
member of the DRA Revolutionary Council; Wali Yusufi,
Deputy Minister of Higher and Vocational Education, and
Khan Karabaghi, a popular folk singer.
 
Supported by imperialist powers and some reactionary
regimes in the region, the counter-revolutionary forces did
not give up attempts to destroy the gains of the April
Revolution.
 
The undeclared aggression against the Democratic Re
public of Afghanistan was escalating. The peace proposals
of the revolutionary government on a political settlement
were rejected. Thus, constructive proposals advanced by
the Afghan Govemment on May 14, 1980, and August 24,
1981, evoked practically no response from the USA and its
allies, though the proposals covered the main foreign policy
aspects of the settlement problem.
 
Centres for coordinating armed actions against the DRA
were set up in Peshawar and Quetta (Pakistan). New bases and camps for training sabotage and terrorist detachments cropped up. The terrorists began to be trained by foreign
instructors. In the summer of 1980, the then Foreign
Minister of Iran Gotbzade openly declared that Iran de
livered and would continue to deliver weapons to Afghan
counter-revolutionaries. At that time President of Egypt
Anwar Sadat announced his readiness to provide sabotage
and terrorist groups with arms.
 
In July 1980, leaders of Afghan counter-revolutionary
organisations paid visits to the capitals of a number of
West European states where they negotiated deliveries of
weapons. They were satisfied with the outcome of the
negotiations, as they themselves admitted. In the autumn
of 1980, Sabhatullah Mojadidi, a well-known leader of
Afghan counter-revolutionaries, visited the United States
to raise funds for the counter-revolution.
 
As is seen from numerous bourgeois press reports (and
also from recently published studies by American, British,
Canadian and Pakistani political writers), Pakistan, Saudi
Arabia and some other countries in the region rendered,
and still render, lavish financial and other aid to the counter
revolutionary organisations entrenched in the territory of
. Pakistan close to the Afghan border. These resources are
used for purchasing arms and ammunition, including anti
tank missiles and anti-aircraft weapons. The Pakistani
press has written on many occasions about aid to Afghan
counter-revolutionaries and their sabotage and _ terrorist
organisations provided by a number of conservative regimes
in the Middle East and by numerous governmental and non
governmental organisations of Britain, Japan, the USA and
the FRG. Reports to that effect appeared in the US and
West European press.136
 
The opening of a representation of the counter-revolu
tionary Afghan Press Agency in London late in 1980 cannot
be regarded otherwise than as complicity with the Afghan
counter-revolution and gross ‘interference in the internal
affairs of the DRA.
 
The government and the people of Afghanistan and
progressives the world over regarded the repeated state
ments by the US administration spokesmen in 1981-84 on
the intention to continue to deliver weapons to the counter
revolutionary detachments operating in Afghanistan as crude interference in the DRA’s internal affairs.
 
There are numerous facts proving that the total volume
of financial, military, technical and other aid coming to
Afghan counter-revolutionaries from the imperialist and
reactionary forces has been steadily growing, which is
evidence of their intention to go ahead with the undecla
red aggression against the Democratic Republic of Af
ghanistan.
 
All these actions, grossly violating international law
and the UN Charter, tend further to aggravate the situa
tion around Afghanistan and in the whole of South-West
Asia, putting up new barriers in the way of political settle
ment, for which the revolutionary government of the DRA,
supported by its allies, has been striving. Various projects
of "neutralising" the DRA, advanced now and again by
leaders of the diplomatic services of some Western states,
pursue anti-Afghan aims.
 
The Presidium of the DRA Revolutionary Council was
compelled to enact the law on universal military service on
January 9, 1981, providing for a call-up to the armed
forces of Afghanistan of men aged from 20 to 40.
 
The PDPA Central Committee and the DRA Government
have carried extensive work at the new stage of the April
Revolution to strengthen the armed forces, which are now
better organised, trained and equipped. New commanding
officers have been trained. The Afghan army has inflicted
heavy damage on the counter-revolutionaries, destroyed
many of their bases and strong points and seized large
amounts of weapons and ammunition. Hundreds of armed
counter-revolutionary detachments, whose members let
themselves be involved in the fratricidal struggle, have laid
down arms.
 
At the same time the revolutionary authorities of the
DRA have always advocated a reasonable combination of
military and peaceful ways and means to normalise the situa
tion in the country, stop the bloodshed and establish peace.
The PDPA Central Committee and the DRA Government
amnestied those who had given up armed struggle against
the motherland. They held talks with leaders and rank
and-file members. of counter-revolutionary detachments
misled by hostile propaganda, helping them to go back to
peaceful life in their native land.
 
At the new stage of the April Revolution, just as in the
past, the peoples of Afghanistan have been invariably
relying on the friendly aid and support of the Soviet Union.
 
The growth of all-round and mutually beneficial ties
with the USSR has become most important for the DRA
when the undeclared aggression against the Afghan people
escalated, and when the USA and many other capitalist
countries discontinued or cut drastically trade, economic,
crediting and financial relations with Afghanistan. The
shipment of Afghan exports and imports across Pakistan
and Jran have become extremely complicated. Some inter
national economic organisations (actually controlled by US
monopolies or transnational corporations) have ceased all
aid to Afghanistan or reduced it to the minimum.
 
In these conditions cooperation with the Soviet Union
(and also with the other countries of the socialist com
munity) has enabled the Democratic Republic of Afghani
stan to hold out against imperialist pressure and to over
come many negative effects of what had amounted to a
blockade of the DRA by the imperialists, and even to use
most effectively the national economic potential for its
own benefit. After the April Revolution, specifically after
the start of its new stage, Soviet-Afghan relations have
reached a new level and become fraternal relations of rev
olutionary solidarity. The mutually beneficial trade, eco
nomic, technical, scientific and cultural cooperation be
tween the Soviet Union and Afghanistan has grown. It has
been constantly expanding and improving, acquiring a new
content, and becoming more dynamic and stable.
 
Mutually beneficial cooperation between the DRA and
the USSR offers Afghanistan a wide access to the newest
technology and modern scientific knowledge. This co
operation has a very important role to play in strengthening
state sovereignty and political and economic independence
of Afghanistan, in the development of the public sector in
all the major sections of the national economy. It assists
Afghanistan in fulfilling various plans of: social, economic
and cultural advancement, thereby enabling it to overcome
the hard legacy of the pre-revolutionary past, eliminate
backwardness, improve living standards, and build up its defence potential. Finally, cooperation with the Soviet Union, conducted on an equitable basis, offers Afghanistan
every opportunity for defending its legitimate interests
and demanding equal trade and economic relations with
capitalist countries.
 
Thus, the USSR accounts for 54 per cent of all foreign
loans and credits granted to the DRA. Over 160 national
economic projects have been built, or are under construc
tion, in Afghanistan with Soviet aid. They account for
70 per cent of the industrial output of the public sector.
The Soviet Union renders considerable aid in the develop
ment of Afghan agriculture, power engineering, transport,
communications, housing construction, and in the training
of the national personnel so badly needed by the country’s
growing economy. About 70,000 skilled workers have been
trained for Afghanistan with Soviet aid. The USSR grants
Afghanistan loans and credits on easy terms, to be repaid
by traditional Afghan export goods or by a part of the out
put of the enterprises built with Soviet aid. In 1979-83
alone, the DRA’s trade with the USSR more than tripled.137
The conditions for goods shipment between the two coun
tries greatly improved after the motor-road and railway
bridge was built across the Amu Darya in May 1982.
 
Other socialist countries, too, render economic and
technical assistance to the Democratic Republic of Afghani
stan.
 
‘The official friendly visit by Babrak Karmal to the
Soviet Union in October 1980 gave a fresh impetus to the
growth of Soviet-Afghan relations. During the talks the
head of the Afghan state and Soviet leaders discussed the
further development of cooperation between the two coun
tries, major international issues and the situation in the
Middle East. In a joint statement the USSR and the DRA
expressed their intention to encourage the growth of
Soviet-Afghan friendly ties established in the days of
Lenin. Both sides stressed the complete identity of views
on all the questions discussed and spoke in favour of a polit
ical settlement of the situation around the DRA, which
would have a positive effect not only on the situation in
the Middle East but would also help improve the political
climate in the world. The sides emphasised that to achieve
such a political settlement it was important that any interference in the internal affairs of Afghanistan should be stopped and that appropriate understanding should be
reached between the governments of Afghanistan and its
neighbours, Pakistan above all, on the basis of the DRA
Government’s proposals,138
 
In December 1980, another agreement on economic and
technical cooperation between Afghanistan and the USSR
was signed in Moscow, together with a protocol on free
Soviet aid to Afghanistan in training the national personnel
which the DRA so badly needs. New agreements on the
expansion of Soviet-Afghan economic and trade coopera
tion and on Soviet assistance in the DRA’s social and
economic advancement were signed in July 1983 and in
March 1984.
 
The peoples of Afghanistan are not alone in their struggle
for social progress, freedom and independence. As was
pointed out in the Report of the CPSU Central Committee
to the 26th Party Congress, "Afghanistan’s sovereignty,
like its non-aligned status, must be fully protected’".13
 
The 26th Congress of the CPSU reaffirmed the Soviet
Union’s preparedness to withdraw the Soviet military con
tingent, with the agreement of the Afghan Government,
after the infiltration to Afghanistan of counter-revolu
tionary terrorist and sabotage groups from abroad would be
completely stopped. Dependable guarantees are required
that there will be no new intervention against the Dem
ocratic Republic of Afghanistan. The cessation of the
undeclared war against Afghanistan should be sealed by
agreements between the DRA and its neighbours.
 
The 26th Congress also stated that the Soviet Union was
prepared for constructive talks on international aspects of
the Afghanistan issue through a separate settlement of the
situation around Afghanistan and also through a discussion
of problems concerning the DRA in the context of the
security of the Persian Gulf.
 
On November 15 and December 23, 1982, and on Febru
ary 15, 1984, Babrak Karmal met with Soviet leaders in
Moscow. On March 14, 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev, General
Secretary of the CC CPSU, received Babrak Karmal in the
Kremlin. In their comradely talk they discussed the basic
aspects of Soviet-Afghan relations and the situation around
Afghanistan. Both sides condemned the continuing aggressive actions of outside forces against the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and stressed the inalienable right
of the Afghan people to shape their life as they saw fit.
. They expressed the belief that stopping the armed inter
vention and any other outside interference in the affairs of
people’s Afghanistan was an important condition for con
solidating peace and stability in Asia. Both sides were plea
sed to note the growing friendly relations between the
CPSU and the PDPA, the Soviet Union and the Democ
ratic Republic of Afghanistan, and reaffirmed their willing
ness to further strengthen these relations.149
 
The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, being a sover
eign non-aligned state, pursues an active policy of peace
aimed at promoting international cooperation. In the inter
national arena, the DRA enjoys increasing support and
recognition. In 1985, seven years after the national-democra
tic April Revolution, the DRA maintained diplomatic rela
tions with almost eighty countries. And the fraternal ties
of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan with
103 Communist, Workers’ and revolutionary-democratic
parties and national liberation movements and organisations
have been developing well.
 
One hundred and thirty years ago Engels wrote that
revolutions are a mighty motive force of social and political
progress which helps the country in which it has been ac
complished to "‘pass in five years over more ground than it
would have done in a century under ordinary circum
stances."141 The April 1978 national-democratic revolution
in Afghanistan overthrew the autocratic, exploiter regime and
created conditions for carrying out radical changes in a
short period of time and advancing the country from back
wardness towards progress. A new epoch, one of revolution
 
 
ary renewal of the ancient country, has begun in the history
of Afghanistan.
[[Category:Library works about Afghanistan]]
[[Category:Library works about Afghanistan]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Library:History_of_Afghanistan}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Library:History_of_Afghanistan}}

Latest revision as of 12:33, 8 August 2024

A History of Afghanistan
AuthorYuri Gankovsky
Translated byVitaly Baskakov
Original languageRussian
PublisherProgress Publishers
First published1985
Sourcehttps://archive.org/details/gankovsky-yu.-v.-ed.-a-history-of-afganistan-progess-1985/mode/1up
PDFhttps://annas-archive.org/md5/df07c729ca9385839738c73b16dbc2c9

Foreword

This book examines the history of Afghanistan since prehistoric times. It would not have been written at all if the authors had not drawn upon the research done by their predecessors and by their colleagues in the Soviet Union and abroad, especially, in Afghanistan. Occasionally they summed up their own Afghan studies.

The first publications on Afghanistan, appearing in Rus sia in the early 18th century, told the readers about the country and its population, the events in the Herat and Qandahar regions and their struggle against the troops of Nadir Shah Afshar. Several works on Durrani, the first sovereign state to include all the territories populated by Afghans, on Ahmad Shah Durrani, the founder of the state, and his successors, and on Russo-Afghan trade were written and published in Russia in the middle and the latter half of the 18th century.

However, it was with the publication of the works by Academician B.A. Dorn in 1829-1838 that a genuinely scientific study of Afghanistan began in Russia. B. A. Dom was the first to make research into the history of the Pash tun people and his studies retain their value to this day.

In the middle and the second half of the 19th century prominent Russian Onentalists V. V. Grigoryev, N. V. Kha nykov, L. N. Sobolev, M. I. Venyukov, N. A. Aristov, and S. N. Yuzhakov, to mention a few, conducted studies into the ancient and medieval history of Afghanistan, the origin of its peoples, the social make-up of the Pashtun society, its customs and traditions, the people’s struggle for freedom and independence, and Anglo-Afghan relations. At the tum of the 20th century an extensive study of Afghanistan was conducted by A. E. Snesarev, M. V. Grulev and A. A. Bob rinsky. Academician V. V. Barthold did a great deal of research on Afghan history and culture.

The Great October Socialist Revolution in Russia marked the beginning of a new stage in Afghan studies, primarily owing to the general progress of science and culture in the Soviet Union, specifically in the former colonial backwoods of tsarist Russia. Further headway in tlie Soviet studies of Afghanistan was made when the two countries established friendly and good-neighbourly relations immediately after Afghanistan’s independence was restored in 1919, which evoked great interest among Soviet people in the historical past and the present of Afghanistan, in the rich culture of its peoples, their languages, literature, ideology and eco nomy. This unfading interest stimulated the work of Soviet Orientalists who produced not only academic research but also books for the general readership. As a result, over 6,000 publications on Afghanistan have been published in the Soviet Union over the past six decades. Among them are monographs, collections, reference-books, articles in journals and book reviews (in Russian and other languages of the USSR).

A great contribution to Afghan studies in the USSR was made by M.S. Andreyev, M.G. Aslanov, E. E. Bertels, N. A. Kislyakov, N. D. Miklouho-Maclay, I. M. Oransky, I. P. Petrushevsky, N. V. Pigulevskaya, I. M. Reisner, A. A. Semyonov, K. V. Trever, A. Y. Yakubovsky, B. N. Za khoder and other Orientalists who have studied the ancient, medieval and modern history of Afghanistan and the evolu tion of Afghan society in recent times. They have also studied major aspects of the history and specifics of the transformations of the languages, culture and ideology of the peoples of Afghanistan in the past decades.

The knowledge of a nation’s past enables one to better understand the present and grasp the significance of tradi tional views and institutions in present-day life, and the extent of their influence on the social, economic, political and cultural processes going on in the country. This, of course, pertains to present-day Afghanistan, whose people accomplished a national-democratic revolution in April 1978, the first genuine social revolution in its history.

After the April Revolution the good-neighbourly rela tions between the Soviet and Afghan peoples rose to new heights. Their close friendship and revolutionary solidarity serve as a sound basis for the steady promotion of these relations. The interest of the Soviet public in the past and present of their southem neighbour, in the political, social, economic and cultural processes taking place in Afghanis tan, the revolutionary changes carried out there and in its home and foreign policies has increased still more.

A History of Afghanistan has been written by M. R. Aru nova (Chapter Two, ‘‘Afghanistan in the Middle Ages"), Yu. V. Gankovsky (‘‘The State of Durrani" in Chapter Three), V. G. Korgun (Chapter Four, "Afghanistan in Con temporary Times", except for the concluding part), V.M. Masson (Chapter One, "Ancient Afghanistan"), G. A. Muradov ("The Victory of the National-Democratic April Revolution and the Foundation of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan" in Chapter Four, jointly with G. A. Polyakov), and V.A.Romodin (Chapter Three, ‘Afghanistan in Modern Times", excluding the first part).

Ancient Afghanistan

Historical Beginnings

Much of the early history and the events in the territory of the present-day Afghan state became more or less known only in the 1960s and 1970s, when a considerable part of the territory was surveyed by archaeologists. A good deal has been done by Soviet-Afghan expeditions which dis covered numerous Stone and Bronze Age artifacts on the left bank of the Amu Darya.

That was a time of the primitive communal system, when man’s life largely depended on natural conditions. In the Palaeolithic hunting and gathering edible plants and mol luscs took up most of his time.

It is not as yet known if the territory of Afghanistan was one of the zones that were initially settled by man. The crude stone implements found in Dasht-i-Nawur, Ghazni province, give us reason to assert that at least 200 to 100 thousand years ago Palaeolithic hunters already lived in the territory of Afghanistan. The ancient camp discovered at Darrah-i-Kur, North-Eastem Afghanistan, where Mousterian flintwork (Middle Palaeolithic) was found in the lower layers, is believed to have existed 60 to 35 thousand years B.G. The bones of wild bulls and sheep discovered in the camp are witness of the fact that the meat of those animals made up man’s chief food then. A skull fragment found at the same site evidently belonged to Neanderthal man. A grave of a Neanderthal boy was found by Soviet archaeologists in the Teshik-Tash cave on the right bank of the Amu Darya. Finds of Middle Palaeolithic tools in the sands by the Amu Darya in Northern Afghanistan indicate the pres ence of Palaeolithic hunters.1

The lower layers of the Kara-Kamar cave near the Haibek settlement, on the way from Pul-i-Humri to Tashkurgan, have been traced back to the Late Palaeolithic, the next period in the Stone Age.* At that time Stone Age hunters lived far and wide in the foothills of the Hindu Kush, though traces of their habitation are rare over 1,100 metres above sea-level.. The anthropological type of modem man had taken shape already in the Upper Palaeolithic, but no skeleton fragments of that time have so far been found on Afghan territory.

The descendants of the hunters who had lived in the foot hills and open valleys were the tribes that populated Afgha nistan in the Middle Stone Age, or Mesolithic, from 10 to 7 thousand years B.C. Some time within this period a group of people who hunted sheep, antelopes and birds found shelter in the Kara-Kamar cave. Also, two caves and one "outdoor" camp on the Balkhab River, south of Mazar-i Sharif, with the common name of Ak-kupruk, date from the same period. Found there, apart from bulky weapons and tools, made of stone plates and chips are microliths—small flint plates. These were inserted into the slits of handles and used as knives and other tools. The handles, made of bone or wood, have not survived for the most part. This new technique helped produce work implements that were highly advanced for that time. At the late stage of the Mesolithic flint insets with regular geometric outlines— triangles, rectangules and segments (Tash-Kupruk, camp 40)—became widespread. Late Mesolithic or Early Neolithic materials of that kind were found by the Soviet-Afghan ex pedition near Akchah where the people who had evidently inhabited this region used to hunt and fish in the deltas of small rivers and streams at the foothills. The Mesolithic flint artifacts of Afghanistan, though so far found only in the north of the country, resemble those of Central Asia of that time, primarily from Southem Turkmenia (Jebel and Dam-dam-Cheshme) and South-Westem Tajikistan (Tut kaul, the lower layer). This most likely indicates the main directions of ancient cultural contacts.

In the Neolithic, or the New Stone Age, the economic development of communities in the territory of Afghanistan was gradually becoming dissimilar. In the north, hunting, fishing and gathering still remained the chief method of obtaining food (the so-called food-gathering stage), whereas in the south one can see evidence of transition to new forms—farming and livestock raising, i.e., food production or a producing economy. The Bactrian plain, where the climate was humid and the rivers and streams running down from the Hindu Kush mountains came close to the sand ranges, was densely populated by Neolithic hunters and fishermen. Therefore dozens of scattered Neolithic camps were located in the spot where the sand and the rivers joined. Apart from the togls and weapons made of regular thin blades, there were artifacts of geometric outlines, including trapezia and segments. Potsherds, though not numerous, have also been found there. Neolithic layers were discovered also in several caves in Northern Afghanistan where, together with flint weapons and implements, rough graters and stone hoes were found.

For some time rich natural conditions made for a fairly stable existence of Neolithic communities. But, gradually, population growth and the increasing scarcity of animals forced man to look for new sources of food which he found, as is evidenced by the flint blades of the sickles used for reaping grain plants and the bones of domestic animals discovered in the caves of Norther Afghanistan, though there is still some doubt as to their stratigraphic site. In the south the signs of a new historical epoch, that of farming and livestock breeding, were more distinct. The condi tions for the change were on the whole favourable. Soviet botanist N.I. Vavilov established that an exceptionally wide variety of grain crops were grown in Afghanistan: about sixty strains of soft wheat and up to fifty strains of dwarf wheat. Regions like Herat, Qandahar and South Easter Afghanistan, he pointed out, should be of great interest to those specialising in farming history.

It was in the south of the country that the first artifacts of ancient farming and livestock breeding were found. In the 1970s a French expedition excavated the Mehrgarh settlement dating from the 6th-5th millennia B.C. at the Bolan mountain pass near the Afghan border. Mud-brick houses and numerous fragments of stone vessels and sickles—these cultural changes are a clear indicator that a new age had set in. Only the flint sign including microliths of geometric outlines (trapezia and segments) bear witness to links with the cultures of Mesolithic and Neolithic hunters and gatherers. An interesting discovery was that almost identical types of trapezia, with a concave top line, have been found at Mehrgarh and at scattered hunters’ camps along the Amu Darya. The pottery found in the Mehrgarh settlement was decorated with painted orna ments, a sure sign of the early farming period when consid erable attention was attached to applied arts.2 Everything considered, the relics of the Mehrgarh type were not unique.

In the territory of modem Afghanistan the most ancient relics of settled farming and livestock breeding have been found south of the Hindu Kush (dating from the 4th-3rd millennia B.C.) in the fertile and well-irrigated Qandahar province (Mundigak, Said-kala, Deh-Morasi-Ghundai). Fair climate favoured the growth of early farming culture. The evolution of that culture in Southern Afghanistan is well studied thanks to the Mundigak excavations conducted by French archaeologist Jean-Marie Casal.3 A wide variety of earthenware, made on the potter’s wheel and decorated with painted ornaments, was found even in the lowest layers. The use of such a sophisticated appliance as the potter’s wheel is an indication of considerable technical progress and the development of specialised production.

As to the types of omament, local culture has much in common with the early farming cultures of Beluchistan and Southern Iran. The late 4th and early 3rd millennia B.C. saw an expansion of ties with the farming and livestock raising communities of Southern Turkmenia, probably caused by a migration of tribal groups to the south-east. Thus, clay figurines of women, found in the Said-kala settle ment, were made in the same manner as those found during Southem Turkmenian excavations. There is a striking resemblance in the painted omaments on pottery. The Qandahar group of the early farming tribes had obviously made considerable headway in metallurgy, evidently due to the occurrence of copper ore in the territory of Afghanis tan. Copper and bronze were used for making axes with holes for handles, daggers and ornaments. Casting in closed moulds was widespread.

The culture of this group of tribes was in ‘its prime in the 8rd millennium B.C., when the Mundigak settlement must have played the role of the local capital. On a hill formed by the cultural layers of an earlier period there stood a monumental structure with closed semi-pillars at the fagade, the supposed residency of a local prince. Another archi tectural monument is a big structure, supposedly a temple, enclosed by a wall, which is decorated with sharp pilasters. Bronze compartmental seals were widespread at that time. A wide variety of them can be found also among the imple ments of that period in Southem Turkmenia and Northem and Eastern Iran.

A number of ceramic vessels resemble some of those of the ancient Indian Harappa civilisation in shape and orna mental design. Perhaps the Harappa centres in the Indus Valley received copper ore and lapis lazuli from Afghanis tan; one of the largest deposits of lapis lazuli is in Badakh shan. This beautiful stone was highly valued in the ancient Orient .for it was believed to have magic properties. Begin ning with the second half of the 4th millennium B.C. lapis lazuli became widely popular in Mesopotamia and Egypt, and reached Troja in Asia Minor. Through multiple ex change Afghan lapis lazuli reached far into the West. There is evidence that direct trade and cultural contacts with the Harappa civilisation existed at that time. In 1975 French archaeologists revealed the Shoturgai settlement on the Amu Darya bank, and typical samples of Harappa pottery and seals were found in the lower layers. So far, only ten tative excavations were conducted, but there is strong evid ence that close ties existed between the ancient cultures. It is not ruled out that Shoturgai is the remains of a Harap pa trading station. Various specialised production which, having separated from farming, gradually tumed into crafts, and monumental architecture provide convincing evidence of an emerging civilisation. Discovered in Mundigak was an extemal wall flanked by square towers. At the late stages of its existence Mundigak was evidently tuming from an agricultural community into an urban-type settlement.

In the 3rd millennium B.C., similar changes are to be found in the culture of another group of the early farming tribes of Southem Afghanistan—the Seistan group. There the Helmand delta, which consisted of numerous streams flowing into lakes constantly varying in size (hamuns) faci litated the growth of irrigated farming. In a few dozen early farming settlements of that period high-quality painted ware, made on the potter’s wheel, and also bronze compart mental seals have been found. The ruins of the capital of that group of tribes, known as Shahr-i-Sohte, are now situat ed in the territory of Iran. Excavations at Shahr i-Sohte revealed a monumental building, metallic compartmental seals, a bronze figurine of a woman, apparently brought from Mesopotamia, and a clay tablet with signs of the Proto-Elamite writing. There are reasons to believe that, like Mundigak, Shahr-i-Sohte is the remains of an early urban-type settlement.

It is more difficult to form an opinion on the culture of Northem Afghanistan in the period when early-farming settlements flourished in the south. It is possible that in the north the transition to farming and livestock breeding was greatly delayed and that the communities with archaic Neolithic culture existed simultaneously with those of the settled farmers of the south. In some caves the researchers found traces of the ‘Neolithic with the cult of mountain

oats" (3rd millennium B.C.), so called because ritual urials of these animals have been discovered in the cultural layer. The stone and flint weapons and implements found in the same layer were roushiy made and obsolete for that time. Possibly sited here were the camps of hunters and livestock breeders whose cultural development was on a comparatively low level.

Considerable changes set in in the 2nd millennium B.C., when the culture of both groups of South Afghan farmers fell into decay for reasons not quite clear. Most of the settlements were neglected; the settled area in Mundigak shrank drastically, and hand-made ceramics prevailed, though artisans put out wheel-made pottery. In the north, by contrast, high-developed culture flourished. It has been studied by Soviet scientist V. I. Sarianidi during a Soviet Afghan expedition there. A number of valuable artifacts, some made of gold and silver, were found during chance predatory excavations.5

On the whole, the picture of that ancient culture has become fairly clear. A few dozen settlements of farmers and livestock breeders, five or six oases along small rivers, have been discovered in a comparatively small area between Daulatabad and Mazar-i-Sharif. The settlements themselves were concentrated in river deltas, in the zones bordering on barren expanses, where high spring floods could be used for irrigation. Obviously, small’ ducts were dug to irrigate the fields. The loess soil of Northern Afghanistan is known for its fertility. Research done by Soviet archaeologists has shown that oasis farming was already practised there in the Bronze Age. The field would be tilled by something like a plough driven by oxen. Each of the oases had its centre which differed from the ordinary settlements by a small rectangular fortress nearly 2.5 acres in area. The fortress was surrounded by an adobe wall with circular towers at the comers and semi-circular ones along the wall (Dashly-I, Ghirdai)—a stable and fairly developed fortifica tion system for that time. It is known also that the cultural level of the oasis population in the 2nd millennium B.C. was high.*

Ceramics of standard shape was made on the potter’s wheel and baked in special two-tier kilns near the settle ments. The ceramists produced vessels of strict and refined outlines without omamentation. Painted ceramics had disappeared with the decline of early-farming traditions in applied arts. But smelters, smiths and jewellers made all kinds of axes, sickles, mirrors, and pins with elaborate tops, often portraying a goat, a ram, or a bull. The number of weapons they made was significantly large and included swords, spears and combat axe. The latter, judging by clay figurines of warriors, were normally carried tucked behind the belt. The fortresses and a large amount of standard weapons indicate that those were years of armed clashes. The making of large open-work bronze seals, often picturing people and animals, was probably a separate production branch. There were also stone seals picturing, among many" other things, winged lions, an image of a clearly Mesopo tamian origin. Outstanding pieces of ancient art are the stone figurines of sitting women, their bodies made of dark ophite and the heads of light-coloured marble. The figurines bear obvious traces of the artistic canons of far-away Mesopotamia. :

This highly developed culture for the most part did not have local predecessors in Northem Afghanistan in the form of any kind of settlements of the early farmers. It had emerged on the Bactrian plain as something already com plete, and evidently took the place of the archaic and largely Neolithic culture of the hunters and livestock breeders. At the same time all the chief elements of that culture are observed in the Bronze Age monuments of Southem Turkmenistan. Moreover, judging by the exca vations: in Altyn-Tepe, they had taken shape there in a natural way, on the basis of the local cultural traditions of the early-farming stage. In the 2nd millennium B.C. the main centres of that culture of Southem Turkmenistan —Altyn-Tepe and Namazga-Tepe—fell into decay. Part of the population migrated eastwards towards the delta of the Murghab River, creating new oases, each having as its centre a rectangular fortress with semi-circular towers along the walls, Evidently, the gradual migration of those population groups with a high urban-type culture resulted in the cultivation of fertile areas in Norther Afghanistan. Si multaneously, settlements with an identical culture ap peared in Southem Uzbekistan, on the right bank of the Amu-Darya (Sappali, Jarkutan).

But, on the whole, that was a fairly Se) saree process. The presence of doubtlessly Mesopotamic features in Dash ly-type settlements and of the grey ware, more typical of the regions south-east of the Caspian Sea than of Southem Turkmenia, -point to the existence of other links. In any case, it was a period when contacts expanded between various countries and different cultures, which was often caused by the migration of groups of tribes. This perhaps explains why the ruins of scattered settlements with coarse hand-made pottery, typical of the cattle-breeding tribes living in the steppes of the northern areas of Central Asia and Kazakhstan, were found not far from the Bronze Age fortresses in Norther Afghanistan.

So far, no large monuments of the Bronze Age, which could be regarded as remains of urban-type settlements, have been found in Northem Afghanistan. Probably at the early stages of the opening up of new lands concentration of inhabitants proceeded at a slow pace; therefore the com munities were small and scattered, not far from one another, each being a separate social organism. Notable are fairly large structures of monumental architecture detached from other buildings, obviously serving specific purposes common to a group of settlements (and perhaps the whole of Northem Afghanistan). Two such buildings were excavat ed in Dashly-3. One of them is square-shaped, each side being 130 to 150 metres long. In the centre there stands a round fortress with rectangular towers slightly protruding from the walls. Within the fortress there is a shrine-type structure with an altar at the wall, which means it was a cult centre, most probably a temple having various services, depositories, granaries, and dwellings for the priests and servants. The ancient temples of Mesopotamia are known to have been not only the symbols of the ideological unity of communities, by whose joint efforts they had been erected, but also administrative and economic centres, as it were. ;

The other structure is rectangular, 84 by 88 metres in area. It has a courtyard where various storehouses were sited and a small building with altar recesses. The outer walls of the building are decorated with numerous pilasters. It is supposed that the building was a kind of palace or temple but, judging by its lay-out, it lacks the dwelling space a palace is expected to have. Probably it was a temple, after all, but for a different deity. In Mesopotamia, for instance, there often were temples for the supreme god and his divine wife built close to one another. Whatever, the case, it was a Bronze Age religious, administrative and economic centre. Although among the dozens of excavated burial mounds archaeologists have not yet found any containing riches that would allow them to be classed among the tombs of the secular or clerical elite, among the accidental finds in Northern Afghanistan there are quite a few valuable articles of the Bronze Age, including golden vessels with relief omaments—a clear indication that they originated either from rich burial mounds or from temple treasure rooms. It is therefore safe to maintain that in the 2nd millennium B.C. an ancient Oriental type of civilisation was taking shape in Northern Afghanistan, though in conditions and a cultural environment that differed from what they were in the 3rd millennium B.C. in the south of the country. It appears that during this period a process of social and property differentiation was taking place and social ine quality was beginning tosetin. __ ; ;

The ethnic and linguistic affinity of the ancient tribes which had created these wonderful Bronze Age cultures 1s not quite clear. Already in the early-farming period the area was inhabited by long-headed people of the European type who by their anthropological characteristics are close to the present-day population of Afghanistan. However, a similar anthropological type existed in most of the other early-farming cultures in the areas from Southern Turk menistan to the north-western regions of South Asia, and

‘ also among the people of the Harappa civilisation. Analysis of inscriptions on Harappa seals gives reason to suppose that their language can be classed among the proto-Dravi dian ones which were rather widespread in ancient times. A seal bearing a similar inscription was found in Southern Turkmenia during excavations in Altyn-Tepe. It is possible that various groups of early-farming tribes in Southern Turkmenia, Northern Iran and a considerable part of Afghanistan also spoke the languages and dialects of the proto-Dravidian group. While in the south of Iran, numerous ancient settlements have been found bearing traces of the Elamite language which is, in some respects, close to proto Dravidian.

In the 2nd millennium B.C. the situation began to change. There is reason to believe that part of the popula tion in the territory of Afghanistan spoke the languages of the Indo-Iranian group, as most of the country’s present day population does. The ancient Iranian and ancient In dian languages originated from one common language from which they had adopted the fundamentals of grammar and the bulk of the vocabulary. The Indo-Iranian common elements (or Aryan, according to their self-identificati on) were not confined to the language alone: there was much in common also in religion, mythology and epic legends.

Analysis of the terms dating back to the Indo-Iranian community allows us to maintain that they were tribes that knew agriculture, but that cattle was their main wealth and it was the criterion of welfare. During this period a military elite had emerged: chariot warriors called ratayshtars (literally, standing in the chariot). Power was in the hands of the chiefs who were gradually tuming into sovereign kinglings. The tribes that spoke ancient Indian languages were settling in Norther India, possibly in two flows, in the general direction from the north-west to the south east. They mixed with the local Dravidian-speaking popula tion, a fact witnessed by the strong Dravidian influence on the Aryan languages of Northern India. The Rigveda, the most ancient relic of these languages, is dated by many authors between the 12th and 10th centuries B.C., but they are supposed to have spread in the first half of the 2nd millennium B.C. These developments, naturally, affected the territory of Afghanistan and many historians believe that the ancestors of the Indo-Aryans lived for a certain time in the territory of Central Asia and Afghanistan toge ther with the ancestors of Iranian tribes.®

The appearance in the Middle East of Aryan proper names and specific terms associated with the Iranian linguistic group, is traced back to the mid-2nd millennium B.C." In any case, early in the 1st millennium B.C. the areas of present-day Afghanistan and the greater part of Central Asia were already populated by Iranian speaking tribes. The names they gave to some regions stuck for centuries. All this prompts the conclusion that during the latter half of the 2nd millennium B.C., and perhaps even earlier,-Iranian-speaking tribes settled in Afghanistan and in nearby regions; they assimilated with the local population whose language had quite possibly already been Indianised. The initial regions inhabited by Indo Iranian livestock breeding tribes were most likely the steppes between the Danube and the Urals. Everything considered, these tribes migrated in different directions: some reached the Middle East via the Caucasus, while others moved to the east of the Caspian Sea. These data are comparable, to some extent, with the evolution and spread of ancient cultures in accord ance with archaeological evidence.

It appears that there existed three types of these cultures and archaeological complexes. The first one includes the cultures promoting the development of local traditions of settled farming. These traditions gave rise to the formation of ancient Oriental civilisations. Such are the complexes of the Namazga-5 and Namazga-6 type in a section of the foothills in Southern Turkmenistan and in the Murghab delta and also the artifacts found along the middle rea ches of the Amu Darya, on both of its banks (of the Ghir dai, Dashly and Sappali type). While the local traditions continued in those cultures, in the 2nd millennium B.C. there appeared some features and phenomena related to the culture of Mesopotamia and a number of regions in Western Iran. This was reflected in certain artistic images (winged lions, or a hero fighting wild beasts), and in cer tain types of bronze artifacts, specifically battle axes and daggers.

The second type includes artifacts of the steppe bronze of Central Asia and Kazakhstan, mostly coarse hand-made pottery ornamented with simple scratched-on designs. They have been found also in Southern Turkmenia and in the south of Central Asia, and some articles of that kind have turned up on the left bank of the Amu Darya. The third type of the archaeological complexes of that period is marked by a pone syncretism of features, though in a somewhat rougher version, and of elements that go back to the zone of the Bronze Age steppe tribes. Monuments of this kind have been studied well in South-Western Taji kistan (the early Tulkhar burial mound, and the cemetery "Tiger Gorge’’) and can, evidently, be found on the left bank of the Amu Darya (the upper layers of the Shoturgai settlement).

This intricate picture reflects the process of the settle ment of the tribes of new ethnos, genetically related to the steppe zone of Eurasia, which had absorbed in the process of migration certain cultural elements of West Asia. Simul taneously, linguistic assimilation of the local proto-Indo Iranian population was under way. In the cultural area highly developed local traditions of settled farming pre vailed. It is obviously not accidental that Indo-Iranian myths are reflected in the intricate patterns on the seals of that time. Whatever the case, this period was most im portant in the history of the ancient tribes and ethnic groups of Afghanistan, a time when the direct ancestors of the present-day population emerged.

Early Class Society

The ancient history of Afghanistan, beginning from the late Bronze Age, has been studied on the basis of archaeo logical evidence as well as written sources. The most im portant source on the ancient history of Afghanistan and neighbouring countries is the Avesta, a remarkable sample of ancient Iranian writings from which we have leamt the names of a number of historical-cultural areas in the terri tory of Afghanistan dating to the Ist millennium B.C. The Qandahar region, for instance (where an isolated group of early-farming tribes lived in the 4th-3rd millennia B.C.) is called Harahwati in the Avesta, which in Greek stands for Arachosia. The Seistan area, the homeland of the second group of early-farming tribes, is called Haitumanta (after the name of the Haitumant River, now Helmand). Since in ancient Iranian "‘haitu’"? means bridge, it may be supposed that there was an important river crossing. The area is better known under the name Drangiana (ancient Persian Zrarika).

In Northem Afghanistan too there existed two major historical cultural areas. The territory of the present-day Herat oasis is named Haroiva in the Avesta (Areia in Greek), which eventually became Herat. The regions along the middle reaches of the Amu Darya, together with the south em regions of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, formed Bactria

Bahdi in the Avesta and Bakhtrish in ancient Persian).

ordering on Bactria, and at certain periods becoming part of it, was Margiana (Mouru in the Avesta and Margush in ancient Persian), an area in the fertile low reaches of the Murghab in South-Eastem Turkmenia.

The version of the Avesta, which has come down to us, is by far incomplete. The most interesting part that has survived intact is ‘"Yasna’’, which literally means "reverence, sacrifice". It contains various texts that were recited during specific religious ceremonies. Among them are 17 chap ters whose author is said to be Zoroaster (Zarathustra), the famous founder of one of the world religions. Zoroaster’s preachings known under the title ‘"The Gathas’’, are very archaic as to language, but very emotional and passionate. The ‘"Videvdat’"’ (a law against devs), another important part of the Avesta, contains texts describing quite ancient tradition. And, last but not, ‘least, the Avesta also includes 22 hymns, so-called yashts, dedicated to different deities. Their language is still more archaic than that of Zoro aster’s preachings.

The oldest parts of the Avesta contain enough data to describe the social set-up of the East-Iranian tribes, at least those that lived in the first third of the 1st millennium B.C. The primary social unit was the nmana-(haus), a big patriarchal family, including slaves, dwellings and the entire household. The next unit was the vzs, or clan, which was followed by the zantu, the tribe or the region inhabited by the tribe. And the fourth unit in the social hierarchy was the dahyu, the country or area that was headed by the dahyupati, the ruler. Apparently the dahyus were the main economic and political organisms of that time, which presented oases with urban-type settlements in the centre. Such oases grouped round a large settlement with a citadel resting on a thick raw-brick platform, are known to have existed in ancient Margiana, in the delta of the Murghab in the 9th-7th centuries B.C. Most likely Nadi-Ali in Seistan was such a centre of ancient Drangiana. In the middle of Nadi-Ali is a hill, 31 metres high, and on the hill-top are the remains of a structure resembling a palace. It was built in the 7th or the 6th century B.C. Found during the Nadi-Ali excavations were, apart from pottery, fragments of cop per and gold omaments. Possibly this was the residency of a local dahyupatt. The yashts make mention of the rulers’ dwellings, evidently the oldest palace-type buil dings. Monumental structures resting on high raw-brick platforms and dating from the first third of the Ist mil lennium B.C. (Tilla-Tepe) have. been discovered in left bank Bactria.

Available archaeological data indicate that certain chan ges had taken place in the culture of the North Afghanistan oases in the first 300-350 years of the 1st millennium B.C. The amount of artisan-made pottery decreased, and nearly half of all the clay ware consisted of coarse hand-moulded vessels, often decorated by a simple design. (Some of the cultural traditions, however, were preserved, notably in construction). The large number of bronze arrow-heads show that arms played a big role in the life of the ancient tribes. During this period iron began to be used, enabling the warriors and farmers to manufacture weapons and tools of unprecedented strength and durability. A similar culture had spread at the time also on the right bank of the Amu Darya (Kuchuk-Tepe), and in the lower reaches of the Murghab (complexes of the Jaz-Depe 1 type). The causes of the changes are not quite clear. Most probably they reflect the process of cultural assimilation which was linked with the adoption of languages and dialects of the East Iranian linguistic group by the population of Afghanistan and neighbouring countries. Early in the 1st millennium B.C., as the settled oases began to develop, the nomad tribes, who also spoke East-Iranian languages and descended from the Bronze Age steppe livestock breeders, began to merge. When the nomads mastered horse riding, they began to cover long distances. Mounted warriors became a power ful military force in the ancient world. Most known among those tribes were the Sakas, dwelling mainly in Northem Kirghizia and Southern Kazakhstan. However, some groups of nomads often lived close to oasis settlers. There is reason to believe that nomad tribes rather early came as far as the south of Afghanistan.

Economic development, accumulation of riches, the growing threat of war, and the continuing division of society into rich and poor served to promote the striving to establish large political amalgamations with stable centra lised leadership. The heroic epic tradition of the East Iranian tribes, partially preserved in the Avesta, sheds light on some aspects of that process. One of the yashts, entitled ‘Mihr-Yasht’’? and devoted to Mihr, or Mithra, an ancient Iranian god, makes mention of a dahyu pati of all dahyus, or the ruler of not merely one but of several oasis-countries.8 The very appearance of the term points to the tendency for political centralisation, for unification of several oases under one ruler. Some of those amalgamations were fairly large. It is said in the "Mihr-Yasht"’ that riding a fast horse, Mithra was the first to reach mountain tops from where he viewed the rich ‘‘Aryan’’ land, comprising Sogd, Margi ana, Areia, Khwarizm and the regions lying, evidently, in the mountains of Afghanistan. Historians have enough in formation to suggest that it was one of the quite ancient political amalgamations without fixed borders or stable power.

The heroic epic tradition of the family of Vishtaspa, a patron of Zoroaster, describes the dramatic events accom panying such amalgamations. Kavi Khusraw, a remote an cestor of Vishtaspa, had fought against Frangrasyan, the leader of the nomad tribes called the Turas in the Avesta. Initially Frangrasyan conquered the country of Kavi Khusraw who apparently ruled Drangiatia in South-Western Afghanistan. The nomad chief, however, lost a severe battle and was captured. Bound hand and foot, he was brought before Kavi Khusraw who then killed him "at Chaichasta, a deep lake with salt water’? (most probably the Aral Sea). Soviet historian I. M. Dyakonov maintains that the Aryan land described in the ‘Mihr-Yasht" was a confederation formed by the ruler of Drangiana. In any event, it was one of the temporary amalgamations that were formed under the rule of lucky kinglets and were based on military strength. However, the power of the kinglets was limited by a "council of superiors". The religious elite, a priestly caste, played a major role, too.

Whatever the case, the struggle for unifying the separate oases in the conditions of constant clashes, when the coun try was often attacked by nomads, became the chief pro gressive trend at that period. It was in that historical con text that Zoroaster emerged on the scene. Stylistical analy sis of his preachings, the Gathas, shows they had been written by one and the same person and reflect the author’s vivid personality, impetuous character, passion and intol erance. He was obviously a reformer.rejecting the previous beliefs and denouncing the priests behind them.

Zoroaster was fervently opposed to mendacious gods and their advocates, and also to the rulers under whom the "bad preachers’ functioned. In his religious views he gave priority to Ahura-Mazda (the wise deity). He also laid the foundations of the dualistic system dividing the world into the kingdom of good and truth (Arta) and the king dom of evil and falsehood (Drug). Thus Zoroaster put it in so many words: "I want to say about the two Spirits at the beginning of life, and of them the bright one told the evil one: ‘There is no accord between our views, teachings, will, convictions, words, deeds, our faith or our souls.’ The two primordial spirits appeared as twins, kind and evil

in thoughts, words and deeds. And when the two met, they first established life, on the one hand, and destruction of life, on the other."’ Man, theoretically at least, is free to choose between good or evil. Zoroaster himself never doubted his choice and was a champion of Arta. But beyond Zoroaster’s abstract notions and vague, though poetic, visions, one can discem quite real and earthly aspi rations. 0

The conditions in which this ideological phenomenon emerged and took shape, in particular the uncompromising dualism with eternal conflict between good and evil on a cosmic scale, are quite definite. Thus, Zoroaster mentions time and again, and in various combinations, livestock breeding and various domestic animals, most often oxen and cows. Speaking about livestock and animal breeding, the prophet showed great interest in their well-being and flourishing, in their being guarded against evil forces, against * large-scale slaughter at offerings and, most important, against rapaciousness and plunder. It is known that at a certain stage of social development, when social groups became distinctly divided and transformed into classes, the number of cattle owned was what determined one’s social standing. Cattle, as an easily alienable property, was the first to become the object of ownership, for cattle owner ship meant prosperity. It is noteworthy in this respect that the noble family, one of the first to back up Zoroaster’s teaching, was called Hvagva, originally meaning "having a good ox" or "good cattle". The name of one of the prophet’s followers, Frashaoshtra, means "having good camels", and that of another was Jamaspa, "leading ahorse"’. Even the pro phet’s name means "owner of yellow camel" or ‘"‘cameleer’’.

But Zoroaster was not in the least a passive advocate of protecting welfare and wealth, of which prosperous lives tock breeding was a symbol. He argued that society could be protected from misfortune and plunder and that prin ciples of truth and light on earth could be established by means of khshatra, the strong power of earthly rulers. In his 17 discourses that have survived this idea is mentioned 63 times. A good ruler, Zoroaster said, brings death and destruction to the camps of enemies and thus enthrones peace to joyful settlements. In this respect Zoroastriism was a doctrine to a great deal in accord with the historical situation of the time, providing ideological grounds for setting up large state amalgamations under "righteous kings". This, in turn, was one of the causes of the rapid spread of the new doctrine which served as an ideological platform for the nobility which opposed their own power to society. ; is

The founder of the doctrine himself was active in the political struggle for setting up stable state formations. Zoroastrian tradition maintains that Zoroaster appeared on the scene 258 years before Alexander the Great, but it is not clear whether it is the Seleucid era, which originated in 312 B.C., that is meant or some other period. The life and activities of the prophet can approximately be dated the 7th century B.C. The name of his mother was Dugh dova ("milking cows’) and his father’s name was Puru sh spa ("one who owns grey or spotted horses’’). At the age of about thirty Zoroaster began to preach a new doctrine but was: no success in his country. The opposition was especially vigorous on the part of traditional priests and Zoroaster was fOrced to flee his homeland. He found re cognition, however, at the court of ruler Vishtaspa. The new doctrine was supported by many from among the nobility, including the -ruler’s chief adviser Jamaspa. With this strong support Zoroaster angrily exposed other rulers who heeded the voices of "false prophets’. Zoroaster is believed to have achieved that success at the age of forty two. But Vishtaspa’s struggle for creating a large domain was hard indeed and he ultimately lost. His main adversary Arjataspa, chief of the Hiauna tribe, conquered Vishtaspa’s kingdom. As for Zoroaster, he was killed at the age of seventy-seven by a nomad from the Tura tribe.

But this is only an instance of the military and political struggle for creating bigger state formations. Judging by what we know, most successful were the rulers of Bactria, where rich and prospering oases had taken shape by the 2nd millennium B.C. In the Avesta Bactria is described as "a wonderful land with banners raised high’’, which obvi ously implies valour. !

According to stable tradition of ancient historiography, traced back to Ctesias of Cnidus, ancient Bactria was a strong political amalgamation. This tradition has it that Bactria was a large kingdom with a number of cities. Then it w s attacked by Assyrian troops led by king Ninus and queen Semiramis. As the capital Bactra (now Bala-Hissar near Mazar-i-Sharif) was well fortified (apart from fortifi cation walls there was a citadel), it was conquered only by a ruse. After the fall of the capital the attackers seized a large amount of gold and silver. Much of this story resem bles a legend. Semiramis was the actual ruler of Assyria since 810 B.C. At the time of her rule her troops sometimes penetrated far into the East, though obviously no further than the central regions of Iran. Possibly in a record of events ancient authors proceeded from both recollections about these long expeditions to the East by Assyrian troops and from the tradition which held that there existed a fairly strong political amalgamation in pre-Achaemenian Bactria. One thing is certain, however: in the 8th and 7th centuries B.C. urban-type settlements with strong citadels existed in Afghanistan and in the south of Central Asia. It is indicative that after the defeat of Media, the Achaeminian king Cyrus regarded Bactria a major rival, along with Babylon, Egypt and the Saka nomads. Some Graeco-Roman authors mista kenly named Zoroaster as king of Bactria during the Bactri an-Assyrian war: the ancient world knew Zoroaster as an outstanding personality who lived far away in the East. Perhaps Bactria and neighbouring areas were being drawn increasingly into the orbit of the political history of the ancient Orient.

Late in the 7th century B.C, Media, which had inflicted a crushing defeat on Assyria, became the leading power in Westem Asia. At some point Media’s influence must have extended also to the southem regions of Afghanistan. But Media’s domination in the Orient was shortlived and its place was soon taken by the Persian Achaemenian empire. In 550 B.C., Cyrus, the founder of the new dynasty, cap tured the last Median king and seized Ecbatana, the capital of Media. The new state began to flourish and expanded enormously, having incorporated Areia, Bactria, Dran giana, Arachosia and Gandhara. These areas had most likely been conquered by Cyrus during his eastem campaign be tween 539 and 530 B.C. Some details of those events were recorded in ancient sources and it is known, for instance, that the Persians had entered into an alliance with the tribe of Ariaspa that lived in Drangiana. For their noble be haviour they were called Evergets (noble). According to another ancient source, Cyrus was assisted in his eastem campaigns by the Sakas of King Amorg, particularly in combats against the tribe of Derbiks supported by Indian detachments with combat elephants.

The stories about the Evergets and the Derbiks obviously describe one and the same event, when during the struggle against the tribes of Eastem Iran and Southern Afghanistan Cyrus managed to win over to his side a group of tribes. No details are known about how Cyrus conquered Bactria. But it is known that the first battles were not decisive and that only later the Bactrians voluntarily submitted them selves to the founder of the Achaemenian state. Any resist ance was ruthlessly suppressed. Thus, Cyrus destroyed Kapisa (located in the vicinity of present-day Bahram). In the conquered countries he set up satrapies headed by Persian vicegerents who had armed forces and an administra tive apparatus for collecting taxes. But not all of Cyrus’ eastern campaigns were successful. In August 530 B.C. the Persian army was routed in a clash with nomads and Cyrus himself killed. According to some sources, in that battle Cyrus was opposed by the Massagets. Other sources name the Derbiks, and still others assert they were the Dais or Dachs. However we do know that they were nomads from Central Asia. The Persian army was most likely defeated between the rivers Amu Darya and Syr Darya.

After the death of Cyrus his son Cambyses succeeded him as "king of kings’ ae the Achaemenian empire (530-522 B.C.). He set out to conquer Egypt, which his father had failed to do. During the last year of Cambyses’ rule the Achaemenian state was hit hard by a severe socio-political crisis. Behind the dynastic struggle going on at the time one can easily discem the intemal contradictions tearing apart the empire Cyrus had built. The empire comprised many countries and peoples which had once been independent and would not reconcile themselves to their subordinate position. The Persian and Median tribes enjoyed a privileged position in the Achaemenian empire, with property and social differentiation growing more distinct; the nobility was getting richer while ordinary community members found themselves ever deeper in bondage. Similar processes of class differentiation were also going on in the eastern satrapies of the Achaemenians, where the local nobility in some cases took the side of the conquerors and turned against their own people.

Mass movements were triggered off by a dynastic coup. In a bid to secure for himself one-man rule, Cambyses secretly murdered his brother Bardiya. As Cambyses was away on an expedition to Egypt, one of the priests (a magus), Gaumata by name, taking advantage of the fact that the murder was secret, declared himself Cyrus’ son and seized power in Persia. Cambyses hurried back home but died on the way from a wound received under unknown circumstances. Gaumata assumed the title of "king of kings" and the vast empire was now completely in his hands. But the disturbances that had started under Cam byses were mounting. To remain in power, pseudo-Bardiya suspended for three years both tax payment and supply of troops to the Persian army from the conquered countries. Soon after, a plot was hatched among the Persian aristo cracy against Guamata and he was killed. Darius I (522 486 B.C.), of the younger Achaemenian line, became "king of kings’. The new coup worsened the political situation still more and Darius I had to promptly suppress insurrec tions in many parts of his empire, including the eastern satrapies.

Opposition swelled most in Margiana where the insurg ents chose Frada, a Margian, as leader. Dadarshish, a Bac trian satrap, was sent to quell the uprising and the Margians suffered a heavy defeat in a battle on December 10, 522 B.C. It was reported that 55,000 insurgents were killed and 6,500 were taken prisoner. V. V. Struve has contended that the Margian insurrection can be interpreted as a broad popular movement that was particularly dangerous to the social foundations of the Achaemenian empire. He argued that this accounted for the speed and severity of its sup pression.11

Another uprising that was no less dangerous to Darius swept across Persida and some other regions. It was led by Vahyazdata, who announced himself to be Bardiya, a son of Cyrus. He was supported by the whole of Persida. Ac cording to an official version, the rebels were defeated in the very first battle at Kapishkanish fortress (supposedly identified with Kapisa) on December 29, 522 B.C. But the movement was not put down, and the insurgents mustered forces once again, which shows that they had support among the local population. They were utterly defeated in the second battle on February 21, 521 B.C., at Gandutava. There are all grounds to see these insurrec tions as a result of increased class differentiation which evoked protest on the part of the ever more deprived ordinary members of the community.12

Having won in the intensive struggle, Darius I conducted certain reforms and altered the state administrative system, instituting secret surveillance over the satraps. The roads were improved; and so was money circulation. ;

¢-However, the tendency to isolate some of the satrapies, particularly those most developed economically and politic ally, remained. Indicative in this respect was the role of Bactria, whose satraps were usually appointed from among the ruling dynasty. The satraps tended to use their rule in order to make higher political claims. Thus, at the start of his rule Xerxes (486-465 B.C.) was opposed by his brother Aryamen, who headed a Bactrian satrapy. Later, still under Xerxes, another Bactrian satrap, Masista, who enjoyed broad support among Bactrians and Sakas, rose in rebellion. Under Artaxerxes I (465-423 B.C.) his brother Hystaspes, ruler of Bactria, claimed the throne, and that sparked off a protracted internecine war in which the Bactrians fought vigorously on the side of the claimant. During this period the Achaemenian state was on the decline, which was largely due to the unsuccessful Greek campaigns, incessant palace coups and the weakening of the Persian army in which the number of mercenaries was increasing.

Meanwhile the remote satrapies were growing more in dependent, some becoming individual states. In the East, for instance, Khwarizm broke away and a number of Indian lands, annexed under DariusI, became independent. Besus, the last Achaemenian satrap of Bactria, did not limit his domain to Bactria alone. Sogdians and Indians (evident ly the inhabitants of Westem Gandhara) were subordinate to him (at least they supplied troops for his army), while the Saka tribes were his ‘‘allies’"’. This vast domain, which would later become the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, could not fail to influence the political ambitions of Besus, who tried to form an independent state when the Achaemenian empire was defeated by Alexander the Great.

The lists of the regions taxed by the Achaemenian state and records of events in the 6th and 5th centuries B.C, mention the names of various tribes and peoples, thus be coming a valuable palaeo-ethnographic source. Among the multi-lingual population of the Achaemenian empire men tion is also made of the Paktyes who lived somewhere in the eastern satrapies. Some historians believed that Paktye was a version of a name assumed by the Afghan tribes, now known as the Pashtuns or the Pakhtuns.!3 Records by Greek authors make it possible to approximately outline the territory where the Paktyes lived. Within this territory was the city of Caspatura, or Caspapura, from which a flo tilla of Darius I set out down the Indus to explore the new territories of his domain.

There is also evidence that the lands of the Paktyes bordered on the territory populated by the "Scythians’’, that is, a group of nomad tribes ancient authors often called by the name of the nomads better known to them. More likely they were the Sakas from the Pamirs, where their burials have been discovered, or the Sakas who also lived in mountain valleys and on mountain plateaus but some what more southerly. Rivers in the area inhabited by the Paktyes were navigable and, possibly, their lands were in the mountains north of the Kabul River.!4 But there is no linguistic evidence of a merger between the Paktyes and the Pashtuns.

The toponymy of Bactria, Arachosia, Drangiana and other regions, now fully or partially incorporated in Afgha nistan, has shown that the population living in those areas in the middle of the 1st millennium B.C. spoke mainly the dialects of the East-Iranian group of languages. One of the numerous indications of this is the element aspa (horse) in the names of tribes and peoples: Zariaspa, a nickname of the Bactra, and also Ariaspas, Aspasians, etc. It was these ancient East-Iranian tribes that made up the basis on which the Iranian-speaking peoples populating present-day Afgha nistan were developing. There exist definite links between the Bactrian and modern Afghan languages. A considerable role in the development of the Afghan languages was also played by the Saka languages. The people who spoke them had moved far to the south at a rather early period and their ranks were replenished by inflows of nomad tribes. Obviously the interaction between the settled population of Arachosia and Drangiana, who spoke East-Iranian dialects, and the nomads of the Saka group marked an important phase in the ethnic evolution of the ancestors of the Afghan people. However that was along and complex process.

Though in the period between the 6th and 4th centuries B.C. there were numerous uprisings and disturbances, for Bactria and neighbouring areas it was, on the whole, a time of certain stabilisation. The relative peace, Zoroaster had called for in his preachings, came to the "joyful settle ments’. There was definite progress in the economy, pri marily in irrigated farming and in the handicrafts, The Achaemenian government built irrigation installations, though it laid additional taxes on the community members using the water. There also existed a kyariz system in which water-collecting galleries gradually brought subterranean waters up to the surface. Encouraging irrigated farming, the Achaemenians exempted from taxation, for a certain period, each person who built a kyariz. Quite probably, the first kyarizes in Afghanistan, known to be in a number of regions in the country, in particular in Farakh-Girishk, date back to the middle of the 1st millennium B.C.’

The population was gradually concentrating in urban type settlements, which were becoming major centres of economic and cultural development. The ruins of the Bac trian capital studied by archaeologists occupy an area of 120 hectares, not counting the suburbs. Many cities had a fortified citadel, apart from fortress walls. Thus, Altyn Dilyar-Tepe, a major centre of that oasis, was circular in shape with a rectangular citadel in the centre. Towns were the seat of handicrafts, exchange of goods, and trade. In dian sources have made it possible to draw up a long list of the trade items of the time: woollen blankets; various iron tools, including sickles, spades, ploughshares; pottery; gold and silver adomments; boats, carts and chariots—all mostly made by craftsmen. As for farming, there are many signs that it was little affected by commodity relations: from among the farming products various wines, including a wine variety from Kapisa, were for sale. There was a growth of international trade, which was patronised by the Achae menian government, and there existed a trade route from Asia Minor to Bactria and further on to India.

The development of money circulation reflected the pro gress of commodity relations and showed that at the time the limits of the natural economy were overgrown. Sources mention taxes levied in various satrapies, with Bactria paying 360 talents annually (one talent equalling about 30 kilograms of silver), It was most probably a monetary equivalent of various natural deliveries, but it cannot be ruled out that taxes were paid in part with money. In the territory of Bactria, Gandhara and Arachosia coins of Achaemenian mintage—gold dariks (8.4 grams) and silver sikles (5.5 grams) are found comparatively rarely. More widespread were the coins issued by various Greek towns, above all, Athens. Local coins were also minted in Gand hara, in the shape of elongated or square silver bars with various imprints. A large treasure-trove of silver coins was found in Kabul, but only a small part of it was stored in a museum.!5 Apart from Achaemenian, Greek and Gand haran coins, it contained 29 peculiar coins resembling Greek ones in mintage and Gandharan ones by the impressions on some of the coins picturing a bird, coupled rams, the head of an elephant and a hyena (?). It is believed that the coins were minted in Kapisa or even in Bactria itself.16

It may be concluded, on the whole, that during the polit ical rule of the Achaemenians, whose domains also included the lands of present-day Afghanistan, the development of class relations completed in that society. On the one hand, the local aristocracy, which represented the power of the central government in the provinces, strengthened their privileged position and, on the other, stratification of the community and enslavement of its rank-and-file members increased giving rise to large-scale popular movements in Margiana and Arachosia. The members of the Achaemenian dynasty and Achaemenian noblemen had in their personal possession vast lands and all kinds of workshops with slaves and the poorest members of the community, who lived as slaves, working there.17 The slave-owning elite of the eastern satrapies sought to follow the way of life of the Achaemenian capitals. This explains why palace-type buildings of this period were discovered in Drangiana and Bactria.18

The middle of the ist millennium B.C. saw the further flourishing of culture and the arts. Works of art not only of Mesopotamia but also of the Greek part of Asia Minor were already known in the region, which may be judged by the artifacts of the so-called Amu Darya treasure-trove chanced upon in the 19th century in Northem Bactria.!9 Quite a few articles had obviously been brought from other parts. Some were samples of the court art of Achaemenian Iran and even of Hellenic art. Others, in particular those picturing animals in swiff movement, resemble the art of nomad tribes, the so-called Scytho-Siberian animalistic style. There were also pieces of local Bactrian art. It is thought that it was in Bactria that the local version of Achaemenian glyptics—golden rings with various represen tations resembling the gems of Asia Minor though differing from them in certain respects—had taken shape.2°,

Major economic and cultural achievements largely stimu lated separatist tendencies in the eastern satrapies which sought political independence. The local elite was not inclined to endlessly share with the Achaemenian dynasty the profits gained by the exploitation of their tribesmen. Their aspirations were realised only later, when the Achae menian empire, hit by an internal crisis, fell under the onslaught of the armies led by Alexander the Great.

The Flowering of Ancient Civilisations

The Graeco-Macedonian army dealt a finishing blow at the decrepit Achaemenian empire. The struggle between Greece and Achaemenian Iran, which had begun under Darius I, ended in a complete rout of the Persians. The last battle was fought on October 1, 331 B.C., at Gaugamela in Mesopotamia. The persons close to DariusIII, the last of the Achaemenians, contrived a plot led by Besus, a satrap of Bactria, and killed their ruler. Besus immediately pro claimed himself "king of Asia". Apart from Bactria, his power extended to Areia and Drangiana. He tried to es tablish his influence in Parthia, too, but Alexander, who considered himself the natural heir to the Achaemenians, did not wish to inherit a diminished country and in 330 B.C. moved his armies to Areia. There he was initially re ceived with honours by the local satrap Satibarzanes, but as soon as the main forces of Alexander marched further south, Satibarzanes fomented an uprising and destroyed the Graeco-Macedonian garrison left in the town of Arta coana, the capital of Areia. Alexander retumed and dealt ruthlessly with the rebels, some of whom were killed and others made slaves.

In Drangiana Alexander’s troops met with no significant resistance. Its satrap Barsaentes fled to a nearby region, but was betrayed and killed. While in Drangiana’s capital, Alexander was faced with a conspiracy in his own retinue: not all shared his Oriental policy. Alexander executed several army commanders, including Philotes, one of his closest friends. Soon his troops advanced further to the east and quite easily conquered Arachosia, after which they headed north, towards Bactria. Besus could neither stop the enemy at the distant approaches nor prepare a strong and efficient army. Employing passive tactics he ravaged the regions lying on the way of the enemy. This, however, did not stop the great Macedonian. In a swift march his troops crossed the Hindu Kush and reached the Bactrian plain. Besus fled beyond the Amu Darya and burt the ships he had used for crossing the river. But the fate of the ill-starred "king of Asia’? was as sad as that of Darius III whom he had betrayed: his own men gave him up to Ale xander. After a long absence, during which the Graeco Macedonians had to fight the freedom-loving Sogdians in Central Asia, they returmmed to Bactria for a winter stay in 329-328 B.C. There they encountered a new wave of anti Macedonian rebellion and in the process of quelling it several cities were destroyed. Pursuing a policy of winning over the local population, Alexander set to forming detach ments of Bactrian and Sogdian horsemen. An impressive feature of that policy was his marrying Roxane, a daughter of Oxyartes, an eminent Bactrian, next winter. Though the ancient sources are unanimous in extolling the beauty of Roxane (her name in Bactrian means "radiant"), it was for the most part a political move. In 327 B.C. the army, rein forced with local contingents, moved from Bactria to the south, across the Hindu Kush, and reached the vicinity of Kabul, conquering the local tribes of the Aspasis, Gureys and Assacenians en route. In a battle for one of the cities Alexander was wounded and the city was totally destroyed and its population exterminated. Roxane’s father, Oxyartes, was appointed ruler of the mountainous Paropamisus area. After his not very successful campaign to the Indus valley, Alexander returned to Babylon where he died in 323 B.C. at the age of thirty-three.

The Graeco-Macedonian conquest of the Achaemenian empire was of immense significance. To a great extent it was the victory of more developed forms of the slave-own ing economy over backward ones. The political organisa tion of the Achaemenian empire no longer conformed to the interests of the ruling class of the countries it com prised, which aspired towards the continued development of the slave-owning economy, particularly of trade and large-scale commodity circulation, and correspondingly; towards an extensive town construction policy.2! A new state was emerging on the ruins of the empire.

Alexander and the men close to him perceived the motley make-up of the new monarchy they were creating and attempted to smooth it over by drawing the Oriental no bility into running the country, and even encouraged mixed marriages. Many new towns and settlements were built during this period. A town named Alexandria was built in almost every satrapy.?2 Thus, in the territory of Afgha nistan Alexandrias were built in Areia, Drangiana and Ara chosia (evidently in the vicinity of Ghazni); there was also a Caucasian Alexandria at the foothills of the Hindu Kush (most likely in the vicinity of Charikara) and Alexandropol also in Arachosia (obviously in the vicinity of Qandahar). Simultaneously, there was a fresh growth of trade: the Macedonian phalanxes were followed by Greek and Phoe nician merchants. Enslavement of the population of the cities that offered resistance could not but strengthen the slave-owning system. However, for the population of the eastern satrapies of the Achaemenians the conquests by Alexander the Great merely meant a change of foreign conquerors. Destruction of cities and the killing of their inhabitants kindled the struggle for political independence which, in fact, had got underway in the Achaemenian period. |

After the death of Alexander the Great the forces rending to pieces the new world power, that was being formed, came into the open: uprisings flared up in the conquered countries, the Graeco-Macedonian garrisons insisted on coming back home, and the fellow-fighters of the great

Macedonian were engaged in a severe internecine struggle.

After a swift succession of battles, conquests, collusions and assassinations, the outlines of large new states were beginning to take shape. One of them was ruled by Alexan der’s military commander Seleucus who, with a thousand warriors, captured Babylon in 312 B.C. and eventually created a state extending from the Mediterranean Sea to India. Bactria was annexed to the new state in 306 or 305 B.C., after which Seleucus moved south where he engaged in battles with Chandragupta, founder of the powerful Indian empire of the Mauryas. Seleucus was evidently not very successful in those battles and, having concluded "friendship and a conjugal union", he was content with 500 combat elephants, ceding in return a number of regions of the Graeco-Macedonian domain, in particular Arachosia. This is confirmed by the fact that an inscription of one of the heirs of Chandragupta, Ashoka (273-236 B.C.), was recently found in this region.

In the vast state of the Seleucids local traditions were being revived in various areas of political and cultural life. The new state attempted to win over the upper crust in the conquered lands by promoting the development of local . culture. Cuneiform literature was flourishing in Babylon and local temples were being restored. The Seleucids pursued the very same policy in the East, where since 293 _ B.C. official co-ruler of Seleucus was his son Antiochus. He

took up residence in Bactra. Antiochus launched several military campaigns. He also built new towns and reinforced the old ones, in particular Artacoana, the capital of Areia. During his rule silver coins were issued at Greek face-value . featuring, on the reverse side, Athene in a chariot drawn by two or four elephants. The coins were made according to local weight standards, evidently with the purpose of winning over to.the government’s side the local elite con nected with trade. When Seleucus died, his son Antio chus became the king of the empire (280-262 B.C.). The Seleucids were paying increasing attention to the West as they engaged in a protracted war against Ptolemaic Egypt for the Eastern Mediterranean. At one time Bactria supplied the central government with combat elephants, but soon even these feeble ties were disrupted.

About 250 B.C. the Bactrian satrap Diodotus broke away from the Seleucids and proclaimed himself king. The new state (it came to be known among historians as the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom) comprised, apart from Bactria proper, Areia and, evidently, Sogd and Margiana. Initially the Seleucid coins minted in Bactria portrayed a Bactrian vicegerent and not the head of the dynasty, and then the official portrait went together with an official inscription: **King Diodotus". Simultaneously, Parthia, too, broke away and became an independent state. Diodotus tried to extend his power to Parthia as well, but failed. The successor to Diodotus was his son, also called Diodotus. But the new dynasty did not last long. In c. 230 B.C. Diodotus II was dethroned and his lineage was exterminated by Euthyde mus. Euthydemus’ coins are particularly numerous among the finds on the sites of ancient settlements and in museum collections, which suggests that his rule was long and rela tively stable. Under Euthydemus the state had to hold out against the onslaught of the Seleucids.

Antiochus III, the last outstanding king of that dynasty, made a desperate attempt to restore the former might of the state. His eastern campaign was a major effort to this end. In a battle with the Parthians he emerged victorious and made them recognise Seleucid sovereignty. In 208 B.C. he approached the borders of Bactria. The severe battle near Herat, close to the border, was followed by a two-year siege of Bactra. Protracted negotiations ensued with Antio chus III represented by Telei. A vivid account of the argu ments put forth by Euthydemus during the negotiations, evidently in response to accusations of betraying the Se leucids, has been preserved. It was not he, Euthydemus continued, who rose against the king first. On the con trary, he acquired power over Bactria by annihilating the offspring of several other traitors. Euthydemus spoke thus at length and in the end he asked Telei to do him a favour and act as peace mediator and convince Antiochus to leave him his royal name and dignity; and if Antiochus would not do as he bid, their position would not be secure. On the border, he said, there stood hordes of nomads threatening both of them, and should the barbarians cross the border, the country would most likely be conquered by them.

The siege of Bactra, which lingered on, did not leave Antiochus III any alternative, and he signed a peace treaty, after which the royal position of Euthydemus was recog nised, and his son Demetrius married a Seleucid princess. The agreed amount of food and combat elephants were handed over to Antiochus III, after which he tumed south, to India. Thus, the achievements of Antiochus III were not so great: both Parthia and Graeco-Bactria retained their independence and soon began to increase in strength.

Graeco-Bactria focussed all attention on the south where beyond the Hindu Kush mountains there lay the gradually weakening Mauryan empire. After Antiochus III was defeat ed at Magnesia by Roman legions, the treaties concluded by him in the East became still more unreliable. At that time Demetrius, the son of Euthydemus, set out on his campaign to India. He captured Arachosia, where he founded the towns of Demetria and Gandhara. Demetrius issued coins in two languages, with a Greek text on the front side and an Indian inscription (in the Kharoshthi script) on the reverse, which suggests that an Indic-language population existed among his subjects. Proud of his victo ries, Demetrius assumed the title of "invincible king". On the coins he was portrayed in a combat helmet shaped as an elephant’s head.

But the extension of borders did not mean that Graeco Bactria was politically stable. While Demetrius was away in India, Eucratides seized power in Bactria. He was evidently an energetic and ambitious military commander. His coins are fairly numerous; some bear Greek inscriptions and others are bilingual, indicating that his power had spread rather far to the south. Eucratides waged a fierce struggle against Demetrius and held out against the onslaught of the Parthians to whom he nevertheless was compelled to make territorial concessions. His activities, vigorous as they were, did not bring tranquillity to his country. Returning from a campaign, he was killed by his own son whom he had appointed co-ruler. Judging by the coins, the son was Heliocles. According to ancient authors, he rode a chariot over his father’s blood and ordered that his dead body be left unburied. He then assumed the title of "‘fair king".

Political stability was inconceivable in such conditions. There are indeed coins of at least 20 rulers. Numismatists call them Graeco-Bactrian if they bear only Greek inscriptions, and Graeco-Indian if the inscriptions are in two languages. Many of the rulers, invariably calling themselves kings, were most probably lucky generals or political adventurers whose power was shortlived. And, correspond ingly, their coins were few. Among such Graeco-Bactrian rulers were, probably, Antimachus I and Plato.

The coins of the Graeco-Indian rulers Antialcidas, Anti machus IJ, Apollodotus and Menander are more numerous. A great number of them were found in Arachosia which, evidently, was part of their domains. It is known, for in stance, that Menander was born in a settlement not far from Caucasian Alexandria. He proved to be a far-sighted politician. Having united a considerably large territory under his rule, including the lower reaches of the Indus, Menander relied not only on the Graeco-Bactrian armed forces, but also on some sections of the local population. It was most likely for this motive that he adopted Bud dhism. Still, the contradictions between the Graeco-Mace donian elite and the local population remained a source of internal weakness for Graeco-Bactria. The Graeco-Bac trian rulers also failed to build a‘stable state system that would ensure internal stability. The mounting pressure from the nomads, unable to be contained by the united and powerful armed forces, brought about the inevitable: between 140 and 130 B.C. Heliocles was deposed and Graeco-Bactria was conquered by nomads. They were initially stationed mostly on the right bank of the Amu Darya where numerous burial mounds have been excavat ed, though there is evidence that they are to be found in Southern Bactria too.

The Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, which existed only slightly more than 100 years, left a bright trace in the his tory of Bactria and a number of neighbouring countries. That was a period of the further flourishing of urban life and the spread of money circulation, which had begun under the Seleucids. Ancient sources mention a number of cities built under Graeco-Bactrian rulers and bearing their names. The population of the cities often consisted of colonists from Hellas as well as of Hellenised population of the East Mediterranean countries. There was a rapid process of cultural assimilation of the local population, its upper stratum at any rate, so effectively inaugurated by the marriage of Alexander and Roxane. Greek culture and the Greek language played an immense role. Ashoka in his inscription for the people of Arachosia used two languages: Aramaic, the language of the Achaemenian officialdom, and Greek, which had been introduced by Alexander and the Seleucids.

French archaeologists have unearthed the ruins of a city which had been populated by Graeco-Macedonian colonists on the bank of the Amu Darya, at the place where the Qonduz River runs into the Amu Darya.44 The ruins of the city are now called Ai-khanum, but in ancient times the city was obviously called Alexandria-Oxiana (after the Oxus, the ancient name of the Amu Darya). With steep precipices on three sides, the city was a veritable fortress. Its Hellenic character is beyond doubt. The city had a centre for the physical and intellectual training of young people. Archaeologists have discovered inscriptions devoted. to Hermes and Heracles. A man named Kineas, buried in a special tomb, was believed to be the founder of the city. The tomb (temenos of Kineas) was rebuilt times and again, and later some other people, possibly high-ranking officials, were buried near the sarcophagus of the city founder.

The main part of the city was the administrative centre. Found during excavations was a peristyle courtyard, 137 by 108 metres, and four porticos having 116 stone columns with capitals, in a style closely resembling the Corinthian order. Nearby stood a "southern ensemble" which most likely was the ruler’s residency. In one of its main halls at least 15 statues, 1 to 1.5 metres tall, were mounted in the recesses along the walls. In another hall there stood a sculptural group with the statues two or three times larger than life size. The administrative centre also had an 18 column hall built in the traditions of Achaemenian palace architecture. The main street ended with a temple in which stood a huge statute of a male god, most likely Zeus. The Greek features of that culture are all too obvious: the Greek architectural decor, Greek inscriptions, including copies of Delphic aphorisms, typical Greek sculptures and household articles, a bronze figure of Heracles, and a relief with scenes from the Ikad. The thick raw-brick fortress walls, however, were built in the tradition of local monumental architecture. Though the vast peristyle courtyard of the administrative centre is of the Rhodes style, peristyle courtyards as such, though with a different architectural decor, were built in Achaemenian Bactria (Altyn-10).

Apart from marble sculptures, archaeologists also discov ered in Ai-khanum plaster and clay figures, with parts of the figures often made of various materials. Some scholars believe that clay sculpture was not a Greek but a purely Oriental phenomenon. The fusion of the traditions of local Bactrian civilisation and Hellenic culture was typical of the Seleucid and Graeco-Bactrian periods. The coins of Graeco Bactrian kings are remarkable samples of the medallion portraits of the time.

The decline of the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom marked the beginning of a new period in the history of Bactria and neighbouring countries. It was the time when numerous nomad tribes appeared in Bactria; Arachosia, Drangiana and Gandhara. Their leaders not only became owners of the agricultural oases but carried on the political traditions of Graeco-Bactrian and Graeco-Indian rulers. It is safe to say that interaction of the nomad tribes, specifically those of Saka descent, with the settled population of the oases played a significant role in the Evolution of the peoples of Afghanistan. These complex issues doubtlessly deserve closer study.

Ancient sources suggest that the decline of Graeco-Bac tria was closely linked with the invasion of Parthia by nomads, called loosely Scythians. Parthian king Phraates II tried to use the nomad tribes in military open but, when he failed to keep his promises, they killed him in 128 B.C. His heir, Artabanus I, attempted to take over the initia tive in the struggle against the nomad tribes by a retalia tory blow, but was defeated and in 124 B.C. killed in com bat. It was Artabanus’ son, Mithridates II (124-97 B.C.), who built up Parthian might and eliminated the danger the country was facing.

Ancient authors mention the Asii, Paisani, Tochari and Sacarauli as tribes that overthrew the Greek rule in Bactria. Presently attempts are underway to compare the tribal groups listed in various sources. But in general, it may be concluded that the large-scale migration of nomads had affected most different groups of tribes, basically those speaking East-Iranian languages. The dominating role was played by the Yiteh-chi—this tribal group occupied the ter ritory of Bactria. The Sacas penetrated the regions lying further south: Drangiana, Arachosia and Gandhara. The greater part of Drangiana, which had been occupied by the nomads, was now called Sacastene, which was transformed into what is today known as Seistan.

Initially nomad incursions were accompanied by fire and destruction. Clear evidence of this is offered by the Ai-kha num excavations: the greater part of the administrative centre had been burnt down. The city dwellers used the stone slabs of the neglected ruins as construction material, disassembling the exquisite colonnade. On the ruins of the penny honoured tomb of the city founder ordinary

ouses were built. But that period obviously did not last long and was soon followed by a degree of stability. The rulers of the invading nomads soon understood that it was far better for them to get good profit out of rich cities rather than to burn and destroy them. So, in some of the conquered regions new city centres were built, the existing ones were developed, canals dug and agricultural oases created.25 To maintain money circulation, coins were issued, minted in the manner of those used by the last Graeco-Bactrian kings. Most widespread in Northern Bactria were large bronze coins resembling the tetradrachmas of Heliocles. The gradually distorted portrait of Heliocles was replaced by that of a local ruler, most likely a Ytieh-chi, and on the reverse side the representation of Zeus was replaced by that of the true companion of the nomads— the horse.

The general situation that obtained in Bactria and in the neighbouring countries is well characterised by the graves of the Yiieh-chi nobility, discovered by a Soviet-Afghan archaeological expedition in Tilla-Tepe in Northern Afghan istan.26 The graves were very simple: a wooden coffin on short legs was placed in a rectangular hole 1.5-2 metres deep and covered by a counterpane decorated with golden and silver plates. There were no burial mounds or complex archi tectural structures in the manner of the Kineas mausoleum. However, the deceased, placed in narrow coffins, were clad in extremely rich clothes embroidered with gold decorations in truly barbarian splendour. Stamped and cast golden buckles, plates and dagger scabbards were ingeniously and lavishly decorated with inlaid pearls, turquoise and lapis lazuli. In some cases there were three layers of clothes, each decorated in a different style. The burials are dated to around the Ist century B.C. and the first half of the 1st century A.D., i.e., the time of the Ytieh-chi rule in Bactria.

The discovered artifacts reflect several cultural traditions of that time. Thus, the scenes of the torment of animals locked in close fighting, animals full of tense expression, and winged dragons—all this can be traced to the art of Asian nomad tribes and resembles the Sarmatian style. Numerous multi-coloured inlays are also evidence of this. Another group of scenes represents the purely antique line: a warrior clad in armour, Macedonian style, women bestrid ing a lion, or S.lenus with a rhyton in hand. Many of the representations are complex and have not yet been duly interpreted; possibly they show local, Bactrian images with a Hellenistic and Indian impact. Such, for instance, are the exquisite pendants featuring a king with two dragons on both sides. But in this splendour, that has joined various elements, one finds no stylistic discord, no eclecticism. It was the early stage of cultural integration which later pro duced the remarkable culture of the Kushan period. There began a new and perhaps most impressive period when the ancient civilisations of Afghanistan and neighbouring coun tries flourished.

The developments of that time in the south of Afghanis tan and in contiguous regions have been less studied, but the general picture 1s the same: the nomads gradually began to accept local state traditions. Simultaneously, the region was undergoing an intensive process of cultural integration.

The historical situation varied from area to area: Graeco Indian traditions were clearly followed in the South-East, in Drangiana and Gandhara; while in the South-West, partic ularly in Sacastene, Parthian influence was strong and ultimately extended to Drangiana and Gandhara, though to a somewhat lesser extent. The nomad tribes that entered those regions did not initially create any sound political formation, as they had done in Bactria. A series of Parthian coins with the ruler’s head in a helmet embossed on them are most likely from that period. The embossment was done in such a way as to leave the head of the Parthian king on the obverse untouched. These coins are supposed to have been minted in Areia or Sacastene (formally a part of the Parthian empire, Sacastene enjoyed relative independence). It is significant in this context that Sigal, an urban centre of that region, was called the "royal city of the Sacas".

Inthe first half of the 1st century B.C. the Saca tribes appeared in Kashmir and Gandhara (together with the Yiieh-chi tribes that invaded Bactria). A leader of the Sacas (Shacas according to Indian tradition) soon founded an independent domain and issued a coin on his own behalf. On the coin he is called Maues (Moga in Indian inscriptions), both equally resembling the Sacan name Mavak. Initially Maues modestly called himself a king but later assumed the more pretentious title of "great king of kings". His coins were minted basically in the fashion of those issued by Graeco-Indian rulers. Later individual symbols appeared: first the representation of a horse on the reverse side, just as in the North Bactrian imitations of Heliocles’ tetradrach mas, and then the ruler on horseback with spear in hand. That representation, typical for rulers of nomad pe was later used also by other Indo-Sacan kings. Judging by the great variety of Maues’ coins, the founder of the Indo Sacan state ruled for quite a long time. Based on this obser vation (and coins have been our only source so far), one can conclude that the state had flourished under Azes, Maues’ heir, who ruled in the latter half of the Ist century B.C. A vast number of his coins—nearly 1,500 pieces—have been found in Taxila, the capital of Gandhara, and about 4,000 pieces have been discovered at the bottom of the sac red lake in Mir-Zahak, Drangiana. Portrayed on the obverse of these coins is the king himself astride a horse andin heavy armour, holding a spear or a combat axe. At the time the lands of the Indo-Sacas were enlarged somewhat at the expense of Arachosia and perhaps even Eastem Sacastene. Evidently during the life-time of Azes Azilises was appointed co-ruler. Azilises later became an independent king and, though he preserved the pretentious title "king of kings", the number of his coins is small. Perhaps the Indo-Sacan state was on the decline. Its last ruler was Azes II. The Greek inscription on his coins is roughly made and often distorted.

The westward expansion of the Indo-Sacan rulers com pelled the Parthian rulers of Sacastene to respond to the challenge. As a result, the Indo-Sacan dynasty of Maues had to hand over Gandhara and Drangiana to members of anoth er dynasty possibly related to the Parthian Arshakids. The


first representative of the new dynasty was Gondophares, who issued two groups of coins. Some fully corresponded both as to weight and type to the Parthian traditions and were possibly meant for Drangiana. Others, which were Indo-Sacan in type and bore an Indian inscription on the reverse, were clearly minted for Gandhara and adjacent regions. Gondophares stayed in power fairly long. An in scription made on his behalf is dated the 26th year of his reign and the 103rd year of a certain era. The starting date for the era is supposed to be neither earlier than 80 B.C. nor later than 55 B.C.,27 which means that the founder of what is called the Indo-Parthian dynasty ruled in the first half of the Ist century A.D.

Gondophares is known also to Christian tradition that contains a reference of him being visited in India by Apostle Thomas in 29 A.D. In 42 A.D. Greek philosopher Apollo nius of Tyana made a trip to Taxila where he paid a visit to the Parthian king called Fraotes, which may be a distort ed version of the name Gondophares. Like Maues and Azes, Gondophares called himself "the great king of kings", and the presence of this title on the coins minted in a Par thian manner makes one think that possibly he also claimed the Arshakid throne during the onset of a turbulent period in Parthia. His successors seem to have been less powerful, though they still maintained and even publicised their Parthian ties. One of the ancient sources says that the re gions north of the lower reaches of the Indus were ruled by Parthian kings who constantly ousted one another. There are coins of a number of Indo-Parthian rulers who could well have taken part in that intemecine war. Abdagases is a most typical example. His coins bear inscriptions in another, the third, written language—Parthian, or Pahlavi.*

Other rulers were Pacores and Orthagnes (a Greek version of the Iranian name Verethragna). One of the rulers even called himself by the dynastic name Arsan (Arshak) but the coins of that ruler, or rulers, are few. The quality of the silver coins had declined sharply. The country evidently underwent a period of political turmoil and economic difficulties. This, in great measure, led to its subordination to the new powerful Kushan state which had risen due to the fusion of nomad traditions and those of the settled population, this time in ancient Bactria. Although much has been written about it, a good deal in the history of the: Kushan empire is still vague and confused, particularly when it comes to chronology.*

The early period in Kushan history was a time of inter necine struggle between the small Yiieh-chi domains in Northern Bactria. In that struggle the Kushan domain grad ually gained the upper hand. It is probable that it was in this period that the coins minted in the fashion of Heliocles’ tetradrachmas with a horse depicted on the reverse were issued. At any rate, in the middle or the second half of the Ist century B.C. that domain issued coins with representa tions of the ruler on horseback on the reverse, just like on the later coins of Maues. Though the ruler Heraios, on behalf of whom the coins were issued, is called a Kushan, he did not yet have a royal title.

One of Heraios’ successors took control over the other four Yiieh-chi domains and marched south with his troops where he obviously quite easily conquered the Indo-Parthi an state. The name of the founder of the large new state is interpreted in Chinese sources as Kiojiukiu, and in the Greek version on coins as Kujula Kadphises or Kadphises I. The rise of Kadphises took place gradually. Thus there are coins with a portrait of the Graeco-Indian king Hermaeus on the obverse, while the name of the Kushan ruler appears on the reverse with a rather modest inscription: "Kujula Kadphises, :yabgu Kushan, staunch in faith" (yabgu is the title of Yiieh-chi princelings). Having expanded his domain, Kadphises adopted the traditional Indo-Sacan and Indo Parthian title of "king of kings", though the number of coins bearing this title is relatively small. It is thought that Kadphises I issued the numerous coins of a so-called "name less king", a typical Kushan coins showing a horseman on the reverse with an inscription indicating the grandiloquent title: "great king of kings, liberator". Evidently these coins date from the time when the powerful empire, comprising Bactria, Arachosia, Gandhara, Paropamisus and possibly some other territories, already existed under the aegis of Kadphises I. The king is known to have lived more than 80 years. The most probable period of his rule is from 40 to 90 A.D., considering that at least at the end of his rule he deposed the heirs of Gondophares in Gandhara. One of the heirs, Abdagases, ruled in the 50s-70s.

The new empire sought to expand. But in the west its rival Parthia somewhat regained strength with the coming to power of the younger Arshakids. In the 40s Parthian king Vardanes moved his camp to Bactria, which is indirect evidence of Kushan-Parthian conflicts. The Kushans tumed their gaze to the south-east where political disunity in North-Western India was very alluring. These conquests were accomplished by Vima Kadphises, or Kadphises II, son of the empire’s founder, which made the Kushans the richest and strongest state. It is not ruled out that under Kadphises II the Kushan borders in the south ran in the lower reaches of the Indus and at Benares. The Kushan state then included nearly the entire territory of present day Afghanistan, at least the southern part of Central Asia and the whole of North-Western India. Like Parthia and the Roman empire, it was one of the largest states of the ancient world.

Kadphises II took measures to strengthen his state. One of these was the reform of money circulation undermined under the Indo-Parthian rulers who had released into the market defective silver coins. Under Kadphises II gold and copper coins constituted the bulk of the money in circula tion. The picture of the Hindu god Siva, sometimes together with the bull Nandi, on the reverse of coins, testifies to his desire for binding closer to the empire the territories added to it. The magniloquent title of Kadphises II also includes Mahesvara, another name of Siva. By declaring his inclination for Hinduism, Kadphises II obviously hoped to strengthen the position of the Kushan empire in the Indian regions. Evidently under Kadphises II there was a clash with Chinese troops in Eastern Turkestan.2 8 Though Chinese chronicles describe those events in a favourable light for China, Eastern Turkestan ultimately remained in the Kushan sphere of influence, and the Han westward aggression was checked.

Kanishka is among the best known of the Kushan rulers. In a number of inscriptions mention is made of the years from 2 to 23 of the era he established. If we assume that 128 was the first year of that era and the count of years started with his advent to power, then the years of his rule must have been from 128 to 151. In historical tradition Kanishka is known as an adherent of Buddhism. He is as sociated with the convention of a large Buddhist council. The construction of religious buildings and patronage of monasteries and Buddhist philosophers are also ascribed to him. Indeed, portrayed on the reverse of the coins issued by Kanishka is the Buddha, sitting or standing. His coins depicted many other deities as well, and in the inscriptions their names were spelled out. Among these are the gods of ancient myths Helios and Hephaestus, and the goddess Selene, and the ancient Iranian gods Mithra, Verethragna and, probably, Anahita, the cult of whom had merged with the cult of Nanaia of Western Asia, whose name is inscribed on Kushan coins. Since these cults were fairly widespread in various regions of the vast Kushan empire, Kanishka evidently addressed himself to all his subjects, thereby displaying broad religious tolerance. Meanwhile during Kanishka’s reign Greek inscriptions on coins were replaced by Kushan ones written in a slightly modified Greek alphabet but in the Kushan, or, to be more precise, the Bactrian language, the official language of the new state.

Judging by the names of the Kushan rulers mentioned in Indian inscriptions, Kanishka’s successor must have been Vasishka who ruled in the years 24 through 28 of the Kanishka era, or in 152-156, according to the chronology we have herewith accepted. However, no coins bearing Vasishka’s name have been found so far. Possibly he was of the dynasty that ruled the southem part of the empire without the right to issue its own coins. Another outstand ing Kushan ruler was Huvishka, whose name is found in inscriptions dated 28-60 (Kanishka era), i.e., 156-188 A.D. Huvishka’s coins are nearly as numerous as those of Kanish ka and they also bear pictures of various deities on the reverse. roe ,

The next ruler mentioned in the dated inscriptions 1s Vasudeva (64-98, or 192-226, according to the accepted chronology). True, inscriptions mentioning the years of rule may not have reached us. Judging by the coins with Siva and the sacred bull on the reverse, during Vasudeva’s reign there was a revival, so to speak, of the ideological policy of Kadphises II. In the year 230 an embassy of the Kushan king (Bo Diuo in Chinese sources) visited China. Most scholars are inclined to identify that king as Vasudeva. That was, in fact, the end of the most magnificent period in the history of the Kushan state, which was followed by its gradual decline. Even the coins were of increasingly poorer quality, though the general type which had taken shape under Vasudeva was retained. It is thought that coins were also issued by two other rulers of the same name—Vasudeva II and Vasudeva III, but the inscriptions related to them are not known. All through the latter half of the 3rd and probably the first half of the 4th centuries A.D. bronze imitations of Vasudeva’s coins—several succeed ing series—were minted in Bactria.29

The decline of the Kushan state was undoubtedly also brought forth by failures in the conflicts with the major new state of the Sasanids. Though medieval tradition says that Bactria had already been conquered by Arda shir I (227-243), this is not confirmed by other sources. Falling under Sasanian influence at that time were most likely only Margiana and Sacastene, and even then they were initially ruled by members of the local dynasties. Every thing considered, the first telling blow at the Kushans in that period was delivered by Shapur I (243-273). In his long inscription written in Ka’bah of Zardusht mention is made of Kushanshahr, the country of the Kushans, among the kingdoms and provinces whose rulers were subordinate to him, or paid tribute to him, apart from Sacastene and ' Herat (ancient Areia). The Sasanian vicegerent in the East at that time was Narses, the son of Shapur I, who bore the title "king of Sacastene, Turkestan and India up to the seashore". There is a good deal of literature on the inter pretation of the inscription in Ka’bah of Zardusht.3° Most scholars doubt that the greater part of the Kushan country was ruled by Shapur I. However, the Kushans did suffer a partial defeat, which could have been followed by both loss of territory and a formal recognition of political dependence in some form or other.

Most likely at that time the first series of so-called Kushano-Sasanian coins were minted by the Sasanian vice gerents in the East, who normally were members of the ruling dynasty. Issued in great variety, these coins have repeatedly attracted scholars’ attention. Their interpreta tion is still the bone of contention among them, for differ ent opinions exist in regard to Kushan chronology.3 !

The coins themselves can be subdivided into two groups. The first one includes the coins of the type adopted under Vasudeva, but the rulers (Kushan Shahs) who issued them had Sasanian names—Varahran and Hormizd. The other group was minted in the Sasanian fashion and bore Sasa nian inscriptions, but the titles of the rulers were the same— "king of the Kushans"’ or "great king of the Kushans"’. Some of the coins in the second group have Kushan inscrip tions. The rulers who issued the coins of the latter group are far more numerous. These were, apart from Varahran and Hormizd, Shapur, Ardashir and Peroz. Incidentally, judg ing by crowns and other signs, different persons often had the same names.

The historical significance of these coins is all too clear: the Sasanian vicegerents of the eastern regions of the state sought to maintain authority by using the cultural tradi tions of the territories they ruled or claimed. Hormizd, for instance, is named on some coins not just as a king but as the "great king of kings’’, a title that is the same as that of the head of the Sasanian state. Possibly it was Hormizd, the brother of Varahran II, who led an uprising in the 80s in the East to seize the Sasanian throne. We have observed the same situation in the epoch of the Achaemenians, when members of the ruling dynasty in Bactria considered them selves powerful enough to seek the imperial throne.

The Sasanids kept building up pressure in the East, and under Shapur II (309-379) there erupted a long Kushano-Sasanian war at the tum of the 70s, which is reported in many sources. The Kushans lost the war and the Sasarian troops seized Bactria.

The might of the Kushan state was on the wane. At the turn of the 5th century the Sasanians came under increas ing pressure from Asian nomads, who repeated the march of the Sacas and the Yiieh-chis, and for some time ancient Kushan lands regained their independence, though there was a lack of former unity and might. Political divisions, which made it easier for foreign invaders to win, were lar gely accounted for by the social and economic situation— the rise of the agricultural aristocracy signalling the emerg ence of new, feudal relations.

In the Kushan period ancient civilisation reached its peak. It was a time of political stability and an upsurge of the economy based on irrigated farming and highly specia lised crafts. Urban-type settlements are the best evidence of the level of progress. According to ancient tradition the Graeco-Bactrian state was already called the land of a thousand towns. This was never said about the Kushan em pire, which in general was little known to Graeco-Roman authors. But there are quite a few data, archaeological finds above all, to suggest that it was the Kushan period in which urban life in Bactria, Arachosia, Gandhara and other regions flourished. In the summary of geographic data known to the antique world, compiled by Claudius Ptolemaeus in the 2nd century A.D. he named 18 cities in Bactria alone, though this enumeration is incomplete and to a consider able extent provisional. It was believed that by the 2nd century B.C. the population of Bactria was around one mil lion, doubtlessly increasing over the next 200-300 years. Ancient Bactra was presumably for a certain time the capital of the entire Kushan empire and in any case the administrative, economic and cultural centre of one of the two component parts of that huge state formation. A new wall was erected around Bactra in the Kushan period, but even beyond that wall there stood a number of structures (in particular, a huge stupa, known now as Topi-Rustam). The main centre of Northern Bactria was Termez near which a number of Buddhist centres with first-rate art monuments have been discovered (Kara-Tepe, Fayaz-Tepe).

However, rectangular or square cities seem to have been built in the Kushan period for the most part. Their layout shows that the cities were built on instructions from the central authorities. Carefully planned and systematically built-up urban centres, they were strengthened with for tress walls that had towers at equal distance from one another, strictly in keeping with the Kushan fortification standard. Well studied among such urban centres in North erm Bactria are Kei-Kobad-shah, Dalverzin-Tepe and Zar Tepe.

Quite a few such cities and towns with regular layouts are to be found in the territory of present-day Afghanistan. Among then, in particular, is Begram, located 60 kilometres north of Kabul at the foot of the majestic spurs of the Hindu Kush Mountains. They are in all likelihood the re mains of the ancient city of Kapisa. A settlement that existed from the lst century B.C. to the 4th century A.D. and was built in the initial period of the Kushan state, has been studied better than others. Some 25 hectares of its territory are enclosed by rectangular city walls. Excava tions have revealed three consecutive periods, and help one to trace the evolution of the urban culture of Paropamis ade.32 A central road divided the city into two parts. The residential districts along the city arteries had small "flats" with three or more rooms, including a home sanctuary. In the city centre there stood the ruler’s palace, in which archaeologists found a splendid art collection, obviously the remnants of a palace treasure-trove. The articles of an cient art are evidence of the broad trade and cultural rela tions of the Kushan state. There were tiny black-vamish cups from Han China, as well as glass vessels with various scenes painted on them, beautifully made bronze figurines of Hippocrates, Heracles, a horseman and a stoic philos opher portrayed in a grotesque manner, originating from the eastem provinces of the Roman empire. But of especial Interest is the collection of ebony carvings; mostly plates inlaid in caskets and wooden furniture. Such plates were often decorated with pictures of women dancers executed in a refined style resembling that of the Mathura school of Northern India.

The Soviet-Afghan expedition led by I. T. Kruslik made a thorough study of Dilberjin, actiee site ote Bactrian town 40 kilometres north-west of Mazar-i-Sharif. The first settlement had emerged there by the middle of the Ist millennium B.C., but it was mainly after the Yiieh-chi tribes conquered Bactria that it developed into a large centre.33 The central part of Dilberjin is square, with for tress walls all around, occupying an area of some 15 hecta res. Large residential districts stretch to the south and east of that fortified nucleus, which means that the entire area with urban structures runs up to 40 hectares. In a citadel in the city centre is a monumental temple, which initially had colourful frescoes depicting young men standing beside horses. Probably this is a reproduction of the divine twins known from Greek myths as Dioscuri. Iconographically the frescoes have patent Hellenistic features. Later, but perhaps not before Kadphises II came to power, there oc curred a "‘change of gods’: in the second period a large multicoloured mural on the temple wall depicted Siva and his wife Parvati, both sitting on a bull. The excavations also revealed parts of stone slabs with an inscription in the Kushan alphabet containing information on some kind of rebuilding. Yet it is not so far clear if it pertains to the main temple or some other structure. Found in another temple were three sitting figures. The temple was likely to have been dedicated to the ruling Kushan dynasty. Outside the city nucleus was a district of artisans who lived in small houses huddled together along the streets.

Yet another structure, the "big house", is vastly differ ent. The numerous living and household quarters are grouped round a spacious internal courtyard. On the whole, the house was rectangular in shape and most likely belonged to members of the city patriciate. In the suburbs there were a Buddhist sanctuary and a water reservoir (sardoba). After the flourishing period under major Kushan monarchs Dil berjin began to degenerate in the 5th century and gradually became fully neglected. That was the lot of most of the Kushan towns discovered so far, including Begram.

In the Kushan period commerce was well developed and, like the building of new towns, it was evidently encouraged by the Kushan rulers. Top priority was given to trade with the Roman empire, mainly with its eastern provinces. The traditional land route of trade ran across Parthia towards Herat where it forked, with one road turning straight to the south, to Drangiana (Sacastene), and the other through mountain passes and ravines down to Kapisa-Begram. From Begram the road ran to Ortospana (approximately the present-day site of Kabul) and then straight to the flourish Ing cities of Gandhara. The distances between various points along the trade routes were thoroughly measured and the stopover lots for trade caravans and local places of interest were marked by special people. ,

In addition, a soyithem sea route from Egypt across the Red Sea, then along the Arabian Peninsula and further east to India, was becoming increasingly important in the Ist century A.D. Barbaricon was a major port in the lower reaches of the Indus, and Barygaza in the lower reaches of the Narbada. From Barygaza the land route led north, straight to Bactri. From Bactria Chinese goods reached India along the Great Silk Route, which linked the West and the East of the civilised world of the time and ran through Bactria. Trade with Rome was particularly exten sive. According to ancient authors, various goods to the sum of not less than 55 million sesterces were brought to India from the Roman domains annually. The Kushan state doubtlessly accounted for a considerable portion of that sum, which is confirmed by the relatively large number of Roman-made articles found during excavations in Kushan territory. Far less is known about internal trade. However, the fact that thousands of small copper coins have been found during excavations of Kushan towns and rural settle ments speaks for itself. Those were small value coins, which means that money operations were conducted also in small scale, or perhaps in retail, trade.

The emergence of the powerful Kushan state was closely associated with the evolution of internal processes in Bac tria, Arachosia, Gandhara and other regions. The lack of relevant data prevents scholars from getting a deeper insight into the social and economic relations of that period. They can be spoken of only in general terms. The considerable progress observed in handicrafts production, in urban life and in money circulation is an indication that the produc tion relations of the slave-owning system continued to develop. Strong power, which strengthened the domestic and external position of the state, met the interests of the top slave-owning stratum of society and the big merchants of Bactria and Gandhara. Interesting facts about agrarian relations have been disclosed in Soviet archaeological stu dies dealing with North Bactrian rural settlements of the Kushan period. These settlements are of two types: small ones with slipshod layouts and multi-room houses with living and household structures. Judging by the size of the houses, large families dwelt in them. The more substantial house probably belonged to the village headman. There were no fortification walls. Evidently these are the dwellings of the village communities, in which the interests of central power were represented by the local elder.

However, settlements of another type prevail. They are square-shaped or rectangular, surrounded by a wall, some times having towers, and resemble towns in layout; only they are a good deal smaller, normally not more than 0.5-1 hectare. In excavated settlements of this type archaeolog ists have found huge depositories for wine and grain remi niscent of the state storehouses of the Oriental despotat, for instance, Urartu. Possibly these settlements were temple or royal economic complexes with bonded labourers, who were like slaves. These settlements could also have been economic units that were often created in Oriental states from among prisoners of war and other persons who did not enjoy full rights.

The excavations of Bactrian urban centres revealed a considerable social differentiation of the population, which influenced the division of town territory according to estate and rank. Apart from the huge buildings of the city nobility discovered in Dalverzin and Dilberjin, most of the houses were blocks of 6 to 12 rooms with a common household yard, which belonged to house communities of a kind. As can be deduced from documents of the 3rd century A.D., Khwarizm archives found in the Toprak-Kala palace, nearly half, and sometimes more than half, of the population in such communities were slaves. Yet during this period -notable changes were already fermenting within society. According to Indian sources, the first centuries A.D. saw the emergence of the institution of land grants. Archaeological evidence also testifies to the enhanced political role of the agricultural aristocracy. In the 5th and 6th centuries, when the urban centres were on the decline, individual estates and castles came to the fore. The castles with many-metre platforms at the base were increasingly becoming impregnable fortresses, symbolising the independence of their owners. These were most likely the symptoms of the on coming of the new feudal age. The degeneration of towns was accompanied by a decline of artisan industries, with earthen pottery becoming more coarse and often being hand-made. Nomad invasions by themselves can hardly explain these developments. ndeed, the penetration of nomads in the 2nd century B.C. did not stop the develop ment of the local structures which had not used up to the full all the opportunities of the existing mode of produc tion. During this period the situation underwent rapid change, and there is reason to associate this with the crisis of a definite form of social relations, namely, the crisis of the slave-owning system.

The most significant achievement of Kushan civilisation is most likely the high level of cultural development. Kushan culture, for all the local and temporary differences, was a fusion of the achievements of local ancient Oriental civilisation, of the invigorating aspects of Hellenism, of the refined manner of Indian art and the tempestuous style brought in by the nomads from the vast Asian steppes.’The early stage of this synthetic, though stylistically united, art is well represented in Tilla-Tepe. The Kushan towns with their well-established cultural standards ranging from pottery to articles of religious cult were definitely the bearers and base of the new type of culture. That urbanised, as it were, culture also affected, as did monetary relations, the rural areas. The unity of the mass, traditional culture, brought to light during the Kushan excavations, is striking.

Buddhism became widespread in the Kushan period, as has been already mentioned, and its monuments are to be found all over the territory of that vast state. As a rule, they are lavishly decorated with sculptures, reliefs and pain tings, which make them genuine treasures of art. Most widely known are the ancient Buddhist monuments in the vicinity of Hadda, not far from Jalalabad. The ruins of Buddhist stupas, monasteries and some other structures have been subjected to close study. The figures of the Buddha and the Bodhisattvas are an ideal and perfect image of inner contemplation. But in other sculptures, in which the image was not restricted by preconceived canons, the realism of Hadda sculpturers was particularly impressive. Such are the figures of the donators who made material contribution to the development and maintenance of the Buddhist cult. They show men in light tunics with thick moustaches on strong-willed faces. Great inner strength distinguishes the "head of an ascetic", an emaciated old man with sharp lines at the mouth, his brows knitted with determination. Hadda sculpture, with its realism and emphasis on the individual features of the personages pre sented, its psychological penetration, is an outstanding achievement of Kushan art, which had creatively assimilated the methods of expressive psychological portrayal of Hel lenic sculpturers.

The Kushan rulers upheld Buddhism and, at the same time, sought to build up the prestige of secular authority, which is seen from their efforts to establish the dynasty cult. The Surkh-Kotal sanctuaries in Northern Afghanistan, 15 kilometres to the south of Pul-i-Humri, are remarkable dynasty cult monuments. Excavations have shown that there, on a high hill surrounded by a wall with towers, stood a number of structures, including the main temple with a fire-altar in the centre. Archaeologists found stone statues of Kushan rulers there. Leading to the temple was a long flight of steps which began at the foot of the hill. Of great interest is a many-line inscription made in Greek letters but in the Kushan language, or Bactrian, for that matter, as was the case with the Dilberjin inscription. The inscription is about repair works and mentions the nobles who supervised the reconstruction, and names the complex itself—the "Temple of Kanishka, the Victor". It is not ruled out that the prodigious structure was erected during Kanishka’s rule.

Apart from official cults and religions, there existed the beliefs of the popular masses, most interesting relics of which are the numerous terracotta figurines that have been found in towns and rural settlements (Buddhist ones ac count for but a few). Preference is given to figurines of female deities, clad in robes hanging in heavy folds, with a cult vessel or a fruit in hand. Most likely it is a female deity, that is a goddess of fertility and guardian of the household. This explains why such figurines were found in almost every house. Another distinctive feature of the mass, folk culture is the considerable number of figurines of horsemen, or just of saddled horses, as a kind of memory of the founders of the Kushan state and one of the funda mental elements of its armed forces. Kushan culture, clo sely associated with the socio-economic basis and the polit ical situation in the state, is clear evidence of the flourish ing of the ancient civilisations that existed in the territory of Afghanistan, a process brought forth to a great extent by the cross-fertilisation of various cultural traditions, broad cultural ties and intercourse, which have always been the main stimulants of historical progress.

Afghanistan in the Middle Ages

After the collapse of the Kushan empire a large part of Afghanistan was incorporated in the state of the Chion ites or Ephthalites, which rose on its ruins. Some scholars believe the’ Ephthalite state had been growing round the central regions of what is today Badakhshan. In the second half of the 5th century the Ephthalites seized Gandhara and extended theirrule as far as Punjab, Sind and Rajasthan. The local rajas who agreed to pay tribute to the Ephthalite rulers usually remained in their domains. Towards the mid 6th century the Ephthalite state was falling into decay. In the year 533 their supreme ruler Mihiragula was defeated by a coalition of rajas who ruled North-Westem India, and in 567 the joint forces of Iran (ruled by the Sassanian dy nasty at the time) and the West-Turkic kaganate dealt a crushing blow to the Ephthalites and divided their terri tory. The greater part of what is today Afghanistan went to Khusraw I Anushirwan (with the exception of the north eastern regions controlled by the Turks). The state that had emerged in the valley of the Kabul River and in the area between the Indus and the Chenab, which was ruled by the Shahi dynasty, claimed kindred to the Kushans.

The emergence of the Ephthalite state was accompanied by migrations of a number of tribes under its rule from thé southern regions of Central Asia to areas north of the Hindu Kush and, further, to the Indus valley. These migrations changed, to a certain extent, the ethnic make-up of the territories that are part of present-day Afghanistan and had a strong impact on the ethnic evolution of its peoples.

The 4th-6th centuries A.D. of Afghanistan’s history saw both violent political overthrows and major changes in social and economic development: the slave-owning system was giving way to nascent feudalism.

The disintegration of the Kushan state and Ephthalite conquests brought about the emergence of a large number of small, conflicting principalities in the territory of Afghanistan and contiguous regions of the Indus valley. The rulers and nobility of these principalities were gradually becoming big feudal-type landowners.

As feudal society was taking shape, new social classes were emerging, those of feudal landowners and the under privilegéd socially downtrodden peasants. Only in individ ual remote regions did the relations of the previous social systems persist. ;

Major changes set in in ideology and culture: replacing Buddhism in .the religious form of Hinduism was the ideo logy of feudal society.

These most important social, economic, ideological and cultural changes, signalling the coming of a new, feudal system, coincided with the fall of the Sasanian state and the appearance of new conquerors at the Afghan borders— the Arabs.

The Arab Conquest

The Arab Caliphate, formed in the early half of the 7th century, played an immense role in the fates of neigh bouring countries. Its emergence was closely linked with complex social, ideological and political processes of the feudalisation of Arab society in Western and Northem Arabia, ideologically expressed in Islam.*

The founder of the newreligion was prophet Muhammad (570-632), an Arab of the Koreishite tribe born in Mecca.

During the last decade of his life Muhammad had the eet part of Arabia under his power and influence. His irst four successors, the caliphs Abu Bakr (632-634), Omar (634-644), Osman (644-656), and Ali (656-661), are called pious in Muslim tradition. In the years of their rule, which was the period of early Islam, theocracy was a recog nised ideal in the caliphate, just as it was under Muhammad: religious and secular power, law and religion constituted a single whole and the head of the religious community was simultaneously the head of state.) _

Urging the spread of Islam, the caliphs built an enor mous state. After a number of victorious campaigns they controlled a considerable part of the Byzantine empire, conquered the Sasanian state and a number of other states in South-West Asia, North Africa and on the Iberian Penin sula. By the middle of the 8th century the caliphate com prised the territories of Iran, Iraq, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Libya, countries of the Maghreb (Algeria, Tunisia, Moroc co), and Spain, part of Transcaucasia (up to the Main Cau casian Range), part of Central Asia (including Samarkand, Khwarizm and Ferghana), a considerable part of Afghanis tan and some regions of North-Western India (Sind and the valley of the Indus, up to Multan). They also controlled Sicily and Malta.

The Arab expeditions to Afghanistan—Ghazni, Herat, Seistan and Tokharistan—began in the middle of the 7th century. In 652 the Arabs captured Herat. In many regions, in particular Bamian, Bust, Balkh, Badghis, Ghazni, Kabul, Parvan, and Gorband, the local rulers and the population offered fierce resistance and the caliphs and their viceger ents often had to dispatch troops once again to subdue the recalcitrants. The sources say some mountain regions— Ghur in the upper reaches of the Harirud and the area of the Suleiman Mountains—were never fully conquered by the Arabs. Balkh was captured only in 707 and Parvan, Gorband and Panjshir still later, in the 790s. The Kabul area, ruled by the local dynasty, sent tribute to the caliphs from time to time and was fully subjugated by the Arabs only in the early 9th century after numerous expeditions. Qandahar was conquered at the same time. ‘

The militarily and politically turbulent 7th and 8th centuries were a rather complex period in the history of the peoples inhabiting Afghanistan. Regrettably, sources of relevant data are insufficient for studying many impor tant aspects of the political and socio-economic processes of the evolution of statehood during the Arab conquest and learning about the relations between various peoples and tribes and the development of new social and economic institutions, the growth of cities, expansion of trade, and the transformation of old and emergence of new cultural traditions.

But even available data give us reason to believe that in the eastern outskirts of the Arab caliphate, which, at the time, also included the territory of Afghanistan, feudal relations were beginning to take shape in the 7th and 8th centuries. The process, however, was uneven in different physico-geographic zones. In the oases on the plains it proceeded a good deal faster than in the outlying areas and in the mountain districts where nomad and semi-nomad cattle-breeding tribes lived and communal tribal relations prevailed. Though slavery as a system continued to exist (there were slave markets, for instance, in Balkh, Kabul and some other cities), it did not play a significant role in social and economic activity. Slaves were used mainly in the household and also in mining, handicrafts and livestock breeding. Under the Arabs the land was drastically redistri buted, particularly where farming had been well developed. The greater part of the land was declared state property and was cultivated by peasants who enjoyed the right of hereditary lease; here the tax and the feudal rent coincided. Taxes from that land went as payment to the troops and clerks. A considerable portion of the lands was appropriat ed by the caliphs and members of their families, and by the Arab nobility.

At the turn of the 9th century there was a growth in private land holdings, or mulgs (hereditary land grants to Arab military commanders, district rulers and the local aristocracy) and conventional holdings, or zqta.

At first the conventional holdings were only a part of the rent-cum-tax granted as payment for service rendered during the term of service or for life; later the right to rent was combined with the right to land tenure. In that period wag f ownership began to be practised. Waqfs (land grants) were received by mosques, madrasahs and other Muslim establishments and could be neither sold nor alienated and were exempt from taxation. There also existed communal lands, but their size diminished after forceful appropria tion by Arab conquerors. The peasants were compelled to cultivate state-owned and private lands and also the lands of zgta owners on metayage rent terms, thus falling into feudal dependence. The land was given to peasants on the condition that they would pay one-fourth, one-sixth or one eighth of the crops, depending on who owned the beasts of draught, farm implements and seeds—the sharecropper or the landowner.

A corollary of the incorporation of Afghanistan in the caliphate was the migration of Arabs who settled on the conquered lands. Some of those lands became the posses sion of Arab military commanders and officials. However, there were less Arab settlements in Afghanistan than, for instance, in Iraq or Iran. But it is known that Arab war riors, resettled with their families to Tokharistan, Eastem Khorasan and other localities, were given land and housing. In some regions the Arabs did not mix with the local popu lation and lived isolated. Arab villages existed in many regions of Afghanistan also in the 20th century (in partic ular, in the north of the country, near Kabul and Jalalabad).

The main consequence of the Arab conquest was the gradual spread of Islam and Arabic ie the official and lit erary language), and also the introduction of the Arabic ' script in the writing of the local languages. In the terri tory of present-day Afghanistan Islam was spread primarily in Balkh (a mosque was built there in 742), Herat and Seis tan. As for Kabul, Ghur and a number of mountain locali ties, their population began to profess Islam much later, in the 9th-11th centuries, for the Arabs could not subjugate those regions for a long time. In Nuristan (Kafiristan) Islam took hold only at the turn of the 20th century.

On the vast territories they had conquered, the Arab caliphs often left local rulers, making it binding on them to secure the conveyance to the treasury of taxes, tribute or gifts; and Arab vicegerents were appointed to govern large regions like Khorasan, Seistan and Tokharistan. However, subordinate to the Khorasan vicegerent, for instance, were the rulers of Kabul and Qandahar. A single taxation system was established for the whole of the caliphate, though in some areas local leaders and tribal chiefs still levied tribute for themselves, as had been the practice before the Arab conquest.

Muslims paid the zagat (literally ‘"cleansing’’, alms for the poor) amounting to 2.5 per cent of the crop. The cultivators also paid the kharaj, or one-tenth of the crop. Non Muslims had to pay a bigger land tax and a special per capita tax—the jizza. In addition, the population also paid various duties in kind (for the maintenance of messengers, officials and others); their unpaid bonded labour was used for the construction of roads, irrigation canals and palaces. Taxation usually involved various abuses and cruel treat ment on the part of tax collectors and the landowners. Taxes were constantly rising. Fearing eruption of broad popular protest, the authorities were at times compelled to make concessions. Thus, newly-converted Muslims were freed from paying the kharaj twice during a fixed period of time. Dissatisfaction with the taxation policy was expressed more and more often not only by the tax-paying population, but also by other social groups—the local non-Arab nobility who were often forced not only to obey the vicegerents of the caliph but to hand over to them a considerable portion of their income; traders who had accepted Islam cherishing the hope that they would be granted equal rights with the Arabs; adherents of theocracy who were opposed to the . caliphate being tumed into a secular state, and others. s is known from sources, during this period popular opposition took various forms—from passive resistance (leaving the place of residence and evading taxation) to armed actions which in most cases merged with the rebel lions by individuals or groups of people defending the interests of various social strata. Many of those protest actions were conducted under the banner of various sec tarian doctrines, as those propounded by Shiites, Khari jites, and Hurramites.* Thus, the supporters of the Khari jite sect, which had taken its final shape towards the end of the 7th century, led several rebellions in the 8th century (and later, in the 9th and 10th centuries), in Khorasan and Seistan, among other regions. At the tum of the 740s the supporters of the Hurramite sect, which was close to the Mazdakites, eee in Khorasan the ideas of social equality among all people, defending their right to land and property, and called for massive armed struggle.2 In the second half of the 8th century, they led the Muqanna uprising in Mawarannahr, which exerted strong influence on various areas of Northem Afghanistan.

Most of these movements in the early half of the 8th century were directed against the caliphs of the Umay yad dynasty (661-750). The struggle was headed by des cendants of Abbas (uncles of prophet Muhammad), known as Abbasids. Among other things, they promised the Mus lims (including the new converts) and non-Muslims to ease the burdensome taxation. This explains why the pro-Abbasid uprising stirred up by Abu Muslim at Merv (747) was joined by the population of Tokharistan, He rat, Talikan, Balkh and other regions, by people who belonged to different social strata, ethnic groups, reli gious trends and sects.

The coming of the Abbasid caliphs to power -(750) marked, above all, the consolidation of the feudal order in landownership. The Sunnite version of Islam became the class ideology of the feudal lords. But the conditions of the popular masses did not improve. New uprisings flared up in the caliphate, including the territory of what is pres ent-day Afghanistan. In 755 a large uprising, known as the Sunbadh Magian uprising, spread to a number of regions from Khorasan to Azerbaijan; in 767 another popular rebellion with Ustad Aziz (Sis) at the head took place in Herat; late in the 8th century a new wave of Kharijite rebel lions swept across Seistan and the disturbances continued into the 9th century. Major uprisings against the Abbasids broke out in other areas of the caliphate—in Southem Azer baijan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and Palestine.

Reviewing the events of the 7th and 8th centuries in the caliphate, which affected the fate of the peoples that played a significant role in the history of Afghanistan, it must be noted that the mid-7th century saw the beginning of the division of Muslims.3 Standing out among them were pri marily the supporters of "true Islam’’—the Sunnites,* adherents of the Sunna (they hold that the caliphate is an elective office), and also the Shiites (Shiah, i.e., "the party of Ali"). The latter recognised the hereditary right to be imam—head of the Muslim community of the caliphate and supreme political leader of the state—only for Ali (Muham mad’s cousin and son-in-law) and his descendants. The Shiites had several sects within the framework of both moderate and extreme Shiism, Ismailism4 being one of them. This sect has survived to the present day; its follow ers live in a number of Asian countries and also in Afghanis tan, mainly in its northern regions.

The third sect, the Kharijites (insurgents) who came out against big landowners, and supported the legal and social equality of all Muslims and their dominating posi tion over the Zimmiyas (non-Muslims). In their view, sover eign power was epitomised in the religious community, while the caliph (who had to be elected) should, in his activities, be responsible to it. An important aspect of their doctrine is that any Muslim, and any ruler for that matter, imam or caliph, should he commit a "great sin", was there after considered a Kaftr or infidel, and opposition to him was God-willed. This maxim often served as ideological

round for overthrowing a ruler, or for a "holy war", but in actual fact for political struggle, rebellions and insurrec tions. In the territory of Afghanistan this sect was most widespread in Seistan.

Shiism, just like the Kharijite doctrine, was used by the political, and often social, opposition in the struggle against the Umayyads, Abbasids and other Sunnite rulers.

Afghanistan in the 9th–13th Centuries

The coming to power of the Abbasids, as was mentioned above, did not improve the position of the popular masses in the caliphate. The decrees lowering tax rates and cancel ling some requisitions over and above the kAaraj were either practically ignored or observed for only a brief span of time. The popular movements, originally spearheaded against the Arab rule, more and more often advanced social demands; and anti-Abbasid uprisings, led primarily by the Shiites, Kharijites and later by the Ismailians and Karmathians,* continued. In the territory of Afghanistan such uprisings occurred mainly in Seistan. The rebellions were caused by overtaxation; illegal confiscation of lands of peasant com munities and local owners; collection of additional sums of money and fines from farmers, artisans and traders; abuse of power by Arab vicegerents, particularly Ali ibn Isa, vicegerent of Khorasan and Seistan, and his officials.

The first to rise were the peasants and artisans of Seistan led by the Kharijite Hamzah ibn Atraq (798). The Kharijite movement continuedmany years, andin consequence Seistan was actually free from caliphate control. for more than 30 years. Hamzah ibn Atraq cancelled the payment of the kAa raj. His treasury was replenished by the war booty seized by the Seistanians during attacks on Arab-controlled territories.

By the 9th century the situation in the caliphate wor sened. Supported by the population, which was displeased by the mounting tax burden, the local feudal lords con tinued to come out against the power of the caliphs.

The Abbasid caliphate was disintegrating politically under the impact of a number of factors, connected prima rily with the development of feudal relations, different socio-economic levels of the countries conquered by the Arabs, and the lack of stable economic and ethnic ties between those countries, some of which had nothing in common in terms of language and culture. The incessant popular uprisings, often used by. the local feudal lords for winning political. independence, greatly weakened the cali phate as a whole and its position in the provinces.

Replenishments to the state treasury were on the decline with the increase of big feudal holdings and the exemption of their owners from taxation; some of the local rulers refused to send the caliph tribute and gifts and provide troops; and expenditures on suppressing popular uprisings . and feudal rebellions were growing. Together all this under mined the economic and military might of the caliphs. In fact, they had no real opportunity to resist the separat ism of the hereditary aristocracy, the vicegerents’ desire to consolidate their hereditary power and independence in the provinces they governed. Furthermore, apart from the local aristocracy, apart from the rulers and vicegerents of separate regions, the small feudal lords, too, on seizing lands by military force (with the help of their volunteer detach ments or ghazi*) established hereditary power in the cap tured territories, and sought to become independent.

In a bid to prevent the collapse of the state, the caliphs took steps to bolster their power. To that end, they formed the Ghulam Guard out of Turkic slaves.

Fearing the emergence of another large hotbed of anti Arab action, Mamun, son of caliph Harun-ar-Rashid (786 809), (in 809-813 Mamun was vicegerent of Khorasan), sent his troops against the ruler of the Kabul Shah dynasty which controlled, apart from Kabul, lands in Tokharistan and Qandahar and occasionally rebelled against the power of the caliphs. Despite stubborn resistance, the troops of Kabul Shah were defeated, his throne and crown were sent to Mecca, while the land tax and tribute were doubled. The domains of the Kabul Shahs were made part of Khora san and from then on were subordinate to the Khorasan vicegerent of the Abbasids. Mosques were built in the towns. Then began the inculcation of the Sunnite doctrine of Islam, which lasted almost a century.

In referring to the political situation in the caliphate in the context of attempts by the ruling elite to consol idate their power in the conquered regions (including the territory of Afghanistan), it must be stressed that the elite sought to inculcate the Sunnite doctrine of Islam as the dominant religion, which was to justify the changes in social life brought about by the development of feudal relations. To achieve that goal, tenets of the Koran and cer tain khadises (traditions) of the Sunna were reshaped, and doctors of sacred law and theology—fakihs and ulemas, were summoned to the caliph court. The proclamation of the Sunnite doctrine of Islam in 851 as the official religion was aimed at counterposing it to religious sects whose teachings served as the ideological form of the opposition to Arab rule and to the intensifying of feudal exploitation. Beginning with the mid-9th century the adherents of other sects and religions were persecuted. This period saw the further spread of Sufism, an ascetic mystic sect within Islam, that passively condemned wealth and preached sub mission, tolerance and contentment with one’s lot. Pover was said to be the ideal for the "salvation of the soul".

To retain power, at least nominally, the caliphs meted out to big feudal lords the high posts of vicegerents. The latter often became hereditary owners and formed what were actually independent emirates.* Such a vicegerent in the territory of Afghanistan was Tahir ibn Husayn, former ruler of Busheng in the Herat province. Under his rule were Mavarannahr, Khorasan with Herat, and the Balkh, Kabul and Seistan regions.

Sole masters in vast territories, Tahir and his success ors, known as the Tahirids (821-873), dispatched to the caliph fixed sums from every district. The Tahirids sought to buttress their power and to that end were insistently spreading Islam wherever the population professed Zoro astrianism. At the same time they took measures to regulate taxation, develop agriculture and irrigation, and issued legislation on water use. Under their rule the Kharijite movements in Khorasan and Seistan still continued, though their intensity was on the wane.

The Tahirids were far more troubled by the units of Ghazi under the command of the brothers Yaqub and Amr ibn Lays,** who had suppressed Kharijite uprisings in Seistan. Having defeated the Kharijites, they seized power in Seistan in 861 and moved north where they captured Herat, Balkh, and Ghazni, took control over Kabul and, . having overthrown the Tahirid dynasty in 873, gained con trol over Khorasan. As he failed to conquer Baghdad, the capital of the caliphate, Amr ibn Lays made peace with the caliph and nominally recognised himself to be his vassal. Such subordination, however, was limited to mentioning the caliph’s name during the Friday service in mosques and putting his name first on coins; the Saffarids did not send tribute and taxes to Baghdad.

Having consolidated their hold on the seized territories, they moved north to attack the Samanids (a local dynasty of Termez extraction), who had gained a foothold in Cen tral Asia in 821. In the battle at Balkh, Amr ibn Lays was defeated by the Samanids, taken prisoner and executed.

After their victory over Amr ibn Lays the Samanids con quered vast territories. Their domains, which included the whole of present-day Afghanistan, stretched from the Tien Shans to the Suleiman Mountains and from Bukhara and Samarkand to the Persian Gulf. In the conquered territories, as a rule, they left administrative powers in the hands of local dynasties. These territories included Seistan, Balkh, Ghazni and other regions, whose representatives, while recognising the supreme authority of the Samanids, did not always send taxes, tribute and gifts to their capital Bukhara. :

The Samanids set up a ramified administrative apparatus consisting of 10 departments (divans) that were in charge of taxation, lands, wagqfs, the guards, and extemal relations, all of which is evidence of their efforts to strengthen central power. At the same time the Samanids handed out land in the form of igta, along with the right of tax immunity, leaving members of the local dynasties as rulers of some provinces, thereby promoting separatist tendencies among them. These tendencies were spreading also among the Ghulam Guard, who often joined popular actions conduct ed, as before, under slogans advanced by various sects.

The greatest influence was exerted by the Carmats, who during the first four decades of the 10th century constantly stirred up risings in Khorasan, including the regions of Herat and Ghur.

In 962-963 Alp-tegin, commander of the Samanid Ghu lam Guard, captured Ghazni and then Bust and remained there. After his death, his son-in-law Sabuk-tegin (977-997), who managed to hold out in the struggle against the other claimants to those lands, founded the Ghaznavid dynasty (977-1186). Sabuk-tegin not only gained a firm hold on Ghazni but undertook some successful expeditions, includ ing one to Ghur, and moved east, towards India. He launched an offensive against the principality ruled by the Shahi dynasty whose domains stretched from Lagman (the Kabul River valley) to the Chenab River. As a result, Sabuk-tegin captured those lands and reached Peshawar. The power of the Ghaznavids reached its peak under Mah mud (997-1030).

Apart from Afghanistan, the Ghaznavid empire included the territories of Iran, ithe south of Central Asia with Khorezm, and North-Western India, to which Mahmud went on 17 expeditions, waging a holy war against the "‘infidels"’. Afghan units played a significant role in his army. Caring mainly about replenishing his treasury, Mahmud waged a long and stubborn struggle against the feudal lords, and confiscated their lands, thus greatly enlarging the area of state-owned land. He used the income from the land at his own discretion. Mahmud spent lavishly on the maintenance of the troops, the central administrative apparatus, punitive expeditions, and on criminal investigation. All the recal citrants, those suspected of disloyalty or heresy were subjected to cruel persecution; some were executed and their property was confiscated. The sources of that time say that many localities, including towns, were hard hit by famine and epidemic during Mahmud’s rule, towns were devastated, rural areas were neglected and the people were brought to ruin.

Meanwhile, Mahmud, wishing to acquire the fame of an enlightened ruler and true Muslim, kept a magnificent. court, where many well-known theologians, famous scien tists and poets lived. Their names went down in the chroni cles of world civilisation. Among them were Firdausi, al-Bi runi, and Unsuri, to mention just a few. In Mahmud’s days majestic mosques and palaces were built. Most famous among the architectural monuments of that time are the mosques and madrasahs in Ghazni and the Lashkar Gah _ (or Lashkari-Bazar) complex in Bust.6

But the might and power of the Ghaznavid state was shortlived. Routed in the battle at Dendanakan in 1040, by Turkmenian Seljuks, who had moved from Central Asia to Khorasan, it could no longer regain its former strength. As a result of the exhaustive struggle against the Seljuks, who were supported by the Khorasan nobility and the Ghur rulers, and also because of internecine strife, the Ghazna vids were losing one province after another. The Seljuks captured Balkh, then Herat and the whole of Khorasan and Seistan. In 1151 the capital Ghazni was seized by the rulers of the mountainous Ghur province. The city was almost entirely destroyed and bumt down. The Ghaznavids were forced to abandon their capital and up to 1186 members of that dynasty exercised their rule from Lahore.’

The Seljuk conquerors did not confine themselves to annexing pee of the Ghaznavid possessions. In the 11th ‘century they subjugated Iran, Asia Minor, Syria, Iraq, Palestine and the southern part of Central Asia. But the same fate befell their own state, as had been the case with many other medieval states of that kind: it soon began to disintegrate. ‘

Only its eastem regions, including a part of Afghanistan’s territory, remained for some time under sultan Sinjar (1119-1157) of the Seljuk dynasty. After his death the state collapsed. For some time Muhammad Khwarizm Shah (1200-1220) ruled in Afghanistan until his rule was dis continued by the invasion by Genghiz Khan in 1220.

Reviewing the milestones of the political history of that period, special mention should be made of the events in Ghur in the upper reaches of the Harirud between Bamian and Herat. Historical sources assert that neither the Arabs nor the Samanids managed to penetrate the prov ince deeply, no matter how hard they tried. However there js reason to believe that Islam had spread in some re gions’ of Ghur back in the early 9th century, for Carmat uprisings had taken place there in the early 10th century.

After several military expeditions by Mahmud of Ghazni and his son Masud (1030-1040), many of the Ghur rulers (maltks) were forced to obey the formidable conquerors, though already under Masud’s successors they made attempts to win full independence.

The lack of pertinent data makes it impossible to probe the evolution of social relations in Ghur. Yet it is known that in the 11th century gradual feudalisation was taking

_place there and the communal or private lands of the peas ants were forcibly taken away by the maliks.

Early in the 12th century the Ghaznavids handed over the administration of Ghur to malik Izz-ad-din, who thus became the first "great prince of Ghur" and Ghur essential ly became an independent territory. In the second half of the 12th century, the Ghurids, as already noted, availing themselves of the weakening of the Seljuks and Ghazna vids, dealt a crushing blow to the latter and seized their capital Ghazni.

In 1175 the Ghurids conquered Herat and Seistan, after which Shihab-ad-din Muhammad Ghuri undertook several military expeditions to Northern India. As a result, the Ghurid military-feudal nobility established sway over an immense territory from Lahore and Multan to Bengal. In Ghur itself the residency of its rulers was at Firuzkuh. Bamian, another centre of the Ghurids, was ruled by Fakhr ad-din Ghuri. Under his rule were also Shugnan, Vakhan, part of Tokharistan as well as part of the mountain areas of the Hindu Kush and the Pamirs. Herat, Ghazni, Kabul and Bust were major trade centres in the territory of Afghan istan.

In the years preceding the Mongol invasion, their vast domain was often attacked by Khwarizm Shahs until the Ghurid state disintegrated.8 By 1217 the troops of the Khwarizm Shahs occupied vast territories, including all the lands of the Ghurids in the territory of Afghanistan. In the regions captured by Muhammad Ghuri in Northern India a Ghurid military commander, named Qutb-ad-din Aybak, founded a new state—the Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526).

Thus the period between the 9th and the early 13th centuries in the history of Afghanistan was marked by frequent incursions of foreign conquerors and internecine strife. The invaders seized vast territories, and then redis tributed the land. But no matter who owned the land—the Arab nobility, local landowners or the military-nomad aristocracy—feudal landownership kept spreading, becom ing hereditary. Tribal ties were disrupted and feudalism developed steadily, though unevenly. Slavery was gradually disappearing.

As feudal landownership developed, a considerable part of the peasants fell in ever greater feudal dependence. Remaining free tillers, the peasants cultivated, on metayage rent terms, the land of the feudal lords, who usually had no farms of their own. The growing tax burden often made it impossible for the peasants to work their own plots, for they lacked water, seeds and cattle. In such cases the land plots were voluntarily left to the patronage of the feudal lords on the condition that the peasants would get part of the harvest (often not more than a quarter), a sys tem practised not only in Oriental countries but also in Europe.

The period preceding the Mongol conquest saw certain economic revival. The local rulers took rather successful measures to advance agriculture, handicraft production and trade. Irrigation work and town building developed. In some areas industrial crops such as cotton and silk be came widespread; livestock breeding was expanding, and so were the trades on its base. Apart from growing wheat, barley, fruits and vegetables, rice was sown on larger areas. Canals, kyarizes, wells, and protective structures to stop quick-sand movement, were built. Agriculture and the hand icrafts gradually separated; along with urban semi-agrarian settlements, large feudal-type cities were growing in number. Balkh, for instance, had nearly 200,000 inhabit ants. Even a small town like Panjshir had a population of 20,000. In the cities there were corporations of bakers, potters, weavers, copper-smiths, jewellers and merchants. Apart from free craftsmen who worked in their shops, craftsmen who worked for hire laboured in enterprises owned by the state or by feudal lords.

Carpet weaving, production of cotton and silk fabrics with golden and silver needlework, metal-chasing, and the making of glazed ceramics, weapons, and bronze articles reached a high level. Incidentally, the development of hand icrafts in the towns did not mean that there were no crafts men among the rural settled, nomad or semi-nomad cattle breeding population. Thus, leather currying and metal processing were often done by nomad craftsmen.

The cities were becoming centres of craftsmanship and trade, both domestic and foreign. Narrative sources and archaeological finds provide evidence that Afghanistan main tained trade relations with India, China, and the Mediter ranean countries. Situated along trade routes Herat, Kabul, Balkh, Ghazni and Bust were major centres of handicraft production and retail and wholesale trade; they also served as trans-shipping points for caravan trade.

Ore-mining was developing, yielding big profits for the rulers. Slave labour was often used in the ore pits. Silver pits, with a few thousand workers in each, operated in the regions of Panjshir, Ghuzgan and Parvan; iron ore was mined in Ghur and near Kabul, lead and sulphur in Tokharistan, gems and semi-precious stones—ruby, lapis lazuli and tur quoise—in Badakhshan, in the north of the country.

As the cities developed, their architecture improved: new palaces, caravanserais, mosques and madrasahs were con structed. Ancient ruins in that area and archaeological finds testify to the wide use of alabaster, ore, coloured glazed ceramics, and lustre painting.*

The flourishing of science, literature, poetry and prose in the early Middle Ages was reflected in the immortal poetry of Firdausi, the works of al-Biruni, the writings by Beihaqi and al’-Utbi.


The early Middle Ages played a significant role in the ethnic evolution of the Afghan (Pashtun) people.** The origin of the Pashtuns has been trace.’ back to the ancient population of the Suleiman Mountains. The formation of the union of basically East-Iranian tribes most likely dates from the middle of the 1st millennium A.D. and was a result of the disintegration of the Ephthalite alliance.

Right up to the start of the 2nd millennium A.D. the area inhabited by the Pashtuns was confined to the Sulei man Mountains between the valleys of the Kuram River in the north and the Gomal River in the south. By that time the Pashtun ethno-linguistic community had formed, the boundaries of Pashtun territory were fixed, and the founda tions of the original culture of the Pashtuns and their indi vidual mentality were formed on the basis of the semi nomad and nomad livestock raising economy. It was prob ably at the time when the group of related East-Iranian dialects were developing that the Pashto (Pushtu) language was formed.

As the productive forces developed and the population increased the Pashtun tribes gradually began to live a set tled life. Dwelling in territories around the Suleiman Moun tains, some even engaged in sedentary farming. Their migration was made easier by the fact that the sedentary Irano-Tajik and Indo-Aryan population of those regions had been partially exterminated during the incursions by Gen ghiz Khan and his successors, and also under Tamerla ne (these developments will be described in more detail below), and some of them had moved to safer regions. At first the Pashtuns occupied the Ghazni Plateau, part of the Peshawar Valley, Kohat and Bannu, and several regions in the Kabul area. Some time later they moved on towards, Qandahar, to the Swat Valley, and to the territory of Zhob.

In the process of settlement, tribal relations were dis rupted, and unions’ of tribes were formed and broke up. Property and social inequality was growing in the Pashtun society and major changes set in with the spread of Islam. Settling in the vast area between the Indus and the Hindu Kush, the Pashtuns mingled with the local population. More often than not these contacts led to the assimilation of the Pashtuns with their neighbours who became involved in the tribal and communal structure of the Pashtun society. Thus, from the 11th to the 13th century the Pashtuns mixed with a number of Turkic tribes who lived as nomads on the Ghazni Plateau. The largest of these was the Khalaj tribe (or union of tribes), predecessors of the Ghilzais, one of the biggest Pashtun tribes. The Tarklani tribe, too, populating the Bajaur area has genetic ties with the Turks. Besides, Indo-Aryan tribes and ethnic groups that popu lated the valleys of the Kabul and its tributaries and the lands between the Suleiman Mountains and the Indus played a certain role in the formation of some of the Pashtun tribes.

However, the main role in the evolution of the Pashtuns was played by the Tajiks and kindred Iranian tribes and ethnic groups that populated avast region between the Hindu Kush and the Suleiman Mountains as well as the territory south of the Suleiman Mountains. The Tajiks as well as the Indian peoples, who by that time already had a feudal system that had taken firm root, undoubtedly influenced the development of feudal relations among the Pashtuns. Ample evidence of this is provided, in particular, by analy sis of Pashtun socio-political, economic and state adminis trative terminology.

The Mongolian Conquest

Early in the 13th century, after lengthy and persistent struggle, Mongolian tribal chief Temuchin achieved polit ical unification of Mongolia. Having assumed the title of Genghiz Khan (1206-1227), he was recognised great khan.

By that time an early-feudal society had taken shape in Mongolia, though tribal relationships remained and tribal unions (uluses) were at different levels of social develop ment. Every ulus was hierarchically subdivided into mili tary-administrative units, their names depending on the numerical strength of the armed units they supplied (tu mens,* thousands, hundreds and tens). The units were headed by hereditary tribal chiefs, elders of clans and fami lies, etc., in which the master (or feudal lord) of the tribes men was also their military commander. Implicit obedience was total.

The armed force thus formed was well organised and dis ciplined. Being nomads, the Mongols created a very mobile and manoeuvrable cavalry whose actions, facilitated by the combat’ equipment of that time (catapults, wall-breaching machines and weapons) determined their success in battles against enemy units recruited from among the'settled popu lation of divided feudal state formations.

The name of Genghiz Khan is synonymous with one of the most arduous periods in the medieval history of the many countries invaded by his troops.

Having waged several successful campaigns, the Mongols extended their power to the territories of China, Korea, Tibet, Eastern Turkestan, Central and Western Asia, Trans caucasia, Iran, Afghanistan, Eastern Europe, the areas north of the Black Sea, and the lower reaches of the Don and Volga rivers. As distinct from many other conquerors in the East, Genghiz Khan and his military commanders ravaged whole regions in a systematic and organised manner, des troyed irrigation systems tuming fertile oases into desert land, burned down and wiped off towns and villages. With a 200,000-strong force they often totally annihilated a population that could offer resistance; thousands of crafts men were tumed into slaves and sent away to Mongolia.

Afghanistan did not escape the common lot.? Having at tacked the Khwarizm Shahs in 1219 and conquered Central Asia by 1220, the Mongols marched on to Afghanistan. In 1221 they seized Herat, exterminated the whole garri son, the greater part of the population and took away many craftsmen, including all the Herat weavers. Other cities and regions of Afghanistan, too, including Balkh and Talikan, were sacked. The Nusrat-Kukh fortress was razed to the ground and its entire population killed.

Jalal-ad-din, the son of Muhammad Khwarizm Shah, tried to hold off the Mongols. He mustered an army of 70,000 in Ghazni (where he was vicegerent) from among the volunteer troops of Khorasan, Ghur, and the detach ments of the Khalajes, Afghans and Turkmenians, and moved against the Mongols. He pitched a camp near Parvan, in the upper reaches of the Logar River in the Kabul Valley. In the battle at Parvan the Mongols were defeated. This bolstered the confidence of the Afghan population. Though strife among the feudal lords ultimately made Jalal-ad-din flee to India and then to Iran, in many towns and settle ments anti-Mongolian uprisings flared up. One of the largest was in Herat, where unsurgents killed the Mongol vicegerent, destroyed the garrison and, having fortified the city walls, got ready to repel the attacking Mongolian troops. The siege of Herat lasted nearly half a year, and after its seizure in 1222 the city and its outskirts were ravaged and ruined and the whole of the population mas sacred.* It was not until 1236 that Herat was restored and populated by an order from Genghiz Khan’s son Ogodai.

The Mongols met with protracted and stubborn resistance in Gurzivan and Bamiyan. During the siege of the latter, Genghiz Khan’s grandson was killed. Infuriated with the news, Genghiz Khan ordered that the town be taken by storm and razed to the ground. The same fate befell many cities of Ghur and Seistan.

After the seizure of Kabul and Qandahar the Mongols made several expeditions to India. Passing across the Kuram Valley, they ravaged the lands populated by Afghans. Kabul was so badly destroyed that the city practically ceased to exist. What remained in its place was a settlement populated by an Afghan tribe.

The local Afghan feudal lords offered no resistance to the Mongols. What is worse still, many of them, in contrast to the inhabitants of the cities and settlements, showed not only loyalty but even servility to the invaders. Some of them received permission from Mongol khans to retain control over various regions. But even when such permis sion was given, officials were sent to watch over the ruler’s activities and see to it that taxes were properly collected and the khan’s instructions observed. As a rule, Genghiz Khan and his successors appointed their own vicegerents in large regions, mostly Mongol princes and military com manders.

To tighten their grip on the seized territory, the Mon gols resettled Turko-Mongol and Mongol nomads there. These resettlements, carried out repeatedly in the 13th to the early 14th centuries, had a definite influence on the evolution of the peoples now populating the central parts of Afghanistan. It is commonly thought that the Hazaras, living in the Uruzgun province and in some other regions and cities of Afghanistan (including Kabul and Herat), originated from those tribes. Their name is derived from the word "hazara’’, meaning "thousand’’.*

In the middle of the 13th century the Mongol empire broke up into several uluses, nominally subordinate to the ‘ great khan of Mongolia. The territories in South-West and West Asia became the ulus of Hulagu (1256-1265), a grand son of Genghiz Khan.

In 1256 Hulagu, who continued conquests in Asia, des troyed the state of the Ismailites and the Alamut fortress, its centre. Having seized Baghdad, he executed Mustasim, caliph of the Abbasids (1258). Having fixed the northem border of his domain along the Caucasian range, Hulagu Khan annexed vast territories, including Iran, Kurdistan, Iraq with Baghdad, upper Mesopotamia, the eastern part of Asia Minor, Azerbaijan, part.of Armenia, the Merv oasis, and part of Afghanistan (except for the Balkh region).* Georgia, Cilician Armenia, the Trebizond Empire, the Rum Sultanate and Cyprus became the vassals of the Hulagus and paid tribute to them. The Kurts (a local dynasty that first ruled in Ghur and later extended its rule to other regions of Afghanistan) were also their vassals.

In 1261 Hulagu assumed the title of Ikhan** and was granted an investiture from the great Khan Khubilai (1259 1294) for the whole of Iran and newly-conquered territor ies,*** including a part of Afghanistan.19 Bordering on the | hostile Golden .Horde in the North, the Chagatai ulus along the Amu Darya River in the East, and the Mameluke Sulta nate in Egypt in the West, Hulagu Khan and the Ilkhans who auccenied him waged incessant wars requiring constant expenditures. Heavy spending was caused also by the main tenance of the Ilkhan’s court, the military-nomad elite and the fiscal apparatus.

The Mongol invasion led to a redivision of land: the lands that had belonged to the Khwarizm Shahs and the local feudal aristocracy—most of whom had been extermi nated, banished or simply fled from the country—went over to the elite of the military-nomad tribes. The change in the ethnic set-up of the ruling class caused changes in the tenor of life and in the goals the new rulers set themselves.

The ruling class consisted of the military-nomad nobility (it not only played a major political role in the state, but was greater in number); remnants of the local sedentary aristocracy, including the military; and high Muslim theo logians who had retained their influence. Speaking about the set-up of the ruling class, the following must be em phasised.

The nomad nobility (including the Mongol princes from among the Genghizids), the tribal chiefs and military com manders, who seized the conquered lands or were given land for their service and then as private holdings, were becoming big feudal lords. The greater part of the nobility, sup ported by the tribes and having an opportunity of plunder ing vast territories that had been given to them by the Ilkhans or under the zgta rights, were ultimately interested in decentralising the state, and that trend became obvious already under Arghun Khan (1284-1291). Continuing to live a nomad life, the nobility was very hostile to the local aristocracy and the sedentary population, looking upon it merely as an object of exploitation.

The policy of plunder pursued by the nobility, the intensification of feudal exploitation, abuses and violence with regard to the tax-paying population, which was already ruined in the course of the Mongol invasion, forced the peasants and craftsmen to leave their native lands, under mined the country’s economy as a whole, primarily agri culture, which was the basis of the economy. Thus, by the end of the 13th century merely one-tenth of the arable land was under cultivation.

Another part of the Mongol nobility, less numerous but more far-sighted, sought contacts with the local aristocracy, including the military, the merchants and Muslim theolo gians (the latter had a great influence on the population), and took measures to restore the disrupted economy, the irrigation systems, agriculture, handicrafts and trade. This policy was pursued, in particular, by Ogodai, Munke and specifically by Ghazan Khan (1295-1304), Mongol emir Nawruz, who was vicegerent of Khorasan, and others.

Throughout the entire period of Mongol rule these two opposite trends were in severe conflict with one another.

The surviving part of the local aristocracy felt insecure in their domains, for they depended on the Ilkhans and their vicegerents who could expropriate their land and property to their own benefit. That part of the ruling class sought increasingly to strengthen their economic and polit ical position and wished to see the Hulagid state decentral ised. The strongest among them achieved a certain degree of independence, as was the case, for instance, with the local Kurt dynasty—it ruled in Ghur in 1245-1389, and in. the mid-13th century created a vassal principality with Herat as the capital.

The military, on the contrary, advocated a strong central power with stronger IIkhans and tried to influence them by helping to improve the administration mechanism, including the fiscal system.

The Muslim theologians, owing to the Mongols’ relative religious tolerance, retained their land holdings. Further more, the Mongol khans freed them from all taxes and duties even before they adopted Islam. Connected with commerce, they, just like the military aristocracy, advocat ed centralisation of the state and restoration of agriculture and the handicrafts.

These trends within the ruling class played a major role in the historical development of the state of the Il khans. The main forms of landownership in it were the divant, or the state-owned land; the inju, or khass inju, that is, the land owned by the khan and his relatives; the mulq, or the land privately owned by Mongol, and partly by local, feudal lords; and the wagf lands, conventional feudal land grants: igta, idrar and ubacseh tl

The profits from the divant lands were collected through the state financial apparatus or farmed out to be pent for covering state expenditures. A great part of the lands was given out as conventional ownership mainly to the nomad-military nobility, used for producing food for the troops and partially went to the military in the bureaucratic apparatus. Due to these grants the area of state-owned land, from which the entire profit went to the treasury, was shrinking. The profits from the znju lands were used to cover the expenses of the Mongol court, princes and other relatives of Genghiz Khan and his offspring, their vassals attached to their hordes, or were used on the basis of personal comm endation or patronage; sometimes the znju lands were given by Ilkhans to feudal lords for use or just as a gift.

The igta lands, the conventional land grants, while jurid ically state-owned, turned into hereditary fiefs of the military elite. The lands, given by the Mongols to Muslim theologians of various ranks as waqf lands, were tax-free. While the owners of those lands, and also inju and mulq landholders, collected taxes practically without control.

The terms tdrar and mukasseh meant conventional grants. Thus, the zdrar was a hereditary grant of rent as a fief, while the term mukasseh implied lands and real estate.

In the 14th century, during the rule of the Ilkhans, there already functioned the system called soyurgal, when the landowner was given the right to immunity. I. P. Petru shevsky stressed in his fundamental research Agriculture and Agrarian Relations in Iran in the 13th-14th Centuries that in order to understand the historical significance of immunity one must tum to Marx’s observation that in feudal society the feudal "functions of general and judge were attributes of landed property".12

The pasture lands of the nomad tribes were a special category of land in the state of the Ilkhans. Those lands legally belonged to the tribe but in practice were control led by the tribal elite. The lands of the rural communities and of the landowning peasants who had left the com munities accounted for a meagre portion of the land. At the time when feudalism developed, that category of land was doomed to extinction.

Apart from taxes and duties that existed also in the previous years, introduced under the Mongols were new taxes and duties and extraordinary collection of food and forage for the army, requisitions for the maintenance of emirs, clerks, messengers, tax-collectors, as well as labour conscription and provision of billeting. There existed the practice of distributing so-called berats, giving officials and the military the right to receive a salary or pension in some region or other. Often several berats were given to one and the same region. One of the newest reforms effect ed under the Mongols—under Ghazan Khan, to be more’ precise—was the attachment of peasants to the land.

At first the Mongols extended the practice of attaching nomads and peasants to their master in keeping with the military-administrative division of Mongolian society into tumens, thousands, hundreds and tens. Then the enslaving of the taxed population, which was a logical outcome of the development of feudal relations, took its final shape under Ilkhan Ghazan.

Lenin pointed out that under feudalism non-economic coercion may take different forms, "ranging from the peasant’s: serf status to his lack of rights in the social es tates".13 Given feudal property in land, which made up the basis of fetidalism, one of these forms was attaching the farmer not to the feudal lord but to the place where he paid his taxes and carried out his duties.

In 1303, under an order issued by Ghazan Khan the peasants were included in the tax lists of the regions where they lived and weré not permitted to change their place of residence. During the time when agriculture was being ruined, irrigation structures destroyed, peasants and handi craftsmen taken away as prisoners and exploitation inten sified, masses of rural inhabitants fled to the mountains, and joined bands of robbers. The mass departure of peasants brought further deterioration of agriculture and reduced the profits of the feudal lords and the treasury. Therefore a special point of the edict attaching the peasants to the place of taxation envisaged the right of the feudal lord and the state to bring back fugitive peasants by force within a period of 30 years since their escape.

An important measure to strengthen central power was the regulation of the administration machinery under Ghazan Khan, particularly the fiscal system. Under his edicts tax rates were established (and partially reduced), and the berats and some of the most burdensome duties (as, for instance, billeting rights) were cancelled. To pro mote handicrafts and trade, the tamga tax was reduced for craftsmen and merchants, and in some regions it was even cancelled altogether; slave craftsmen working in large work shops (karkhanahs) were transferred to the quitrent system, without freeing them from slavery. The slaves, whose numbers during the expeditions were replenished with prisoners, were widely used as craftsmen, in agriculture, construction, and so on. This enabled historians to view the period of Mongol rule as a period of revival of slavery.

Among the reforms effected by Ghazan Khan that were, in some way or other, connected with the regulation of taxation, mention should be made of the establishment of a unified system of weights and measures and of a monetary unit—the dirhem (2.15 grams of silver).

Ghazan Khan adopted Islam, and leaning on the local nobility and Muslim theologians he left their wagf lands intact. Simultaneously, the mulg area was increased. But that was done mainly by granting the local holders the neglected lands, provided they would cultivate, irrigate and populate them. Not only the Mongol elite but all Mongol warriors without exception were given land under the zqta right, the hereditary character of this grant was formalised, and so was the right of the iqtadars to tax immunity. An iqtadar could not sell the land grant. But, under the khan’s order, it could be taken away from him for negligence of duties and service evasion.

The policy of centralisation pursued by Ghazan Khan was strongly opposed by the military-nomad elite. A num ber of feudal rebellions erupted at the time. All of them were quelled, though some concessions had to be made. The reforms effected by Ghazan Khan yielded some results, but they could not prevent the collapse of the state of the Dkhans.

Among the vassal territories subordinate to that state a special role was played by the Kurt principality with Ghur as its nucleus. At the time of the Khwarizm Shahs a considerable part of Ghur was subjugated. Rukn-ad-din, the ruler of the Khaysar mountain district—a rather small territory in Ghur—who did not recognise their authority, retained independence. The Khaysar fortress held out also during the invasion of the Mongols. Rukn-ad-din received official permission from Genghiz Khan to rule Khaysar and Ghur. His successor Shams-ad-din Kurt (1245-1278) main-. tained relations with the Mongols and even took part in their expedition to India in 1246. During the struggle for pone between Munke and other claimants Shams-ad-din

acked Munke, who showed his gratitude by handing him down the administration of a number of towns and regions.

Later, under Abagha Khan (1265-1282), the son of Ilkhan Hulagu, Shams-ad-din. managed to get an edict con° firming his right to administration. Among other towns and regions named in the edict, Afghanistan was mentioned as a region populated by Afghan tribes in the area of the Suleiman Mountains and between the upper reaches of the: Helmand in the north-west and the Indus in the south-east.

The sources of the time do not contain any detailed information about the Afghans. It is known, however, that during this period Afghan tribes were becoming feudalised and that a hierarchy existed among the Afghan tribal chiefs who governed their small domains and had a subordinate tax-paying population dependent on them, as well as slaves. At the same time the Afghans continued to settle not only the territory of present-day Afghanistan but also that of India. The Afghans played a meaningful role in the political history of India in the 13th century, specifically during the rule of the Delhi sultan Ghiyath-ad-din Balban (1265 1287), the Hildji dynasty (1290-1321) and also later.15

Despite numerous military expeditions of the Mongols to regions populated by the Afghans, they failed to subdue many of the Afghan tribes. This is clear, for instance, from a letter to Shams-ad-din Kurt written by Afghan chief Almar, who had consolidated his position in Teri. In the letter he declared that never before, under no sultan did his "fathers and grandfathers serve the Mongols or pay tribute to the infidels".

Some of the Afghan maliks voluntarily recognised the power of the Kurts. Among the Afghans who had long resisted the Kurts wére Almar from Teri and also the chiefs of the tribes from the Mastung and Ghazni areas. On one occasion the besieged Afghans held a fortress for several months on a mountainous island on a lake near Ghazni. The Kurts had to build ships and boats to seize the fortress. Having encircled the Afghans, the Kurt soldiers forced the besieged, after 12 days of incessant fighting, to surrenderand received a contribution of 10,000 dinars, 10 packs of silk fabric, 5 Arab thoroughbreds, 50 slaves, and valuables. Besi des, the Afghans were obliged to pay them annual tribute.16

It took the Kurts several years to conquer the Afghan lands. At the tum of the 14th century the ruin and im poverishment of the population of the Kurt principality, and of the whole of the Hulagid state at that, were so enor mous, and the flight of the tax-paying population reached such disastrous proportions, that not only the Kurts, but also the Mongols, who sought the retum of the fugitives for fiscal reasons, were compelled to make considerable concessions. Emir Nawruz, for instance, who had been sent by Ghazan Khan to Khorasan, ordered the rulers of Farah, Isfizar and Seistan to retum the people who had fled to them from Herat and its outlying districts and then issued a decree exempting the Herat population from taxation for a term of two years.

Speaking about the position of the tax-paying popula tion in the Kurt state, mention should be made of the karkhanah, the profit from which went to the ruler. Wide spread at that period were karkhanahs for thé manufacture of bricks and tile, which was obviously caused by the need to fortify city walls.

The revival of the slave-owning system in many countries during the Mongol rule also took place in the Kurt prin cipality. The sources say that in artisan production, with the status of slaves, apart from the local people, there worked prisoners or persons punished for some offence; many were in chains.

It is significant that under the Kurts Herat did not lose its importance as a trade centre, which is evidenced by the fact that bazaars and caravanserais were built in the city. Another interesting fact is that Ogodai’s decree on the restoration of Herat in 1236 was issued on the mer chants’ advice.

Just as in other vassal territories, the Mongols sent their representatives to the Kurt maliks. Various officials resided permanently in Herat for inspection work. Herat and Ghur were under the direct control of the Kurt maliks. The rest of the principality was administered by feudal rulers who depended (as vassals) on the Kurts. Among them were Ghurs, Afghans, Tajiks, and also the militaryynomad Mon gol elite. The largest Mongol settlements were in Badg his. The conflicts that erupted between the Mongol elite and the Kurts often grew into armed clashes. In some instances the Kurts deliberately aggravated relations with . the Hulagid rulers by suspending the delivery of taxes and tribute to them, executing officials they had sent, and backing the feudal lords opposed to the Ilkhans. Behind this policy of the Kurts was the intention of the local sedentary nobility to create an independent domain, making use of the hatred among the masses towards the Mongol invaders. Owing to this, the Kurts managed to deal heavy blows at Mongol troops and pursue a relatively independent course.

To win support of the pcople, the Kurt maliks sought popularity among them and set out to bolster their position among Sunnite theologians. They built mosques and ma drasahs, bestowed alms to the poor, and made offerings of money and property to dervishes. Acting as champions of the norms of Islam and morality, the Kurts ordered that drunkards and profligates should have their beards shaved off, be chained, and used for work in karkhanahs together with slaves.

The striving of the Kurt maliks for independence caused dissatisfaction and apprehension among the Mongols. Their troops repeatedly attacked the lands of the Kurts, including the capital Herat. Thus, in 1270, under an order from Abagha Khan, the entire population was evicted from Herat. In 1298-1299 the city was besieged by the troops of a Mongol prince, later known as Oeljeitu Khan (1304-1316), but, having received 30,000 gold coins and ravaged the city outskirts, he rescinded the siege.

In 1306 the city was again besieged by Mongol troops headed by Danishmand Bahadur, and later by his son Bujay. After a siege lasting five months and fierce battles the city was taken. The Mongols destroyed all the fortifica tions and many buildings in Herat. In 1319 Mongol prince Yasawur sacked the city outskirts. In 1358 Herat was again besieged by Mongol troops, however they failed to capture the city and the siege was raised. But the suburbs were des troyed; the population was plundered.

Speaking about the numerous instances of devastation of Herat in the 13th and 14th centuries, one is to mention forays by groups of nomads who did not recognise the power of the Hulagids. They often raided the Herat area, sacking the city and its environs.

A negative impact on Herat’s economic life was doubt lessly exerted by the internecine strife and by the rebel lions of vassals. The rebellions by the rulers of Isfizar and Farah were especially wide-scale. Herat’s location at the crossroads of major trade routes, with Mongol-ravaged Merv and Balkh offering no competition, coupled with the striving of the Kurts for independence and their efforts to ensure the security of their capital, improve the city and enlarge its population were all factors that definitely facilitated the revival of that area. Taking advantage of a lull in attacks from the outside, the Kurts continued to fight successfully the recalcitrant vassals, forcing them to pay taxes and indemnities, and restored or rebuilt city fortifica tions. The second city wall, about a farsakh long (7-8 kilo metres), scaled the northern and eastem parts of the city. It was built under Muizz-ad-din Kurt (1331-1370).

Built in Herat under the Kurts were the citadel Ikhtiar ad-din, the palaces Bargakh and Koshk, madrasahs, the tomb of malik Muizz-ad-din, bazaars and caravanserais. The walls of many houses were decorated beautifully with ornaments. Most fascinating were the walls of the Bargakh palace built under malik Ghiyath-ad-din (1307-1329). Fol lowing the malik’s instructions, the big mosque, which had been built in Herat under the Ghurids, was restored.

The subjugation of vassal territories, the strengthening and growth of Herat, and the measures to improve it, all show that the Kurt influence was waxing and that the patronage of the Mongol rulers was increasingly oppress ing them. Beginning with the early 14th century the Kurt maliks more and more often refused not only to go to the great Khan to express their respect but even to fulfil the direct duties of vassals—to pay taxes and tribute and supply troops for their suzerain. The displeased Ilkhans responded with threats. But the victory of Ghiyath-ad-din over a Chagatai prince, who had opposed the Hulagids, strengthened the position of the Kurt rulers at the Ilkhans’ court. Muizz ad-din, son of Ghiyath-ad-din, formally recognised himself to be a vassal of the Mongols, but after the death of Ilkhan Abu Said (1335) he ordered that his name be mentioned during religious service at mosques on Fridays as an inde pendent ruler and that it be inscribed on coins.

The disintegration of the Hulagid state, which had concluded by 1353, offered the Kurts an opportunity to consolidate the independence of their state. They estab lished friendly relations with Timur (Tamerlane) who by that time had extended his power to Central Asia, and exchanged embassies with him. But these relations, which seemed to be well established and even sealed by marital ties, proved to be shortlived in the end.

Timur and the Timurids

In the last thirty years of the 14th century several states were attacked by Timur (1336-1405), the son of emir Taragay of -the Barlas in the Kesh province (now Shahri syabz). Having gained a firm position in Mavarannahr and actually being head of the state (formally the Chagatai princes were the rulers of Mavarannahr), Timur undertook numerous expeditions of conquest to Iran, Asia Minor, Transcaucasia, to the Volga, Siberia, the Tien Shans, to Khwarizm, Afghanistan, Northem India, and intended to subjugate China.17

Leaving a trail of death and destruction, killing hundreds of thousands of people, and tuming farming oases and cities, partially restored after the invasion of the Mongols, into barren land, Timur wanted to create a vast state with strong central power. His goal also was to establish control over the main trade routes from Europe to Asia that ran across Iran and Afghanistan, and simultaneously to close the caravan routes alongside the Black and Caspian Seas.

The conquest by Timur of the territories of what is now Afghanistan began in 1370 with the seizure of Balkh. Hav ing established friendly relations with the Kurts, Timur, however, soon demanded that they recognise his supreme authority. The Kurts refused to obey and he marched on their lands. Having enlisted the support of Muhammad, the ruler of Sarakhs, who had come over to his side, he seized Jam, Kohe-Siyakh, and Fushenj and besieged Herat in 1381. After repeated but futile attempts to capture Herat, Timur called upon the besieged to surrender and promised that if they complied with his request he would leave the city whole and the people unharmed. But after they surrendered he ordered the population to pay a large contribution; 200 eminent persons and mullahs were forcefully resettled to Kesh, the native city of Timur, the iron gates of Herat were also taken to Kesh, and the city walls, built under Muizz-ad-din, were destroyed.

Fearing an uprising, Timur left a garrison and a viceger ent in Herat and prohibited the restoring of the city walls and the construction of new fortifications. His apprehen sions were not unfounded. In 1383, the people of Herat, partly consisting of Ghurs, set the town afire, annihilated the garrison and started an uprising. The insurgents were backed by units of warriors who had arrived from Ghur.

The Herat uprising was suppressed with utmost cruelty by troops of Timur’s son, Miran Shah. Simultaneously, an expedition was sent to Ghur accompanied by mass extermi nation of the population; then the troops invaded Seistan, where many cities were ravaged, especially Bust; and other areas that were part of the Kurts’ principality, including Qandahar and Kabul, were also sacked. The invading troops built towers with the heads of the dead bodies of the city’s defenders. In 1389 the last of the Kurts were killed.

In 1392, Timur made a gift of the lands south-west of the Hindu Kush, largely populated by Afghan tribes, to his grandson Pir Muhammad, though many of the mountain regions in those areas had not been actually seized by Timur. He appointed his son Shahrukh ruler of Khorasan, Seistan, Gurgan, and Mazenderan, with Herat as the centre of the domain. During his Indian expedition in 1398 Timur captured some of the territories populated by Afghan tribes (a district in Peshawar, part of Bajaur, Swat, and other territo ries). However, Timur failed to subjugate many of the tribes.

In the struggle against the Afghans, Timur and his suc cessors cruelly punished the unruly and made wide use of the strife among the various tribes and tribal groups. Timur also enlisted Afghan tribal chiefs with their troops in his military operations. Participation in these expeditions pre vented the Afghans from carrying on productive work, increased the power and wealth of the tribal chiefs, and touched off the migration of Afghan tribes that settled in India, which later led to the emergence of the Afghan dynasties Lodi and Sur that ruled in India in the 15th and 16th centuries.

The Afghan chiefs, on their return from predatory ex peditions to India, received part of the spoils, and some times also land grants. This tended to speed up the feudal isation of Afghan society. Besides, after entire regions were devastated during the invasion of the troops of the Mongols and Timur, the Afghan tribes began to undertake seasonal migrations from the mountains to the flat country, to the vast pasturelands in the Ghazni area and the valleys of the Helmand, Kabul and Kunar, practically seizing those terri tories. As a result of conflicts with the rulers of Kabul and Ghazni, part of the tribes (for instance, the Yusufzais) migrated, reaching the Peshawar Valley through the Khyber Pass, and settled there in the latter half of the 15th century.

The 13th and 14th centuries marked the beginning of the gradual transition of the Afghans from nomad livestock breeding to sedentary farming, which was mainly caused by the internal processes underway in Afghan society. The number of dependent tribesmen (khamsaya) was increasing not only within the tribes; often whole clans and tribes became dependent; the khamsaya grew in number as they were joined by members of various social and ethnic groups, including ‘those from among the indigenous population of the areas seized by the Afghans and also those who had moved from India. The process of property stratification within a number of tribes led to the intensification of the struggle for pasturelands, undermining tribal relations and enriching the elite. Tribes joined in alliances, which no longer consisted of kindred tribes alone. Within the tribes themselves there emerged privileged hereditary families, the khan-hels, from whose midst there came forth chiefs of whole tribes—khans.

The feudalisation of Afghan tribes proceeded under the influence of and in interaction with the feudal environ ment, i.e., the cities and agricultural oases, where the feudal system was already established. This interaction had a number of major consequences. It proved very important in that the Afghan tribes went over from patriarchal and tribal relations to feudalism by-passing the slave-owning stage. Among other significant aspects was the unequal development of feudal relations among various tribes (also depending on the places of their settlement), the lack, for quite a long time, of cities with a purely Afghan popula tion, the relatively poor level of the handicrafts among the Afghans who remained active as intermediaries in transit trade along the caravan routes from Iran and Central Asia to India, and the forniation of Povindah tribes special ising in that trade, etc.1

The further feudalisation of Afghan society was also influenced by the specifics of the social, economic and political development of the state formations, of which Afghanistan was part—the state of the Herat Timurids, the state of the Great Moghuls and the state of the Safavids.

After Timur’s death in 1405 his state was rent by inter necine strife and part of the territory he had seized fell away. The Timurid rulers retained power in Central Asia, part of Iran and in Afghanistan. In 1409 Timur’s son Shahrukh gained a firm stand in Herat and made it his capital, while a considerable number of the state’s regions were granted to Timurid princes. Thus, his son Ulugh Beg received Mavarannahr and soon became essentially its sovereign ruler (1409-1449); Samarkand was the central city. Ghazni, Qandahar and Kabul were given to another son of Shahrukh, Qaydu; and Tokharistan was granted to Muhammad Jahangir.

During the rule of Shahrukh (1409-1447) part of the Abdali tribe migrated to the Beets region.

Shahrukh did not wage large-scale wars of conquest. Military operations during his rule were conducted mainly to suppress uprisings, mutinies, and intemecine strife. Among the most potent enemies of the Herat Timurids were the chiefs of the Turkmenian tribal confederation Qara Qoynlu, who captured Azerbaijan, Armenia, Kurdistan and Arab Iraq and sought to form an independent state. But, having suffered a number of defeats from Shahrukh, they recognised themselves to be his vassals.

Under Shahrukh taxes were fixed, duties determined, and measures were taken to develop farming, irrigation, the handicrafts and trade. Much attention was devoted to Herat, the capital of the state. The city was adomed with magnifi cent buildings: the Mosalla ensemble with the mausoleums of Shahrukh’s wife and son, a madrasah, the tomb of Ansari, a library founded by prince Baysunghur, and gardens and parks.

Shahrukh’s death was followed by a struggle for power and internecine strife. Mutinies became more violent, and devastating incursions by the Hazaras and Nikudaris into the areas of Ghur, Qandahar and Farah became more fre quent. Among the short-term rulers of Herat were Shah rukh’s son Ulugh Beg and his grandsons Abdul Latif and Abdul Qasim Babur. In 1458 Herat was seized by Abu Said, the ruler of Mavarannahr. But during his rule the interne cine strife did not cease. In 1469 he was killed.

After a period of stubborn struggle the Herat throne was occupied by Timurid prince Sultan Husayn Baiqara (1469-1506) who conquered the whole of Khorasan. During his rule Herat became more prominent as a major city and a centre of the handicrafts, trade, culture and the arts in the Middle and Near East. At that time the famous poet, scientist and statesman Ali Sher Nawai, poet Abdurrahman Jami, historians Mirkhwand and Khwandemir, the great master of miniature painting Behzad and many others lived in Herat.

New palaces, madrasahs, hospitals, baths, bridges, gardens and parks appeared in the city. Repair and reconstruction of the central mosque of Herat, built under the Ghurids, were conducted on a broad scale. However, con-_ centrating on the development of the arts and culture and on the construction activities of the Herat Timurids, medieval authors almost never describe that part of the city where the working population lived. Apart from the grand buildings in the city centre, there were overcrowded dist ricts with narrow dirty streets, without running water— hotbeds of diseases. Only on rare occasions, when describ ing splendid buildings and shady gardens or the benefi cence of a ruler, do the sources mention that under Sultan Husayn running water was to be found only in the vicinity of the central mosque, or that thousands of people died during an epidemic of the plague in Herat and its environs. They note, as if.in passing, that water and air contamina tion was the cause of the epidemic.!9

Under the Timurids Herat was a major centre o f domestic and foreign trade. Trade and the handicrafts were concen trated along the main bazaar routes intersecting the city and at small marketplaces in the city districts.

Apart from locally made articles and foodstuffs from the environs, goods and livestock were brought to Herat from all over the state. Various goods, be it articles made by craftsmen, raw materials, livestock or foodstuffs, were all sold at special places. Horses, for instance, were sold at the fortress walls not far from the Melik Bazaar. Handi craft articles of a common type were sold in several build ings called tims, The tims most probably had links with handicraft corporations known as firkas or asnafs, though there is no direct evidence of this.

Many sources mention trade relations of the Timurid state with countries of the East and Europe. Though Balkh, Qandahar, Ghazni and Kabul were major trade cities where to caravans arrived from Iran, Central Asia, India and China, the centre of foreign trade at the time was Herat. Ambas sadors arrived from other countries, and there were am bassadors from Moscow too (1464-1465).20 It is known that the Timurids sent ambassadors from Herat to India, China and even to Grand Duke Ivan III of Muscovy (1490). These relations were more commercial than diplomatic. Among the export items were precious stones—Badakhshan ruby, topaz, lapis lazuli, turquoise—brought to the Middle East and Europe, and Ghazni apples and madder delivered to India. The Timurid state imported mainly luxury goods, chinaware, and fine cloth.

The city suburbs stretched in a continuous line, about 10 farsakhs long, and were like small towns and settle ments located close to one another. The Herat suburbs were subdivided into nine districts, or bulyuks, which made up the Herat region and were administratively subordinate to the capital. The subdivision into bulyuks was done on the land-tenure principle, i.e., the area irrigated from one and the same canal comprised a bulyuk. The bulyuks were named after the canals that irrigated them.

In the Herat province life bustled most in Obah, Sha felyan, Isfizar, Fushenj, Kusuviye, and Badghis. The Timu rid rulers also built baths, bridges and pavilions at mineral springs in the Herat province. Some of the towns in the province were densely populated and had large bazaars. The Isfizar bazaar, for instance, had 1,200 shops.

Farming was developing parallel with trade and the handicrafts; the area of irrigated, and hence cultivated, land was expanding; and irrigation canals and kiryaz sys tems were built. Economic advancement in the state of the Herat Timurids was significant; though, the sources say, it never reached the 12th-century level (prior to the Mongol invasion). But still, in the 15th century most of the dis tricts had an economic specialisation of their own. Sayavu shan, for instance, was a grapevine-growing area with crops reaching 30,000 harvars.* The Badghis region was famous for its pistachios. It also provided Herat with timber, fuel, livestock and grain. Obah, lying in the foothills, was dis tinguished for fertile soil, white-marble quarries, and a hot mineral spring. A similar spring was in Shafelyan, which was famous also for its lead pits, as well as fruits—apples, apricots, plums, peaches and musk-melons.

Under the Timurids the feudal system was further devel oped, which was seen in the spread of soyurgal. Territories of various size, from a village to an administrative region, were granted as a soyurgal. It is known, for instance, that Timurid Abul Qasim Babur (1452-1457) granted the whole of Seistan as a soyurgal to emir Halil.

While recognising the supreme power of the head of the Timurid state, the holders of large soyurgals could them selves give out soyurgals to smaller feudal lords, their vas sals, who had a staff of officials, a court and a large military reserve contingent. Thus, late in the 15th century the armed contingent of emir Khusraw, who had a soyurgal right to the possession of lands from the Amu Darya to the Hindu Kush, was some 30,000 strong.

Big feudal lords made independent expeditions of con quest and levied taxes in the seized territories. Shaikh Ali Khan, the Timurid ruler of Kabul, attacked Indian provinces in the first 30 odd years of the 15th century, and for some time levied duties from several regions of Punjab.

The sources inform us also about other forms of grants— the tarkhan deeds. Those possessing them had, apart from immunity, all sorts of privileges in the distribution of war spoils, were not subject to legal responsibility until commit ting nine violations of the law, etc. Usually the word tar Ae was added to the name of persons receiving such

eeds.

The holdings of Muslim religious institutions and those of outstanding Muslim theologians, which made up a con siderable part of the land, also enjoyed the right of tax immunity.

Deeds lifting some or all taxes were often given to the owners of mulgs (private lands). Such lands, which were called free mulgs, were sometimes huge and brought im mense profit. The poet Jami, for instance, received an in come of over 100,000 dinars annually from the lands in the Herat province.

This policy of the Timurids resulted in the reduction of the influx into the treasury from taxes; the weakening of central power and the spread of separatist tendencies among the feudal lords.

_ To replenish the treasury, the authorities increased landand poll-tax rates (kharaj and sarshomar), and taxes on gardens; fixed kharaj rates prior to harvesting; intro duced new duties; and compelled the population to do unpaid work, to dig canals and build palaces. As is known from historical records, there were instances when the material for building houses, laying out parks and growing gardens was collected from the population in lieu of taxes.

The intensification of feudal exploitation was compoun ded with the tyranny of the authorities and financial officials. The mounting tax burden and oppression by officials evoked acute dissatisfaction and, in some instances, violent protest action among the masses. Popular action was spon taneous and often ended with the killing of tax-collectors.

Sometimes, after a mutiny, the authorities would depose some of the officials and reduce taxes, with the very es sence of feudal exploitation left unchanged, of course.


Thus, under Sultan Abu Said, decrees were issued, an nouncing a reduction of a part of the kAaraj to be paid before harvest gathering and the lifting of taxes on fruit trees. In response to the popular action of protest against abuses by officials who had misappropriated part of the taxes and increased the poll-tax tenfold in Herat in 1457 1458, Mahmud Mirza, son of Abul Qasim Babur, ordered that the unlawfully collected money be returned to the popu lation. The subsequent years saw new uprisings caused b abuses of power by the fisk officials. During one such upri sing Ali Sher Nawai, who was then a vizier, was compelled to announce, on behalf of Sultan Husayn, the lifting of taxes in Herat and the punishment of the officials. Though one must know that such orders were a mere formality.

As before, the anti-feudal thrust of popular action under the Timurids often took the form of religious sectar ian movements. Most known at that time was the Hurufi sect21 which was under the influence of the Ismailites and the Sufis. It had followers in Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Syria and Herat, mostly among the craftsmen and urban intel lectuals. They saw the people’s liberation from tyranny in an armed uprising led by a mahdi who would "feed the Earth with truth and justice". Common property and com mon meals were introduced in the dervish abode of the Hurufis in Herat. After Ahmad Lur, a member of that sect, wounded Sultan Shahrukh with a knife in Herat’s central mosque in 1427* (Ahmad Lur was slashed to death on the spot), the Hurufis were subjected to repression; some were executed. :

Some of the feudal rulers and tribal chiefs began to rise increasingly against the Herat Timurids, especially in the middle of the 15th century. According to historical sources, they not only refused to pay taxes but staged numer ous rebellions against the Timurid princes and the rulers of a number of regions. Many were only nominally depend ent on the centre, but they sought full independence all the same. Among the recalcitrant vassals of the Timurids the sons of Sultan Husayn (vicegerents of Balkh, Merv and Abivard) and the Arghun dynasty of Mongol descent were most powerful. Members of the Arghun dynasty ruled a vast territory that included Ghur, Seistan, Zabulistan, and the Kabul region, with Qandahar as their capital.

At the close of the 15th century Sultan Husayn’s son Zunnun Arghun rose in rebellion. During those same years Muhammad Shaybani, khan of the nomad Uzbeks, seized the domains of the Central Asian Timurids and their capital Samarkand, Having mustered large forces (including the troops of his sons), Sultan Husayn moved his army against Muhammad Shaybani at the start of 1506, but died en route. The strife between the Timurid princes flared up anew. This enabled Muhammad Shaybani to seize Balkh and then, in 1507, Herat.22 Soon Khorasan was practical ly conquered. But Muhammad Shaybani’s rule was short lived. In 1510 his trepps were routed and he himself was killed near Merv in a battle against Shah Ismail (1502 1524), the founder of the Safavid dynasty that had been established in Iran and contiguous regions.

After lengthy and persistent battles the Safavids con quered Khorasan and the lands on the left bank of the Amu Darya up to Balkh. Khorasan became an outlying province of the Safavid state and its population, which professed Sunnism, was subjected to religious persecution by the Safavids who had proclaimed the Shiite branch of Islam the’ officia] religion, Popular action and feudal mutinies in the subsequent years often assumed the form of religious struggle which was waged off and on for several decades with alternating success, Due to this, the Uzbek khans of Mava rannahr, who enjoyed certain support of the population opposed to the Safavid rulers, even managed to temporarily establish their power in Herat (in 1535, 1587 and 1597).

Late in the 16th century Herat was recaptured by the Safavids, and members of the large Kyzylbash tribe Shamlu were for many years the hereditary rulers of that region.

As for the Kabul and Ghazni regions, beginning with the middle of the 15th century they were ruled by Abu Said’s son Ulugh Beg (1460-1502). Afghan tribes settled in his domains. After a conflict with Ulugh Beg part of the tribes migrated to the east, some settled in Lagman, and others moved first to Nangarhar and then to the Peshawar Valley and seized the regions of Bajaur and Swat.

Babur, the Roshanites and Khushhal Khan

In 1504, the Ferghana ruler’s son, Timurid prince Zahir ad-din Babur, who later founded the dynasty of the Great Moghuls, captured Kabul. A large part of the lands populat ed by Afghan tribes came under the rule of that dynasty. In his memoirs Babur Namah, a most important source for studying Afghanistan and the Afghans, he relates valuable information about the settlement, way of life, morals and customs of the Afghan tribes and gives a detailed descrip tion of a number of towns and regions, paying particular attention to Kabul, which he was very fond of. Babur also wrote Mubayyin, a treatise in verse on state administra tion.

Babur’s policy with regard to the Afghan tribes was shaped in accord with his preparations for an expedition ta India. Part of the tribes, that would not obey him and refused to pay tribute, he dealt with eruelly; while in, the case of other tribes, the Yusufzais, forinstance, he succeeded in winning their support and persuaded them to, join his army, taking into consideration the fact that the throne in Delhi was occupied by the Lodi dynasty of Afghan descent.

In 1526, after the battle at Panipat, in which Sultan Ibrahim Lodi (1517-1526) was killed, Babur with his troops, which partly consisted ef Afghans, seized Delhi and extended his power up to Bengal, He died in India in 1530, but was buried in Kabul, ‘in accordance with his wish. His state included part of the territory of present-day Afghanistan, among them Nangarhar, Seistan, and the Kabul, Herat, Ghazni and Qandahar regions.

The Qandahar region, and the city proper, stood on caravan routes, which brought great profit. Besides, being a major strategic point on the route to India, Qandahar was for many years the bone of contention between the Great Moghuls and the Safavids. It changed hands several times in the 16th and the early half of the 17th centuries. In 1649 the city was seized by Savafid Shah Abbas IT. The Ghilzai and Abdali tribes that settled in the Qandahar province took part in the long struggle for Qandahar. Their chiefs sided intermittently with the Safavids and with the Great Moghuls. Part of the Abdalis moved to the Herat provin ce, while others, who supported the Great Moghuls, went to India and settled mainly in Multan. The Ghilzais gained a foothold in the regions of Zamindawar and Qandahar.

The chiefs of the Ghilzai, Abdali and other Afghan tribes that settled in the territory of the Safavids were subordinate to the Safavid vicegerents appointed ‘by the shah. To gain the continued loyalty of the tribes and receive military support from the Afghan chiefs, the Safa vids often gave them a free hand in tax-collecting, granted them titles, land and money, availing themselves of the discord and struggle between separate tribes or their sub divisions. Thus, under Abbas I (1587-1629) in 1597 Abdali malik Sado of the Popolzai clan received the title of ‘‘chief of Afghans" for his cooperation in the struggle for Qan dahar. Sado’s troops were instructed to safeguard the roads from Herat to Qandahar. The Sado family were granted privileges that were later enjoyed also by their offspring— the Sadozais who, having become the khan-hels, received the right to appoint the chief of all Abdalis.

Taking part in the military expeditions of various rulers and fighting almost incessantly against other tribes and the settled population for cultivated lands and pastures, acting as middlemen and guarding the caravan routes, the Afghans for a long time retained intra-tribal military orga nisation based on traditional family ties. At the same time, tribe unions were formed mainly for joint struggle against other tribes and local, non-Afghan rulers whose lands the Afghans seized or intended to seize. Within such unions the relations between tribes at that period were based increasingly on vassal dependence, which largely accounted for the erosion of patriarchal and tribal rela tions. The development of social relations among the Afghan tribes has been thoroughly studied primarily in works by Professor J. M.‘Reisner and his disciples Profes sors Yu. V.Gankovsky, L. R. Gordon-Polonskaya, and V. A. Romodin.24 They stressed in their studies that during the development of seized lands and pastures and settle ment in seized territories, the subdivisions of Afghan tribes gradually mixed, while tribal unions tended to become the embryo of territorial-tribal associations set up for the joint struggle against other tribal unions.

For various reasons groups of one and the same tribe often occupied pastures and land oases not on an uninter rupted tract of land but intermittently. The chiefs of some tribes, instead of forming tribal troops set up military units not joined by blood relationship.

Having occupied the lands in particular in the area of the Kabul and Qandahar regions and in the Peshawar Valley, the Afghans divided them among the tribesmen. This division of land was based on various principles: ac cording to the number of people or to the size of the here cia shares, or depending on the prestige of the heads of the families and their role in the conquest of the lands. A large part of the land area went to the nobility. Ever more often the impoverished members of a tribe, a clan or separate families were compelled to seek the patronage of the stronger ones by the right of the khamsaya (dependent), thus bolstering the position of the tribal nobility who were gradually becoming feudal landlords.

The growing property inequality and the natural con ditions in the new regions of settlement, where nomad livestock breeding was often out of the question, made separate groups and subdivisions of some tribes switch toa settled way of life. Thus, part of the Ghilzais, Abdalis, Momands, Kakars and Muhammadzais began to cultivate land, grow cereals and rice and sell them, while others, who settled in the cities, for instance in Kabul, Herat or Ghazni, made up a section of the Afghan population there and were occupied with handicrafts and trade. As they began to live a settled life, both groups joined the already established system of feudal relations and feudal economy. W ile seizing cultivated land oases, the tribal nobility tried not to give the land out to their tribesmen but to appropriate jt tum ng the population into khamsayas. :

Developmentt’;in« Afghan society of barter and trade,

emergencé:of tisury, ad 'consolidation’-of*the riglt’to land Ownership—first'for thé Milslim thedlogiaris anid then for the nobility—etodéd patriarchal-tribalrélitions! with the tribal chiefs ‘and "elite? tiitning intd" a‘ hereditary ‘feudal nobility. : ~ Peto at be. ~li¥'the process of the feudalisation of the Afghan tribes, thé ‘social’ infgtitutions, that'‘were ‘patriarchal -by form:(spe cifically, -thé 'jé##ga-touncik ‘of: tribes); gradually changed their social’ maké-up, ensurif'g thé: right ‘of the nobility not’only ‘to the’ éxploitatibi’ef Slavesand ‘the khamsayas, but also to subjugation ‘and -ehslaveménit of the formally free co-tribesmen. thee ENR

Féudalisation proceeded unevenly among various tribes. In the livestock ~breedir4 tribes, the Wazirs, for instance, patriatchal-ttibal Felations ‘were only beginning to disin tegrate"inithe P'6th*k8th cenfiries, while the feudalisation of the Khattaks}tKHalils,-Muhammadzais and flat-country Momands, i.€.;'those who had begun a settled life, was going on much faster. The concentration of land in the hands of the elite of those tribes was a more intensive process.

An important aspect of feudalisation in Afghan society was that the development of the productive forces, the social division of labour and the shaping of antagonistic classes, while undermining the traditional forms of col lective landownership, led to the formation not only of feudal landownership but also of private landownership by the peasants.

Karl Marx wrote on that score that "the more the tribe moves away from its original place of settlement and oc cupies alien land, thus entering substantially new condi tions of labour and the energies of the individual further developing—hence the communal character seems, and must seem,rather as a negative unity in relation to the outside world—the more do conditions arise which cause the indivi dual to become a private proprietor of land—of a partic


ular plot—whose separate cultivation devolves on him and his family."25

The struggle between the peasants and the tribal elite, which was becoming ever more feudal for retaining that property during the disintegration of the patriarchal-tribal relations played an important role in the development of Afghan society.

Most outstanding Muslim theologians were the first in Afghan society to secure for themselves the right to keep their land holdings out of the sphere of re-allotment (vesh), which in some instances was practised annually. Many of the impoverished tribesmen were seeking the patronage of influential Muslim theologians, timing their land plots over tq them and thus becoming khamsa'yas.°

As they became big landlords, the Muslim theologians often exploited not only the khamsayas‘'but also other believers. This explains why the anti-feudal movement, begun in the 16th century in the eastem regions-populated by Afghans, against the tribal elite which was getting feudal and against the power of the Great Moghuls, was also spearheaded against orthodox Islam and its preachers.

Like many other anti-feudal movements'in the Middle Ages, that movement, too, had originate’dand spread as a sectarian one. Its leader and idedlogist’ was Bayazid An° sari.26 Bom in Punjab, he moved ‘together with his family to Kaniguram (Waziristan), the homeland of his father. Travelling with caravans across the Afghan lands, Central Asia and India, he studied various branches of Islam and Hinduism. In the middle: of the 16th céntury Bayazid Ansari declared himself a prophet, the eldei df. the world (pir-t roushan) and began to preach ‘a new teaching. His main postulates were that there was no-distarice between God and man, that the divine was omnipresent throughout the world and that all people, whatever their nationality, religion, property status or hereditary ‘privileges; were equal before God. Believing in the migration of*souls, he preached that "the path to salvation" was the same for slaves, khamsayas, Afghans and non-Afghans, and that salvation could be achieved in the struggle for equality in earthly life. Ansari was opposed to the payment of a kalym for the bride.

According to him, all people were subdivided into those who rejected and those who accepted his doctrine (the

"people of the light""—the Roshanites). Those who rejected his doctrine, his adversaries, were declared, from time to time, to be non-existent, having no right to own land and other property, and were often annihilated. Their property was confiscated to be distributed among the sect members. The Roshanites proposed that the division of Afghan society into families and tribes should be abandoned in favour of a unification of people that was to be based on the territorial principle. Ansari set forth the essence of his doctrine in verse and prose. Best known among his writings is Khay ul-Bayan (Good Word), written as Bayazid’s dialogue with God. Bayazid Ansari was not only an eloquent speaker and a superb poet, but also a gifted political leader and mili tary commander of the 1560s. From preaching he went over to organising an uprising. By its slogans and composi tion the-Roshani movement en masse was a peasant move ment spearheaded against the tribal nobility (becoming feudal lords) and the Muslim theologians. Because the movement was clearly anti-Moghul, the insurgents were joined by individual members of the nobility and tribal chiefs dissatisfied with the power of the Great Moghuls.

Encompassing mainly areas north-west of what is today Pakistan (with the centre of the movement in Tirakh), the Roshanites achieved, in the long years of their resolute struggle, significant military victories in the territory of Afghanistan too. They captured temporarily the areas of Nangarhar, as well as Ghazni, Kabul and contiguous re gions, and blocked the Khyber Pass, thereby disrupting not only traditional trade routes, but also the military communications of the Moghul rulers.

In the lands seized by the Roshanites the conditions of the khamsayas and of ordinary tribesmen improved and slaves were set free. The lands and property of the nobility, Muslim theologians and Moghul rulers were to be divided between the sect members, and one-sixth of the spoils went to the sect leaders. In case of resistance, prisoners were often executed.

Most active in the movement were the Khalils, Muham madzais, flat-country Momands, and Hughianis, among whom social contrad ctions reached a high point, while the ordinary members were subjected to double exploita tion, by the tribal nobility and the Moghul vicegerents. The Roshanites were backed up by other tribes, sometimes together with their chiefs. The chiefs joined the movement for various reasons. Some planned to avail themselves of the situation and seize more fertile lands and pastures, others in order to fight against the Moghul rulers who were taking away part of their gains.

The Great Moghuls took vigorous efforts to quell the Roshanite movement and sent major military expeditions to fight them. The class character of the movement and its anti-Moghul thrust were not the only reasons why the Roshanites were so violently opposed. The areas captured by them in the north-west of the lands of the Great Moghuls were important for the latter economically and strategically, for through them ran the main routes linking India with Iran and Central Asia.

However, for more than half a century the Great Moghuls failed to suppress the Roshanites. The movement was led first by Bayazid Ansari himself and then by his sons and grandsons. It was not before the late 1580s that the Great Moghuls, having won over the nobility of some tribes and pooled their own efforts, dealt a series of heavy defeats at the Roshanites, after which the movement lost its force. Bayazid Ansari’s grandson Karimdad, the last of the move ment leaders, was killed in 1638.

In the course of the movement it was now joined by some tribes, and then left by them. This inconsistency was not so much due to the fact that the nobility, which sought land grants, high titles and privileges, compacted with the Great Moghuls. Some of the tribes themselves, as, for in stance, the Yusufzais, opposed the equalisation of rights of free tribesmen with those of the slaves and khamsayas, since this left no chance for exploiting the latter two. In addition, one should take into account different levels of social development, economic and political discon nection, and traditional tribal strife.

Despite the defeat, the Roshanite movement had an enormous influence on the historical development of the Afghan tribes. It was an outstandirig period in the struggle of the popular masses against feudal exploitation and foreign rule. What is more, the movement of the Roshanites and their striving to unite the population on a territorial basis at a time when patriarchal-tribal relations were fractur ing, was a progressive factor which undoubtedly influenced the development of Afghan society.

The unification ideas were taken up in a new Afghan uprising led in the 1660s by Khushhal Khan (1613-1689), the ruler of the Khattaks.27

The Khattak principality with its centre in Akora, situat ed on the roads leading to Peshawar, at the confluence of the Kabul and Landai rivers, was formed in the 16th century as a domain dependent on the Great Moghuls.

The Khattak nobility, who prevented their tribesmen from taking an active part in the Roshanite movement, sided with the Great Moghuls and for many years were at loggerheads with the Yusufzai chiefs. Padishah Akbar (1556-1605) granted the Khattak chiefs a number of privileges (the right to rule Akora as a jagir, a conventional land grant) and obliged them to guard the caravans, the military units of the Great Moghuls and their transport from attacks by other tribes on the roads to Peshawar. Although power in Akora was practically hereditary, the Moghul padishahs by special edicts asserted the authority of the Khattak rulers, giving them all sorts of incentives from time to time. Thus, Shahbaz Khan, the father of Khushhal Khan, was granted the right to collect taxes from the Yusufzai lands in the Peshawar Valley (amounting to 12,000 rupees annually) for his successful struggle against a rebellious vicegerent and the Yusufzais. After the death of Shahbaz Khan in 1641 Moghul padishah Shah Jahan approved the appointment of the former’s son Khushhal Khan as ruler of the Khattaks. For taking part in the expedi tions of Moghul troops to Balkh, Badakhshan, Deccan and other places, Khushhal Khan received a large land grant with the jag:r status, which brought him 150,000 rupees annually. In retum, he had to supply 1,500 warriors to the Moghuls. A vassal of the Moghul padishahs, Khushhal Khan also had Khattak maliks and khans subordinate to him.

During Khushhal Khan’s rule many of the Khattaks began to live a settled life. By that time stratification of the Khat taks on the basis of property ownerships and feudalisation attained higher levels than among many other tribes. The Khattaks cultivated the land, were skilled in handicrafts, worked salt-mines, selling the salt outside the principality. By order of Khushhal Khan a cadastral survey was carried out in the principality. Arable lands and also wastelands, granted additionally for cultivation, were measured and land plots fixed in accordance with the number of people in a family. All these data were entered into a special register. Thus, to regulate tax exploitation Khushhal Khan carried out a cadastral survey and attached the Khattak tribesmen to definite plots of land that were no longer liable to redivision, as was periodically practised before.

Though the main forces of the Roshanites were sup pressed, riots among the Afghan tribes continued into the 1640s and 1650s. The disturbances intensified in response to the offensive policy of the Great Moghuls and their military expeditions to the north-west provinces of their empire (the region of Peshawar and the roads from Peshawar towards Kabul, where the Afridis, Yusufzais, Momands, Shinwaris, Safis and other Afghan tribes had settled). The riots, with the epicentre in the Afridi territory, grew into an uprising. The troops of the Great Moghuls raided Afghan settlements, committed outrages, pillages, and burned down houses.

At first Khushhal Khan was not very active in the opera tions conducted by the tribes. But, suspected by the Great Moghuls of supporting the insurgents, he was seized and held in a fortress from 1664 to 1668, after which he was under house arrest.

On returning to his native land Khushhal Khan led an uprising against Moghul domination. A fearless soldier, Khushhal Khan had great oratory and poetic gifts. In his speeches and verses he called for the unity of the Afghans and urged them to end tribal discord and internal strife and join in the struggle against the Great Moghuls. During the insurrection he was joined by the tribes that populated the area from Peshawar to Qandahar. According to some data, by 1675 his supporters numbered nearly 300,000. But the: persistent oa bleed struggle of the Afghans was suppressed.

Moghul padishah Aurangzeb had to fight against the Afghan tribes for almost two years. By destroying crops, exterminating the population and kindling intertribal en mity the Great Moghuls intended to subdue the Afghans and to induce their chiefs to treachery. The sources cite numerous facts of chiefs being bribed and intrigues by the Moghul rulers. For instance, the governor of Kabul sent letters to the tribal nobility on behalf of an Afghan chief, saying that the Afridi chiefs were not going to divide the conquered lands and intended to leave them for them selves. All that, naturally, caused tensions, and then a split, among the tribes. Khushhal Khan’s son Ashraf, who led the movement, was seized in 1683 and taken to Bija pur. His successor Afzal recognised himself as a vassal of the Great Moghuls. But even after the uprising was sup pressed, the power of Moghul padishahs was only nominal in many regions populated by Afghans.

The anti-Moghul uprisings of the Afghans were followed by the struggle of the tribes living in the Safavid state.

The Qandahar and Herat Principalities

At the end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century the Safavid state, which included Herat and Qan dahar, was in the grip of a severe economic and political crisis. A. Volynsky, the Russian Ambassador to Iran from 1715 to 1718, wrote: "During his stay [in Iran] Alexan der the Great could not have sacked the country as much and I oa oe that this crown is facing complete ruin.’"2 8

One of the most important causes of such decline was the ruin of small peasant farming—the economic basis of the feudal Safavid state.29 After the 1698-1701 census, the duties and part of the rent, paid in money, were in creased and a new taxation system was introduced. With the growth of the proportion of taxes paid to the treasury and the end to the wars of aggression that had brought abundant spoils, the feudal lords’ profits shrank drastically. To increase them, they taxed the population more rigor ously. Feudal exploitation increased many times over. The ruin of peasants caused the decline of agriculture, which left craftsmen without raw materials and merchants with out goods. Many peasants left their homes. The lands, including those in the shah’s domain, were left untilled. Officials in the capital were instructed to populate those lands with peasants who had little land or no land at all.3° The arbitrary rule and embezzlement by officials, court intrigues and corruption made the situation even worse.

A tide of discontent and indignation swept the coun try. Many chiefs of nomad tribes came out against the shah. For the Safavids this meant not only the contraction of their social base but also the loss of military back ing from the tribes.

The peoples whose lands were forcefully incorporated into the Safavid state fought most vigorously against the central government. The liberation movement of the sub jugated peoples had two main trends in it: one included the broad masses—the peasants, the rural settled and nomad tax-paying population (rayats and ilyats), and the towns people (handicraftsmen and small traders); the other includ ed the local feudal lords dissatisfied with the infringement on their political power and the worsening of their econom ic situation. In those protest actions the striving for freedom from foreign domination was closely intertwined with the separatist tendencies of the feudal lords who exploited the discontent of the popular masses.

The population of Qandahar, a busy trade centre and a strategic military point, was among the first to rebel. At that time the Qandahar province was populated by Afghan tribes, mostly the Ghilzais, Abdalis, and also the Kakars, Tarins, Baburis, and Nasyrs. There were Afghans (mainly Ghilzais of the Hotaki clan) in Qandahar proper.

In each tribe the disintegration of tribal relations and the shaping of feudal ones proceeded in a somewhat dif ferent direction. The Abdalis and Ghilzais had reached a higher level of social and economic development. In the Ghilzai tribes the tribal elite was most feudalised among the Hotakis who made up a large part of the Afghan popu lation in the Qandahar province. The Hotaki group included the Khan family of the entire Ghilzai tribe (Shah-alam hel), which doubtlessly facilitated the growth of Hotakis’ political influence on the other Ghilzai tribes.

The Afghan tribes in the Safavid state were harshly repressed in the late 17th and early 18th century. In the 1698-1704 period alone taxes were increased twice in the Qandahar province. The Safavid rulers plundered the entire population. The economic condition of the tribes was much deteriorated by the drastic reduction of transit trade, which had previously been a source of large incomes for them. The reduction was caused by the transfer of trade with Indian Ocean countries to Dutch and British merchants, by the development of sea routes from Europe to India, by the closure of the Indo-Persian border, constant uprisings of the Sikhs in the Punjab, and so on.

Apart from tax oppression, the Afghan tribes were subjected to national discrimination and religious per secution. The latter was caused by the increased role of Shiite theologians in the Safavid state (the Afghans were Sunnites). The persecution of Sunnites grew especially large-scale under shah Sultan Husayn (1694-1722) who, being under the influence of Shiite mujtaheeds,* perse cuted Sunnites, Sufi dervishes and members of various sects, specifically those populating the outlying provinces of the Safavid state (including those in Afghanistan) who propounded separatist tendencies.

The popular unrest in the Qandahar province in the early years of shah Husayn’s rule was an response to the increased burden of the taxes and the arbitrary rule by the shah’s officials. This evoked great apprehension in the shah’s court. In 1704 Gurgen Khan, known for his cruelty, was appointed the beglerbeg (ruler) of Qandahar. But his policy of terror, of exploiting discord between individual Afghan tribes, also between the Ghilzais and Abdalis, only added to the dissatisfaction of the people. The malcon tents were led by Hotaki chief Mir Wais, the galantar of Qandahar.

Mir Wais went to Isfahan to lodge a complaint against Gurgen Khan. On his arrival he saw that the shah’s power was weak and realised that by bringing together the mal contents he could fight not only against Gurgen Khan but even attempt to liberate Qandahar from the Safavids. After that Mir Wais went on a pilgrimage to Mecca where he received the blessing of Sunnite theologians for a struggle against the "heretical king", the Shiite shah Husayn.

Back in Qandahar in 1708, Mir Wais summoned a jirga, a council of tribe representatives, which was attended by the chiefs and members of the nobility of the tribes of the Nasyrs, Baburis, Tarins, Kakars, Alkozais and Baluchis. A decision was made to start an uprising.?2 In April 1709 Mir Wais led an uprising in Qandahar during which the Safavid ruler was killed and his troops defeated. Qandahar became the centre of an independent domain ruled by Mir Wais. The emergence of the new domain marked anew stage in the complex evolution of the Afghan state.

All strata of the population took part in the 1709 up rising. The nobility of the tribes, ilyats and townspeople had one common goal—liberation from Safavid domination. After futile attempts by the Safavids to regain Qandahar in a peaceful way, they sent two military expeditions against Mir Wais, in 1710 -1711 and in 1713, which ended in the utter defeat of the shah’s troops. In their struggle against the Safavid forces the Afghans were greatly support ed by the Baluchis, nomad tribes that inhabited the Qan dahar plain.

The economic and internal political situation in the Safavid state was going from bad to worse. Peasants fled their homes, leaving the fields untilled. In 1710 shah Sultan Husayn issued a firman (decree) on attaching the peasants (rayats) to places of tax payment. It may be concluded on the basis of -narrative sources that at that time the nomad population (ilyats) had no right to change without permission the places of residence or a territory where it roamed.33 The Safavids’ decrees and their predatory policy (particularly in the conquered areas) sparked off new risings against their rule.

The insurrection in Qandahar and’ the formation of the Qandahar (or Ghilzai, as it was otherwise called) principa lity were followed by uprisings in the northern Caucasus led by Surhay Khan of Kazikumuh, and disturbances in Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kurdistan.

The Afghan tribes (mainly the Abdalis) populating the . Herat region revolted in 1716.34 Those tribes were in fer ment soon after the assassination of Gurgen Khan by whose order thousands of Afghan families had been reset tled from Qandahar to Herat in the early 18th century, while many chiefs, including the grandfather and uncles of Ahmad Khan Abdali (the future founder of the inde pendent Afghan state) had been murdered.

The tribal chiefs summoned Abdullah Khan Sadozai and his son Asadullah, who were at the time in Multan, to Herat. On their way they were seized by Safavid military commander Khusraw Mirza, but soon escaped to Herat where they began preparations for an uprising. Having learnt of this, Abbas Quli Khan Shamlu, the Safavid ruler of Herat, arrested them. But the disturbances in the city, which involved also non-Afghans, frightened the Safavids. It was therefore decided at a shah’s durbar that Abbas Qulli Khan Shamlu should be recalled from Herat and a new ruler, Jafar Khan Ustajlu, be.appointed instead.

Meanwhile Abdullah Khan Sadozai again escaped from prison and took refuge in the Dushah Mountains. He was joined gradually by thousands of his supporters. The in surgents occupied Isfizar, after which they moved on to Herat and laid siege to it. With wide support from the city’s population the insurgents took Herat. Their power soon spread to Badghis, Kusuviye, Ghurian and later to Farah, which had earlier been seized by the Ghilzais.

The loss of all these regions, of which Herat was most important, was a heavy blow to the Safavids. A. Volynsky noted at the time that bread and livestock were supplied to the Safavid residency in Isfahan and other places mostly from the Herat region. "However," he wrote, "during my presence there the Persians lost it, for it was conquered by the Afghans, and that causes the Persians to start a war...."35 But the Safavids peoved unable to suppress the uprising, and there emerged the independent principality of Herat.

The political situation in the Safavid state was growing ever more tense: in 1717-1719 the liberation movement of Daghestan tribes was on the upswing and the Lurs and Baluchis rose up in arms. The Arabs of Masqat, who seized Bahrain, operated along the Persian Gulf coastline.

But what worried the Safavids more than anything else was the, uprising of the Afghans who, having gained ground in Herat, began to threaten Meshhed. The second, and the last, attempt to suppress the insurgents also failed.

For all the differences among the Afghan tribes, includ ing those between the Ghilzais and Abdalis, the Ghilzais grew stronger militarily. The tribe’s nobility with Mir Wais’s son Mir Mahmud at the head undertook an expedition to Iran.36 The ruler of Qandahar, which remained the centre of the Ghilzai principality, was his brother Husayn.

In 1722 the Safavid capital Isfahan was captured by Mir Mahmud after an eight-month siege. After that, Kerman, Fars and Persian Iraq were conquered.

At that time various clans of the Abdali tribe struggled for power in Herat. Ultimately the struggle was won by Allahyar Khan who became the Abdali shiek

The differences between the Ghilzais and the Abdalis became increasingly acute and often grew into armed clashes, which played a large role during their struggle against Nadir Quli Beg (since 1736 Nadir Shah Afshar).

Nadir Quli Beg, the leader of a feudal group in Khorasan, joined the detachments of Tahmasp, the son of shah Sultan Husayn, in 1726 and placed him under his influence. Hav ing united the Khorasan tribes, Nadir Quli Beg captured Khorasan, Mazenderan and Astrabad and began mustering forces to fight the Ghilzais, who had occupied Isfahan, and the Turks, who had seized some of the western regions of the Safavid state. But before moving his troops against the Ghilzais Nadir had to capture Herat and thus secure a safe rear flank for himself.

Putting large stakes on the expedition to Herat, Nadir told S. Avramov, a Russian representative in Iran: ‘‘We have come out against fifty thousand Afghan Abdalis and... if we are defeated, that will be the end to the Persian state....737

Having learnt about Nadir’s intention to subdue Herat, the Afghan Abdalis started intensive preparations for its defence. They built fortifications, stocked up with food and fodder, and formed armed units. According to an eyewitness, the population of many towns and villages in the region joined the insurgents.

In May 1729 Nadir set out from Meshhed to Herat with an army of 20,000 men and artillery. The insurgents, led by Allahyar Khan, went to meet the enemy, having sent units of horsemen who were to by-pass Nadir’s troops from the rear. Nadir moved very cautiously. A few farsabs from the Kafir-Qala fortress, where the insurgents stood, the first battle was fought till dark. Nadir was wounded and his troops incurred heavy losses. In the second battle the Afghans had been winning, too, but were forced to retreat to Ghurian when reinforcements had come to back up Nadir. As the news reached the Abdali chiefs, they sum moned Zulfiqar Khan and his troops from Farah to Herat. In the battle which took place soon after that and involved great bloodshed, the insurgents suffered a defeat, in spite of their desperate resistance.

Nadir’s troops plundered Farah and captured the fami lies of the Abdali chiefs, including those of Zulfigar Khan and Allahyar Khan. This development hastened the chiefs to conclude peace. Nadir, too, wanted peace, for he was aware of a, Ghilzai expedition to Khorasan. He therefore had to set out for Meshhed immediately. A peace agree ment was concluded in June 1729, according to which the Abdali tribe was to release the prisoners and pay tributes. Allahyar Khan remained the emir, but now as Nadir’s vicegerent. On the Afghans’ insistence Nadir and his troops did not enter Herat, neither did he leave a garrison in the region. His compliance was due to the fact that, wishing to secure a rear to fight the Ghilzais and Turks, Nadir did not want to aggravate relations with the Abdalis.

By the beginning of 1730 Nadir routed the Ghilzais and captured Isfahan. Mir Mahmud’s brother Ashraf Hotaki, who led the troops, was killed. After that Nadir inflicted heavy defeats on the Turks.

In 1731 the Herat province was again in a state of fer ment. Ruined under the Safavids by taxes and exhausted by a struggle which had lasted almost 15 years, the popular masses refused to pay the requisitions fixed by the terms of peace with Nadir. The chiefs of the Abdali tribe, de prived of independence and being forced not only to obey Nadir’s orders but to share their profits with him, were preparing for an uprising. They were promised support from’ Husayn, the ruler of the Qandahar principality (1722 1738) who had been frightened by the military successes of Nadir and feared that he would attack Qandahar.

Allahyar Khan’s attempts to maintain peace in the region proved futile. The indignant population dethroned him and banished him from Herat. The power went over to Zulfiqar Khan who declared Herat an independent city. The insurgents then advanced towards Meshhed in an at tempt to take control of the whole of Khorasan.

The garrison troops with Ibrahim Khan Afshar at the head were defeated in a battle at Meshhed and took up positions in the fortress. Zulfiqar besieged the city, but upon leaming about the coming of Nadir, had to retreat to Herat. Early in May 1731 Nadir’s troops approached Herat and pitched a camp on the right bank of the Harirud at Juyi Nukra.

Meanwhile preparations were underway in Herat to beat back an enemy attack. The population of the city and its suburbs were busy building fortifications and form ing armed detachments. Messengers were sent to Qandahar with a request for reinforcements.

The insurgents made sallies day and night, inflicting heavy losses on the enemy and keeping it in constant suspense. During one such sally Nadir was nearly taken prisoner. On another occasion, when the Herat defenders were shooting at the enemy camp, his tent was pierced by a cannon-ball. Infuriated by the stubbornness of the city defenders, Nadir made up his mind to encircle the city, leaving it no chance to receive reinforcements. To that end, he ordered his men to block the road to Qandahar and to sack Farah. In June Herat was blockaded. The city began to suffer from a shortage of food and salt. The plight of the besieged was getting worse with every passing day.

At that point the population of Badghis lent a helping hand, bringing food to Jebrail, from where the Heratans were to take it to the besieged city themselves. The first unit of 1,000 men left Herat secretly and reached Jebrail. The insurgents marched through mountain paths and ravines of the Paropamisus on their way back and brought the food safely to Herat. As soon as he leamed of this, Nadir at tacked Jebrail and, after long and stubbom battles, captured it. New ways were to be sought to bring food to Herat.

In late autumn 1731, a 2,000-man unit of insurgents left the city and, having passed through the Paropamisus, entered Obah, whose population provided the insurgents with food, after which they returned to Herat.

These events evoked an enthusiastic response among the population in the area. Derwish Ali Khan with numerous supporters from among the local population marched on Herat. Nadir, wamed about his approach, sent his troops under the command of Delawar Khan against him. The forces of Derwish Ali Khan were routed and he himself was taken prisoner and executed.

The siege of Herat was taking too much time and, having lost all hope of taking the fortress with his own forces, Nadir ordered the Khorasan ruler to send a reinforcement.

Meanwhile the food reserves from Obah had come to an end and the insurgents had to start negotiations. The arrival of a 10,000-man unit from Khorasan to support Nadir and the new fortifications built at the city gate left them no chance of receiving any help from the outside. Hunger began to, spread through Herat.

In March 1732, at the decision of a durbar (nobility council) the besieged, promised by Nadir that their lives. and the city would be spared, opened the fortress gates. Nadir entered Herat. He appointed Muhammad Khan Mervi, a member of the Khorasan nobility close to him, the ruler of the city. The durbar was replaced with a council whose members were to be picked out by Nadir. Several thousand Abdali families were deported. To prevent new uprisings in Herat, the tribe was broken up and resettled, the durbar was abolished and another ruler was appomted. At the same time, units of the Abdali cavalry were included in Nadir’s army and actively participated in his expeditions.

In 1736 Nadir was proclaimed the shah of Iran at a meeting of the nobility in the Mugan Steppe. Beginning with late 1736 his troops made repeated attacks on Qan dahar. Nadir feared that the Qandahar Afghans would pose a perpetual threat to him. Besides, the seizure of Qandahar was to be the first step in the preparations for an: expedi tion to India. But despite his undeniable military superio rity, Nadir could not: enter Qandahar for more thana year. The long siege compelled him to build a whole town on the site of his military camp. The sources relate numerous facts about the heroic resistance of the Qandahar people. Their sorties were causing serious losses to the enemy. By Decem ber 1737 only afew thousands remained of the army which Nadir had led to Qandahar. A new levy of recruits was called almost in every part of the Iranian state. But it was not before May 23, 1738 that Nadir captured the city.*

Nadir laid waste to the city and carried out several ‘measures to weaken the economic power and political influence of the Ghilzais, kindle strife between them and other Afghan tribes and to preclude any possibility of new uprisings. The Hotakis and some other Ghilzai clans were resettled to various regions of Khorasan and the Mugan Steppe, their lands were declared the property of the state and given out as jagirs to Abdali khans. At the same time, a cadastral survey of lands requiring irrigation was made in the Qandahar province at Nadir’s orders and taxes were fixed. Abdali khans were appointed the rulers of the pro vince and a number of its regions. It must be noted that the Abdali tribal elite occupied prominent places in Nadir’s army. They were paid higher salaries and were granted land. In contrast with the nobility of most of the other tribes, they were neither executed nor fined, though executions and fines became particularly frequent in Nadir Shah’s last years of life.

The uprisings in Herat and Qandahar spread over into nearly all regions populated by Afghans. The struggle did not abate even after the cities were occupied by Nadir. When Nadir was still in Qandahar, an uprising of Afghan tribes started in the Ghazni region. In Kabul various sections of the population—the nobility, Muslim theologians, and ordinary ilyats—united against Nadir. Though artillery made Nadir’s troops superior in weapons, they came up against fierce resistance at Kabul.

The Afghan tribes living in the mountains between Kabul and Jalalabad also rose against Nadir. Twelve thousand of the shah’s elite troops under the command of Aslan Khan Qirklu were sent against those tribes, which had long been known for their militancy. The shah’s troops were defeated. The Afghans utilised every opportunity to offer resistance to Nadir. Some of them, who had fled from persecution, joined the army of the Great Moghul Muhammad Shah in 1738 and then fought under his command at Delhi in 1739.

Nadir’s mounting strength and his military victories, including the seizure of Delhi, did not discourage the Afghans who carried on the liberation struggle. A bit more than a year after the fall of Qandahar, new disturbances began in the city.

Nadir. sent there Tahmasp Khan Jalair, one of his best military commanders, in the capacity of the ruler of Afgha nistan and the north-western regions of the Punjab, which had been added to Nadir’s empire. In the 1740s riots flared up anew in several regions, including the Qandahar and Kabul provinces. Taqi Khan, the ruler of Kabul, supported the insurgents and declared his insubordination to the shah. The insurgents established links, with other tribes also fighting against Nadir. The shah’s soldiers often came over to their side. The example of the people of Qandahar and Kabul was followed by the Hazaras who, having joined hands with the Herat population, rebelled against the Ira nian authorities. The Yusufzais rose too. The liberation struggle of the Afghan and other subjugated peoples was combined with protest actions against the mounting tax burden. That was the reason why a powerful wave of upris ings rolled across the country after the introduction of new taxes in 1743.* Taking part in the uprising were various sections of society, with the tax-paying population, the working masses, being most active.

The founding of the independent principalities of Qan dahar and Herat and the subsequent actions of the Afghans were not merely isolated incidents. The Afghans were the first to raise the banner of struggle against Safavid domi nation. That liberation struggle, which started in the late 17th century and lasted, with short intervals, for nearly half a century, promoted the development of a fierce struggle against the Safavids and Nadir Shah. The risings of the Afghans and other peoples in the territory of present day Afghanistan, together with the liberation movements in Daghestan, Georgia and Central Asia, were one of the main ‘causes of the collapse of the shah’s empire. Major elements in the Afghan tribes’ stubborn long-time resistance to foreign rule, the uprisings in the first half of the 18th. century speeded up "the entire formation of the Afghan ‘ state, a process prepared by the course of the evolution of Afghan society".38

Afghanistan in Modern Times

The State of Durrani

The Durrani state was not the first state formation among the Afghans (Pashtuns). In the 16th century two feudal principalities—Akora and Teri—had emerged in the terri tory populated by an East Afghan tribe—the Khattaks. In the 17th century a small feudal principality was formed by the Afridis, another East Afghan tribe. But those first Afghan (Pashtun) feudal principalities occupied a very small area and did not become the nucleus of a state that could unite within its borders all lands populated by Pash tuns. Nor did the two Afghan feudal principalities that ‘emerged at the beginning of the 18th scent as panerto and Herat, although they did play an important role in the history of the Afghan people. The state of Durrani (1747 1819) was the first to unite all the lands populated by Pashtuns into one independent state.

The desire for uniting all Afghans into one independent state first originated in the 16th-17th centuries, in the crucible of the wars against foreign oppressors. The sons of Bayazid Ansari, who fought for a long time against the Great Moghuls, called themselves "the padishahs of the Afghans". It was not until the mid-18th century that the conditions were ripe for the formation of an independent Afghan state. By that time the development of feudal relations in the main Afghan (Pashtun) tribes provided internal conditions for unification. A major factor that speeded up that process was the need to fight the external enemies—the Iranian and Moghul feudal lords who for cen turies oppressed the Afghan people. In the mid-18th cen tury, the disintegration of the Iranian state, the collapse of the empire of the Great Moghuls, and the feudal mutinies in Central Asia offered favourable international conditions for uniting the Afghan lands into one state and extending the power of Afghan feudal lords to the vast territories of the countries bordering on Afghanistan.

The creation of an independent state was in the interests of the feudal upper crust of Afghan society—the khans of the tribes and the Muslim theological elite. It gave them a means for suppressing the exploited lower strata of the population. Furthermore, they no longer had to share their surplus product with Moghul and Iranian feudal lords, under whose power the Afghan lands had been before. Besides, the feudal elite was now able to conduct expeditions of conquest against neighbouring countries.

The formation of the independent Afghan state was also supported by the members of free Pashtun communities— the livestock breeders and farmers who for many years had fought against foreign enslavers—the Iranian and Moghul feudal lords. The khans of the Afghan tribes and the Muslim theological elite were compelled, especially at the initial stage, to reckon with the survivals of the tribal system in Afghan society, and could not immediately begin to exploit their tribesmen in an open and direct way. There fore the emergence of the independent new state had a favourable effect on the position of the rank-and-file commu nity members, all the more so since part of the immense war spoils brought to the country by Ahmad Shah (1747-1773), the founder of the Durrani state, came their way. In the territories which formed the eastern part of the empire of Nadir Shah Afshar (the nucleus of the Durrani state) the emergence of the state put an end to feudal anarchy and inter-tribal clashes which in the last years of Nadir’s rule had a pernicious effect on the people’s living conditions. The establishment of a modicum of order and security in the vilayets (provinces) was in the interest of their popula tion—farmers, livestock breeders, craftsmen and small traders.

Thus, the formation of the independent Afghan state under Ahmad Shah was welcomed not only by the ordinary members of the Afghan community but also by part of the non-Afghan population in the central provinces that yeamed for the end of feudal anarchy. This was one of the causes of the relative soundness of the state, which did not fall into pieces right after the death of its founder.

After the death of Nadir Shah Afshar, who was assas sinated in a coup on June 20, 1747, his vast empire col lapsed? and its separate parts became independent states. The Afghan units of Nadir’s army, which were commanded by several khans of the Abdali tribe, captured a number of artillery pieces from the Iranian army and part of the shah’s treasury, and left Khorasan, where they were stationed, for Qandahar. In Qandahar a jirga of the most influential and powerful khans from all the main clans of the Abdali tribe was convened near mazar Shir-Surh in October 1747. After several sessions they elected the shah—Ahmad Khan, a young military commander from the Sadozai clan.

Among the Abdalis the khan family of the Sadozais enjoyed a number of privileges: its members could not be executed for a crime and the law of vendetta did not apply to them. However, apart from his origin, there were some other reasons for choosing Ahmad Khan as the head of the Afghan state. One of them was that the Sadozais were not numerous, and the khans of the Abdali tribe believed that a shah elected from the Sadozais did not have "powerful enough support to suppress the autocracy of major tribal khans’’.3 No mean role was played also by the backing ren dered to Ahmad Khan by Sabir Shah, an outstanding Muslim theologian and a leader of the large Sufi order of the Chishtiye (the Sadozais had long-standing ties with it). Sabir Shah had suggested Ahmad Khan for the post and himself crowned him. His personal prestige was also significant. Though he was a young man (in 1747 Ahmad Khan was not older than 25), he made his way up by taking part in a number of military campaigns during which he commanded Afghan mounted units in the army of the Iranian conqueror.

Since the khans of the Abdali tribe had fathered the Afghan state, they occupied a leading position in it. For the same reason the Abdali tribe was renamed Durrani (the pearly). Furthermore, the key posts in the state appa ratus, the army and the court of Afghan shahs were granted to, and made hereditary for the khans of the major Durrani clans and families.* Ahmad Shah even refused the title of "durr-i dauran" (the pearl of the epoch) offered to him by Derwish Sabir Shah and, instead, chose the title of "durr-i durran"’, i.e., ‘‘the pearl of pearls".

Ahmad Shah, relying on the Afghan mounted units, well seasoned in expeditions, first built up his power in the Qandahar vilayet and then subdued Qalat-i Ghilzai, Ghazni, Kabul and Peshawar.* After that the khans of the East Afghan tribes recognised him as shah.

Qandahar, Ghazni, Kabul, Peshawar and Herat (it took almost the whole of 1750 to conquer the latter) constituted the territorial nucleus of the Durrani state. From there Ahmad Shah later on spread his power and influence to the neighbouring areas of North-Westem India, Eastem Iran and Southem Turkestan.

Due to the specific features of the socio-economic devel opment of Afghan society in the Durrani epoch, the state formed by Ahmad Shah was a state of conquerors. In the first half century of its existence the Durrani Shahs made a large number of expeditions, at least 18 to North-Westem India alone. Eastem Iran and Southem Turkestan were also the objects of Afghan invasion on several occasions.

As was already noted above, the Afghan khans were not strong enough economically, militarily and politically, even after the Durrani state was formed, to begin direct and open expropriation and exploitation of their tribesmen. In order to weaken and gloss over the growing class contra dictions and to prevent an outburst of discontent among ordinary members of the communities, they sought to draw them into wars of conquest, which could bring rich gains. Victorious military campaigns were used by the Afghan feudal nobility as a means of their own rapid enrichment and weakening the growing social contradictions in Afghan society. The conquests also provided the Afghan khans with an opportunity to use the military strength of, the tribes for their own benefit. Since part of the immense military spoils also went to the rank-and-file, thousands of free members of the communities readily joined the expe ditions, especially when they promised easy success.

In the north-west Ahmad Shah conquered Khorasan. in 1750-1754, where there had emerged several small feudal domains after the assassination of Nadir Shah Afshar. In most of the conquered Khorasan cities, as, for example, in Meshhed and Nishapur, local khans remained in power. However, some of the eastern regions of Khorasan were included in the Herat province of Afghanistan. In the west Ahmad Shah also subdued Seistan in the summer of 1754 and its rulers pledged themselves to pay tribute and supply trdop confingents for the shah’s army. In the south-west Nasir’ Khan, the‘ ruler of Baluchistan, became a vassal of Ahniad Shah in 1750.

Ahmad Shah incorporated the Punjab into his state in 1750-1752, but lost the whole of the province (with the exception of the Multan region) in the 1760s as a result of the victorious uprisings of the Sikhs.*

Kashmir, the pearl of Afghan territorial possessions in India, was seized in 1752. And though later the viceger ents of that province often rose in arms against the Durrani shahs, Kashmir remained in their hands up to 1819.

Ahmad Shah subdued Sind in the lower reaches of the Indus. He left behind an Afghan vicegerent in the northern part of Sind (the town of Shikarpur) and the rulers of lower Sind became vassals to the Durrani shahs. The ruler of Bahawalpur, too, became a vassal of the Afghan shahs.

In 1750-1752 Ahmad Shah’s army conquered several small Uzbek khanates north of the Hindu Kush: Balkh, Shibirghan, Andhoi, Qunduz, and Meymaneh. Balkh was chosen for the residency of the Afghan vicegerent and local rulers were left nearly in all of the other khanates. However, the power of the conquerors was rather feeble. Though Balkh remained in the power of the Durrani shahs, not a single rupee from the city reached their treasury. Timur Shah (17,734793), Ahmad Shah’s son and successor, could not’ find’ atr¥o¥é)} whd"would agree to be the ruler there. The shah’s enéifies joked on that score: "The Loutis, who wandered from town to town with monkeys and other animals, taught them to cast earth upon their heads ... when they were asked whether they would be govemors of Balkh."5 By the beginning of the 19th century Qunduz, Meymaneh, Andhoi and Shibirghan had become fully in dependent, and even in Balkh the power of the Afghan vicegerent had become merely nominal.

The borderline of the Durrani state thus depended on the expansion policy of Ahmad Shah and his successors, on their successes and setbacks. In the spring of 1761, when Ahmad Shah was in the prime of his might, the south-east em border of his domain ran less than 100 kilometres from Delhi and their total area exceeded 2,000,000 square kilo metres.

The Durrani state under Ahmad Shah was one of the largest states in the Middle East. The trade routes linking Iran, Central Asia and Eastem Turkestan with the states of South Asia ran through its territory. Ahmad Shah main tained diplomatic relations with many countries. In the years of his rule the Russian govemment made the first attempt to establish equal and friendly relations with Afgha nistan.6

However, the conquests of Ahmad Shah and his succes sors had different consequences for the Afghan (Pashtun) and non-Afghan parts of the Durrani state. In the Afghan lands they speeded up the development of feudal relations and helped expand and consolidate feudal landownership by the Afghan khans and strengthen the feudal class as a whole. In the westem vilayets the conquests forced a large ‘number of Afghans to settle in the lands populated by Tajiks, who were gradually becoming leaseholders.’ The fact that Afghan khans were given administrative powers, particularly those of tax collection, stimulated the seizure of the lands of the indigenous population. The fading away of tribal relations and of the vestiges of the tribal epoch and the development of feudal relations, for all the com plexity of that process, doubtlessly signified progress. Therefore the epoch of the Durrani shahs, despite all its contradictions, left a deep imprint on the history of the Afghan people.

However, the consequences of the conquests by Ahmad Shah and his successors were all too different for the neighbouring countries, whose peoples in the latter half of the 18th century enjoyed a higher social and economic level. To them those conquests meant greater exploitation and ruin. The actions of Ahmad Shah prevented the unifi cation of Iran under the Zend dynasty (1750-1794), and delayed the consolidation of the Sikh state in the Punjab and of the Mangyt state in Central Asia. At the same time the long and severe war between the Afghans and Sikhs and the rout of the army of the Marathis, the strongest one in India at the time,* by Ahmad Shah in 1761, weakened the peoples of India in the face of the impend ing British threat and, in the long run, made it easier for Britain to conquer the South Asian subcontinent.8

The economic foundation of the Durrani state was the feudal state’s ownership of land: it levied a rent-tax from all the territories under its sovereignty. (That did not exclude the éxistence of both private and communal land ownership and land tenure.) The surplus product taken from direct producers was distributed among the members of the feudal class which consisted of the following main groups: the Afghan tribal nobility, the Muslim theological elite (ulama), the tope echelon of the central and provincial civil government apparatus, the non-Afghan top military, the surviving local feudal families in a number of provinces conquered by Ahmad Shah, and the small feudal lords emer ging in the community in the process of its disintegration.

Apart from the land tax,** the population had to pay a livestock tax, a mill tax, a tax in kind for the maintenance of the army, of the officials in charge of irrigation systems, headmen, and judges, and other taxes.

The taxes for the state treasury were not paid for all the lands .under the supreme suzerainty of the shah. The jagirdars (holders of privileged land grants who had full tax immunity) had to pay no tax. Many lands granted by the shah or other individuals to various religious institu tions were also tax-free. Many Afghan (Pashtun) tribes were also relieved of taxation if they served in the army. The Durrani tribe, to which the shah belonged, was placed in most privileged conditions. The tribe did not have to pay the land tax and taxes for livestock, gardens and vineyards and was relieved of many extraordinary taxes.

The main profits of the Durrani shahs came from the vilayets of North-Western India. The taxes collected from the western vilayets populated by non-Afghans (Kabulistan, Qandahar and Herat) and, of course, the taxes paid by the tribes, were of smaller significance. Even at the end of the 18th century, after the shahs lost the greater part of the Punjab, the western vilayets and the regions populated b the tribes accounted for not more than a quarter of all the revenues. Ahmad Shah used to say that the western part of his state gave him soldiers and the eastern part gave money. As for the Uzbek khanates south of the Amu Darya, the shah alluded to them as a beehive with too many bees and little honey.

After the formation of the Durrani state the Afghan khans used their dominating position in the state for build ing up their power and might to the utmost. The transfer of tax collecting functions to them and their endowment with administrative, military and legal power in the terri tories inhabited by their tribes increased the influence of the tribal nobility and facilitated their gradual turning into big feudal landowners. The growth of feudal landownership by the tribal khans was due to the expropriation of the non-Afghan peasantry (and partly their own tribesmen), and to generous land ts which they received from the Durrani shahs in the Afghan and non-Afghan vilayets of the state.* The expansion of feudal landownership was promot ed by the entire land and tax policy of the Durrani shahs, who suppressed the resistance of Afghan and non-Afghan peasants alike. Therefore in the initial years of Ahmad Shah’s rule relations between the shah and the Afghan tribal nobility were, on the whole, marked by loyal coope ration, due to their common interests.

The tribal khans, however, zealously protected their independence from the shahs. The shah’s attempts to introduce effective control over the khans invariably came up against resistance. The growth of feudal landownership by the Afghan tribal elite, which retained considerable armed forces consisting of the khans’ personal guards and volunteer units from among the tribesmen and had almost uncontrolled power in the territories occupied by these tribes,.had already produced rudiments of inevitable separ atist tendencies, which presented a serious threat to the integrity and unity of the Durrani state.

So long as Ahmad Shah was winning his wars, during which the Afghan nobility enriched itself with immense spoils* and lavish land grants, he was helped readily by the khans. They even tolerated, to a certain extent, his inter ference in their internal affairs and his taking away part of their rent. The situation changed when Ahmad Shah and his successors began to suffer defeats, when the Punjab, and some other provinces were lost.

The Afghan feudal. lords tried to make up for the losses in India by seizing state-owned lands in Afghan regions proper. They also tried to augment their profits by reduc ing the share of the rent paid to the state, all the more so since the absolute increase of the rent was opposed by both the free members of the Afghan communities and the en slaved peasants who now and then rose in rebellion. The sources put it straight that the Afghan feudal lords demand ed more land and a reduced land tax, but were often re fused.9 Simultaneously, there was a growth of separatist

. tendencies among some vilayet rulers who, as the profits of the provinces were reduced (due to the ruin of peasants and handicraftsmen and a decline in trade as a result of endless wars and feudal mutinies) grew more and more unwilling to share these profits with the central govern ment.

In their effort to increase power and curb the separatism of big Afghan feudal lords, the Durrani shahs could rely on the guards (ghulam-shahi) recruited from among Iranians, Tajiks, Hazaras and other non-Afghans, on the mostly Iranian-Tajik bureaucracy and the Muslim theological elite, who depended on the shahs, and, lastly, on the rich Indian merchants and usurers in the eastern vilayets of the state, who profited on levyirig state taxes and financing expedi tions of conquest.* But these forces were clearly insuf ficient to resist the Afghan tribal khans. This made the Durrani shahs seek other ways of strengthening their power and influence.

Thus, to weaken the khans of the powerful Barakzai clan, Ahmad Shah separated the Achakzai family from it. He prohibited the Ghilzais, one of the biggest Afghan tribes, to have a khan. Ahmad Shah also made an attempt to set the powerful Durrani feudal nobility against the khans of East Afghan tribes. To that end, he created an artificial formation called bar-Durrani, that is, "upper" or "moun tain" Durranis, comprising the Yusufzais, Tarklanris, Momands, Khattaks, and some other East Afghan tribes. But all those measures effected. no cardinal change in the situation. The main cause of the weakness of the Durrani shahs was that the Afghan tribes and their khans almost fully retained their independence. The khans rose repeatedly even against Ahmad Shah_10 Though those uprisings were suppress ed by the shah, the breeding-ground for feudal plots and mutinies remained. Therefore the Afghan lands often caused Ahmad Shah and his successors no less worry and apprehen sion than the vilayets of North-Western India or Eastern Iran.

After the death of Ahmad Shah in 1773** his son and successor Timur Shah moved the capital from Qandahar, the outskirts of which were populated by the Durrani tribe, whose khans enjoyed great influence there, to Kabul. To consolidate his power, Timur Shah made an attempt to rule by relying on his personal guards, bureaucracy, the Muslim theological elite, and rich merchants, not inviting the tribal khans to offer'solutions to state problems. He executed Shah Wali Khan Bamizai, his father’s vizier, for his attempt to bring to the throne Sulayman, another son of the late shah and the husband of Shah Wali Khan’s daughter, after the death of Ahmad Shah.11 During his rule that post remained vacant. The reason for this was that, since the post of vizier belonged to the Bamizai clan and was here ditary, Timur Shah would have to appoint a relative of executed Shah Wali Khan as vizier, and he did not want to do that. Neither did he intend, in violation of the established tradition, to pass it over to a khan of another tribe or clan.

Timur Shah’s attempts to restrict the influence of Afghan aristocracy and bolster his own power came up against constant resistance on the part of tribal khans and viceger ents who organised uprisings.

As the shah’s power weakened, some of the hakims (vilayet rulers) behaved in the provinces given them for administration as in their own domains. Sultan Mahmud Khan, for instance, the ruler of Muzaffarabad, divided the lands under his administration among the members of his family, leaving himself the city of Muzaffarabad and its outskirts "to have something to live on’. There were repeated attempts on the life of Timur Shah. Some sources say he died of poisoning.12

In the last quarter of the 18th century big feudal land ownership of the Afghan khans kept growing and the khans continued to plunder state-owned lands. At the same time the peoples subdued by Ahmad Shah were building up resistance. Uprisings flared up not only in the Punjab, but also in the north, in Southern Turkestan. All this left central power without a considerable part of tax revenues and made the Durrani shahs dependent on the tribal khans, for the shahs could no longer afford to maintain a strong guard contingent.

Timur Shah’s son Shah Zaman made an attempt to put an end to the growing feudal decentralisation and stop the disintegration of the Durrani state. "He wanted to quash the influence of the tribal nobility, which led to greater feudal fragmentation, and to strengthen central power." Many executions followed and property confiscations were widespread. Many hereditary posts were taken away from eminent khans and given to those who were not high born but faithful to the shah. Shah Zaman even contem plated a transfer of the capital from Kabul to Lahore, which was motivated by the fact that he wanted to resume conquests in North-Western India. In 1799, the khans of the tribes, including the Durrani tribe, joined in a plot to limit the Shah’s authority. They demanded, in particular, that shahs should be elected and the khans should have the right to elect or depose the head of the state. The main figure behind the plot was Payinda Khan, the powerful chief of the Barakzai clan. Though the plot was discovered and the plotters executed, Shah Zaman failed to strengthen his influence. Even the lavish land grants and the generous handouts of money and high titles did not help. Payinda Khan’s son Fateh Khan Barakzai and other khans who were dissatisfied with Shah Zaman backed shahzade Mah mud, his brother and rival who had taken refuge in Iran. Zaman was dethroned and blinded, and Shah Mahmud (1801-1803) who was brought to power by a clique of Durrani khans, was a toy in their hands. Some time later he was also overthrown, to be replaced by another brother of Shah Zaman—Shah Shuja ul-Mulk (1803-1809). After that Shah Mahmud was put back on the throne and ruled from 1809 to 1818. Each of these palace revolutions was followed by a distribution among the tribal khans of what remained of the vast treasure grabbed by Ahmad Shah during his victorious expeditions, and by new land grants. Having neither real power or resources, the shahs fell into increasing dependence on the good will of the Durrani chiefs.14

During the reign of the last Durrani shahs at the end of the 18th and.the beginning of the 19th century, the archi tects of the British colonial policy made the first open attempts to interfere in the internal affairs of Afghanistan. To prevent an alliance between Shah Zaman and Tipu Sultan, the ruler of Mysore, a state in Southern India, the British East India Company, relying on its influence in Iran, made the Iranian authorities help shahzade Mahmud in his struggle for the Afghan throne. In this way the Brit ish colonial leaders helped to overthrow Shah Zaman. Late in 1808 a diplomatic mission headed by M. Elphinstone was sent to Afghanistan. Its head managed to conclude an agreement with Shah Shuja on June 17, 1809. The agree ment made it binding on the shah not to let French troops pass through the territory of Afghanistan in the event of an expedition of Napoleon! to India, and not to join the Franco-Russo-Iranian alliance.* Soon after the signing of the agreement Shah Shuja was dethroned and the agreement was rendered null and void.

Feudal anarchy now reigned supreme in the Durrani state. The province rulers virtually became independent princes. In 1810 Muzaffar Khan, the hakim of Multan, receiving no help from the central government in his struggle against the onslaught of the Sikhs, entered into talks with the governor-general of the British East India Company,

roposing himself as a vassal of the British. Jahandad Khan

urzai, the ruler of Attok, sold that major strategic region, which controlled the crossing of the Indus, to Ranjit Singh, the maharaja of the Punjab. Inter-tribal clashes and wars grew more intense. International transit trade across Afghanistan was on the decline. In that situation real power went completely to the khans of the most power ful Afghan feudal clans, among which the Barakzai clan headed: by Fateh Khan was the strongest. Fateh Khan was popularly known as "‘taj-bakhsh’’, "the giver of the crown", for he handed the crown of the shah of Afghanis ae OM to one, now to another descendant of Ahmad _ Shah.

The provinces included by Ahmad Shah in the Durrani state were either becoming independent or dependent on stronger neighbours. Sind, Baluchistan, Bahawalpur, Seistan, Khorasan, and the khanates and provinces of Southern Turkestan got out of control by the Afghan shahs. The lands on the nght bank of the Indus and Kashmir became the prey of maharaja Ranjit Singh, who had subdued the whole of the Punjab.

In the Afghan areas proper feudal decentralisation led to the emergence of several independent feudal principa lities. In most of them, as in Kabul, Qandahar and Peshawar, power was seized by the Barakzai khans in 1819. Only in Herat did a grandson of Ahmad Shah, Shah Mahmud, retain power (having lost the shah’s throne in 1818, he ruled Herat till 1829). He was succeeded by his son Kamran who ruled Herat until 1842.

Some of those principalities were united into one state under different historical conditions in the mid-19th century.

The New Unification of Afghanistan and the Beginning of British Aggression

After the downfall of the Durrani state, Afghanistan broke up into several independent feudal domains, of which the Herat, Kabul, Qandahar and Peshawar principalities were the largest: Many of the Afghan tribes living in the mountain areas retained independence. The overthrow of the Sadozai dynasty and the emergence of several large and small independent feudal domains on the debris of the Durrani state were the result of the prolonged crisis that had befallen that state. But in the first decades of the 19th century conditions had already emerged for overcoming the crisis and consolidating the political situation. In econom ic terms, this consolidation was ensured by the develop ment of commodity-money relations within the more or less closed regional markets that had taken shape around Kabul, Peshawar, Herat and Qandahar.15

In pelted terms, the stabilisation of the situation in Afghanistan in the early 19th century was facilitated by the fact that the khans, who had expanded their domains, needed great power to guard their possessions against en croachments by other feudal lords. At the same time, the feudal landlords needed the mighty state power to sup press the resistance of the exploited peasants.

The years of political strife in Afghanistan coincided with the time when the might of the Sikhs’ state in the Pun jab was at its peak under maharaja Ranjit Singh. In the early 19th century the British colonial conquerors had already eyed the Punjab as their future prey and at that moment it suited them that the Afghan border areas be ruled by Ranjit Singh. But they planned to enslave the Sikhs and the Afghans alike.

Having subdued Multan in 1818, and Kashmir in 1819, the Sikhs began to subjugate the areas populated by Afghans on. the right bank of the Indus. In 1819, they con quered Dera Ghazi Khan and in 1821 Dera Ismail Khan and won a dominating position in the Afghan regions along the middle reaches of the Indus.

In 1823, Ranjit Singh, who was previously satisfied with the nominal recognition of his suzerainty by the Peshawar khans, moved his troops towards Peshawar. His aim was to put an end to the Kabul rulers’ influence in the region. The decisive battle between the Sikhs and the Afghans was fought at Naushahra in March 1823. Ranjit Singh won the battle and seized Peshawar, after which this major economic and cultural centre remained outside the Afghan state.

The next ruler of Kabul was Dost Muhammad Khan, who came to power in 1826. An energetic ruler, he soon subdued Ghazni and greatly extended his domain. Later on, he persi stently sought leadership over his brothers who ruled other regions and cities in Afghanistan. The objective outcome of Dost Muhammad Khan’s policy was that the feudal divisions were largely, although not completely, overcome, and this signified a new stage in the history of the Afghan state.

One of the most important achievements of Dost Muham mad Khan was the formation of a regular army. The long barrelled muskets made by Kabul gunsmiths had a longer fire range than even the guns used at that time by the British colonial army in India. With his new troops, Dost Muhammad Khan extended his rule to anumber of Afghan regions. Towards the end of 1833 he subdued Jalalabad.

The growing strength of the independent principality of Kabul and the successes of Dost Muhammad Khan in unit ing the state ran counter to the British plans for expansion in Afghanistan and then in Central Asia. The East India Company adopted a tough policy with regard to Dost Muhammad Khan to remove that obstacle. To frustrate his efforts to unite Afghanistan, the Company made an at tempt to use former shah Shuja-ul-Mulk, its paid stooge who lived in India. In 1833, the British, who were preparing Shu ja’s offensive against Afghanistan, agreed that Ranjit Singh should support Shuja. The East India Company also attemp ted to set Afghan chiefs against Dost Muhammad Khan.

In March 1834 Shuja with a 22,000-strong army, recruit ed and armed with the help of the East India Company, set out to Qandahar through the Bolan Pass. The Qandahar rulers tumed to Dost Muhammad Khan for help. Late in June 1834, Shuja was defeated in the battle at the settlement of Qala-eh Azim, not far from Qandahar, and fled. The Sikhs thereby added Peshawar and the area around it to their domains.

Dost Muhammad Khan could not reconcile himself to the loss of Peshawar. The negotiations with Ranjit Singh proved futile, and in September 1834 Dost Muhammad Khan declared a "jihad" (sacred war) against the Sikhs. As a sacred war could be declared only by a sovereign Mus lim ruler, he had been given the title of emir Se al-mu minin, which means "‘the ruler of the faithful’) by the Mus lim theologians of Kabul. Dost Muhammad Khan renounced the title of shah, probably afraid of causing discontent among his numerous ambitious and envious brothers. Hav ing raised some 500,000 rupees with great difficulty, he equipped a fairly large army and, reinforced with the troops of the Afghan tribes, set out for Peshawar. But the expedition ended in failure, even though it never came to a decisive battle. Exploiting the discord between Dost Muhammad Khan and the sardars of Peshawar (Sultan Muhammad Khan and his brothers), Ranjit Singh managed to win them over to his side. After a large part of his arm had abandoned Dost Muhammad Khan, he retumed to Kabul.

The emir could still not reconcile himself to the loss of Peshawar. Realising that the British did not wish to help him get Peshawar back, and that the policy of the East India Company, which backed Ranjit Singh and Shuja, was the main obstacle to the unification of Afghanistan, .Dost Muhammad Khan made a few important foreign polic moves. In September 1835 he sent an envoy to the Sh of Iran with a letter proposing that they should combine their efforts in the struggle against the ruler of Herat.

In October 1835, the emir dispatched a letter to the Russian tsar Nicholas I which was delivered by Afghan mes sengers to Orenburg in May 1836.

The governor of Orenburg, V. A. Perovsky, who attached great significance to this diplomatic move aimed at estab lishing friendly relations between Afghanistan and Russia, sent the Afghan envoys, accompanied by his aide-de-camp, I. V. Vitkevich, to St. Petersburg. ,

In May 1836, Dost Muhammad Khan asked Lord Auckland, the govemor-general of India, to help him regulate Afghan-Sikh relations. The Afghan emir agreed to recognise the Sikhs’ claims to Kashmir on the condition that Peshawar was retumed to him. But a reunion of Peshawar with Afghanistan did not suit the British colonial policy makers, and the emir’s proposal was tumed down.

I. V. Vitkevich, who accompanied the Afghan envoys from Orenburg to St. Petersburg, was later appointed Rus sia’s representative in Kabul by the tsarist foreign ministry. It was his duty, according to his instructions, to help re concile the "Afghan rulers", that is, Dost Muhammad Khan and Kohandil Khan, the ruler of Qandahar. Vitkevich had to make it clear to the Barakzai rulers "that, owing to the long distance between Russia and Afghanistan, the former could not render them effective aid, but did, never theless, have sincere sympathy with them and would always intercede for them through the mediatorship of Persia". Besides, he was instructed to discover opportunities for expanding Russo-Afghan trade.16

On his way to Kabul Vitkevich stayed in Qandahar, where he took part in the negotiations between the Iranians and Kohandil Khan during which a decision was taken to form an alliance against the Sadozai ruler of Herat. In December 1837, Vitkevich arrived in the capital of Dost Muhammad Khan, where the British mission headed by Sir Alexander Bumes was on a visit at that moment.

In the circumstances obtaining, with the approval of tsarist diplomats, the Iranian ruler Muhammad Shah set out for Herat with a large army and besieged the city in October 1837. From an intemational point of view, the situation in Afghanistan was becoming increasingly explosive.

The British, in their turn, rendered material aid to Herat ruler Kamran. Besides, Eldred Pottinger, an officer they had sent to Herat, actually supervised the defence of the city. Meanwhile, I. Blaramberg of the Russian embassy acted as military adviser to the Shah of Iran.

The aim of the British mission in Kabul, headed by Sir Alexander Bumes, was to set the stage for the conquest of Afghanistan by the East India Company.!?7 Bumes’s task was to prevent a rapprochement between Dost Muhammad Khan and the Barakzai rulers of Qandahar, on the one hand, and Iran, on the other, and to impede their joint attack on Herat. But Burnes’s mission failed, primarily because of the aggressive intentions of the British colonial policymakers with regard to Afghanistan.

During the talks Burnes received a letter of instructions from Lord Auckland stating that the claims of Dost Muham mad Khan to Peshawar should be categorically rejected and that it should be made clear to him that the British would openly support Ranjit Singh in his attack on Afghanistan unless the emir discontinued his friendly relations with Iran and Russia. Burnes was also told to demand that Dost Muhammad Khan should break off relations with Russia and Iran, expel Vitkevich from Kabul immediately and never again receive Russian or Iranian representatives with out the permission of the British authorities. Dost Muham mad Khan rejected this ultimatum and in April 1838 Burnes left Kabul.

In these circumstances Vitkevich assisted in reconciling Dost Muhammad Khan with the ruler of Qandahar, Kohan dil Khan, and persuaded them to set up a defensive alli ance with Iran to repel the impending British attack. The treaty was to come into force provided the tsarist govern ment offered its guarantees. Vitkevich also reached an understanding with Dost Muhammad Khan on expanding trade between Russia and Afghanistan. He did, moreover, promise the emir Russia’s assistance in the oe le for the return of Peshawar, and this had a favourable effect on the outcome of the talks.

But at that time substantial changes were taking place in the policy of the Russian tsarist government which ob structed the pursuance of the former policy of countering British expansion in the Middle East. Seeking a rapproche ment with Britain in the efforts to settle the Turco-Egyp tian conflict and hoping to gain British support with regard to the straits, the tsarist government made concessions over the Herat issue. Vitkevich left Afghanistan. The Shah of Iran and the Qandahar ruler were informed of the tsar’s refusal to approve the Iran-Afghan treaty. The results of the diplomatic efforts of Vitkevich’s mission were reduced to nil.

But, in spite of all that, the British continued to use Vitkevich’s mission as a pretext for unleashing a war against Afghanistan, alleging that Dost Muhammad Khan’s contacts with Iran and Russia threatened the security of British India.

While making political preparations for a war against Afghanistan, the major promoters of British colonial policy attempted to persuade Ranjit Singh, whose relations with Dost Muhammad Khan remained hostile, to take an active part in the war. Ranjit Singh refused to make any conces sions to Dost Muhammad Khan with regard to the return of Peshawar. On the contrary, during the long negotiations he exploited international tensions in a bid to secure new

ossessions in Afghan territory or political advantages for imself.

In May 1838 William Macnaghten, secretary for foreign affairs of the governor-general of India, was sent to Lahore for talks with Ranjit Singh. He managed to persuade the latter to sign a treaty of alliance with Shuja, which was guaranteed by the East India Company. Under the treaty, which was signed in July 1838, the East India Company and Ranjit Singh assumed commitments to reinstate Shuja as the shah of Afghanistan. In return for military and polit ical support promised him, Shuja agreed to cede Sind (which he did not possess) to the British and reaffirmed his giving up to the Sikhs, "for all time to come", Peshawar, Multan, Kashmir and other territories conquered by Ranjit Singh, previously possessions of the Sadozai shahs of Afghanistan. Shuja also promised that he would not annex Herat to his future state. The foreign policy of Afghanistan and that of the Sikhs’ state were to be subject to British control. Under the treaty, Shuja, when back on the throne, would invite British army officers to organise an army.

Wishing to avoid aggravation of relations with Britain, Ranjit Singh yielded to its diplomatic pressure and signed the treaty, but he refused to let the troops of the East India Company pass through the territory of the Punjab. The East India Company had to change not only the initial plan for its troop movements, but also the composition of the troops by including British regular units in the expeditional corps, in addition to the units of India Sepoys.

The next British move in preparing to invade Afghan istan was to bring pressure to bear on the Shah of Iran to lift the siege of Herat. The British government even went as far as severing diplomatic relations with Iran. Faced with the threat of war, the Shah was compelled to put an end to the siege late in August and early in September 1838.

After the British had forced tsarist diplomacy to re treat, signed a treaty with Ranjit Singh and Shuja and com pelled the Shah of Iran to withdraw his troops from Herat, they speeded up preparations for the invasion of Afghan istan. To justify the war of aggression and conceal its true motives, Lord Auckland, governor-general of India, published a declaration in Simla on October 1, 1838, which surpassed in its hypocrisy and lies even the most despicable docu ments in the history of colonial policy. It urged that Dost Muhammad Khan should be toppled and Shuja be put on the Afghan throne with the help of the East India Compa ny’s armies.

On the eve of the British invasion, the territory ruled by Dost Muhammad Khan stretched from Kohistan (north of Kabul) to Mukur in the south-west, and from Bamiyan in the north-west to the Khyber Pass in the south-east. The population of that territory was about 1.3 million.

The Qandahar principality was divided among the broth ers Kohandil, Rahmdil and Mehrdil. Each of the rulers had his own court and received his share of profits from the principality according to seniority, collecting taxes from the population of the territory under his rule. The total population in the principality was approximately 700 to 800 thousand. The domestic situation there was unstable. There was much unrest not only among the peasants, but among the urban population as well. Furthermore, a large part of the ruling class—the khans of the Durrani tribes whose privileges were infringed upon by the Qandahar rulers, and the Sunnite theologians denouncing the contacts between the Qandahar rulers and Shiitic Iran—opposed the authorities. The Qandahar principality was weakened by enmity among the ruling brothers. The leaders of the East India Company Imew the Barakzais’ weak spots and hoped to take advantage of them in the coming war.

At the end of 1838, the troops of the East India Com pany under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir John Keane set out for Afghanistan. Early in April 1839 all the units that were to invade Afghanistan through Qandahar, were assembled in Quetta. The ‘"‘Army of Indus’’, as it was called, numbered about 20,000 officers and men serving in line. But the total strength of the army was far greater, for it was accompanied by nearly 38,000 transport and camp attendants. The actual leader of the expedition was Sir William Macnaghten, secretary of the Anglo-Indian government, who served as "ambassador and minister" under Shuja.

The troops began to move towards Qandahar in mid April. At first, they met hardly any resistance on the part of the Afghans. Moreover, some of the influential Afghan sardars, bribed by the British, took Shuja’s side as the Army of Indus approached Qandahar.

The ceremony of reinstating Shuja on the throne took place soon after the British troops had entered Qandahar. On May 7, 1839, just before the ceremony, he signed an eight-clause treaty aimed at abolishing Afghanistan’s inde .pendence. It confirmed the treaty concluded in July 1838 and Shuja’s consent to the isolation of Afghanistan from the outside world and to the presence of British occupation forces in Afghanistan, and included other provisions.1

The situation with which Dost Muhammad shan, who was getting ready to repel the invaders, was faced, was made more difficult by the uprising in Kohistan, in the Kabul area. Still, he managed to dispatch part of his best forces under the command of his son Muhammad Akbar Khan to the Khyber Pass, and to assemble troops in Ghazni and in Kabul.

The people’s antipathy to shah Shuja, who had arrived in their country with foreign troops, was evident right from the very start of the war. The Afghans’ resistance took the form of a religious war against the British.

On July 21, 1839, the advanced detachments of the British forces approached the Ghazni fortress, which was believed to be unassailable and well defended against a siege. But the defenders of the city were betrayed: the British were informed about the number of troops in Ghazni and had learned of the most vulnerable spot in the city defences, the Kabul Gates, which had not been barri caded. The British toes took the city by storm and massacred its population.!9

A week later, they set out for Kabul, having left a garri son in the fortress. Meanwhile, an 11,000-strong British detachment was moving towards Kabul through the Khyber Pass. Soon the British captured Jalalabad.i

With about 6,000 troops Dost Muhammad Khan was moving from Kabul towards the British and Shuja. But he was betrayed by some of his army commanders, abandoned his army, and retreated to Bamiyan and then northwards to Hulm with his family and a few retainers. His troops dispersed. On August 7, the British and Shuja entered the capital unhindered.

The shah was given the Bala Hissar castle in Kabul for his numerous household. Outside it, the foreigners, hated by the people, ruled the country on his behalf. Sir William Macnaghten, the conceited and self-opinionated chief repre sentative of the East India Company, the shah’s ‘‘ambassa dor and minister’, enjoyed dictatorial powers in the country.

Intoxicated hy their easily won victories in the colonial wars, the British officials and army officers believed their situation in the occupied country was secure. Disregardin elementary precautions, the British command statione the troops in a marshy lowland on the outskirts of Kabul, most improperly in military terms. In addition, P art of the occupation forces was soon withdrawn from Afghanistan and the garrison near Kabul was greatly reduced. Mean while, a guerrilla war had started in Afghanistan, and unrest among various sections of the population was mounting. The British had to give up the plan of an immediate offen sive on south Turkestan, where Dost Muhammad Khan had taken refuge, because the local population was making ready to offer them resistance.

Dost Muhammad Khan attempted to unite the forces of several khanates on the left bank of the Amu Darya to strike back at the occupation forces. But, having failed in that, he entered into negotiations with Nasrullah Khan, the emir of Bokhara, and the Shah of Persia. The emir of Bokhara invited him to his domains, promising shelter and hinting at possible aid. But when Dost Muhammad Khan arrived in Bokhara, he was given a cool welcome, put under surveillance, and found himself in the position of a prisoner. No aid, of course, was to be expected from the emir of Bokhara, and his only hope now was to escape unharmed.2 9

After some time, Dost Muhammad Khan ventured to escape. He reached Shakhrisyabz with great difficulty. From there he went to the ruler of Hulm who helped him gather forces to offer resistance to the British. In the summer of 1840 the alarming news reached Kabul: Dost Muhammad Khan was back, assembling troops under his colours.

Meanwhile popular unrest was mounting in Afghanistan. Ghilzai uprisings followed one another, the one in April 1840 being the biggest. Popular protest erupted in the Qan dahar and Khyber regions and in many other areas.

In August, Dost Muhammad Khan moved towards Ba miyan. The British found themselves in a real fix and were saved from being routed in that region by the arrival of a strong reinforcement from Kabul commanded by Colonel Dennie. In September, the British troops, who were greatly superior in artillery, defeated a poorly armed volunteer force of Dost Muhammad Khan. But he did not lay down arms and went to Kohistan in the Kabul region, where he headed popular resistance and created a serious situation for Shuja and the British garrison.

Large contingents were moved from Kabul against Dost Muhammad Khan. In the battle at Parvan on November 2, 1840, the British were defeated, suffering heavy losses in dead and wounded. They retreated in fear of an uprising ° in the rear, or an encirclement. But precisely at that mo ment, for reasons we still do not know, Dost Muhammad Khan left his army, arrived in Kabul and surrendered to the surprised British. Anxious to remove the popular emir from the country as soon as possible, they sent him off to India heavily guarded.

Immediately after the emir’s capitulation the wave of insurrection in .Afghanistan was at a low ebb, and a calm seemed to set in. But that was the calm before the storm. Very soon the whole nation rose to struggle, and this had a decisive effect on the further developments. In the spring and summer of 1841 the flame of popular war was spread ing throughout the country. The clergy, who saw the es tablishment of the power of "the infidels" (the British) as a desecration of the Muslim faith, ceased to mention the name of Shuja in Friday prayers. The toiling people protest ed against the mounting burden of taxes.

In the winter of 18401841 many regions of Afghanistan were hit by famine. Food supplies on the outskirts of the capital were meagre, too. Large purchases of food and forage for the British camp soon caused a sharp rise in the food prices on the Kabul markets. The British conquerors tured the whole population of Afghanistan against them. But neither the spreading popular discontent, nor the rising tide of insurrections shook the confidence of the British leaders, including Macnaghten, in the stability of their posi tion in the occupied country.

In September 1841, the imminence of an important event became quite evident. The Ghilzais undertook a large armed action during which they disrupted the communications between the Kabul garrison and India; after this, during the night of November 1, the Kabul uprising began. The insur gents encircled the houses of Alexander Bumes and other British officers. After unsuccessful attempts to pacify the insurgents and pay a ransom, Bumes escaped disguised as a woman but was spotted and killed:

Taking part in the Kabul uprising were the city poor, artisans and traders, and also peasants from nearby villages. They were soon joined by units of Afghan tribes which had come to the capital. The British troops stationed in the Sherpur Camp near Kabul were demoralised and took no effective action against the insurgents. The capital wasnow entirely in the hands of the insurgents. On November 5 the . Afghans seized British food stores. The British garrison found itself in a poor plight. After a’ fierce battle, in which several hundred British troops had been killed and the Afghans had captured part of the British artillery, the insur gents controlled the key positions on the Bemaru heights.

By that time the most outstanding among the leaders of the Afghan liberation struggle was Muhammad Akbar Khan, the emir’s son. Sir William Macnaghten was compel led to enter into negotiations with the Afghan leaders, and on December 11, 1841, he signedan agreement on the with drawal of British troops from Afghanistan, the release of the prisoners of war and the return of Dost Muhammad Khan.

But to Macnaghten the signing of the agreement was merely a stratagem. Just as before, he sought to provoke discord among the insurgents and contemplated kidnapping and murdering their leaders. However, Muhammad Akbar Khan guessed his intentions. In anticipation of his actions, he attempted to-take him prisoner during the talks on De cember 23, 1841. Macnaghten offered resistance and Mu hammad Akbar Khan killed him.

Macnaghten’s death spread panic among the British. A new agreement was signed between the British leaders and the Afghan sardars on January 1, 1842, which provided for


the immediate withdrawal of British troops from Afghan istan. Some 4,500 officers and men left Kabul with nine field guns, and 12,000 camp and transport attendants. The severe winter and attacks by Afghan guerrillas turned the retreat of the demoralised British and Sepoy units into a catastrophe, for the whole of the occupation army was destroyed. Early in 1842 Afghan detachments were still attacking the British garrisons remaining in some towns and regions of the country.

With the foreign troops out of Kabul, Shuja, pressed by the popular masses, was compelled to declare a ‘‘sacred war" on the British and set out for Jalalabad, where he secretly hoped to join the British camp. But on his way there he was attacked by a Barakzai sardar with a group of supporters Shuja was charged with treason and shot on the spot.

Early in April 1842, the units commanded by General Pollock rushed from Peshawar to the aid of the besieged Jalalabad garrison. Meeting almost no resistance on their way (the chiefs of the Afghan tribes in the Khyber region had been bribed by the British), the units approached Jalalabad on April 17.

Muhammad Akbar Khan negotiated with Pollock the terms of the British troop withdrawal from Afghanistan and the return of Dost Muhammad Khan from captivity, but, on learning of Shuja’s death and the enthronement of his son, Fateh Jang, he left urgently for Kabul. There he occupied the post of vizier under Fateh Jang who did, however, flee to the British in Jalalabad.

Meanwhile, the newly appointed governor-general of India Ellenborough sent additional instructions to the troops, virtually ordering a punitive expedition. In August 1842 the British marched on Kabul and soon occupied it. Fateh Jang was reinstated in Bala Hissar. The British colo nialists plundered and bumed Kabul and its outskirts, killing thousands of civilians. British punitive detachments operated in several regions of the country.

But, for all that, the British could not keep Afghanistan under control. The continuing war waged by the popula tion forced them to leave the country. Aware that he could not retain power without foreign support, Fateh Jang abdicated the heone. Before leaving Kabul, the British installed Shahpur, another son of Shuja, in his stead. As soon as he leamt that Muhammad Akbar Khan was getting ready for action, the new shah fled the capital. Early in 1843 Dost Muhammad Khan was allowed to return home. Thus, the British admitted the failure of their policy in Afghanistan. That spelled the end of the first Anglo-Afghan war of 1838-1842.

The heroic struggle of the Afghan peoples led to a vic tory over a strong and dangerous enemy. The courageous soldiers and volunteers from various tribes, well experienced in guerrilla warfare, made the most of the mountainous terrain. Most effective were the strikes made by the Ghilzais who often blocked the roads from Kabul to Qandahar and Jalalabad. The feats of the 1838-1842 war left their mark on the patriotic traditions of the peoples of Afghanistan.

Back in power, Dost Mulaninad Khan persistently con tinued to pursue a policy of uniting the country. It took him a good deal of time and effort to establish effective power over a number of regions in his domains, because the Kabul principality had, in fact, broken up into separate parts, Therefore the emir appointed his sons the rulers of towns and provinces.

In the mid-1840s Dost Muhammad Khan controlled no more than a quarter of the territory of present-day Afghan istan. Kohandil Khan was again the independent ruler of Qandahar; after the death of Kamran in 1842 all power in Herat was in the hands of his vizier Yar Muhammad. In unifying the country, Dost Muhammad Khan relied on the army he had restored. He was reorganising it, improving its armaments and combat readiness.

In 1843, the East India Company seized Sind whose emirs had recognised the supreme power of Afghan rulers in the past. As a result of the first Anglo-Sikh war of 1845 1846, the East India Company established control over the Punjab, after which the territory of the Sikh state was great ly diminished and it only formally became independent. The actual master in Lahore was the British resident. In April 1848, Sikh army units in Multan rose against British rule. In November of the same year the troops of the East India Company crossed the Sikh border without declaring a war. The second Anglo-Sikh war began.

Dost Muhammad Khan and his men were aware of the great danger for the future of Afghanistan presented by the new onslaught of the British colonial aggressors in North West India. At the end of 1848, responding to the request of Chattar Singh, the Sikh viceroy of the Hazara region, for military aid in fighting the British, Dost Muhammad Khan concluded an agreement with him. The Afghan emir pro mised to send troops and the Sikhs promised to give him back Peshawar.

The troops of Dost Muhammad Khan, including an Afghan cavalry unit, entered the Peshawar area. But that relatively insignificant support could not tip the balance of forces which was not in favour of the Sikhs. In February 1849 the troops of the East India Company inflicted a decisive defeat on the Sikhs and occupied the whole of the Punjab. In March of that year the Punjab officially became part of British colonial possessions in India. Further struggle for Peshawar threatened to develop into a war against the British, so Dost Muhammad Khan decided to retreat. The Afghan population of Peshawar and other regions which had previously been seized by the Sikhs, was now ruled by the British colonialists.

Dost Muhammad Khan returned to Afghanistan and, having lost all hope of being successful in the east and

south-east, he focussed his attention on the north, sending

a large military expedition there. That marked the begin ning of the conquest by Afghan emirs of the regions on the left bank of the Amu Darya, which lasted many years. In the 1850s the domains of Dost Muhammad Khan already included a new province—Afghan Turkestan, with Muham mad Afzal Khan, the emir’s eldest son, as its ruler.

However, the international situation and the develop ments in British India made British diplomacy seek a rap prochement with Dost Muhammiad Khan. At that time, the British ruling circles were quite prepared to be content with controlling Dost Muhammad Khan’s foreign policy and using Afghanistan as an ally against Iran and as an instru ment in their overt and covert struggle against Russian influ ence in the Middle East. The British did therefore support the Afghan emir for some years with money and weapons. Dost Muhammad Khan, for his part, accepted the proposals of the East India Company on improving mutual relations, for he needed peace, above all, to strengthen his power and unite Afghanistan.

The initial understanding between the British authori ties in India and Dost Muhammad Khan was evidently reached at the end of the first Anglo-Afghan war, when the British allowed the emir to go to Afghanistan.22 In the mid-1850s Dost Muhammad Khan chose a rapprochement with Britain, caused, among other things, by the threat to Herat from Iran.

The talks between the emir of Afghanistan and Britain resulted in the signing of an agreement consisting of three articles on March 30, 1855. Article One of the agreement proclaimed: the establishment of friendship and peace be tween the East India Company and Dost Muhammad Khan and his successors. In Articles Two and Three the sides pledged themselves to respect the integrity of each other’s territory. In addition, Dost Muhammad Khan made a pro mise that he and his successors would "‘be the friends of the friends and the enemies of the enemies’’ of the East India Company. Meanwhile the British side made no such com mitment. This just goes to show that the agreement was unequal, for it provided Britain with far greater benefits and unilateral advantages: it meant that Britain gained an ally without assuming the obligations that usually exist between allied countries.

The promise given by Dost Muhammad Khan to respect the integrity of the East India Company’s territory was recognition of its right to the possession of Peshawar and other regions populated by Afghans which had been seized by the British colonialists in 1849. The tearing away of a number of Afghan-populated regions, later formalised by the unequal agreement with Dost Muhammad Khan owing to the annexation of the Punjab by the British, marked the initial stage in the emergence of the Pushtunistan problem.

The loss of a large part of the Afghan lands under the 1855 agreement and the unilateral commitments were the price paid by Dost Muhammad Khan for the British aid in money and weapons, for the East India Company’s pro mise not to interfere in the internal affairs of his state and for the consent not to obstruct the annexation of Qandahar, and later Herat, to his domains.

Afghanistan in the Latter Half of the 19th Century

In the 1850s and early 1860s Dost Muhammad Khan succeeded in uniting the main regions of Afghanistan under his rule, which had been part of that state since the mid 18th century, with the exception of Peshawar and other towns and regions on the right bank of the Indus which became part of the British colonial possessions in India in 1849. The economic ties among the regions of the feudal state of Dost Muhammad Khan had not yet become suffi ciently well established. For some time the emir managed to curb the separatist tendencies of the numerous local feudal lords. But the state he had unified still lacked stabi lity as was evidenced during the internecine wars that erupt ed in Afghanistan after the death of Dost Muhammad Khan.

At the close of his rule Dost Muhammad Khan launched an expedition to Herat. In June 1862 he set out from Qan dahar with a strong army, reached Herat early in July, besieged the city, and captured it in May of the following year. .

But that was his last victory. On June 9, 1863, Dost Muhammad Khan died in Herat. After his death, at a cere mony in Herat, his heir, Sher Ali Khan, was proclaimed the emir of Afghanistan in the presence of nearly all the sons of the deceased. Soon after that, Sher Ali Khan set out for Kabul, leaving in Herat a strong garrison and his third son Yaqub (at that time under age) as the ruler.23

At first, all the brothers of Sher Ali Khan recognised his power. But soon an internecine war flared up among them and the hostilities spread throughout the country. Muhammad Afzal and Muhammad Azam struggled for the throne of the emir. Muhammad Amin and Muhammad Sharif were opposed to the spread of the power of Sher Ali Khan to the regions that they regarded as their own hereditary domains. The other brothers stirred up rebel lions in response to the emir’s attempts to abolish some feudal privileges such as the right to have troops and not to pay land taxes to the treasury. Among the first to oppose the new emir was Muhammad Azam, who operated from Zurmat. But he could not hold out against the emir’s troops, escaped to Kohat and later settled in Rawalpindi, enjoying the patronage of the British authorities and receiving handouts from them.

The heads of the British colonial administration fed the fires of the internecine wars for their own reasons. Pursuing a "closed border" policy with regard to the neigh bouring Afghan tribes, after the suppression of the Indian ‘uprising of 1857-1859, the British colonial authorities, however, often sent punitive expeditions into their lands, mostly to the mountain regions between the Swat and the Indus. The Afghans were joined in their struggle against the British by emigrants from India, followers of the Muslim movement "tarika-i-muhammadiya".24 The British colo nialists regarded the Afghan lands bordering on India as the object of their future expansion and therefore did not want the influence and power of the Afghan emirs to grow stronger there. The internecine wars in Afghanistan suited them well.

The second year after the death of Dost Muhammad Khan saw a large armed conflict between emir Sher Ali Khan and his elder brother Afzal. The emir’s troops won the battle in the mountainous Bajgah area, in a pass across the Hindu Kush. After that, Sher Ali Khan appointed Fateh Muhammad Khan the ruler of Afghan Turkestan, and Afzal and his family were taken to Kabul and then to Ghazni, where he was kept in detention.

Meanwhile, the intemecine struggle was raging in Af baad Among the active opponents of the emir were his

rothers Muhammad Amin Khan and Muhammad Sharif Khan. A decisive battle against them was fought in June 1865 at Qajbaz, near Kalat-i-Ghilzai. During that battle, which was won by the emir’s troops, Muhammad Ali Khan (the emir’s beloved son and heir) and Muhammad Amin Khan fought each other in a duel, in which both were killed.25 Sher Ali Khan lapsed into deep depression, remain ing in Qandahar for a long time, unable to run the state. The news of this became publicly known, causing turmoil in the country, and in May 1866 Muhammad Afzal Khan captured Kabul, to become emir.

Sher Ali Khan, who had retreated from Qandahar to Herat, consolidated his power there and extended his influence to Afghan Turkestan. The leaders of the British colonial policy did not think twice about recognising Muhammad Afzal Khan as the emir of Kabul and Qandahar, but at the same time they recognised Sher Ali Khan who ruled Herat. Dissatisfied with such a policy on the part of the British, Muhammad Afzal Khan did not trust them and made attempts to establish contacts with Russia, ex pecting to get more reliable support from that country.

In October 1867 Muhammad Afzal Khan died and the administration of Kabul passed to Muhammad Azam, who was proclaimed emir. But his rule turned out to be short lived. During the internecine struggle in 1868 the balance tipped drastically in favour of Sher Ali Khan. The latter sent to Qandahar an army headed by his son Yaqub who captured the city in March of that year, and in September Sher Ali Khan occupied Kabul.

Toppled, Muhammad Azam and his nephew Abdurrah man (the son of Muhammad Afzal) tried to hold out against the adversary but were defeated and with a few people loyal to them, without money and with no hope of being able to, continue the struggle, they crossed the border to live in exile.

Some time later, Muhammad Azam Khan died, and Abdurrahinan Khan set out for the Khiva khanate across the Turkmenian deserts. After forty days of tiring travel, he arrived in Urgench, and then went to Bokhara, and Samarkand.26

Abdurrahman spent more than ten years in Russia’s Central Asian domains, receiving fairly lavish grants from the tsarist authorities. Although his permanent place of resi dence was Samarkand, he often stayed in Tashkent, attend ing receptions, holiday festivities and balls at the house of go vemor-general Kaufmann, who often invited him to watch military parades and exercises as well. Once Abdurrahman Khan saw how electricity was used for an explosion on the Salar river. To satisfy the interest aroused in him by this experience, a section on electricity from a school text-book in physics, written by Academician E. H. Lentz (1804-1865), was translated for him from Russian into Persian.

His contacts with Russians notably broadened his out look. Later, when he returned home, his interest in engi neering (primarily when used for military purposes) did not abate. He built an arms factory in Kabul with British aid, and all kinds of workshops. But, being the ruler, he did not promote the new sciences on which technology was based, but patronised merely the teaching of the "old" (divine) sciences. __

After Sher Ali Khan had firmly established himself as emir in 1869 and extended his power to the territories which had previously been part of the state of Dost Muham mad Khan, he set about eliminating the consequences of the internecine war. To build up central power, Sher Ali Khan did, above all, need troops and money. To obtain them, he was ready to use outside support and accept aid offered by the British. However, when entering into talks with Britain, he did not waive the sovereignty of Afghanistan but sought to retain its independence in every respect.

Having accepted the invitation of the viceroy of India Mayo to visit the country, Sher Ali Khan met him in Am bala in March 1869. During the talks Sher Ali Khan insisted that the British should stop any interference in the internal affairs of his state and assume obligations ‘"‘not to recognise in Afghanistan as friends" anyone except the emir and his heirs. But the British limited themselves to a declarative condemnation of internecine wars in Afghanistan, refusing to recognise the right to power for Abdullah Jan whom Sher Ali Khan had appointed as his heir.

On his return from India, Sher Ali Khan set about effect ing reforms. He began with taxation and military reforms. The Russian Ambassador to Iran, I. A: Zinovyev, wrote in a report to the Foreign Ministry on August 14, 1869: "To lessen the influence of his bigger vassals, the emir de cided to take over control of the country’s financial sources and to form a si.gle permanent army."*7 It is known that Sher Ali Khan decided to go over to levying the land tax in money only, giving up taxation in kind. But that deci sion was never carried out and the tax was levied both in money and in kind, as previously.*

The numerous facts mentioned by those who lived at that period and some objective indices (for instance, the population of Kabul, which was 140,700 in 1876) testify to the comparatively rapid development of Afghanistan and show that it reached a degree of prosperity under Sher Ali Khan and that the reforms he effected facilitated economic and cultural advancement. When assessing the situation in Afghanistan in the 1870s, the outstanding modem Afghan historian Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar. even arrived at the conclusion that precisely at that time the conditions were first ripe for the emergence of the "sprouts of capital ist relations".28 This point of view merits attention. But since the data on the socio-economic relations in the Afghanistan of that time, contained in the sources, have not been analysed, and no monographs have been published on the subject, the question needs a more in-depth study.

Striving for a stronger central power, Sher Ali Khan took measures to improve the administrative system, to set up Afghanistan’s first cabinet of ministers, and instituted a deliberative body which was to advise the emir on matt ers of state administration.

Sher Ali Khan achieved some success in building up the armed forces owing to the fact that Britain had gone over to an openly aggressive policy and there was a danger of a new invasion by British colonialists. By the autumn of 1878 he had increased the numerical strength of the regular troops to 50,000.29 The army had more than 300 pieces of artillery, although for the most part these were obsolete smooth-bore guns of little military value. A large part of the army was poorly armed and fitted out. The treasury did not have enough money for the army’s upkeep, and soldiers often had to seek additional earings. But, for all that, Sher Ali Khan’s army was efficient enough. Later on, many regular officers and men fought excellently against the Bri tish aggressors. When he was forming the regular army, Sher Ali Khan ordered that the English service regulations be translated into Pushtu and Persian (Dari).

Special mention should be made of the reforms in edu cation and culture, in particular printing, started by Sher Ali Khan. At that time, lithography was introduced in Kabul, and books and postage stamps began to be printed. Postage stamps with a picture of a lion were issued with a value of one-tenth, a quarter, half of a rupee, and one rupee.39 The first Afghan newspaper, Shams an-Nahar, whose first issue came off the press in 1873, was published up till the start of the second Anglo-Afghan war of 1878 1880. Among the most important and interesting, from the point of view of the history of culture, were the measures effected by Sher Ali Khan in education. Before him Af ghanistan had no secular schools, and there existed only two ways of providing children with education: either at home, which very few rich families could afford, or at a madrasah with a traditional religious education according to medieval canons. Sher Ali Khan founded the country’s first secular state school in Bala Hissar, which had two departments, military and civilian. English was taught by Indian teachers.31 Many present-day Afghan historians attach great historical and cultural significance to the re forms effected by Sher Ali Khan in the 1870s, regarding them as the start of the modemisation of Afghanistan.

Under Sher Ali Khan attempts were made to improve communications: roads were built, bridges repaired, and the post service now linked Kabul with Afghanistan’s main towns and also with Peshawar. Whereas formerly it was used solely by the emir’s administration, now it was also used by private persons.

The construction of arms factories and a new town named Sherabad (or Sherpur) began near Kabul for which an area of 2,000 jaribs* was allocated in 1870. The official history of Afghanistan contains information on the outer town walls and the internal ones (round the citadel), which the emir had ordered to build, on the number of soldiers employed as building workers, on a pay rise for those sol diers, etc. For more than five years 6,000 workers and about 1,000 skilled builders (for instance, carpenters) were engaged in the construction of the town. The soldiers build ing the town were paid five rupees in addition to their regular monthly pay, and the skilled builders received daily wages (previously the forced labour of subjects belonging to poll-tax-paying estates had been used in this kind of work).

Sher Ali Khan was aware of the need for a centralised state and for domestic reforms to ensure the country’s independent development. He was fairly well informed about developments in Europe, and did, to a certain extent, know the history of the European states and Russia, regard ing Peter the Great with much respect.32

The international standing of Afghanistan in the 1870s was determined by the rivalry between Britain and tsarist Russia in the Middle East. In the south it bordered on the colonial empire of Britain, which had seized part of the lands on the right bank of the Indus populated by Afghans; and in the north it bordered on tsarist Russia’s Central Asian possessions.

At the end of the 1860s and beginning of the 1870s the British "‘closed border’’ policy in the north-west of India gave way to an "offensive policy’. This meant that blatant aggression was now the official policy of Britain, which had entered the imperialist stage of capitalist development, and a new war of aggression against Afghanistan thus bécame imminent. With the coming of the Disraeli cabinet to power in 1874, Britain stepped up preparations for a war with Afghanistan. To camouflage its aggression and mislead public opinion, the British ruling circles in their jingoistic propaganda used the false argument that there existed a threat of India being invaded by Russian troops.?3

Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Gorchakov proposed that Afghanistan be regarded a ‘"‘neutral zone"’ between the domains of tsarist Russia in Central Asia and British India. It was envisaged that the independence of Afghanistan would be guaranteed by Russia and Britain. But the British government, which was preparing to attack Afghanistan, refused to offer any such guarantee. In 1873, the tsarist government renounced its former proposal on Afghanistan’s neutrality and officially assured the British that it regarded Afghanistan "beyond the field of Russian influence". Under an agreement between Russia and Britain the Amu Darya river was recognised as the northem frontier of Afghanistan.

In the spring of 1878 the tsarist government sent a diplomatic mission to Kabul headed by General Stoletov which was received with great honour.34 The British government, for its part, demanded that a British mission should be received in Kabul, but Sher AliKhan refused. Both _ events were used by Britain as a pretext for starting a war.

The British army invaded Afghanistan in November 1878.

The British military command had planned to advance apace and end the war by capturing Kabul. By mid-January 1879 the units of General Browne, moving through the Khyber Pass, seized Jalalabad. In the south British troops entered Qandahar and occupied part of the area around it.

After that, they marched on Kabul. Force and bribing were the means they used. Some members of the Afghan nobility conspired to bring to power Sher Ali Khan’s son Yaqub, who suited the British. Having left the capital to Yaqub, Sher Ali Khan set out to Mazar-i-Sharif on Decem ber 13, 1878, with members of the Russian mission who still remained in Afghanistan. The emir still pinned hopes on appealing to intemational public opinion in order to end Britain’s unprovoked aggression. He intended to go to St. Petersburg to convene an intemational congress on the Afghan issue. But soon after his arrival in Mazar-i-Sharif he fell seriously ill and on February 20, 1879, he died. The Russian mission left Afghanistan.

It was already clear by the outset of 1879 that the British plan for a quick victory was quite unfeasible: the position of the invading forces became critical. But emir Yaqub, who tried to retain the throne with British help, ° ordered the end of resistance. On May 22, 1879, he was accorded a sumptuous reception in the camp of General Browne. The emir appeared to be compliant and on Ma 26 concluded the Treaty of Garidamal with the Britis commissioner Sir Louis Cavagnari, a peace treaty under which Afghanistan did, in fact, lose its independence. A British resident with armed guards was now to stay perma nently in Kabul to control the emir’s activities and the way he spent annual British subsidies. Yaqub recognised Britain’s right to control Sibi, Pishin and the Kurram valley and the Khyber and Michni passes. Prime Minister of the British Tory cabinet Benjamin Disraeli declared that the Treaty of Gandamak ensured a scientifically fixed and adequate fron tier for the Indian empire.

Sir Louis Cavagnari, who was appointed the British resident in Afghanistan, arrived in Kabul on July 24. He interfered without scruple in matters of administration, just as in a conquered country. Among the Afghan population and in the army protest was growing against the foreigners and the emir kowtowing to them, and in September 1879 Afghan soldiers started an uprising in Kabul. They were joined by the city population. The insurgents attacked the British residency, killing everyone they found there. The events in Kabul shook the whole country. Tajiks and other peoples, too, rose against the invaders, and volunteer armed units were formed in many areas.

The invaders, who had withdrawn nearly all their armed forces to India after the signing of the Treaty of Gandamak, only held out in Qandahar. Supported by reinforcements from Britain and South Africa, they set out for Kabul again. That expedition was led by General Roberts. Emir Yaqub, who had surrendered to the British, ordered the Kabul garrison to lay down arms. But the soldiers disobeyed him. After fierce battles the British captured the capital in October 1879 and perpetrated severe reprisals against -ts defenders and population. Many people were detained and executed. The conquerors avenged themselves on the people of Kabul and the city itself. The Bala-Hissar citadel and the residential districts around it were severely damaged.35 The cultural beginnings of Sher Ali Khan suffered a great reversal. In particular, the equipment of the printing house built during his rule was destroyed, which held up the development of the Afghan press until the early 20th century.

Emir Yaqub was accused by the British of not taking effective measures to aid Sir Louis Cavagnari. In October 1879 General Roberts issued a proclamation informing the people of Afghanistan that Yaqub had abdicated. The dethroned emir was taken under escort to India. Thus the British conquerors, who had alleged that their purpose was to defend the Indian borders and eliminate ‘‘the threat of a Russian invasion", betrayed their true intentions. The population of Afghanistan resisted the invaders’ attempts to take over the administration of their country. Although the British authorities managed to win the support of some feudal lords by bribing them, the officials appointed by the British from among them to administer some of the coun try’s regions .were conffonted with popular resentment. Some of the officials were killed, and others fled to the British.

The volunteer units of Afghan tribes and Tajiks from Kohistan, who were most active in the liberation struggle, were led by Afghan General Muhammad Jan Khan Wardak, a capable commander. In the autumn of 1879 he arrived in Ghazni province having persuaded the volunteer detachments of the Wardak tribe to take part in future hostilities. Mullah Din Muhammad, too, called for a sacred war against the British. At that time, he, together with Muhammad Jan Khan and mullah Abdul Ghafur Langari, was getting together the volunteers arriving in Ghazni province.

At the end of November the insurgent units from Ghazni and other regions launched an offensive on Kabul. General Roberts failed to prevent the unification of those units.36 The decisive battles between the insurgent detachments and the troops commanded by Roberts were fought at mount Koh-i Asmai and culminated in the victory of the Afghans on the approaches to Kabul. General Roberts and his troops were forced to retreat to the Sherpur military camp. On December 15, 1879, the rebel detachments entered Kabul. Popular wrath was also spearheaded against the sardars who sided with the British, and their houses in Kabul were looted and bumed down.37 The capital was liberated not only due to the valour of the soldiers who had come from various parts of the country under the banners of Muham mad Jan Khan Wardak, Ghulam Haidar Khan Charhi, and other leaders of the popular uprising, but also due to the active part taken by the population of Kabul and the surrounding areas in the struggle.

The Afghans failed in their further actions against Rob erts’ troops. The unfavourable balance of forces caused by the arrival of enemy reinforcements forced Muhammad Jan Khan to retreat after some time. He headed for the Maidana valley in the Ghazni area. In January 1880 the British recaptured Bala Hissar, the ruined citadel of Kabul.

At the end of 1879 and the beginning of 1880 the ag gressors’ position was unstable, in spite of the seizure of Kabul. A popular guerrilla war was still going on. In the long run, the British ruling circles had lost all hope of tuming Afghanistan into a colony by force of arms. Plan ning a withdrawal of the occupation forces, they sought ways of achieving the most favourable outcome to a pro tracted war that had cost them a good deal of money but held out no hope for the better. Some of Britain’s top politicians tended to believe that by putting an obedient emir on the throne and stationing their garrisons in some regions of Afghanistan it was possible to make it a dependent state. Simultaneously, it was planned to break up the country into several domains dependent on Britain.

Having dethroned Yaqub, the British aggressors saw how hard it was to rule an occupied but unsubdued country, and then they remembered about Abdurrahman Khan. When he had set out for home late in 1879, he himself reminded the British of his existence by his actions. At the beginning of the Anglo-Afghan war the Russian tsarist government did not allow Abdurrahman Khan to leave for Afghanistan for it wished its rival, Britain, to lose that war. So it thought that the appearance in Afghan istan of a claimant to the throne, who was dangerous to Sher Ali Khan and also to Yaqub, would cause disarray among the resistance forces and weaken the Afghans fight ing the aggressor. But in the autumn of 1879 the situation in Afghanistan had changed; and so had the attitude of the tsarist authorities to Abdurrahman Khan’s retum. He was allowed to go home.38

Having occupied the country, the British extended their control to only part of its territory. They failed to enter Afghan Turkestan, which bordered on Russia’s Central Asian domains. The tsarist goverment preferred to have

-an independent Afghan state, but not a British colony close by. By facilitating the emergence of a new aspirant on the political scene, it expected Abdurrahman Khan to gain a foothold in Afghan Turkestan and to create an indepen dent domain there. If he became the emir of the whole of Afghanistan, the tsarist authorities hoped to have a friendly neighbour. To give British diplomats no pretext for accusing Russia of interfering in Afghan affairs, they allowed Abdur rahman Khan merely to "escape" unhindered from Tashkent.

As he appeared in Badakhshan, Abdurrahman Khan was pleasant in his treatment of the members of the local nobi lity who had not yet submitted to him. He received them in a big way, trying to gain their favour. He cajoled the influential persons he needed, and his prestige rose.9 9

,His chief rival in the struggle for power in the north em part of the country was Ghulam Haidar Khan Wardak, the Afghan general whom emir Yaqub had appointed his deputy in 1879 in Char-vilayet and who nowruled Mazar-i Sharif and other towns on the left bank of the Amu Darya. Ghulam Haidar Khan wanted to become the ruler of the whole of Northem Afghanistan and made contact with Muzaffar, the emir of Bokhara, in order to secure his backing.

General Ghulam Haidar Khan Wardak sent large forces, part of the regular troops he commanded, to Kataghan in a bid to extend his influence to that province and to neigh bouring Badakhshan. But the forces he had sent recog nised Abdurrahman Khan as their leader and joined him. This instantly changed the situation in the northern pro vinces in favour of Abdurrahman Khan. Ghulam Haidar Khan fled to Bokhara, where he was killed some time later.

As he gained a foothold in Khanabad, Talikan and Qunduz, Abdurrahman Khan, pursuing a cautious wait and-see policy and avoiding any move that could cause a conflict with Britain, began negotiations by correspondence with Sir Lepel Griffin, a British political representative who had arrived in Kabul from India.

The British policy-makers were contemplating the divi sion of Afghanistan into "independent domains" under a British protectorate. One of the chief elements of their plan was to find a suitable claimant to the vacant throne in Kabul from among the Afghan nobility. At a durbarheld in the Afghan capital on April 13, Sir Lepel Griffin declared that the British troops would leave the country as soon ‘ as the Afghan chiefs would agree among themselves on the choice of an emir friendly towards the British government. It was stipulated that the Qandahar region would become an "independent state".*9

The British policy with regard to Afghanistan was greatly affected by the situation in India. The late 1870s and early 1880s marked a turing point in the history of Britain’s largest colony.4! In those years discontent with the colonial regime was rapidly increasing among various sections of the Indian population. The British authorities wanted to wage the war in Afghanistan at the expense of the peoples of India, increasing the tax burden on the population of that colony. In India rumours were spreading like wildfire about Britain’s setbacks. People said that its conflict with Russia was inevitable and predicted Russia’s victory in it.42 Many people in India saw Britain’s future defeat as deliverance from colonial domination.

It was at that time, in the spring of 1880, that the troops of Abdurrahman Khan launched an offensive on Kabul from the north, while the volunteer units of Ghazni were approaching the city from the south. That could have created a critical situation for the troops of General Rob erts. A detachment of 7,000 was dispatched to Kabul from Qandahar under the command of Genera] Donald Stewart.

But, in spite of this, the general situation in the coun try was already precarious for the invaders early in the summer of 1880. They failed to maintain control over communications. The reports coming to India from Afghan istan said that Afghan volunteer units up to 20,000 strong were being assembled in Ghazni province. The British government saw the enthronement of Abdurrahman Khan as the most acceptable way out of the deadlock. The British politicians expected Abdurrahman Khan to make great concessions, and this was the case in the long run, although the talks lasted too long.

On June 14, 1880, the British sent their ultimatum terms to Abdurrahman Khan, and on June 16 it became known in Kabul that Abdurrahman was approaching the capital with 2,000 soldiers and 12 field guns. The country on the whole was on his side. According to the Afghan sources of that time, the total number of soldiers support ing him was 300,000.43 On June 26, Abdurrahman Khan’s answer reached Kabul. He said that he should have complete control over the territory which had in the past been ruled by his grandfather Dost Muhammad Khan.

Formally, that answer did not mention Qandahar, al though Abdurrahman Khan’s claim to that province had been expressed earlier in no uncertain terms. Ignoring the advice of his subordinates to discontinue the talks, viceroy Ripon did not take a hasty decision. In the circumstances, British diplomacy was forced to recognise Abdurrahman Khan as emir. With the assistance of Sir Lepel Griffin, mullah Mushk-i Alam, who enjoyed great prestige in the country and had influence with the other leaders of the "national party’? who headed the volunteer units concen trated in Ghazni province, took the side of Abdurrahman Khan.

Agreeing to accept the throne and the capital city from the British, Abdurrahman Khan tried to smooth over, as far as possible, the bad impression that move had made on the population, and on July 20 he proclaimed himself emir in Charicar. On July 22 a durbar was called in Kabul at which the delegates of the Afghan nobility were informed that Queen Victoria had recognised Abdurrahman Khan as the emir of Kabul and that the British troops would soon be withdrawn from his domains. The British handed over the capital to him and supplied him with arms and military equ ipment and later on began to pay him a large annual subsidy.

During the talks Abdurrahman Khan managed to get Britain’s consent to cancel the provision of the Treaty of Gandamak on the presence of a permanent British resident with armed guards in Afghanistan. Instead, there was to be an agent in Kabul from among Indian Muslims for liai son between Abdurrahman Khan and the British authorities in India. But Abdurrahman Khan’s pledge to conduct diplo matic talks with other states only through the viceroy of India placed Afghanistan’s foreign policy under British con trol. On the whole, the terms of the agreement with the British were too exacting for Afghanistan.

The emir pledged himself to ensure a safe retreat of the British occupation forces. This left the British command free to act at its own discretion and to use its forces for operations in Qandahar province. The British government, bent on severing the Qandahar province from the Afghan state, made it an "independent domain" headed by sardar Sher Ali Khan Qandahari, its stooge.

As the talks between Abdurrahman Khan and the British on recognising him as emir were entering their last phase, Ayub Khan, the ruler of Herat, moved his troops to Qan dahar to drive the invaders out of Afghanistan. With Afghan regular army regiments and several artillery batteries in Herat, Ayub Khan had had a good chance of winning a battle against Abdurrahman Khan when the latter had just appea red in Afghan Turkestan and had not yet assembled a large force. But Ayub Khan did not sacrifice the interests of the state to win in a struggle for power. He gave Abdurrahman Khan an opperuy to act without a hindrance and began to prepare his troops for an offensive on Qandahar.

In response to the request of the Qandahar "‘ruler’’ for urgent help for his troops stationed in the Ghirishk region, the British sent a brigade there under the command of General Burrows, part of the occupation forces stationed in Qandahar. The British politicians feared that if the British troops remained inactive in Qandahar, Ayub Khan would launch an offensive on Ghazni. Such a possibility was viewed by the British authorities in India as a threat of a complete failure for their p) sin Afghanistan.44

With the approach of Ayub Khan, soldiers of the Qan dahar "ruler" began to go over to his side. His army was, moreover, replenished by numerous volunteers from among the local population. As a result, the military and political situation in Qandahar province changed drastically against the British. In the battle fought on July 27, 1880, near the village of Maiwand, 55 kilometres from Qandahar, the Afghans led by Ayub Khan won a sweeping victory, having routed a brigade of regular enemy troops. After that, how ever, the British command managed, with the assistance of Abdurrahman Khan, to move fresh forces to Qandahar from Kabul. With their superior numerical strength and arms, the British defeated Ayub Khan and forced him to retreat to Herat.

The outcome of the battle of Maiwand also decided the fate of Qandahar, for it frustrated the plans of the British colonial policy-makers to tear the city away from Afghan istan. When the invaders clearly saw that the population was implacable with respect to them, they deemed it right to leave the city and, some time later, in April 1881, all of the remaining British troops were withdrawn to India. The British aggressors were compelled to admit that all their efforts to make Afghanistan their colony had been in vain. Only the agreement with Abdurrahman Khan gave them an opportunity to end the hopeless war more or less satis factorily.

By mid-1881 Abdurrahman Khan had extended his power to the main regions of Afghanistan, except Herat. The new emir was confronted with hard tasks in foreign and domestic policy. The country had been ravaged and exhausted by the war. The treasury was empty. With the central authorities remaining inactive for a long time, local feudal lords plundered the population with impunity in many regions.

In the summer of 1881 battles for Qandahar flared up between Abdurrahman Khan, who ruled in Kabul, and Ayub who still controlled Herat. In July Ayub Khan defeat ed the troops of Abdurrahman Khan which had captured Qandahar and occupied it. Then Abdurrahman Khan him self led his army against Ayub Khan and won a decisive battle in September 1881. Ayub Khan retreated to Herat, -but early in October 1881 that city, too, was seized by Abdul Quddus, a commander of Abdurrahman Khan’s army, after which Ayub Khan left for Iran. He lived in emigration, taking no part in the events in Afghanistan till his death in 1914.

Extending his power to the whole of the country, Ab durrahman Khan defeated guerrilla units and executed many of the popular war leaders who had fought against the British and then against himself after he reconciled him self with the enemy. Some Muslim theologians were execut ed on the same charges. To guard his power against the descendants of emir Sher Ali Khan, he deported many of their supporters from among the nobility. Having ap pointed his faithful supporters the rulers of regions and keeping them under his constant control, and having flood ed the country with secret spies, Abdurrahman Khan set about consolidating his might in every possible way.

In foreign policy he sought independence for his state, using Anglo-Russian contradictions and in some instances manoeuvring between his strong neighbours, Britain and Russia.

Fearing a war with Russia from the very outset, Abdur rahman Khan was extremely wary in his relations with his northern neighbours, Bokhara, Khiva, and the Turk mens. In 1881-1883 he responded with great caution to the diplomatic moves of those neighbours whenever there was a risk of involving Afghanistan in a conflict with Rus sia. Towards the end of 1881, for instance, in a reply to a letter from the Khiva khan, in which the latter proposed an alliance against Russia, Abdurrahman Khan, using polite words of gratitude, virtually refused to co-operate. Soon after that, he categorically rejected the request of Mahtum Quli, one of the four khans of Mery, to incorporate Merv (at that time independent) into Afghanistan.45 Abdurrah man was well aware of the fact that interference in the affairs of Merv might well entail a conflict with Russia.

In_ 1884-1885 an acute conflict erupted between Britain and Russia over the "Afghan delimitation" issue. The Bri tish and Russian governments agreed to draw a border

line between Afghanistan and the Russian domains in Central Asia along the Amu Darya river. But when the actual delimitation was being done, considerable difficulties arose in the regions in the river’s upper reaches, for the sides could not agree on which mountain regionsshould be consid ered to be located north of the Amu Darya’s sources. The disputes were even more acute in the north-western border area of Afghanistan, in the territories lying between Kerki, the point where the Amu Darya turns north, and the re gions where the borders of Afghanistan, Iran and Bokhara (Russia’s vassal territory) converged, in the lands populated by Turkmenian tribes. The latter did in fact remain inde pendent until 1884 and did not obey the rulers of the neighbouring states.

Under the agreement reached between the British and Russian governments the borderline between Afghanistan and the Russian domains in Central Asia was to be drawn by a Russian and a British commissions set up for the pur pose. The British commission, which set out from Baluchis tan to Herat early in September 1884, consisted of 1,400 persons (including a large military escort) and looked more like a military expedition than a group of experts sent to achieve a peaceful settlement of border issues.

It was not accidental that the British commission moved from India precisely across the deserts of Baluchistan. The British feared the hostile attitude of the Afghan population, which, as historical experience had proved, could come to the surface even if there was complete understanding be tween the British and the Afghan emir. Abdurrahman Khan, anticipating the possible complications that might be caused by the arrival of the British commission with a large military escort in Afghanistan, sent detailed instruc tions on that score to his officials and military commanders in the border regions.

Availing himself of the Anglo-Russian contradictions and the tension existing in relations between the two coun tries, Abdurrahman Khan sought, with British diplomatic support, to retain as many of the disputed regions as possib le for himself during demarcation. But, in so doing, he want ed to avoid a conflict with Russia. The British, on the other hand, were provoking the Afghans to a conflict. An armed clash did occur on March 30, 1885 at the Tash-Kepri

bridge between a Russian detachment commanded by General Komarov, stationed in the Murghab valley, and an Afghan unit. The Afghans retreated. The clash, which had in fact been provoked by the British colonialists, was far more detrimental to Britain than had been expected at the outset.46 The provoked conflict dealt a heavy blow at Britain’s prestige, not only in Afghanistan but in a vast area of the Middle East. It was also used as a pretext for fanning warlike sentiment in Britain.

The impression produced by the clash at Tash-Kepri, followed by the bellicose stir it caused in Britain, when it was widely believed that a war between Russia and Britain was inevitable, was long remembered in Europe.*7 The British navy received orders to be in combat read iness. Gladstone clamoured for military credits in Parlia ment. The situation grew tense. At that time, as noted by Lenin, ‘"‘Russia was on the verge of war with England over division of the spoils in Central Asia’.48 But the sabre-rat tling British government feared a war against Russia in the Middle East for many reasons. For Britain combat in Afgha nistan meant the risk of remaining face to face with Russia in the remote parts of Asia. The threat to British rule in India posed by the oppressed peoples of India was among the main reasons for the British government’s fear of a war with Russia at the gate of that vast colony. The Russian government, for its part, also had reasons for avoiding a war with Britain ad agreed on the settlement of the con flict through diplomatic negotiations.

A significant role was played in the peaceful outcome of the 1885 crisis by the resolute stand taken by Abdurrah man Khan who refused to make any moves that could lead to a war with Russia. His position largely facilitated the Anglo-Russian understanding on the north-western frontier of Afghanistan, formalised in the protocol signed on September 10 (August 29 Old style), 1885, in London. On July 10, 1887, the final protocol was signed, fixing the Russo-Afghan frontier from the Harirud river in the west to the Amu Darya in the east.

Beginning with the late 1880's, after the border issues with Russia were settled, Abdurrahman Khan focussed his attention on the southern frontier. However, there his polit ical ambitions came up against the aggression of British colonialists who were advancing rapidly into regions populated by Pashtuns and Chitrals for the purpose of seiz ing the strategically important lands of the East Hindu Kush on the approaches to the Pamirs.

Just a few years after the second Anglo-Afghan war the British had already started aggressive action in the north westem region of the border between British India and Afghanistan. Their aim was to seize the Hindu Kush and spread British influence to the Pamirs and the nearby terri tory. As a result of General Lockhart’s mission, a British protectorate was established over Chitral in 1885, and a political agency was instituted in Gilgit two years later. The British aggression in the lands of the tribes in the border regions was conducted by means of military expeditions with the subsequent signing of agreements with the jirgas (councils) of the tribes. Beginning with the late 1880's, the British colonial policy-makers, relying on the Pesha war Province, on the one hand, and, on Chitral and Gil

it, which had become dependent on Britain, on the other, aunched a vigorous offensive in the north-western region along the border in a bid to establish their rule in the area on the approaches to the Hindu Kush.

In pursuing an active policy with regard to the East Hindu Kush and the neighbouring mountain regions in 1886-1888, Abdurrahman Khan was obstructed by extreme ‘ domestic complications in Afghanistan itself: the Ghil zai uprisings and the mutiny of Ishaq Khan, which present ed a grave danger to him. Punitive expeditions and inces sant military actions in various parts of the country, com bined with the emir’s efforts to overcome feudal interne cine strife, and. particularly his policy of ruthless suppres sion of the discontent among the people and popular move ments, were the most salient features in the history of Afghanistan in the 1880's.

In the early years of Abdurrahman Khan’s rule there were already bursts of popular protest in various parts of the country.49 The authorities’ arbitrary rule and the burden of taxes sparked off uprisings among the Hazaras.5° The disturbances assumed extensive proportions in Badakh shan, and rebellions occurred repeatedly in Khost, in partic ular among the Mangals, and also the Dzadzi and Hasan Khel and other tribes.51 The emir’s troops had to wage on a protracted struggle against the Shinwari tribe. Abdurrahman Khan came up against great difficulties in the Tegions (as in the Shinwari lands), that had not been subject to regular taxation in the past. But difficulties often arose to an equal extent in the regions, first and fore most the Ghilzai lands, where taxes had been smal] and where the land had not been measured.

The Ghilzai uprising in 1886-1888 was a series of actions, three of them very serious, which shook Abdurrahman Khan’s power at different times. One of the chief causes of the Ghilzai armed uprising was that they were taxed un der general regulations, in violation of tradition, on a par with most rayats in the Afghan state. The Ghilzai tribes, which had carried the brunt of the wars of independence waged by the Afghan people, were still a major military force in the 1880s. In numerical strength they equalled the Durranis, and together with them made up the two most numerous and strongest groups of tribes.

Previously the Ghilzais had to pay comparatively low tributes under a system of fixed quotas. They made fixed payments to their khans, who were trusted completely by the central government in the collection of taxes and the . transfer thereof to the treasury. Usually the Ghilzai khans took half of the revenues and handed over the rest to the sovereign of Afghanistan.

The emir made radical changes in the procedure of paying the land tax by the Ghilzais. He introduced the se

ot taxation system, under which one-third of the harvest from the nahri lands, i.e., the lands irrigated by river water, was to be handed over. The Ghilzais now had to pay govern ment taxes as well and various kinds of tributes. In 1881 their outbursts of protest had already led to terror, numer ous arrests, assassinations, and executions. The reprisals in 1881-1883 were mainly peel against the Ghilzai khans and the mullahs.

The abolition of tax privileses the emir’s policy of cen tralisation, the toughness of his rule, and the harshness of the reprisals made the majority of the Ghilzai nobility the emir’s sworn enemies. As for the rank-and-file tribes men, they were outraged to know that the government was demanding of them much higher taxes than they used to pay before. The Ghilzai chiefs influenced their tribesmen, reminding them of traditions and calling for tribal solidarity in the struggle to eliminate their unequal position and de manded the abolition of the privileges enjoyed by the Dur rani nobility. ; ars

The popular leader of the insurgent ,Ghilzais was the mullah Abdul Karim. His father, the mullah Din Muhammad (Mushk-i Alam), had died in 1886 at the age of 96. In the last years of his life his vast landed possessions were taxed for the first time, while the payments received by him and his sons were cancelled by the emir. The abolition of land tax privileges and the persecution of the leaders of the an ti-British struggle and Ghilzai dignitaries made Din Muham mad and his sons rise against Abdurrahman Khan. Ismatul lah Ghilzai was arrested in January 1882. The arrested was a close associate of the mullah Din Muhammad who re quested his release, but in vain. In October 1882, Isma tullah was hanged. The first major Ghilzai uprising was started by the Andari tribe in the Mukur region in October 1886. The emir’s troops could not suppress it, and it conti nued to spread, involving not only the Ghilzai tribes, but was also supported by the Kakars, the Wazirs, some tribes of Khost and part of the Hazarajat population.

The emir tried to placate the insurgent Ghilzais by prom ising concessions. He promised that the taxes to be paid by the Ghilzais would not exceed the amount they used to pay under Dost Muhammad Khan, and attested his pro mise by a seal on the Koran. Abdurrahman Khan also tried to influence the Ghilzai chiefs by appealing to their relig ious sentiments and pointing out that, as Afghanistan’s neighbours were hostile heterodox states, an internal split in the country could do great harm to Islam. But all the promises and the persuasion proved to be of no avail. Dur ing the Ghilzai uprising there was a considerable decline in the emir’s popularity in the country. So, he did not venture to announce a large-scale appeal for tribal volun teers to suppress the rebels.

However, he managed to improve relations with the Dur rani tribes, which largely helped his troops to suppress the uprisings. This was of great political significance, although the feudal volunteer force provided by the Durranis was apparently of little value. The emir exploited the appre hensions of the Durrani feudal lords over their privileges, should their traditional Ghilzai rivals succeed. The position of the emir’s troops also improved after the delivery of large amounts of materiel from Qandahar. In the spring of 1887, the emir’s troops defeated the Hotaki Ghilzais who had to submit and moved into the, lands of the Tarakis, where they were joined by units from Ghazni.

In spite of the victory won in June 1887 over the Tarakis and the heavy losses they suffered, the Ghilzai uprising had still not been suppressed on the whole. The uprising had assumed tremendous proportions, involving other tribes and peoples and might well have spread to the emir’s troops. At the end of the spring and the beginning of the summer of 1887 all this created a critical situation in the country. The persistent struggle against the Ghilzais and the other insurgents who backed them ultimately culminated in vic tory for the emir. On the whole, the troops remained loyal to Abdurrahman Khan. This, and also the superi ority in material and military hardware resources of the reg ular army over the arms, and specifically the equipment and supplies of the insurgent units, which was largely due to the British financial aid and arms deliveries, led to the emir’s victory.

The rebellion in the north started in the summer of 1888 by Abdurrahman Khan’s cousin Muhammad Ishaq Khan (the hostilities lasted till the end of September 1888), was viewed by the emir as more dangerous to his power than the Ghilzai uprisings. Back in 1880 Muhammad Isha Khan had helped Abdurrahman Khan to come to power and was appointed by him the administrator of Afghan Tur kestan. His dependence on the emir was evidenced by the regular deliveries of valuable presents to Kabul. From 1884 onwards relations between them changed for the worse af ter Muhammad Ishaq Khan began to ask the emir to grant him the administration of Afghan Turkestan for life. This made the emir suspiciously alert.

In Afghan Turkestan, where Uzbeks, Tajiks, and Turk mens made up the majority of the population, the people at large lived in extremely hard conditions. Muhammad Ishaq Khan decided to exploit the situation in the province in his own interests. While preparing to become an independent ruler there, he sought popularity by trying to be "nice" to people and making some concessions to them.

He wanted to influence the religious feelings of the peo ple and to show himself to be a zealous Muslim during re ligious ceremonies, parading his belonging to the Naksh bandiya Dervish Order (he had joined it when in Samar kand), which enjoyed prestige among the local population, particularly among the Turkmens. Ishaq Khan won over to his side the officers and men stationed in Afghan Turkes tan by paying them their salaries accurately and regular ly, which was something unusual in Afghanistan at that time.

The uprising began on July 30, 1888. On that da Muhammad Ishaq Khan announced the separation of Af ghan Turkestan from Afghanistan to the troops and the townsfolk gathered in Mazar-i-Sharif. The civilians and sol diers swore allegiance to him; he put on a gold crown (taj). That very day an envoy of Ishaq Khan went to see the commander of the Kerki garrison to inform him of the proc lamation of an independent domain "‘under the patronage of Russia". Then Ghulam Qadir Khan, the official ambas sador of Ishaq Khan, arrived in Kerki with generous gifts. The Russian authorities pursued a policy of non-interfer ence. But the tsarist government ordered that the gover nor-general of Turkestan reinforce the troops along the border with Afghanistan, just in case.

Since there had been no clashes with the emir’s main for ces before September 1888, Ishaq Khan was getting ready for decisive events. Apart from military measures, he start ed diplomatic activity in a bid to win over allies among the rulers of the countries and regions adjacent to Afghanistan. He sent out letters urging the rulers of Chitral, Dir, Bajaur, Swat and other areas to come out jointly against Abdur rahman. Generous promises were made, should victory be gained. Availing himself of a brief respite, Muhammad Ishaq Khan occupied towns and villages along the Bamiyan road leading to Kabul and in some other regions. That placed Abdurrahman Khan, who was seriously ill, in a pre carious position. Ayub Khan appeared at the border. But developments soon took a differént turn.

Abdurrahman Khan’s troops launched an offensive on Tash Kurgan. Having joined forces with the units of the emir’s deputy in Badakhshan, they fought a decisive bat tle late in September at the village of Ghaznigak, 30 kilo

metres south of Tash Kurgan. In spite of their fierce resistance, the rebels were routed. Ishaq Khan with his son and retinue followed by several thousand soldiers fled to Rus sian Central Asia, where they were given refuge.

To put down popular uprisings and feudal mutinies, Abdurrahman Khan used to set volunteer armed forces of some tribes and peoples against others. Thus, in the strug gle against the insurgent Ghilzais in 1886-1888, he used Dur rani detachments, and in 1892-1893 the forces of Afghan nomad tribes to quell the Hazara uprisings. Such a policy stirred animosity among tribes and nationalities of Afgha nistan for many years to come.

The early 1890s saw fierce rivarly between the Afghan emir and the British colonialists for influence in the strip of land populated by independent tribes along the border between India and Afghanistan. The British seized lands in the southern part of this strip and also in the Kurram and the Khyber Pass regions. But the majority of the indepen dent Afghan tribes offered a stubborn resistance. Their sympathies were with Abdurrahman Khan, for they hoped for the Afghan state’s assistance in the struggle against the British aggressors. The religious factor also Slaved quite an important part. The religious-political treatise ""Taqwin ud-din" (The Strengthening of Religion) written by a group of ulemas by order of Abdurrahman Khan, and the numerous appeals distributed by the emir’s emissaries among the border tribes propagated the teaching on jehad and also the religious duty of all Muslims to obey the sov ereign of Islam and the zealous adherent of religion—the padishah of Afghanistan. In this way, Abdurrahman Khan established close contacts with many religious leaders of the border tribes.

The British colonial authorities were alarmed by the news of the treaties concluded by the emir with the border tribes and sought an advantageous demarcation of the bor derline. But Abdurrahman declined invitations to go to In dia for talks and refused to receive in Kabul the British mission headed by General Roberts, who was hated in Af ghanistan for his outrageous deeds during the second Anglo-Afghan war.

Very soon, however, weak spots became evident in Abdurrahman Khan’s border policy. He was faced with considerable difficulties. His attempts to impose taxes on the tribes that tended to recognise his power caused growing dissatisfaction developing into open uprisings. Quite often, the Afghan emir would send his units against the insur gents and his soldiers would mercilessly put down a rebel lion. Taking advantage of the weak spots in the border pol icy of Abdurrahman Khan, the British smuggled their agents in among the malcontents. The agents urged the local population to obey the British authorities and provoked actions against the emir. The tense and unstable situation at home doubtlessly affected the possibilities available to Abdurrahman Khan to resist the British pressure*.

Early in 1892 Abdurrahman Khan intended to work advantageous political changes in Bajaur and Dir and, should he succeed, to annex them to his state. But these plans were obstructed by Umra Khan, the ruler of Jandol and Bajaur, and later Dir, and a conflict with him seemed im minent. However, the British wamed the emir that they would regard a clash with Umra Khan as an action against British interests. Abdurrahman had to give up his plans with regard to Bajaur and confirmed as his priority task the sei zure of Asmar. At-that time the domain of Asmar, which was in vassal dependence on the emir, could easily slip away from him, since Umra Khan had placed his man as the ruler there. ‘

In 1893 the relations between Afghanistan and Britain reached a critical point. The British policy-makers demand ed that Abdurrahman Khan should give up the struggle for the territory populated by the independent tribes and stop supporting them in their resistance to British colon ial expansion. Abdurrahman Khan began to get his troops ready to repel another British invasion. The war seemed imminent. But this time the British government preferred more cautious diplomatic moves to a policy of ultimatums. It feared’ serious complications with Russia if there were a war with Afghanistan. It also took into account the power of resistance of the Afghan tribes in the border regions and the sad outcome of the previous invasions of Afghanistan which had set off popular wars against the aggressor. An embassy headed by Sir Mortimer Durand, secretary for for eign affairs in the government of colonial India, was sent to Kabul.

The period preceding the Durand mission was marked by Britain’s extreme diplomatic pressure on Afghanistan, backed by military threats and claims to the territory pop ulated by the ‘‘independent" Afghan tribes. In such cir cumstances, negotiations were held between Abdurrah man Khan and Mortimer Durand.

On November 12, 1893, Abdurrahman Khan was com pelled to sign a seven-clause agreement that Durand had drafted. The emir relinquished to the British the greater part of the strip of land populated by the Afghan tribes in the border area and assumed an obligation not to interfere in the affairs of the regions that adjoined British possessions in India, in accordance with the attached map. He renounced his right to Buner, Swat, Dir, Bajaur and the lands of the Afridis, Waziristan, the territory of Biland-Khel, Kurram and the disputed region of Chaman (in which the British had built a railway to Qandahar province of Afghanistan), and other areas. At the talks, however, the emir succeeded in achieving the recognition of his right to possession of the Asmar valley (by that time occupied by his troops) and the Birmal area in Waziristan. Provisions were made for increasing the annual subsidy paid by the British to Abdur rahman Khan from 1,200,600 to {800,000 rupees. The agreement included a promise that the British authorities would not obstruct the import of military equipment in to Afghanistan.

Under the agreement with Durand, the domains of the Afghan emir included Kafiristan, the area which at that time was under no one’s control.

But all these concessions, plus the increased subsidy and the official recognition by the British of Abdurrah man Khan’s right to purchase (in India and Europe) weapons and military equipment and to transport them ac ross India were of infinitely smaller significance than the forced recognition of the colonialists’ power over the lands populated by the eastern Afghan tribes, and the fact that the new political borderline (the so-called "Durand line") was at variance with the ethnic borderlines not only of the Afghan people as a whole, but of a number of large tribes (the Momands, for instance), which were divided by the "Durand line’.

After the conclusion of the agreement, the emir tried to improve the difficult situation without ending the strug gle (primarily by pursuing a-religious policy) for influence in the border strip populated by Afghan tribes and was in no hurry to send his representatives for the demarca tion commissions. Probably Abdurrahman Khan saw the agreement as a temporary forced concession and hoped for an upsurge of the anti-British movement among the eastern Afghan tribes whose lands were to become part of the Brit ish colonial domains under the agreement.

In actual fact the very first attempts by the British to advance to the frontiers fixed between their domains in India and Afghanistan along the "Durand line" met with armed resistance on the part of many Afghan tribes. The up risings were joined to a certain extent by the largest tribes in the border strip. The British insisted that Abdurrahman Khan should send out a description of the agreed border line to placate the population in those regions. The emir agreed to do so and informed the border tribes of the agree ment with Durand. But at the same time his secret agents continued to operate in the border regions which were to be joined to British possessions. Local mullahs who tumed for help and instructions to Kabul as before, carried on anti British propaganda under Muslim slogans. But this time the emir maintained ties with those taking part in the struggle against the British only through his border officials and secret agents who had to answer requests and pass on the advice and instructions of the Afghan emir not on behalf of the government but on their own behalf. Simultaneously, Abdurrahman Khan attempted to influence the British p ol icy-makers and public opinion in Britain by "‘private" let ters to individuals.

The complications that arose in 1894 during the delimi tation in the Momand lands developed into a new crisis between Afghanistan and Britain early in 1895 around the events in Chitral. The British colonial policy-makers speed ed up the planned offensive operations in the northern part of the strip populated by the easter Afghan tribes in a bid to establish their domination there and assume complete control over Chitral and then to dictate their own delimitation terms in the north to the intractable Abdurrahman Khan. The British authorities’ decision to go over to active offensive operations in the north was fol lowed by their setting up of the Dir, Swat and Chitral Agen cy in 1895. That administrative and political measure, which was an important step in the history of British colen ial aggrandizement along the north-westem border of British India, was regarded by the last governor-general of India’s north-westem border province as more significant than, for instance, the occupation of Quetta and the crea tion of the province of British Baluchistan.53 Just as be fore, the British colonialists justified the new expansion by the need for defence against a non-existent Russian threat.

Those in charge of British colonial policy were bent on occupying the Chitral principality primarily owing to its strategic value. The Chitral mehtars (rulers) had already become the vassals of the Kashmir maharajas in 1878 as a result of an agreement concluded to suit the British. The mehtars received an annual subsidy and were first under the indirect (through Kashmir representatives), and later direct control. An intemecine strife flared up in Chitral in the early 1890s, in which the British and the Afghan emir had their stooges. By the end of 1892 power in Chitral had been seized by Nizam al-Mulk who had sritish leanings. Enjoying no support among the population, he sought the aid of his patrons, asking them to establish a permanent British mis sion in Chitral. On January 1, 1895, Nizam al-Mulk was killed. His death was followed by a struggle for power. The new mehtar, Amir al-Mulk, also tumed to the British for help. The British sent a large force to Chitral from Peshawar under the command of General Low. Before the troops set out on the expedition, a proclamation was issued to the effect that the British govemment had no intention of violating the tribes" independence. Although the British managed to win the maliks (elders) of some tribes over to their side, detachments of the mountain tribes occupied the major mountain passes andoffered resistance. Lowcrossed the lands of the Yusufzais with great difficulty and occupied Chitral which was, just like Dir and Swat, tumed into one of the numerous vassal principalities of the British colonial empire.

The last of the big foreign policy issues in the history of Afghanistan at the end of the 19th century, ensuing from contradictions between the British and the: Russians was the ‘Pamirs issue’. The clash of interests between tsarist Rus sia and Britain over the Pamirs became most acute in the late 188Gs and early 1890s and was for 4 few years central to the Anglo-Russian rivalry in Central Asia. The Pamirs border issues between Britain and Russia were resolved by diplomatic means on February 27, 1894, when the govern ments of both countries approved the borderline and de fined the task of the mixed demarcation commission. In particular, the transfer of the Wakhan Corridor to the Afghan emir was decided.

In July 1895 the members of the demarcation commis sions arrived in the Pamirs where they met with represen tatives of Afghanistan. At the talks that followed the si des signed a document on locating demarcation signs. The official Afghan sources say that the country’s representa tives, who regarded the work of the commissions with cau tion, refused to sign the document until relevant instruc tions had been received from the emir. Late in August 1895 the demarcation work in the east Pamirs was completed. After that, the frontiers in Shugnan were specified, ‘and all that is located to the south of the border went to Afgha nistan and the area that lies to the north went to Russia". On September 11, 1895, the mixed commission signed a demarcation map.54 ;

In the summer of 1895, when the Pamir issue had been, on the whole, resolved, Abdurrahman Khan decided to con quer Kafiristan. The conquest of that territory was for the most part completed in 1896.55 The population was con verted to Islam and taxed. Soldiers were billeted and mullahs were sent there. In the remote regions the opposi tion to the new order and new religion was more pronounced, and old traditions proved more tenacious. A few thous and people fled to Chitral. Many were resettled in various regions of Afghanistan where they remained for a lon time.56 After the Kafirs were converted to Islam, that fend was renamed Nuristan (‘‘the land of light’, meaning the light of Islamic religion). The conquest heightened the pres tige of Abdurrahman Khan among the Muslim population of Afghanistan and outside it. As a "warrior for faith" he acquired new big opportunities to uphold his repute as a Muslim sovereign, a zealous champion of true religion. In 1896, he was given a new honorary title—‘‘ziya al-millat wa-d-din" (‘"‘the light of the nation and religion").

After the settlement of the Pamirs issue and the con quest of the land of the Kafirs, Afghanistan’s modem fron tiers were finally fixed. By that time, a significant period in the country’s history, whose main element was thestreng thening of the emir’s power and the centralisation of the state, ended in the stabilisation of the absolute monarchy with a despotic form of rule characteristic of Afghanistan at the turn of the century.

In the 1878-1880 war against Britain the peoples of Afghanistan suffered heavy losses, which were followed by the destruction of the productive forces. The cities, han dicrafts and trade, and major oases suffered a good deal. Meanwhile, the country’s development, hampered by co lonialist oppression and forced isolation from the outside world, making it impossible for Afghanistan to cast off the heavy burden of mediaeval survivals, proceeded in difficult conditions. Afghanistan’s seclusion did, to some extent, meet the interests of the domestic policy of Abdurrah man Khan who feared the emergence of new trends in the feudal state which could shake his despotic rule. He delib erately obstructed primarily the population’s ideological and cultural ties with the outside world, limiting the contacts between his subjects and foreigners to the utmost. Those who left the country without a special permit (rahdart) risked death penalty. If someone failed to return to the country after a trip abroad, his relatives were impris oned and one of them, who had been selected as a "hos tage", was executed. Apprehensive of the penetration of British imperialism into the country, the emir was stubborn ly opposed to the British plans for building railways in Afghanistan. Only a Muslim could be Britain’s diplomatic representative in Kabul (for liaison with the viceroy of In dia); and even he was kept under the close surveillance of the Afghan police. The emir’s subjects, who were known to make acquaintance with the representative, were immediately sent to jail.

At the turn of the century Afghanistan was literally a "forbidden country’. Very few Europeans managed to visit it. Sometimes officials went there for a brief period, but each of them had to have special permission from Abdur rahman Khan. Only a few foreign experts, primarily British, who had been invited by the emir himself and were employed for the construction and servicing of an arms fac tory were permitted to stay there for a longer period.

Abdurrahman Khan set about centralising the state soon after he came to power, taking measures to improve the state apparatus and the administrative andpolice machinery, concentrating on organising secret police and a far-flung net work of secret agents. Reports by military commanders and officials were verified by the information sent over by sec ret informants who reported on the fulfilment of the emir’s orders and instructions in the provinces, on deviations from his directives, and also on cases of disorder, atrocities, cor ruption, bribery, or embezzlement.

By enforcing harsh measures, the emir guaranteed safety on the caravan routes, cruelly punishing the robbers caught. Those who violated the emir’s laws or disobeyed him were punished with extreme severity.

In the late 1880s and early 1890s Abdurrahman Khan set up a ramified administrative and police apparatus, ensur ing a more regular inflow of taxes into the treasury. The class character of the emir’s domestic policy was manifest in the ruthless suppression of popular uprisings, in which the chief role was played by the peasants. Varying in char acter, the actions against the emir’s power became espe cially extensive and reached a high degree of intensity in the latter half of the 1880s and in the early 1890s.

To consolidate his position, especially in the early per iod of his rule, Abdurrahman Khan styled himself a cham pion of ordinary people’s interests and of the tax-payers’ rights, and a fighter against arbitrary requisitions. In 1882, having removed the governor of Qandahar, who did not remit the taxes collected to the treasury, the emir ordered that 83,376 rupees be given back to the rayats because, he said, this money had been illegally extorted from them by the former governor. Later, he frequently referred to this incident, as showing him to be a fair sovereign who was concerned with the needs of the people. Although one of the main aims of his domestic policy was to ensure the unfail ing inflow of taxes in the treasury, the-emir did, according to some sources, sometimes reduce taxes for certain sec tions of the population and shared his tax revenues with influential persons or groups of persons, including Muslim theologians.

Abdurrahman Khan failed to stamp out the power of the tribal nobility, and the tribal khans remained the proponents of the ideas of feudal separatism. He had to reckon with their interests, which made his centralisation measures less effective. He did, however, resort to tough measures, whenever he deemed it necessary, even against the highly privileged Durrani tribes and their khans.

Under Abdurrahman Khan substantial changes occurred in the position of the Afghan tribes, partly because the part played by the nomadic traders (povindas) in the transpor tation of goods was diminished after the British built railroads to the Khyber and Bolan mountain passes, and the main goods traffic was now along those roads. A growing part was also being taken in trade by Afghan feudal lords and the emir himself, who had monopolised the export and import of the main commodities. The leading merchant in his state, Abdurrahman Khan took measures to encourage the Afghan merchants, seeking to increase their involvement in foreign trade and to limit the number of foreigners who were predominant there. The policy pursued by the emir somewhat heightened the role of the national merchants in the country’s trade. He tried to unify weights and measu res and to introduce a single monetary system. A mint was built in Kabul where silver and copper coins were minted by machines. These measures did above all benefit the mer chants and the feudal lords engaged in trade.

On the whole, Abdurrahman Khan’s domestic policy met the interests of that part of the feudal class which, as dis ge ae sere (ule ee on the strength of in constant need of Seen cae aan in, bir ratusol Gidlesercca g centralised state with an appa tie eagles an eae to ensure domination over included military commanders, courtiers ast sons iwiied landiece" ate er ers, courtiers, and officials who granted to them or their ancestors for the services rendered.

In foreign policy the emir sought to achieve the inde pendence of his state by taking advantage of Anglo-Russlan contradictions. Diverting the emir’s attention from the struggle for the Afghan-populated border regions and hop ing to use Afghanistan in the event of a war with tsarist Russia, Britain encouraged him to expand his land posses sions in the north, provided him with arms, helped to build an arsenal in Kabul and increased its subsidies to him, But the emir, minding his own interests, had no intention of going to war with Russia for Britain’s sake, and proved to be a cautious and prudent diplomat. .

When speaking about Abdurrahman Khan as a historical figure, ruler and person, it is noteworthy that his activities were contradictory. He was an extremely cruel ruler, es pecially in the last years of his life, remembered in Afgha nistan as a merciless tyrant. The outstanding Soviet research er I. M. Reisner, noting that British aid "came in handy for the energetic emir" during the final subjugation of the outlying regions through ‘‘a policy of drastic centralisa tion", wrote the following about the activities of Abdurrah man Khan:

"Taking advantage of his position as the only intermed iary between Afghanistan and the outside world and hav ing superiority in military equipment and a constant in flow of financial aid across the Indian border, the Kabul emir decided to rise to the position of an Afghan sovereign: the feudal chief of independent tribes wished to become a true monarch. The absence of large cities and the poorly developed trading capital deprived foun Afghan absolu tism of the enlightenment aspect and lessened its historical role. Another obstacle was the extremely motley composi tion of the various groups of the population making up Afghanistan." Referring to Abdurrahman Khan’s autobio graphy, Reisner writes that the emir "went out of his way to present his activities in the manner of the best examples of 18th-century Europe’. But in actual fact he was "not so much a profound reformer as he was a skilful military commander’"’.5

The measures effected by the emir facilitated the growth of the cities, promoted trade, involving part of the feudal class in trade activities, and made for the formation of national merchant capital and the home market. By artful manoeuvring he preserved the independence won by the people for the Afghan state.

Many aspects of his activities provided conditions for future development. For instance, when modern machine tools and mechanisms were installed at the Mashin-kha na factory in Kabul, he had to employ and train the first industrial workers. Although these workers could not yet be regarded as hired labour, for they were forced to work, and their status was similar to that of the serfs at the ma nufactories of pre-reform Russia rather than workers at capitalist-type enterprises.

But the recognition of the objective historical conse quences of such aspects of Abdurrahman Khan’s activi ties as the centralisation of the state and the strengthen ing of the emir’s power, achieved by draconian measures, by no means gives reasons for idealising him or his despo tic regime. The above-mentioned facts about him clearly show that his foreign and domestic policies were extremely contradictory.

Afghanistan in the Early 20th Century

At the outset of the 20th century Afghanistan was a semi-dependent (semi-colonial) state. When describing the position of such states, Lenin wrote: "‘The struggle for these semi-dependent countries should have become particular 4 bitter in the epoch of finance capital when the rest of the world has already been divided up.’’5 8

The position of Afghanistan somewhat differed from that of most of the Eastern countries of similar status at that time. Though it was subjected to capitalist influence through foreign trade, Afghanistan was not turned into an object of the export of capital. It was not enmeshed in foreign loans, and no foreign concessions existed on its ter ritory. Afghanistan entered the 20th century as a country retaining independence in domestic affairs, but whose sovereignty was limited by prohibitions in the foreign polli cy sphere. It was still isolated from the world, an under developed country with neither railways nor roads. Just as before, agriculture—crop growing and pasture livestock breeding—was the basic economic activity for the majority of the population. According to the merchants that were ar riving in Central Asia from Afghanistan, the most fertile regions "supplying farm produce not only to the local popu lation but also capable of exporting the surplus" were Badakhshan, Qunduz, Charvilayet, Herat, Farah, Qanda har with Ghazni and the valley along the middle reaches of the Kabul river.* Bread was often in short supply in the country. Exports of wheat, barley, flour, etc. to Central Asia from the border regions of North Afghanistan in the years of a good harvest were very small and were evidently effected in the manner of a usual market trade between neighbour regions.

Wheat was the main crop grown in the country. Next in importance and crop area was barley which was the main foodstuff for the population in the mountain regions. Then followed rice.59

Due to the natural conditions in the main agricultural regions irrigated farming had long been predominant and in some regions it was the only possible way of cultivation. The water of rivers and springs was used for irrigation. In some regions kyariz irrigation was practised. The main agri cultural area in the country in the early 20th century was Afghan Turkestan where mainly grain crops were grown on the fertile loess soil. Besides irrigated farming, non-irrigated cultivation was practised on a large scale in the foothills at the oases of Afghan Turkestan. Wheat and barley were grown in those lands, too.

The Herat oasis with its diverse and fairly deep alluvial soil, irrigated from the Harirud, has been known since the Middle Ages. Field crops, orchards, melons and vegetables had been cultivated there for centuries.

The centre of another large oasis irrigated from the river Arghandab was Qandahar. The existence of narrow strips along the river banks with a rather thin layer of rocky soil facilitated fruit growing. On the outskirts of Qandahar fruit and vegetable growing was developing apace. Pome granate groves stretched along the Arghandab.

Besides, there were large areas of irrigated land in the fairly narrow mountain valleys at heights of 1,400 to 2,600 metres. The soil was cultivated with simple implements, mostly the wooden plough and the mala, a levelling board used as a harrow. Threshing was done by driving cattle and other animals over scattered stems with ears of com. Simple but useful improvements were, however, always being made in those primitive implements.69 Also the experience accumulated by the local farmers over the ages helped to introduce some improvements into farming production. Various irrigation methods were adapted to the local con ditions, the fields were well prepared for sowing, the soil was enriched by natural fertilisers, and proper care was taken of the plants.

But, on the whole, because of the unfavourable histori cal conditions at the beginning of the 20th century, agri culture in Afghanistan was based on manual labour and its output was low. Its development was primarily hampered by socio-economic conditions. Feudal relations were pre served and natural and semi-natural forms of agriculture pre vailed.

At the turn of the century cotton growing was develop ing at a faster rate in the north (and on a smaller scale at the Qandahar oasis) due to the increased cotton exports to India and Or det to Russia. Other industrial crops cul tivated in the country included oil-bearing plants, mostly flax and sesame (predominantly in the north); in some areas (Badakhshan and Afghan Turkestan) opium poppy-seeds and small quantities of sugar cane (the Jalalabad oasis) were grown.

Apart from farming, pasture livestock breeding remained a major sector of the Afghan economy. Each year nomads from South Afghanistan would drive their cattle to the lush pastures in the north. Badghis had long been famous for its pastures. The vast areas of pastures of Hazarajat promoted the growth of livestock breeding among the local Hazaras and increased the inflow of nomads during seasonal migration. ’ At the beginning of the 20th century nomad cattle breed ing still remained the main section of the economy in some large Afghan tribes. Among the Durrani tribes the nomad cattle breeders were the Nurzais, and among the Ghilzai tribes they were the Suleiman-Khels. There were also Afghan tribes engaged in agriculture and partly in nomad livestock breeding, such as Achakzais among the Durranis.

The nomads’ herds consisted mostly of sheep. The wool of white fat-rumped sheep, raised by the Ghilzais, was of very high quality. The Afghans also bred camels (specifi cally in the Qandahar region), donkeys, zebu, and buffa loes. Horse breeding was relatively poorly developed. In Hazarajat, whose population lived a setiled way of life for the most part, cattle were raised and fed on distant pas tures, and livestock breeding was of ,a subsidiary nature. Using the pastures on the mountain slopes, many families would normally move with the herds not far away from their settlements for a summer season and return home in autumn for harvesting. Like Afghans, the Hazara livestock breeders were mainly occupied with sheep and goat breed ing. From the end of the 19th century in the areas populated by the Turkmens, most of whom remained cattle breeders, the astrakhan sheep population had been rapidly increasing with the growth of astrakhan exports. :

Cattle breeding was of great significance among the Jam shidis, Firuzkukhs, Taimanis and also part of the Uzbeks. Among the Tajiks it was nearly always subsidiary.

Many of the local industries consisted in processing cattle-breeding products. While the manufacture of cotton fabric output was small, and sheep breeding was given pri mary attention, the domestic manufacture of various wool len articles became widespread in Afghanistan. Wool was used for making cloth, felt, carpets and many other house hold items. Afghan nomads busied themselves with making coarse woollen cloth and blankets, with carpet weaving, feltmaking, knitting stockings, weaving lassos, etc. The Ha zajarat people were famous for their carpets and high-qual ity woollen cloth. The majority of the population in Afgha nistan wore clothing made from hand-woven Hazara cloth. The people in the mountainous Tajik regions produced wool len cloth used for making robes and carpets. The Uzbeks manufactured coarse woollen cloth, carpets and_ bags. Qandahar was famous for its felt outdoor clothing. Al though the processing of hides and pelts, the curing and making of leather articles were done within the framework of rural production, quite a few urban craftsmen were doing this type of work as well.

The manufacture of cotton fabrics was less developed in Afghanistan. Homespun fabric (karbas) was produced on a large scale, specifically in the Tajik mountain regions. It was used only by the poorest sections of the population. Uz bek weavers made simple but hard-wearing cotton fabric (alacha and mata). In some parts of the country the domes tic silk industry existed. The centre of domestic crafts in Afghanistan was Kabul, followed by Qandahar.

The traditions of medieval guild production played a considerable part in the life of the craftsmen. City crafts men of a common trade occupied whole districts or rows in a bazaar. In Qandahar, for instance, north of the Herat bazaar, there lived trunk makers and opposite to them tai lors and shoemakers. There was a bazaar in Kabul where copper household articles were not only sold but made. The best craftsmen in Kabul were coppersmiths and also wood carvers and jewellers. The main handicrafts in Quan dahar were the making of felt clothes and other felt artic les and silk processing. Qandahar craftsmen were famous for embroidering felt clothes with silk, mostly for the rich. Turkmenian and Herat carpets were widely popular.

The conditions in which most ordinary craftsmen worked were appalling. They worked hard from morning till night in the workshops owned by rich Kabul merchants. These workshops were usually located in low semi-basement rooms, below the bazaar shops.

Early in the 20th century the economic and cultural de velopment of Afghanistan was going ahead in difficult con ditions. The political situation grew more stable after the normalisation of the situation on the border with Russia. But, at the same time, after the 1893 agreement with Brit ain the border with British India became a seat of incessant conflicts. Military operations against the British invaders hardly ever ended in the lands of the border Afghan (Pash tun) tribes and disrupted the traditional commercial ties with India, although that country was the biggest part ner in Afghanistan’s foreign trade.

The political and economic circumstances of that time made the emir broaden contacts with Russia, even if only in trade, the only form of relations that would not evoke an immediate conflict with Britain. In 1898-1900, Abdurrah man Khan tended more than before to expand trade with Russia and Bokhara. For that reason, he reduced customs duties on imports of Russian sugar and textiles.61 The Russian authorities and trade and industrial firms, for their part, rendered considerable assistance in promoting the pattici pation of Afghans in trade between Russia and Afghanis tan.

As he was seriously ill, the emir began to prepare his elder son, Habibullah Khan, for ascension to the throne, wishing thus to avert the internecine struggle for power that had flared up so frequently in Afghanistan after the death of a ruler. Abdurrahman Khan handed down to him the leadership of the major departments and granted him the right to remove and appoint civilian and military offi cials, so that, once on the throne, Habibullah Khan could have the support of the army and immediately take power into his hands.

Abdurrahman Khan died on October 1, 1901. His death was concealed from the population until October 3, the day when Habibullah Khan was solemnly proclaimed the emir and received an oath of allegiance from the members of the ruling family and also from other influential persons and "ordinary men" who were present in Kabul. Habibullah Khan informed the viceroy of India of his ascension to the throne in a letter, in which he declared his intention to fol low in his father’s footsteps and promised to be "the friend of his friends" and never to side with his enemies. The vice roy of India, Lord Curzon, immediately tried to wring from the new emir additional concessions limiting the country’s sovereignty still more. Using the exchange of let ters on the revision of the Anglo-Afghan agreements, which had just started, Curzon thought it advantageous to inter pret them as treaties concluded personally with Abdur rahman Khan which therefore had to be resumed after his death. He informed Habibullah Khan that they could be resumed only after discussion and settlement of the ques tions hampering Anglo-Afghan relations.

Lord Curzon invited Habibullah Khan to meet him in Peshawar in the spring of 1902. The latter refused, saying In a reply to the invitation that there were no disputable issues and therefore there was no need for additions to be made to the agreements signed by Abdurrahman Khan. The pone eases in June 1902 received no response from him at all.

The situation was unstable in Afghanistan in the early years of Habibullah Khan’s rule, and his power was not well established. In 1902, the country was hit by a drought followed up by famine. Then a cholera epidemic broke out. In 1903, the Durranis-and the Ghilzais protested against the obligation to provide one soldier from every eight per sons capable of carrying weapons. The emir made some concessions for the Afghan tribes.

At the start of the 20th century the British and Russian press carried frequent reports about Russia’s intention to establish relations with Afghanistan by way of exchanging trade representatives.62 But British diplomacy worked to prevent Afghanistan from breaking out of isolation. All attempts to establish direct Russo-Afghan contacts between the frontier authorities and to exchange trade represen tatives between Russia and Afghanistan proved futile.

The British authorities conducted military preparations, building up and reorganising the colonial army and con structing railways in North India, and were getting ready to continue their construction in Afghanistan in the event of a war breaking out between Britain and Russia. It is known that in April 1904 the British negotiated with Habibullah

,Khan the "ceding" of Kunar to Britain for the construc tion of a railway along the Kunar river up to the Russian frontier.63 ;

The international situation at the time (the setbacks experienced by tsarist Russia in the war against Japan) made it easier for British diplomacy to conduct large scale activities in the Middle East. Trying to exploit that situation for bolstering up their positions in Afghanistan, the British sent a mission led by Sir Louis Dane to Kabul for the purpose of signing a new treaty. Dane was instruct ed to ensure the preservation of complete control over Afghanistan’s foreign policy by the British government and obtain the emir’s consent to construct railways in his terri tory linking his domains with India. According to the press, Dane’s mission also raised the question of extending Indian telegraph lines across Afghanistan and granting to British nationals the right to enter the country. Dane evidently demanded replacement of the agent from among Indian Muslims at the court by an official embassy as well. There are reasons to believe that Dane tried to get the emir’s permission for British military engineers to arrive in the country to supervise the building of fortifications along the Afghan-Russian border.

To accept those demands would have meant allowing greatly increased penetration of British imperialism into Afghanistan and would have furnished the conditions to tur the latter entirely into a British colony. Dane brought to Kabul a draft treaty elaborated by Curzon. Habibullah Khan rejected it and expressed his intense dissatisfaction with the article providing for the limitation of arms delive ries to Afghanistan.

The talks, which lasted from the end of 1904 till March 1905, often ran into an impasse. On January 1, 1905, Habi bullah Khan proposed his own draft treaty providing merely for extending the term of the agreements, signed previous ly by Abdurrahman Khan, till the end of his rule. The draft was rejected by the colonial authorities of India. But in Britain the advocates of a more cautious policy, who thought it unwise to risk a war, got the upper hand. The British government decided to accept Habibullah Khan’s version of the treaty, and it was signed in Kabul on March 21, 1905.

Habibullah Khan’s pride was satisfied to a certain ex tent by the recognition of his royal title. In the treaty he was addressed as His Majesty Siraj al-Millat-Wa-d-Din Emir Habibullah Khan, the Independent King of the Afghan State. The world "independent" did not of course mean that the British government had granted genuine indepen dence to Afghanistan, which was still deprived of the basic right of a sovereign state—the right to have independent diplomatic contacts with other countries. The acceptance by Habibullah Khan of the obligations entered into with Britain by his father maintained British control over Afgha nistan’s foreign policy. The new emir was rewarded by re ceiving the same subsidy that had been granted to Abdur rahman Khan.

Early in 1907, having accepted the invitation of viceroy Minto, Habibullah Khan made a trip to India. The Anglo-In dian colonial authorities gave a spectacular reception for the Afghan emir. He was presented the highest British awards, visited warships in Bombay, hunted tigers in the domain of the maharaja of Gwalior, visited factories, museums, etc. in Calcutta and other cities. The emir took special interest in military affairs. During his trips to military camps he exam ined artillery guns, watched the functioning of wireless telegraph, and even got into the gondola of a balloon. Back in Afghanistan, he repeatedly stressed in his public speeches the need for military and technical improvements and the modernisation of the army, thus urging recognition of the pressing need for various reforms in the country.

Although Anglo-Russian relations remained tense in the early 20th century, there were signs of a coming change in Britain’s policy, caused primarily by its greatly increased rivalry with Germany. Preparing a large-scale offensive against Britain in the East, German imperialism had tumed its gaze not only on Iran but also on Afghanistan, seeing it as the gate to India. German firms were selling artillery samples to the Afghan emir, according to which it was sup posed to modemise arms manufacture at the Mashin-khana factory in Kabul.

The Baghdad railway, too, served the purpose of German imperialism’s penetration into Mesopotamia. The British political leaders had to reckon with the prospect of the emergence in the Persian Gulf of German warships moored in German-built docks, and with the threat of the Baghdad railway being used by the Hohenzollern army. This impelled some British statesmen to demand a revision of Middle East policy. By 1906 the penetration of German imperial ists into the Middle East and Iran intensified; and their eco nomic onslaught was conducted in the same direction. The acute aggravation of contradictions between Britain and Germany, the revolution in Iran and the growing libera tion movement in India created a new situation, which in duced the British ruling circles to seek rapprochement with Russia.

For some time, the tsarist government pursued a wait and-see policy with regard to the intentions of British dip lomacy. But in the spring of 1906 it began to be inclined to reach an agreement with Britain. That tumabout was motiv ated by the desire to obtain from France and Britain the loans so badly needed for propping up the tsarist regime en feebled by the defeat in the war against Japan and the 1905 revolution in Russia. Entering into talks with Britain, tsar ist diplomacy was prepared to forego its former position with regard to Afghanistan in retum for British assistance in the straits issue and in the Balkan policy. But, in making concessions to Britain on major political issues concemming Afghanistan, tsarist diplomacy sought easier opportunities for developing Russo-Afghan trade.

This is how Lenin characterised the essence of the agree ment between Britain and Russia on the division of the spheres of influence, which had been signed on August 31 (18 Old Style), 1907: "divide Persia, Afghanistan, Ti bet (preparing for war against Germany)".6* Five articles in the agreement concemed Afghanistan. Article 1 expressed the previous formula of recognising Afghanistan as a coun try lying outside of the sphere of Russian influence. Pre viously, however, tsarist diplomacy had never mentioned preventing the Afghan emir from establishing relations with other states, whereas now it pledged itself "to use the mediation of the govemment of His British Majesty in all its political relations with Afghanistan’’. The tsarist govern ment also agreed "not to send any agents to Afghanis tan"’.65

In Article 2 the British government pledged itself neither to annex, nor occupy any part of Afghanistan and not to interfere in the internal administration of that country. This hypocritical statement by the British government, which rejected in its secret talks with Russia in 1907 any idea of limiting its freedom of action with regard to Afgha nistan,66 was followed by a reservation that the Afghan emir had to fulfil his obligation to the British goverment as a condition of exercising the British commitment regis tered in that article.

Article 3 stated that direct contacts were not prohibit ed for Russian and Afghan officials on the border and in the border areas for the purpose of settling non-political local disputes. Article 4 recognised the principle of Bri tain’s and Russia’s equality in trade in Afghanistan and said that in the event the growth of trade would require Russian commercial agents in Afghanistan, the British and Russian governments would agree between themselves on approp riate measures to be taken. In Article 5 the coming into force of the agreement with regard to Afghanistan was made conditional on the approval of the relevant articles by the Afghan emir.

The viceroy of India informed Habibullah Khan of the articles in the agreement that concemed Afghanistan in a letter dated September 10, 1907. In his reply the emir said that the State Council regarded the agreement as disad vantageous to Afghanistan and as violating its indepen dence. Then he rejected the agreement in a public state ment. The emir had to reckon with the negative attitude to the agreement in the country, at any rate with the fact that in the ruling circles it was regarded as a humiliating document detrimental to the country’s independence.

The rejection of the agreement by Habibullah Khan and his policy in the subsequent period reduced the trade equal ity of the sides to nil and also the prospect of "direct con tacts" between the border authorities, and the admission of Russian commercial agents into Afghanistan—the provi sion haggled over by the tsarist diplomats from the Brit ish. Afghanistan still remained a "forbidden country", above all for Russia.

The 1907 Anglo-Russian agreement weakened the posi tions of Afghanistan, for its foreign political situation was now far worse than in the preceding years, which dimin ished the prospects for regaining its sovereignty. The possi bility of exploiting Anglo-Russian contradictions, as it had been done by Abdurrahman Khan, was now reduced to a minimum. In these conditions Habibullah Khan continued the policy of keeping the country isolated which had been pursued by his father. Europeans were not allowed into Afghanistan without the emir’s permission, which was given on very rare occasions.

Almost one-third of the population of Afghanistan, which was under the despotic rule of the emir, consisted of nomads or semi-nomads, and feudal relations, archaic in the 20th century, still persisted. At the same time, depend ing on Britain in terms of foreign policy, the emir was be coming increasingly dependent on it economically. Export ing raw materials and importing industrial goods, Afgha nistan was gradually becoming an agrarian and raw-mater ial appendage of the capitalist world. Forced isolation and the heavy burden of medieval survivals acted as a brake on the country’s economic and cultural development. The peas ants were a tax-paying class which had to pay land and other taxes to the emir’s treasury: The taxes were largely, or even primarily levied in kind. The peasants suffered from the severe arbitrary rule and extortion by the officials who had farmed out the right to levy taxes, which was widely practised in the country. The officials in charge of tax collecting kept the peasants under strict control; a peasant could not use the gathered crops, under the threat of strict punishment, until he paid his tax. :

During Habibullah Khan’s rule people had to pay numer ous taxes, as, for instance, the funeral tax or the wedding tax, on top of the grain and livestock they had to give away as maliat and zakat—the main taxes. Forced labour was used in clearing state-owned irrigation ditches, in the mainten ance and building of roads, bridges, etc." The peasants’ condition was especially hard in the northern and central parts of the country Sengueres by the Afghan emirs, such as Afghan Turkestan, and Hazarajat. In Afghan Turkestan vast territories were owned as a domain personally by Ha bibullah Khan; part of these lands was given out to the Afghan nobility.

The circumstances of the overtaxed livestock breeders were none the easier. Just like the settled peasants, many of them suffered from both the development of the mone tary economy, followed by the penetration of commercial and usurious capital into the countryside, and from the ero sion of the natural economy. Many peasants were ruined and became landless. Property inequality became much more marked among nomads, and many of the poor live stock breeders went to work as herdsmen for the rich.

Afghanistan had no factories except a few state-owned . enterprises; manufactured consumer goods were imported. The economy depended heavily on foreign trade, in which India occupied the leading place. The British imperialists used that trade, and the Indian capital invested in it, for the expansion of their influence in Afghanistan.

_ The country mainly exported the products of sheep breed ing—astrakhan skins and sheep wool. In 1913-1914 exports of wool and astrakhan accounted for nearly half the co untry’s total exports to Britain (India) and Russia.68 Habibullah Khan retained the monopoly of astrakhan ex ports, which had been introduced by Abdurrahman Khan. By the beginning of World War I the astrakhan sheep pop ulation in Afghanistan exceeded one million.69 Hiabibullah Khan conducted wholesale trade in other goods as well, spending a large part of the British subsidy on commer cial purchases from India.

At the beginning of his rule, Habibullah Khan effected several measures to strengthen the positions of the nation al merchants. But home trade was developing slowly. While the natural and semi-natural forms of economy persist ed, the medieval system of levying taxes in kind was pre served, hampering the growth of commodity-money rela tions. Nevertheless, major changes were setting in, although slowly: the cities were growing, trade and handicrafts were developing, in some regions the irrigation network was ex panding, the landlords now had stronger ties with the mar ket, local merchants were playing a bigger part in large scale trade, and a national commercial bourgeoisie was tak ing shape. These changes had been facilitated by political consolidation, the increasing specialisation of agriculture, and the shaping of the home market.

Up-to-date machinery was imported, although in small amounts. The construction of the telephone line between Kabul and Jalalabad in 1909-1910 marked the first step in the development of modern communications. A few small euhe stations were built and the decision was taken to.

uild a hydroelectric power station in Jabal Os-Saraj (60 kilometres from Kabul) to supply electricity to several new factory-type state-owned enterprises. The equipment and materials for the first Afghan hydroelectric power station were imported primarily from the United States and the pro ject was supervised by an American engineer. The construc tion began in 1907, and it was only completed in 1919.

In 1903 a state-owned tanning and shoe-making factory was commissioned in Kabul. Its output went almost entire ly to the Afghan army. By 1917 a Kabul cloth mill was built. The history of its construction shows very well what difficulties Afghanistan was confronted with when it came to the building of industrial enterprises. Apart from the high cost of industrial equipment, its delivery Ey primitive trans portation means in the mountainous country, which was short of good roads, was extremely expensive. It took five years just to erect the shell of the mill building for lack of construction materials and their delayed delivery, as they had to be brought from remote regions. The machines for the Kabul cloth mill cost slightly more than 80,000 dollars, while their delivery cost 240,000 dollars.7 9

The economic effect of the first steps in building up Afghan industry was very modest. Besides, if the new technology and machines were to be mastered, even though their imports were extremely limited, there had to be qualified specialists with at least basic modern training behind them. The need for scientific and technical impro vements in the army made it abundantly clear to the emir and his retinue that the army needed capable and educated officers. In other words, the attempts to modernise the Afghan state at the beginning of the 20th century were a necessity ,arising from life itself. Initially, these attempts were confined to technical borrowings in armaments. The mastering of foreign innovations in palace life, started way back under Abdurrahman Khan, was spreading. That was followed by more important innovations in education.

The outward Europeanisation of the emir’s court was limited to copying some elements of etiquette, to replen ishing the emir’s cuisine with some Western dishes, and to Habibullah Khan’s wearing a European uniform or tails at receptions and certain ceremonies, which caused a change in the clothes worm by high officials. Court activities now included golf, tennis, and cricket. The emir and his retinue began to use American fountain pens, and court clerks be gan to use typewriters. Habibullah Khan was fond of taking a drive and by the beginning of World WarI he had 58 cars of different types for personal use.

The novelties in the daily life at court, and purchases of foreign curiosities, chosen by Habibullah Khan from illus trated catalogues of European and American firms and or dered through Bombay trade agents, remained, as a rule, within the palaces and were the privilege of the emir and the few people close to him. Those novelties had no meaning ful influence on the life of the people, or even on the life of the ruling class as a whole. Displaying great interest in machines and equipment (military above all), the emir, nev ertheless, invariably believed orthodox Islam to be the chief instrument of his rule. He admitted, however, the need to update the education system and to study modern sci ences to acertain extent to preserve his state and strengthen his power. Whereas he remained a typical Oriental despot, he assented to this, responding to the call of the times, but seeking to preserve intact the feudal foundations of so ciety and thoroughly avoiding any political or socio-econom ic reforms, limited as they might be.

And yet the founding of the state civilian Habibiya Col lege in 1903 and of the Harbiya officers’ college by 1909 marked the beginning of the emergence of a new Afghan intelligentsia (though not numerous at the start) which re ceived modern education in a varying degree. This consider ably promoted cultural development and the spread of new ideas in the country. The Habibiya College, the first secular educational establishment in Afghanistan in the 20th century, was a 12-year secondary general education school similar to the Anglo-Indian colleges. It was meant for training officials. Almost all the pupils, aged between 12 and 40, came from the nobility. The actual length of train ing usually exceeded 12 years,?1 and only a few managed to go through to the end.

The college was headed by Dr. Abdul Ghani, an Indian Muslim who had been in the emir’s service since 1895.72 Most of the teachers were Afghans or Indian Muslims; some of the subjects were taught by Turks. The curriculum was drawn up after the pattern of the general education schools of British India for the Muslim population and included both the traditional religious subjects and the disciplines taught at European schools.

‘The curriculum for primary education included the fun damentals of the Muslim religion, the Farsi language, arith metic, geography, and calligraphy. At the second stage the students continued to study the Muslim religion, geog raphy, Farsi and Pushtu, and also history, one foreign lan guage (English, Urdu, or Turkish), drawing, book-keeping, and hygiene and sanitation. At the third stage, they learned theology, Farsi and literature in that language, history, geography, algebra, trigonometry, analytical Bc omelnys mechanics, natural history, chemistry, and English./ 3

The Harbiya military school had two stages: primary (general educational) and special (military). Its curriculum included the Koran, calligraphy, arithmetic, geometry, al gebra, grammar, the history of Islam, general history, a number of military subjects, gymnastics, and drill. The main military subjects at the college were taught by Turkish officers. But there were also Afghan teachers, including the enlightener Mahmud Beg Tarzi.

The opening of the Habibiya College, a major step in creat ing an up-to-date educational system in Afghanistan, was of great historical and cultural significance. The average number of students attending the college was between 250 and 270. The military school initially had 150 students, but by the end of Habibullah Khan’s rule the number had reached 900.74

At the same time, an attempt was made to partially mo dernise education at the traditional Muslim schools as well, although all the schools set up for the purpose in Kabul (there were 60 of them in the city) functioned at mosques which means they had not yet been made secular. The new primary schools provided education for nearly 5,000 pupils over a period of five years. Although the modernisation campaign was conducted on a relatively small scale and suffered from a number of drawbacks, its positive effect at the beginning of the 20th century soon became obvious.

Besides, the expansion of publishing, the introduction of printing with movable type by the typesetting method and the improvement of printing machinery was doubtlessly of great cultural value. A "special" printing house with up-to date equipment was founded in 1911-1912 (named after Inayatullah Khan, the emir’s eldest son). This provided conditions for the considerable technical improvement of the publishing industry in Afghanistan, where the quality of lithographic printing had previously been very poor.

The innovations in education and publishing made it possible to boost the dissemination of modern progressive ideas. An important part in this process was played by the Indian Muslims, invited to work as teachers, who were connected with the national liberation movement in their country. Apart from teachers, there were several technicians and gunsmiths working in Kabul. A number of revolutio nary émigrés fram India had also been given refuge there. The influence of the liberation movement in neighbouring India on the development of national ideology, bourgeois as it was in its orientation, was doubtlessly great. But, while admitting this, account should be taken of the role of the new ideas coming from Turkey and Iran in the years of Asia’s awakening. Apart from the Indian community, there was a small but influential Turkish community in Kabul, mostly teachers at the officers’ school.

Afghanistan’s isolation from the outside world was not total at the beginning of the 20th century. Relations be tween the population of Afghanistan and Iran were far from being discontinued and, in spite of the absence of perma nent high-level diplomatic relations, the traditional neigh bourly Afghan-Iranian trade and cultural ties were main tained even during the Iranian revolution. This was a source of great concern to the Afghan authorities, particularly in the Herat province, who feared the influence of the revolutionary developments in Iran and took measures to close the border, prevent the smuggling ‘in of Iranian news papers etc.75 But, despite all the restrictions and bans, news of the revolutionary events in Iran kept coming in across the Western border,which inevitably made an impact on the internal situation in Afghanistan.

At the beginning of the 20th century a movement for change and reform emerged in the country, and popular unrest was widespread. In some regions disturbances took place among the peasants. The popular movements, above all in the areas populated by Afghan tribes, were acquirin an anti-British thrust, which increased after the signing o the 1905 Anglo-Afghan agreement, and especially after the conclusion of the Anglo-Russian agreement of 1907. The spread of national consciousness and the liberation drive created a favourable climate for the ideas evoked by the epoch of awakening in Asia and the dissemination of these ideas under the impact of the Russian revolution of 1905. They were filtering into Afghanistan not only from Iran ‘and British India, but also from Central Asia, which was directly influenced by the revolutionary events of 1905 1907, and from Turkey as well.

But the conditions in Afghanistan did not favour the growth of a mass revolutionary movement on a broad scale, as was the case in neighbouring Iran. On the other hand, there, too, the ideas of struggle for the renovation of the existing system were taking root. The champions of these ideas called for the adoption of a constitution and for a struggle against British imperialists, for independence. The Habibiya College, where the best Afghan intellectuals and Indian teachers worked, became a centre of the first secret organisation whose goal was to achieve reforms and the adoption of a constitution in Afghanistan. Evidently the first group of that organisation was set up in Kabul at the end of 1906. The first proponents of the liberation ideas in the 20th century are called Old Constitutionalists in Afghanis tan.

Among those who set up this organisation was Dr. Ab dul Ghani, who probably headed it at the initial stages. Sub sequently, it was headed by Afghans (Muhammad Sarwar Qandahari and others). The members of the first organisa tion of constitutionalists called for winning complete inde pendence for Afghanistan, for carrying through domestic reforms, in particular, for introducing constitutional rule in the country. Some of them were in favour of a republican form of government.76 Probably the most determined among them expected to achieve their aims through a plot anda coup.

However the organisation was betrayed by the emir’s agents who had infiltrated it. In March 1909 the members of the organisation were arrested. Naib Khan, head of the sleuths and sneaks, and Mirza Muhammad Husayn, the chief of the Kabul police who also supervised the prisons of Kabul, presented to Habibullah Khan the activities of the organisation as an extremely dangerous plot aimed pri marily against the emir. As evidenced by ‘Abdul Ghani, Mir za Muhammad Husayn insisted on the death sentence for all the constitutionalists, alleging that they had been linked with an international revolutionary movement in Russia, Turkestan and Persia.?? Seven members of the group were executed, and about 60, including Abdul Ghani, were sent to prison. The list of the active participants in the con stitutionalist movement, subjected to reprisals in 1909, and some information about them are given in the book Afgha nistan dar Masir-i tarikh by Afghan historian Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar. He says that, apart from the educated persons from among the Afghan nobility (they were in the majority), taking part in the movement were two Kabul watch-makers and a filing clerk, employed at court, that is, not dignitaries.

The punitive actions by the emir were not limited to the arrest of the Kabul Old Constitutionalists; reprisals were levelled against all those who were suspected of taking part in the reform movement, and not only in Kabul and Jalalabad but also in Herat and Qandahar. The emir feared the spread of reformatory and revolutionary ideas in the ar my, which is shown by the threatening orders sent to the garrisons.

The members of the new Young Afghan movement of the subsequent period were for the most part educated people from among the Afghan nobility, there was also a relatively small number of people from among the new in telligentsia of Afghanistan, progressive army officers, and merchants. Though they set themselves the aim of winning the country’s independence, they were isolated from the masses. They insisted on a more radical modernisation of the state, on turning it into a constitutional monarchy, and wanted reforms that could not be carried out effectively owing to the medieval survivals. Although such reforms were in keeping with the vital interests of the whole popula tion, their carrying out "from above" could benefit, above all, the merchants and the landowners linked with commer cial farming. Serve, it was mainly their interests that were expressed by the Young Afghans, who pinned much hope on young prince Amanullah Khan, the emir’s third son.

After the suppression of the Old Constitutionalists, the ideological leader of the Young Afghans was Mahmud Beg Tarzi (1865-1933). He greatly influenced the views of prince Amanullah Khan who had married his daughter Suraya.

Mahmud Tarzi was a descendant of the Qandahar branch of the Barakzai family of the Muhammadazais, to which the ruling dynasty also belonged. His father, Ghulam Muham mad Khan, was a famous poet and was gifted in other arts. He wrote his poetry under the pen name of Tarzi (meaning one well versed in style). Later, Mahmud began to use this name, too. In 1881 or 1882, soon after Abdurrahman Khan came to power, Ghulam Muhammad Khan Tarzi, who shared the lot of many of his eminent countrymen, was subject ed to reprisals by the new emir and was banished from Afghanistan together with his family. He went to India and from there to Turkey, and visited Baghdad and Istanbul. Sultan Abdul Hamid II allowed him to reside in Damascus, and he lived in Syria till his death in 1900.

Mahmud Tarzi lived in Syria nearly 18 years, he spent his youth and received education there. He learned the Turkish and Arabic languages. He studied the Persian lan guage and Persian literature under the guidance of his fath er and began to write verses at an early age, showing a talent for poetry. The young poet studied new Turkish literature and progressive ideas and tumed to civic and so cial subjects. He refused to follow the fettering traditions, in accordance with which the depth of meaning was often sacrificed to sophisticated style. He was also attracted by the literature of the West (he read European authors in Turk ish translation). °

Perceiving new ideas from books and from meetings with people and having broadened his outlook (he travelled a good deal), Mahmud Tarzi decided to devote his life to the struggle for the independence of his country and for its re novation. He had already begun writing when still abroad, but found it practically impossible to get his writings pub lished there. Only upon his return to Afghanistan was he able to have his works published. Mahmud Tarzi also worked much as a journalist.

He returned from emigration in 1905, at the invitation of Habibullah Khan. The emir was greatly impressed by Mahmud Tarzi’s knowledge and broad outlook, and by his patriotic conviction that the country needed reforms to gain strength and achieve prosperity. Soon Tarzi was appointed the head of the translation bureau, whose main job was to inform the emir of events taking place in Muslim countries and in Europe.

Later on Tarzi worked as a writer, publicist, translator, teacher and educator, and was a herald of modern knowl edge and sciences, an ardent proponent of enlightenment and a champion of the struggle for Afghanistan’s liberation. In his noble enlightenment efforts an important part was played by the newspaper Siraj al-Akhbari Ajfghaniya, edited by him and issued from October 1911 to December 1918. Mahmud Tarzi not only was its permanent editor but also wrote numerous interesting articles on various subjects for it. The numerous translations published in the paper, m particular of 19th-century French fiction, were also made by him.

Apart from this, writings by Mahmud Tarzi and his numerous translations came out in separate editions. Of his

translations published by 1917 most noteworthy are a number of novels by Jules Verne (Cing semaines en ballon, Vingt mille lieues sous les mers, and others). Those adven ture stories not only told Afghan readers about the advan ces in science and engineering in the 19th century, which was of great educational significance, but also gave them an idea of the views of progressive French intellectuals of the left-wing, socialist trend.

Among the works by Mahmud Tarzi there are The Gar den of Maxims, Miscellany, A Collection of Poems, Refine ment in the Arts. A Journey in 29 Days on Three Conti nents, Asia, Europe and Africa, works of fiction, scien tific and publicist writings in prose and verse, as well as many separate poems and articles published in perio icals, all in all more than 500.

The first printed newspaper in Afghanistan in the 20th century was Siraj al-Akhbar-i Afghanistan, whose only is sue came out in 1905. Five years later, in October 1911, Mahmud Tarzi began to publish Straj al-Akhbar-t Afghaniya. In the editorial to its first issue Mahmud Tarzi set forth the paper’s programme and the editor’s opinion on the noble mission of the press. Tarzi called newspapers a powerful means of information, "a mirror of the world’, a guide to fiction and a highly effective weapon in the struggle against the ill-wishers of the motherland (in this connection he stressed the great importance of publicity).

The great merit of Mahmud Tarzi and his fellow-writers was the dissemination of scientific knowledge. The paper did not merely abstractly advocate science, extol knowledge and condemn ignorance, but did much to spread specific information on modem sciences, and technological achieve ments and inventions, introducing the reader to the big new world around isolated Afghanistan.

The basic theses of Mahmud Tarzi and his associates on the part played by science in the life of society and the state and their admiration for the power of reason were in themselves of no small significance. The mere fact that for the first time in the moder history of Afghanistan a group of educated people who did not belong to the class of ministers of religion by occupation or social status dared to state their interpretation of the Koran publicly, inter vening in the sphere of the Muslim ulemas’ exclusive privileges was fairly important. In keeping with their views Mahmud Tarzi and his followers declared that their plans for the renovation of the country did not in the least contradict Islam; on the contrary, they were fully in accord with this religion.

When reviewing the various subjects of scientific and popular-science articles printed in the Siraj al-Akhbar, special attention should be paid to theoretical articles. Using easily understandable language they gave the reader a general idea of modem sciences, such as philosophy, poli tical economy and international law, and of such institu tions as urban self-administration, of the joint-stock compa ny and its significance, and the like, leading Afghan readers to the understanding of many phenomena previously unknown to them, and encouraging them to ponder over the progress of mankind, over the forms and the essence of European political and social institutions, etc. The Siraj al-Akhbar drew readers’ attention to such branches of knowledge as archaeology, history, and philology. It also carried articles on art. The paper occasionally carried information about the latest results of research and explo ration by Western scientists. It gave basic facts about the history of modem sciences and their attainments, and descri bed major discoveries and inventions. It devoted much space to technical achievements, citing data on the development of communications—post, telegraph, telephone and radio—and the latest means of transportation of that time: steamship navigation and railways, explained how a car functioned, etc.

Hundreds of different articles opened up before the reader a picture of scientific and technological achieve ments of the beginning of the 20th century.

In general terms, the newspaper contained the following columns: 1) an editorial on political, philosophical or re ligious questions; 2) reports on developments in the country; 3) reports on events abroad, mostly in Muslim countries, and also in other countries of Asia and Europe; 4) a litera ry column including verses by modem poets of Afghanis tan; 5) a column on science and technology mainly con taining a translation of articles from foreign periodicals; 6) feuilleton; this column included translations of fiction (in the fifth year of the newspaper the column was closed to give more space for home and foreign news); 7) miscellancous material and brief reports; 8) announcements.

When calling for reforms in the country, Mahmud Tarai and his associates tried to explain the reasons for the back wardness of Afghanistan and other Muslim countries in modern times. The history of the Afghans, according to Tarzi, showed that one of the main causes of their backward ness was disregard for education and science. He noted bit terly that many generations of Afghans had had no capable and educated teachers. Traditions and superstition reigned in the country and Afghans, like other Muslims, had lost the valuable time for, the development of their abilitics and resources.

The newspaper also published vicws on the need to de velop efficient agriculture, modern industry (with priori ty given to mining and building factories for processing lo cal agricultural raw materials), trade, road building, and transport. Tarzi and his followers appealed to the emir and the ruling elite, settinghopes on the "enlightened monarch". They expected that the reforms would be carried out quick ly "from above", mainly in education and the dissemina tion of scientific and technical knowledge, which, they be lieved, were bound to bring about improvements in eco nomic and social life. Mahmud Tarzi and those who sup ported him sought to adapt the Afghan monarchy to the requirements of their time, seeing in it an instrument for ensuring the country’s progress.

At the same time, Afghan nationalism at the beginning of the 20th century, a trend started by Mahmud Tarzi and his associates, reflected the desire of the Afghan people to become free of the semi-colonial dependence on British imperialism. Mahmud Tarzi himself took an active part in the struggle for independence at its different stages. His ideology was based on religion. He was a reformer of Is lam in his country and he borrowed many ideas from the Arab and Turkish reformers of Islam of the latter half of the 19th century. Stating the religious basis of his ideology, it must be stressed that his consistent struggle against reli gious restrictions had progressive influence on Afghanis tan. The Straj atAkhbar advocated the strengthening of relations with other Muslim countries. Although it propa gated the ideas of Muslim unity within the framework of the pan-Islamic concept, the propaganda of relations with more advanced Oriental countries in order to assimilate the fundamentals of new enlightenment and new culture was in itself progressive for Afghanistan where the medieval way of life was preserved. The Afghans were urged to fol low the example of such Muslim countries as the Ottoman empire and Persia, and also non-Muslim Japan on the hard path of progress, without which it was impossible to effec tively confront modem armies and to overcome the tech nical superiority of the European countries.

Mahmud Tarzi’s views were influenced by the national bourgeois ideas of the Young Turks. This was also reflected in the content of the Straj al-Akhbar, which not only stressed, in pan-Islamic spirit, special sympathy with Islamic countries, but constantly exhibited pro-Turkish sentiments, echoing the chauvinistic views of the Young Turks.

However, the Straj al-Akhbar publish d material on the awakening of the East which did not fit into the religious restrictions. Thé foreign news column contained assessments of events characterising the progressive aspect of the Young Afghan ideology. For instance, the September 27 issue of 1912 gave the following assessment of the 1911 Chinese revolution and the proclamation of a republic in China: "This event merits great attention. It is becoming clear that the Chinese nation has woken up and its national feelings have come to the boil." The approval of the revolution, which was called ‘‘great" and was characterised as an event of extreme importance in a newspaper issued in feudal monarchic Afghanistan, was highly significant in itself.

The Siraj al-Akhbar presented the developments at home with far greater caution. Much of the home news column was devoted to court life, contained pictures of the emir hunting, etc. The paper informed the reader of new devel opments in machinery and equipment used in the emir’s palace and in the country in general and carried brief re ports on the construction of industrial enterprises, the dig ging of canals, the building and repair of roads and bridges, and so on.

The events associated with the beginning of World War I could not but influence the emir’s domestic and foreign policy. At the durbar held in Kabul on August 24, 1914, he proclaimed Afghanistan’s neutrality. So he confirmed his resolve to maintain neutrality and refuted the rumours that he had hostile intentions with regard to Russia. Later on, Habibullah Khan continued to pursue the policy of neutrality in spite of the complex situation obtaining in the country.

Anti-British sentiments were strong in Afghanistan, especially among the border tribes. The situation was large ly influenced by Turkey’s joining the war in October 1914, and by the manifesto issued by the Turkish sultan declar ing a jzhad against Britain and Russia. The pro-Turkish and anti-British sentiments were strong at court among the reac tionary conservatives and opponents of change, the Old Afghans, and still stronger among the Young Afghans.

To win over Afghanistan as an ally, the German imperi alists attempted to exploit the religious prestige of the Turk ish sultan. German and Turkish propaganda presented the Kaiser’s Germany as a disinterested friend of the Muslims, and spread all kinds of inventions like a report saying that Wilhelm IT of Germany had adopted Islam. A German-Turk ish mission was set up in Turkey to induce the Afghan emir to enter the war on the side of Germany and its allies. The idea of launching an expedition to Afghanistan belonged to Enver Pasha, Turkey’s chief of staff.78 Even before the war, the Turkish general staff planned the expansion of Turkish influence to the areas close to India. As soon as Turkey joined the war, measures were immediately taken to organise an expedition to Afghanistan. At the end of 1914 Enver Pasha requested his German allies to send over a few officers to bolster the Turkish expedition.

The ‘German general staff approved of the idea and sent to Turkey a group of officers headed by Senior Lieutenant Oskar von Niedermeyer. He had a good command of the Persian language and had taken part in a German expedi tion to Iran and India a few years before. The German foreign ministry attached to the mission W. O. von Hentig, a diplomatic official. Niedermeyer had the task of inducing Afghanistan to join the war on the side of Germany and its allies. He was to persuade Habibullah Khan to invade India and Russian Turkestan. 4

At the end of March 1915, the expedition set out from Baghdad in three groups, moving to the east during the nighttime. The Russians and the British knew that the expe dition was approaching the Afghan border and assigned mounted detachments to patrol the border regions. The mission managed, though with great difficulty, to cross the Iran ian-Afghan border. Chased by a Russian Cossack detachment, it had to forgo its baggage and gold. After August 20, 1915, the mission arrived in Herat, where it was received with hono urs. Then, accompanied by an escort, it went to Kabul.79

On receiving the news of the mission crossing the Iranian Afghan border, Hardinge, viceroy of India, forwarded a let ter to Habibullah Khan expressing confidence that the emir would prove the sincerity of his promise to observe strict neutrality.89 According to the information received by Russian diplomats from the British authorities in India, in his reply to the viceroy the Afghan emir made a "solemn promise" to order that all the members of the mission be disarmed and detained, and then in a letter received by the viceroy on September 17, 1915, he allegedly wrote about the seizure in Herat of a gang of Germans which had been taken to Kabul under escort.8

Habibullah Khan showed indecision on his attitude to the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. In the early days after their arrival in Kabul the members of the mission were even taken into custody. Only on the eighth day of their stay in Kabul did Niedermeyer get an answer to his letters to the emir who now said he agreed to receive the mission.

During the talk the Afghan emir was handed a letter from the Turkish sultan proposing that the emir should come out with Germany and its allies against Britain and Russia un der the banner of jihad, and also a personal message from Kaiser Wilhelm II. The Kaiser reiterated the version about the liberating role of Germany which was being spread by German propaganda in the East, and promised unity with the Muslims in future as well.

The attitude of the emir to the mission and the treat ment of its members were very uneven. During the talks Habibullah Khan was suspiciously alert. In January 1916 Niedermeyer and Hentig managed to persuade him to sign a draft treaty with Germany. After that he allowed the members of the mission to take part in reorganising the army. But during the subsequent talks, whenever the lead ers of the mission mentioned Afghanistan’s joining the war, the answers were vague and evasive, stipulated by pre liminary conditions. At one meeting Habibullah Khan declared that Afghanistan would come out against Britain, only if Russia’s neutrality would be ensured. At another meeting he made his joining the war conditional on the arrival from Germany of 20,000 troops, 100,000 rifles and 200 artillery guns, plus ammunition and equipment.82

Habibullah Khan would have preferred to pursue a policy of neutrality, but the pro-German attitudes of some of the high officials and courtiers often placed him in a tight corner. Nasrullah Khan, the emir’s brother, who headed the Old Afghans group and was considered to be the chief claimant to the throne in case of a coup, was most active in this respect.

In these circumstances, the British hastened to tell the emir about the events of the war to persuade him to keep to the policy of neutrality and informed him of the sei zure of Erzerum by Russian troops. They left no chance unused to discredit the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission in the eyes of the emir, informing him of intercepted letters testify ing to the intentions of the mission’s members to stage a coup in Afghanistan and, if Habibullah Khan further delayed his coming out against Russia and Britain, to dethrone him. In the spring of 1916 Niedermeyer and Hentig saw that there was no hope of involving Afghanistan in the war, so most members of the mission soon left the country.

There were a number of reasons for the failure of the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. The Afghan emir was inter ested in observing neutrality, for he continued to receive an annual subsidy from the British and hoped for its promised increase from 1,900,000 rupees to 2,400,000 rupees, with a lump sum of 5,000,000 rupees to be paid additionally after the war.83 But, when reviewing the policy of the Afghan government in 1914-1916, the attitude of Habibul lah Khan to neutrality in general and neutrality as applied to Afghanistan in particular, clearly expressed in his public speeches, must be taken into account. Addressing a durbar in the spring of 1915, he described war as "‘the greatest of calamities" and noted that, in spite of the losses incurred by the belligerent countries, they "‘have achieved no results so far. This goes to show," he declared, "‘that at present only the neutral states are happy, and that strict neutrality is a great blessing for Afghanistan."84 Examining the neutrali ty of the Afghan government and Britain’s policy with regard to Afghanistan during World War I, it is essential to stress the immense significance of the conclusions and assess ments made by Lenin concerning this range of questions. Lenin paid much attention to the eastern countries, in par ticular to Iran, and also to Afghanistan. Drawing on various well studied sources, Lenin brought out the specific fea tures of the policy pursued by Britain with regard to Afgha nistan during World War I. The British, he said, did not be lieve that the Afghans were, in military terms, the kind of adversaries to be underestimated and stressed that Britain "treats them with the greatest caution"’.85 To prove his point Lenin cited the following extract from a book by T. Jaeger (Weimar, 1916) concerning relations between the British and the Afghan emir Habibullah Khan: "In this one sees the wisdom of Britain’s ‘velvet glove’ policy, for the British could not behave to anyone more tolerantly and cautiously than they have to him."86

The British government was greatly concerned over the activities of the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission. But viceroy of India Hardinge refrained (contrary to the advice by the London leadership) from any attempts to induce the Af ghan emir to give up that mission to the British.87 The British policy-makers, who wished to avoid a conflict with Afghanistan also because they did not wish to let Russia take part in solving the ‘"‘Afghan issue’ (which was believed to be inevitable if Afghanistan ceased to be neutral), were extremely wary in relation to Habibullah Khan; this was of ten evident in their taking a milder approach in various questions related to border disputes.

Meanwhile, the Niedermeyer-Hentig mission on the bor der with India did not end its anti-British activities, even when most of its members had left Afghanistan, and the de velopments in the border regions populated by Afghan tribes had already taken a bad turn for the British: a large anti-British uprising of the tribes seemed imminent.8 8

For this reason the British government had to tolerate not only the existence of a small but influential Turkish eat in Afghanistan, which exerted an anti-British reoletionary ces netnhg of the Indian emigrant Provisional émigré lena: we a ikiae aid ere In Vecem 1915. This Indian centre was headed by Raja Mahendra Pratap and Maulana Muhammad Barakatullah.*

Habibullah Khan, for his part, had to reckon with the sentiments of his population and with the need to observe the tradition of granting refuge. At first, he displayed indifference towards both the Provisional Government of India and the activities of Indian émigrés, for the most part Muslims. Later, to please the British, he launched reprisals against them, some of the émigfes were deported, which did, to a certain extent, discredit his regime.

The emir’s attitude to the anti-British liberation struggle of the Afghan tribes abroad was one of the main reasons for dissatisfaction with his rule. The anti-British armed actions of these tribes’ volunteer forces were in some instances sup ported by the Khost tribes and other subjects of the emir. From 1915 onwards these actions became more intense.9 In 1916-1917, Habibullah Khan rendered assistance to the British colonial authorities in their attempts to localise the seats of insurrection among the Afghan tribes and to pre vent their spreading in the regions along the north-western border of India. The actions of the emir and his officials set off a tide of indignation in Afghanistan. The emir be gan to receive anonymous letters in which he was accused of treason and betrayal of Islam. Afghan intellectuals were most sensitive to the actions of Habibullah Khan and the frontier authorities. By that time national consciousness had notably increased, since the Afghan nation had begun to take shape.**

The explosive situation at home and abroad compelled the emir to build up his armed forces and improve the entire military machine. In 1916-1917, reforms were being carried out in the Afghan army and measures were being taken to improve military training "in case of internal complica tions’".90

Unsubdued Afghanistan was kept in isolation by British imperialism. But the freedom-loving traditions of the Af ghan tribes on both sides of the Indian-Afghan border, the tribes, which in many areas were not yet totally enslaved by khans and landowners, the fact that part of the pop ulation still possessed amns, the hatred of foreign enslavers which had fermented through the ages, and the striving for independence, had all set the stage for launching a national liberation struggle in favourable circumstances. Such cir cumstances were created by the victorious Great October Socialist Revolution in Russia, which radically changed the international situation in general and Afghanistan’s foreign policy in particular.

Afghanistan in Contemporary Times

Independence Restored

The Great October Revolution in Russia had a tremen dous impact on the national liberation movement in the East. The Leninist foreign policy principles of the young Soviet state, proclaimed in the Decree on Peace, defined So viet policy with regard to Afghanistan. The appeal addressed by the Council of People’s Commissars of the Russian Fed eration ‘To All the Working Muslims of Russia and the East", which affirmed the right of all Muslim peoples to be the masters of their fate,! evoked a broad response in Afghanistan. It constituted, in effect, Soviet recognition of Afghanistan as a sovereign and independent state. The posi tion adopted by the Soviet Government was given official expression in the Brest-Litovsk Treaty, signed in the spring of 1918. Article 7 of the treaty declared that "Persia and Afghanistan are free and independent states"’.

Considering that the establishment of diplomatic rela tions with Afghanistan would help the Afghans in their lib eration struggle, the Soviet government proposed in July 1918 that a Soviet mission be set up in that country. Yield ing to British pressure, Emir Habibullah Khan rejected the proposal. At the end of 1918 the Soviet side repeated its proposal, which again came up against the Emir’s opposi tion.

Meanwhile dissatisfaction with the policy of Habibul lah Khan was spreading in Afghanistan. Levies and taxes were increased, call-up campaigns became more frequent, and the attitude of the authorities towards the population became increasingly arbitrary and despotic. All power, in fact, was now in the hands of the Emir’s favourite, Muham mad Husayn, Minister of Finance, who represented the emerging compradore circles and was, in essence, an agent of British capital and did all he could to help spread British influence in the country. The Emir led an extravagant life, ignoring the rapidly changing situation. His stubborn unwillingness to establish direct contacts with the So viet Republic, that is, to take the opportunity to achieve independence for Afghanistan, only brought nearer the do mestic crisis which spelled the end of his rule.

In the summer of 1918 British troops invaded Soviet Turkestan and seized Kushka, a town on the border with Afghanistan. Thus, Afghanistan found itself surrounded by the British on three sides (by that time the British also had unlimited influence in Persia). The country’s political iso lation from the rest of the world, imposed by the British colonialists and perpetuated by the policy of Habibullah Khan, was tuming into territorial isolation, sustained by the presence of the British troops on the northern and southern borders. Drastic measures were needed if the coun try was to emerge from this difficult position.

As a result of the complex domestic and international situation, opposition in the country was mounting rapid ly. An attempt on the Emir’s life in the summer of 1918 led to massive repressions which, combined with serious econom ic difficulties, only served to further aggravate the gener al dissatisfaction with the regime. On the night of February 20, 1919 Habibullah Khan was assassinated near Jalala bad. For a few days there was dual power in the country. The Emir’s brother, Nasrullah Khan, who was in Jalalabad at the time, proclaimed himself the Emir. At the same time, Amanullah Khan, the third son of Habibullah Khan (in his father’s absence he was the vicegerent in Kabul), supported by a part of the Kabul garrison and the city population, al so declared himself the Emir. He announced that his imme diate goal was to free the country from dependence on Brit ain. The political sympathies of the population were with the young prince. Soon Nasrullah Khan and some of his supporters were arrested.3 Muhammad Husayn was hanged. Amanullah Khan became the new Emir. The attempt by the conservatives to seize power had failed.

The refusal of the British colonial authorities to rec ognise Afghan independence led to armed clashes between the Afghan army and British troops in May 1919. The Afghans offered stubborn resistance, despite the numeri cal superiority and better technical equipment of the Brit ish army. The rout of the British invaders beyond the Caspian Sea and the armed uprising of the Pashtun tribes in the North-Western Border Province helped Afghanistan in the struggle for independence. Britain was compelled to agree to peace with Afghanistan, and a preliminary peace treaty was signed in Rawalpindi on August 8, 1919. In the treaty the British officially recognised the complete independence of Afghanistan, which ended the long period of its semi colonial dependence on British imperialism.

The Soviet Government was the first to recognise Afgha nistan’s independence in March 1919, and this was of great assistance to the Afghan people in their struggle. In a let ter to Amanullah Khan, Lenin greeted the independent Af ghan people and confirmed the Soviet Government’s inten tion to establish friendly relations between the two states. The Soviet-Afghan Friendship Treaty, signed on February 28, 1921, paved the way for friendly relations for many years to come and served as a major factor in strengthening the national sovereignty of Afghanistan.

Afghanistan in 1919–1929

Having won independence, the new government set about introducing a series of reforms to overcome economic back wardness and achieve social progress.

One of the most significant of these reforms was the adoption in 1923 of the first Afghan constitution, which confirmed the country’s independence, declared the Emir to be the supreme ruler and proclaimed a certain number of civil liberties. At the same time the State Council (a con sultative body under the Emir), the Loy Jirgah (the Afghan assembly of tribal chiefs and Muslim clergy), the Durbar-i Ali (a council of government officials), and the government, which held executive power, were established.

Economic changes were an important part of the pro gramme of reforms carried out by the Amanullah Khan government. In 1920, it passed the land-tax law under which taxes in kind were replaced by taxes paid in money. This speeded up the development of commodity-money rela tions. In 1923, it issued the livestock-tax act unifying taxation for all livestock breeders and abolishing additional taxes.

But the most significant innovation of all, and one which greatly influenced the subsequent evolution of the forms of ownership and, consequently, the pattern of social rela tions in the countryside, was the Regulations for the Sale of State Land in Afghanistan, adopted in 1924. This act legal ised the private ownership of land, which was a powerful stimulus to the growth of landed estates. Nearly all the land was sold off to landlords, officials and money-lenders. Oth er economic measures involved the resettlement of some of the nomads in the northern regions of the country and the confiscation and sale of land owned by clergymen. Cus toms duties were introduced and a law encouraging indus trial development was adopted.

The reforms effected by the new regime were aimed, on the whole, at eliminating the inost archaic forms of feud alism and speeding up the development of a new socio-eco nomic system. They met, to a great extent, the interests of the nascent classes—the "new" landowners and the na tional commercial bourgeoisie—which were still small in numbers and whose economic significance was as yet mini mal. Most of the reforms damaged the position of conserv ative sections of society: the orthodox elite of the Muslim clergy, tribal khans, and big feudal landowners. The re forms did not improve the position of the peasants, the largest productive class, for they did not free them from feudal exploitation, but only speeded up the process by which they were being dispossessed of land, and made more dependent on money-lenders and landlords.

Discontent with the reforms developed into an anti government rebellion by the Khost tribes led by mullahs in the spring of 1924. The rebels demanded that the new leg islation be repealed, that free trade with British India be restored and that the reforms (mostly concerning social is sues and way of life), condemned by the mullahs for contra dicting Islam, be cancelled. The rebellious tribes received aid from the British colonialists, who sought to weaken the new Afghan regime. The British even attempted to put their stooge Abdul Karim, the son of former Emir Yaqub Khan, at the head of the movement.

Unable to suppress the rebellion of the southern tribes, the government agreed to a compromise: at the Loy Jirgah held eae: of 1924 it was compelled to cancel some of the reforms. The socio-economic restructuring of the country was slowed down considerably. The formation of a new politico-economic structure in the country required the expansion of Afghan foreign rela tions. After national independence had been restored and political isolation ended, the government of Amanullah Khan took vigorous measures to establish relations with a large number of countries. By 1924 Afghanistan had estab lished relations with the Russian Federation, Britain, Italy, France, Germany, Poland, Belgium, Turkey, Egypt, and Iran. The 1926 Soviet-Afghan Treaty of Neutrality and Mutual Non-Aggression was an important milestone in the history of relations between the two countries, and Afgha nistan’s now traditional policy of neutrality was thus legal ly confirmed. In order to further expand Afghanistan’s foreign relations and bolster up its international prestige, King Amanullah Khan,* accompanied by some of his min isters and advisers, set out on an extended tour abroad. His itinerary included visits to India, Egypt, Italy, France, Germany, Britain, the Soviet Union, Turkey, and Iran. When in India, the king urged Muslims and Hindus to unite in the struggle for freedom. His anti-colonialist speeches greatly alarmed the British colonial authorities. In Egypt, which was, in effect, under British control, he spoke of de fending national independence. The main purpose of his stay in Italy was the purchase of arms. When in France he examined large factories and reached an agreement on deliv eries of French weapons. The visit by the Afghan King to , Germany had economic motives. Amanullah Khan signed preliminary agreements on granting German industrialists concessions to construct railways in Afghanistan, and in vited German engineers and technicians to his country. During his stay in Britain the British authorities tried to exert pressure on him and, demonstrating their industrial and military might, tried to persuade him to establish clos er contacts with Britain to the detriment of Afghan-So viet relations. But Amanullah Khan rejected all those at tempts. The king arrived in Moscow in May 1928 and was warm ly received by Soviet government leaders. During his two weeks in the USSR he was acquainted with the economic and cultural achievements of the Soviet people. The two sides signed documents on expanding economic and cul tural cooperation between the two countries. ;

The visit by Amanullah Khan to Turkey and Iran result ed in the signing of friendship treaties with these coun tries, which strengthened their position in the face of con tinuing political and economic expansion of Western im perialism.

On the whole, the tour of the King of Afghanistan proved fruitful. It strengthened Afghanistan’s foreign ties and of fered it new opportunities to carry out further important changes in its economic and political life.

Back home, Amanullah Khan began preparing a new series of reforms to eradicate the outdated feudal system. Late in August 1928 he put a draft of new reforms before the Loy Jirgah session in Pagman. These reforms included the cancellation of various privileges enjoyed by feudal lords and tribal leaders and they also weakened the politi cal position of the conservative Muslim clergy who were opposing the government policy of reforms. Secular courts of justice were instituted. All mullahs were to be recertified. The king and his supporters made attempts to modernise family and marital relations, and to fix a minimum age for marriage. Here, however, they failed. At a durbar in October, the supporters of Amanullah Khan advanced new draft reforms affecting social and daily life. They included mixed education at schools, sending Afghan young people to study abroad, the banning of polygamy, the abolition of the yashmak, etc.5

In the new programme put forward by the Young Afghan Government, a great deal of emphasis was placed on econom ic development. In a bid to limit the economic influence of foreign (Anglo-Indian) capital, which had monopolised the foreign and, in part, the domestic trade of Afghanistan, the government of Amanullah Khan began pursuing a pro tectionist policy with regard to local merchants. In the 1920s, the first joint-stock companies (sherkats) appeared, with shares held also by members of the ruling circles, including the Emir. :

Attempts to pool national capital in the sherkats were intensified in the late 1920s, by which time the country had about 20 trade companies with a total capital of 5.5-6 million afghanis.6 The sherkats were granted monopoly rights to procure and market staple commodities. As a result, the position of foreign merchants in the country was somewhat weakened. By the end of the 1920s national cap ital accounted for nearly 40 per cent of all foreign trade transactions.? At the Loy Jirgah session in August 1928, Amanullah Khan informed the deputies about his talks with Western industrialists and about the signing of conces sional agreements with them. He proposed that a state bank be set up, with a view to using merchant capital for the needs of the state. But the merchants, who feared to trust their money to the state, demanded that the bank be private, and did not support the proposal.

The reform programme also provided for important mea sures to ‘develop the military forces of the country. Plan ning to reorganise the Afghan army on the European mod el, Amanullah Khan insisted on the introduction of univers al military service in place of the voluntary system, on the extension of compulsory military service from 2 to 3 years, and on a ban on the practice of recruit replacement or re

"lease through payment. Since the purchase of arms abroad demanded considerable state expenditure, Amanullah Khan introduced, in the autumn of 1928, an additional ex traordinary tax—5 afghanis from every individual.

The government also paid considerable attention to com bating deeply rooted social evils, particularly red-tape, bri bery and smuggling. However it did not go farther than ap peals and impracticable plans. What was needed was a radi cal change of the social structure of the state, which was not the intention of the Young Afghans. It was also pro posed that the state administration system be reorganised. Amanullah Khan suggested that a national council—the prototype of a future parliament—be set up in place of the State Council (which was a mere consultative body at court). However, this proposal also proved impossible to implement at the time because of the mounting opposition of various

_ sections of the population to the reforms being introduced

by the regime.

Signs of growing political tension in the country became apparent during the Loy Jirgah session in the heated debate over the bills, and could be seen in the direct pressure exerted by Amanullah Khan and his retinue on the deputies, and in the poorly disguised unwillingness of the latter to back up the reforms. Among the people close to the king there was increasing disagreement over.the scope and depth of socio-economic change; there was no political unity, and the rivalry among various leaders was growing more acute. The radicalism of the reforms proposed by Amanullah Khan increased the number of his adversaries. The king’s attempt to form a party—Istiqlal wa tajaddod (Independence and Renovation)—as a political basis for modernisation came up against resistance on the part of influential leaders of the Young Afghan movement, who held moderate views. Fear ing opposition in the higher echelons of power, Amanullah Khan carried out a purge of the state apparatus and some prominent national figures who supported Young Afghan views lost their posts. Among those who resigned were Mahmud-Beg Tarzi, Minister of Foreign Affairs and the ideologist of the Young Afghan movement, and Minister of Defence Muhammad Wali Khan, one of the king’s closest advisers, the man who headed the first Afghan diplomatic mission to Moscow in 1919.9 They were seplacsa by people without definite political orientation who had managed to win the king’s trust. Some of them did not even conceal their hostility towards the reforms. Among the people close to Amanullah Khan there was an atmosphere of intrigue, distrust, enmity and factional conflict.

The alignment of class forces in the country in the autumn of 1928 showed that opposition sentiments had grown to mass proportions. The opponents of the policy of reforms were joined by the reactionary elite of the Mus lim clergy dissatisfied with the new regime. They were dis pleased by many of the innovations introduced by the gov ernment, primarily by attempts to-belittle the mullahs’ public and political role, secularise many aspects of social life, and place the mullahs’ activities under the control of the secular authorities. Muslim fundamentalists were most indignant at the reforms in the social area and every-day life, for they limited their traditional monopoly in family and marital matters. It was precisely the reforms affect ing family life that came under the sharpest attack. Ama nullah Khan was declared "godless", a "heretic" flouting the sacred principles of Islam, a man led by the "‘faithless". The elite of the Muslim clergy—the most fervent opponents of bourgeois reforms—became the ideologists of the anti-government movement. They were joined by feudal landowners and tribal khans displeased with the restriction of their power in their localities, with the loss of their tra ditional privileges, and with the drop in their duty-free trade (smuggling, in fact) with British India.

The peasants, the poor stock breeders. and handicrafts men, also joined in the movement. Some of the social mea sures of the Amanullah Khan government, in particular, abolition of various additional taxes and requisitions, elim ination of slavery, and proclamation of religious equali ty eased feudal oppression on these sections of the popula tion, but on the whole they had got no direct benefits from the reforms. On the contrary, at the initial stage of the country’s transition to bourgeois development, their eco nomic situation deteriorated seriously. The land tax in creased to reach 45 per cent of the harvest cost by the end of the 1920s. 19 For the most part, the government reforms were carried out at the expense of the peasants. Expendi ture on the king’s foreign tour and on the purchase of weap ons, machines and equipment abroad were a heavy burden on the peasants. And, last but not least, replacement of taxes in kind with taxes in cash, and legalisation of private landownership directly affected the position of the peas antry, causing major changes in the subsequent evolution of the peasant farming and social relationships in the coun tryside. Having no ready money to pay taxes, the peasant had to borrow from money-lender or a landowner on the security of the future harvest from his plot of land, and thus he found himself in debt. (The expropriation of peasant lands left more and more peasants landless, and this exprop riation continued right up to the April 1978 revolution.) In the end, the peasants, who were dependent on feudal lords and khans, came out in protest against reforms which made their conditions still worse, and against the new re gime, constituting the main driving force of the anti-govern ment movement.

The first signs of. the impending socio-political crisis became obvious in the autumn of 1928, when bands appear ed north of Kabul robbing the local rich. This was stilla spontaneous form of social protest by the peasants, driven to desperation by excessive requisitions and the local authorities’ arbitrary rule. One such band of robbers was led by Habibullah, known as Bacha-i Saqao (the son of a water carrier), a non-commissioned officer who had deserted from the army. His band soon began to attack members of the local administration. He shared part of the stolen goods with the poor. The activity of Bacha-i Saqao in the North erm Province and the support he received from the local peasants alarmed the government, which was compelled to take measures to neutralise him, though without obvious success.

In that same period, in November 1928, some of the Pashtun tribes in the Eastern Province rose up in arms against the government. The uprising quickly spread to many other regions. The governor of the province announced that military units would be called in and tribal volunteers raised, and simultaneously called upon the insurgents to end the rebellion. The central authorities dispatched reinforce ments to the insurgent province and by the end of November the army units and the insurgents were involved in serious clashes.

The leaders of the uprising—Muhammad Alam and Mu hammad Afzal, the religious leaders of: the Shinwari tribe— issued a manifesto setting forth the insurgents’ goals. The uprising, the manifesto said, was an attempt ‘‘to change the method of administering the country and to remove rul ers guilty of bribery and corruption, who issue laws contra dicting Sharia’’. The territories controlled by the insurgents, the manifesto went on, were administered ‘in keeping with the laws of Sharia and the ulemas are their genuine rulers". The chief cause of the uprising, said the authors of the ma nifesto, lay in the "pagan reforms" of Amanullah Khan. The manifesto called for the king to be overthrown.1! On De cember 9 a 10-day truce was concluded between the rebels and a government delegation. A few days later, however, the conflict broke out again and the imsurgents besieged Jalalabad, the centre of the province.

In the meantime the anti-government activity of Bacha-i Saqao was gaining momentum. His broad popularity in the Northern Province attracted the opposition, primarily reac tionary Muslim leaders, who decided to use Bacha-i Saqao in the struggle against Amanullah Khan’s regime. At a meeting of khans, held on December 12 in the village of Kalakan (the birthplace of Bacha-i Saqao), he was proclaimed the emir of Afghanistan under the name of Habibullah Ghazi. On the same day he attacked the city of Saraj Hoja and disarmed the local garrison. His comrade-in-arms Said Husayn, a small landowner, seized the town of Jabal Os Saraj and the town’s garrison surrendered without a shot. Bacha-i Saqao prepared to take Kabul.

The king and his retinue found themselves in a difficult situation. The ruling elite was in a state of confusion and fear. Some statesmen were secretly establishing contacts with Bacha-i Saqao. Hazrat-i Shor Bazaar Mujaddidi, an outstanding Muslim theologian who had been banished from the country by Amanullah Khan and now lived in exile in British India, stepped up his activity against the Afghan king. Disturbances spilled over to other provinces of Afghanistan.

The general discontent affected the army, which for the most part consisted of people from oppressed national minorities. Most of the officers, who did not, approve of radical reforms, were also opposed to the king. Desertion from the army reached mass proportions. On December 13 a 3,000-strong unit of Bacha-i Saqao’s forces launchedanattack on Kabul, which was repelled only with enormous effort.

On Decemher 29 the reactionary Muslim leaders, using Bacha-i Saqao as their representative, issued a religious edict in which they attempted to prove the legality of Bacha-i Sa qao’s claims to the throne. The-edict attacked the govern ment’s political and social reforms, accused the king of "‘god lessness" and declared him to be dethroned. Bacha-iSaqao was proposed for the post of the emir. The edict’s authors promi sed he would rule the country in keeping with Sharia./2

Having lost the support of the main social forces, Ama nullah Khan tumed for aid to his own Durrani tribe, but its leaders refused to support him in the struggle against the rebellious eastem tribes, and called upon him to observe the rules of Sharia. In despair, the king sent his relative, Ali Ahmad Khan, the governor of Kabul, who secretly shared the views of the opposition and himself aspired to the throne, to Jalalabad to negotiate with the insurgents. Early in January 1929 he managed to conclude an armistice. The jirgah of local tribes, held in Jalalabad on: January 5, put forward its own demands, which included, among other things, complete restoration of the Sharia laws, reduction of taxes, representation of the mullahs in the state appara tus, deportation of foreien missions, and repeal of the new criminal procedure code. 13 :

The mounting political crisis in Afghanistan was accom panied by greater activity by British imperialism in the re gion. Long before the uprising, the British authorities in India began to erect fortifications and build communica tion lines along the border with Afghanistan, along which a large armed force had been concentrated. In November 1928, Anglo-Indian troops started military exercises in the area.

At that time Colonel T. E. Lawrence of the British intelli gence service appeared in the border region. He was engaged in subversive activities among the tribes in the region. The Afghan government issued an order to arrest him if found on Afghan territory.

The British started open interference in Afghan affairs. British planes repeatedly violated the air space over Afgha nistan. Mr. Humphreys, British envoy in Kabul, met with Bacha-i Saqao, to assure him of his sympathy. The explosive situation in Kabul led the British to evacuate their diplo matic mission. However their plots against the regime of Amanullah Khan did not stop. On December 22, Muham. mad Omar Khan, a grandson of former Emir Sher Ali Khan, who lived in Allahabad on financial aid supplied by the British authorities, left for Afghanistan, where he tried to make his way into the area affected by the uprising and lead the tribes against Amanullah Khan, who did not suit the British.

As it found itself increasingly isolated, the regime surren dered: on January 9, 1929, it issued a firman repealing a number of major reforms pertaining to social and every day life. Universal military service was cancelled; the mullahs’ rights were restored, and a senate was set up from among "well-known ulemas, sardars, khans and some offi cials". But it was too late. Even this move could not win Amanullah Khan time. The regime was doomed: Kabul was besieged by the insurgent troops of Bacha-i Saqao.

On January 14, 1929, Amanullah Khan abdicated in favour of his elder brother, Inayatullah Khan, and left the capital for Qandahar. Bacha-i Saqao refused to accept the armistice offered by the new emir, captured Kabul, and was proclaimed the emir of Afghanistan on January 19. Inaya tullah Khan left for Peshawar on board a British plane and later joined Amanullah Khan in Qandahar.

Thus ended an important period in the independent devel opment of Afghanistan. The failure of the policy of re forms and the fall of the Amanullah Khan regime came as a result of the complex process of class struggle reflecting the clash of old and new social forces—the young national bourgeoisie and feudal reaction. The chief manifestation of class activity in the late 1920s was the spontaneous move ment among working sections of the population, who pro tested against their worsening conditions. The mass actions by peasants and poor livestock breeders were used in the struggle against the Young Afghan regime by feudal reac tion backed up by British imperialism.

The new authorities in Kabul, with Emir Bacha-i Saqao at their head, were supported by conservative circles com prising feudal lords and reactionary Muslim leaders, the op

onents of reforms. Having accused Amanullah Khan of vio ating the laws of Sharia, the new regime annulled all the reforms that damaged the interests of the reactionary oppo sition. The abolition of universal compulsory military ser vice suited the separatist-minded tribal khans. At the same time, the emir, who wished to retain the support of the peasants, the main driving force behind the uprising, can celled the debt arrears of the preceding years and all addi tional requisitions and dues.

Immediately after coming to power, Bacha-i Saqao set about to removing rival claimants to the throne. His troops subdued the North, the Herat Province, and in May 1929 even seized Qandahar. But a number of regions remained independent’ and their recognition of the power of Kabul was merely nominal.

With the annulment of the main reforms introduced by the former regime, Afghanistan regressed in terms of so cial and economic development. Schools were closed and education was now controlled by the mullahs, the minis tries of education and justice were abolished, justice was now controlled by Sharia courts, and women were deprived even of the rudimentary rights they had received under Amanullah Khan. In the very first days of the new regime a new legislative body—the Islamiya—was set up. It consisted of mullahs and the most important khans.

The economy, too, suffered a serious reversal. Bacha-i Saqao began large-scale confiscation and plunder of proper ty belonging not only to the supporters of Amanullah Khan but also to a large number of merchants. Foreign and do mestic trade was paralysed. Banditry became fréquent. Na tional industry declined. The prices of staple products shot up. The events of 1928 caused the utter disruption of state finances. To replenish the treasury Bacha-i Saqao increased taxes, thereby contradicting his own declarations. The deceived peasants gradually turned away from the ruler in Kabul. They received no protection against the arbitrary behaviour and extortion of state tax collectors, usually the same men who had collected taxes under Amanullah Khan.

The new regime also failed in its foreign policy. Not a single state recognised it officially. Most of the foreign diplomatic missions had left Kabul in January and Feb ruary 1929. Only the Turkish, German and Soviet mis sions remained in the Afghan capital. The government of Bacha-i Saqao showed no interest in promoting Soviet Afghan relations, which grew far worse at that period be cause of the spread of the anti-Soviet basmachi movement in Afghanistan. The Kabul emir gave every encouragement to the actions of basmachi gangs who made frequent incur sions into the Soviet territory, assaulting representatives of Soviet power and the local population. Despite the repeat ed protests of the Soviet Government, the Kabul regime did nothing to stop these anti-Soviet activities.

Throughout the rule of Bacha-i Saqao the struggle for power continued in Afghanistan. Former Kabul governor Ali Ahmad Khan, who was in Jalalabad, exploited the sit uation and, having enlisted the support of army units and some of the rebellious tribes, declared himself the emir of the Eastern Province on January 20.14 He abolished all the remaining reforms introduced by Amanullah Khan and cancelled tax debts. But as he needed money, he made the Indian merchants of Jalalabad pay him their debts to the government of Amanullah Khan and began collecting taxes from the population three months in advance. Hoping for British assistance, Ali Ahmad Khan asked the British for financial and military aid. His attempt to seize Kabul failed due to massive desertion and also as a result of inter-tribal discord. Left without any support, he fled to Peshawar.

Meanwhile Amanullah Khan had arrived in Qandahar. As soon as he learnt about the flight of Inayatullah Khan he annulled his abdication and began preparations for an ex pedition to Kabul. The population of the province respond ed with reluctance to his appeal for support in the strug gle for power. However, he soon formed a small army and on March 26 set out from Qandahar to Ghazni, where the largest concentration of Bacha-i Saqao’s troops was de ployed. By the middle of April the troops of the former king reached Ghazni and engaged in battle with the army of Ba cha-i Saqao. But here, too, Amanullah Khan suffered a set back. His army was poorly supplied and its morale was very low. Moreover, Bacha-i Saqao was supported by the Ghil zai tribes, the old rivals of the Durranis. J.ate in April the army of Amanullah Khan began a disordered retreat. On May 23 the former king announced a ceasefire and left Afghanistan together with his family.* His defeat was inev itable, since his programme of struggle had remained un changed and therefore did not enjoy wide support.

In April 1929, Ghulam Nabi Khan, former Afghan Am bassador in Moscow, gathered together a sizeable detach ment of Uzbeks and Hazaras and seized Mazar-i-Sharif in a surprise attack. He declared himself to be a supporter of Amanullah Khan and made no claim to the throne. Soon he controlled the whole of Northern Afghanistan. After the defeat of Amanullah Khan, however, his position grew weaker, and he left Afghanistan in early June.

In the spring of 1929, General Muhammad Nadir Khan, ex-minister of war, joined the struggle for the throne. He had been removed from his ministerial post for his opposi tion to the radicalism of Amanullah Khan’s reforms and had been appointed ambassador to France. In 1927, he retired on pension and lived privately in Nice. When Bacha-i Saqao came to power he returmed home with his brothers, Shah Wali Khan and Hashim Khan, and declared he would oppose the emir, who had seized power illegally. At that time Na dir Khan refused to support Amanullah Khan, as he intend ed to form an independent movement. He disguised his quest for power by "asking his countrymen to abstain from the bloodshed and civil war".15

In March 1929, Nadir Khan arrived in Khost and began to gather tribal volunteer forces. At first his struggle against Bacha-i Saqao was unsuccessful. In the tribal area inter tribal strife was spreading and separatist sentiments pre vailed. The peasants still believed Bacha-i Saqao’s promises to relieve their tax burden. Nadir Khan began his military political campaign in the spring, when the farmers were busy in the fields, and he also experienced serious financial difficulties.

By the end of the summer, however, the situation had changed. The policy of Bacha-i Saqao led the country into an economic impasse and caused political anarchy. The peas ants no longer supported the regime. The slump in trade, arbitrary rule and repression caused the merchants to join the emir’s enemies. Loss of central control hit the country and there was the danger of civil war and a weakening of sovereignty, which could bring about state dependence. Spontaneous disturbances among the working people con tinued. As a result, various sections of the ruling classes who at the beginning had supported Bacha-i Saqao, now tumed their backs on him, which gave Nadir Khan abundant scope for action. He was assisted by the British, with whom he had long maintained close contacts. His attempts to sup press the spontaneous popular movement, to unite the lead ers of the ruling classes and establish a firm government suited them very well. Early in September 1929, a few thous and people from the Wazir and Mahsud tribes living in Bri tish India joined Nadir’s army, largely due to the efforts of the British colonial authorities.1® Later, when he came to power, Nadir Khan received free financial aid from the Brit ish government to the tune of £175,000.1

At the end of September, Nadir Khan ie his supporters began a serious military campaign. On October 8, his army routed the emir’s troops and occupied Kabul. Unable to offer effective resistance, Bacha-i Saqao fled from the cap ital, but was captured. On November 2, 1929 he was exec uted together with his closest supporters.

On October 15, Nadir Khan entered the capital. At a meeting of his associates and supporters he was pro claimed the Padishah of Afghanistan.

Afghanistan in 1930–1945

Nadir Shah was supported by the former enemies of Amanullah Khan—feudal lords, sardars, tribal khans, and conservative orthodox mullahs—and also by members of the new social strata—liberal landowners, merchants and money-lenders. Some saw him as fairly conservative, since he had been opposed to Amanullah Khan’s radical reforms, while others saw him as a man supporting economic pro gress and a moderate degree of modernisation. Ee was op posed by many influential supporters of Amanullah Khan. Nadir Shah ruthlessly stamped out any opposition. Muham mad Wali Khan, one of the closest associates of the for mer king, was arrested and executed. Ghulam Nabi Khan, who returned from exile in 1932, was soon arrested on charges of organising an anti-Nadir plot among the Khost tribes and executed. His brother, Ghulam Ghilani Khan, was executed some time later. Many Amanullah’s supporters were arrested and some deported. The peasants, national minorities, and poor livestock breeders from the Pashtun tribes continued their protest actions unrelated with the interests of any of the political groupings or claimants to the throne. Though Nadir Shah and the ruling elite, frightened by the extent of popular discontent, instructed that "some allowances are to be made in recovering arrears", the tax system remained unchanged, and requisitions and oppres sion by local officials. continued. The rural economy had suffered enormously during the events of 1928-1929.

By November 1929 peasant disturbances had already broken out in Qohdaman, north of Kabul. On November 30, about 10,000 insurgents captured the city of Charikar and attacked Jabal Os-Saraj. The peasant movement was ruthlessly suppressed.

In June 1930, an uprising flared up again in the region. The insurgent Tajik population was joined by some of the Pashtun peasants who were dissatisfied with the govern ment’s tax policy. When regular army units failed to defeat the insurgents, Nadir Shah used voluntary armed forces re cruited from the tribes. He promised the 25,000 Pashtun voiunteers who gathered in Kabul in August to reduce taxes, or cancel them altogether. As a result of this the up rising was drowned in blood.

In October 1932, disturbances began in Khost. The in surgents were protesting against the government’s tax polli cy and accused Nadir Shah of going back on his promise to reduce taxation. The uprising was led by mullah Lewanai, who had risen from the lower ranks of the clergy (the tribal elite remained loyal to the government). The uprising lasted for more than six months. Nadir Shah requested the Bri tish authorities in India to prevent the Wazir and Muh sud tribes living in India from joining the movement. The British backed up Nadir Shah and the insurgents were de feated.

All those actions: were part of the class struggle that had developed over the preceding years. Though they did not have the same scope as the social clashes which occurred in the preceding period, they had a new class content, showing that the peasants had grown ‘more mature politically and socially. Therefore the exploiter classes considered the move ment even more dangerous than the radicalism of the Young Afghan reformers, and this induced them to rally round Nadir Shah and his regime.

In the summer of 1931, the Afghan army crushed what remained of the basmachi groups, which had not only crossed the Soviet border but robbed people in Afghan territory. Having formed a government from among his relatives and closest supporters, Nadir Shah issued a declaration on No vember 16, 1929, setting forth the main principles of his domestic and foreign policies. The main emphasis was on the idea of a "class alliance", as the cornerstone of the so cial structure of the state. Nadir Shah also promised to im prove the tax system and combat embezzlement.

Nadir Shah’s programme also allotted an important role to Islam. The mullahs’ rights and privileges, which had been restored and extended by the Bacha-i Saqao regime, were left unchanged, and they had the opportunity to influence important decisions in state matters through the Ulema Council, set up within the framework of the Ministry of Justice. The provisions of the civil and criminal code were brought in line with the norms of the Sharia law. Women were obliged to wear the yashmak, women’s schools were closed down and polygamy was restored.

The main principles of Nadir Shah’s regime, set forth in his declaration, were enshrined in the constitution adopted at the Loy Jirgah session in October 1931. Its chief purpose was to consolidate the power of the ruling classes and guard their interests against the social dangers resulting from pop ular actions in 1928 and 1929. However, the regime could not afford to ignore the growing influence of the bourgeois classes who also sought to secure their interests ° in state administration and who were most interested in strengthening state sovereignty and putting an end to feudal fragmentation. The constitution proclaimed equality of all people before the law, granted them a number of civil liberties, and abolished feudal estate disabilities. It also proclaimed freedom of trade, industrial and agricultural activity, and also the inviolability of private property.

The greater part of the 1931 constitutional provisions were determined by the predominance of feudal relations in the economy. They fixed the rights and privileges of the Muslim clergy. The rights of Afghan subjects, the constitution said, were regulated not only by civil laws, but also by the laws of Sharia. The mullahs received considerable freedom of ac tion in the sphere of education. Islamic law was now freely taught and the Sharia courts of justice were granted au tonomy.

The modified social structure of power, which now in cluded members of the bourgeois classes, also determined the form of state administration. The functions of the Loy Jirgah (in which the ulemas and the tribal elite were broadly represented) were extended in matters relating to financial, specifically taxation, policy. At the same time the constitu tion provided for the participation of traders and landown ers in state organs. A parliament was established consisting of two houses: the upper house, or the Council of the Nobility (Senate), and the lower house, the National Assembly. The majority of the members of the upper house were appointed by the shah from among the owners of large estates, tribal khans and the upper muslim clergy. The National Assembly was elective. Its members had to be educated persons aged between 30 and 70 with a reputation for "honesty and fairness", which gave the ruling elite a chance to turn down undesirable candidates for political reasons. The right to take part in elections was denied to women, landless peasants moving about the country in search of jobs, and to small nomad tribes. The functions of the National Assembly included approving legislation and the state budget, granting stock-exchange companies benefits and privileges, and considering questions related to domestic and foreign loans. Cabinet members were formally responsible to the parliament. The National Assembly had, in fact, very limited opportunities to influence the government’s policy. The greater part of the constitution was devoted to the prerogatives and privileges of Nadir Shah and his dynasty. According to the constitution, the shah had the right to approve the composition of the cabinet of ministers, veto bills, conduct foreign policy, declare war, and conclude peace. Having consolidated the position of the conservative strata in the constitution and extended the political. rights of the bourgeois classes, who were playing an increasingly important role in the economy, the regime gave legal shape to the ruling bloc of landowners and the bourgeoisie, and this largely determined the subsequent evolution of the state power structure in Afghanistan. The Nadir Shah regime was confronted with the difficult pat of economic development. The events of 1928-1929 ad exhausted state resources. In addition, the world eco nomic crisis had a negative effect on Afghanistan’s economy. The price of astrakhan, Afghanistan’s main export item, dropped on the world market. The reduction of the price of silver on foreign markets led to a devaluation of the Afghan national currency. Seeking to replenish the treasury, the regime launched upon large-scale confiscation of property ibelonging to supporters of Bacha-i Saqao and started a campa jign of reprisals. But the money collected was chiefly used to prop up the tribal khans who fought against Bacha-i Saqao. The new regime was assisted financially by the Kabul merchants, who made generous donations to the state treasury and proposed a number of economic reforms. Their programme was drawn up by Abdul Majid Zabuli, one of the richest merchants in the country, who proposed that the development of agriculture and industry should begin without delay. As the ruling circles continued Amanullah Khan’s policy of pooling isolated nation capitals in sherkats, the trading bourgeoisie, which had gone through dramatic upheavals during the 1928-1929 political crisis, sought a closer alliance with the ruling elite which had defended its interests. In contrast with the previous period, the merchants were, on the whole, in favour of the idea of sherkats, all the more so as the sherkats improved their position in the competi tion with foreign capital. The functioning of joint-stock com panies required the establishment of a national credit insti tution which would help control the country’s monetary and foreign trade markets. The first bank, Sherkat-i Ashami, with a capital exceeding 5 million afghanis, of which 4.5 million belonged to the state and the rest to Afghan mer chants, was opened in Kabul in January 1931. The bank was to stabilise the exchange rate of the national currency and grant credit to merchants.*" A year later a monopoly of the procurement and export of astrakhan was introduced and then transferred to the Afghan National Bank, an im proved version of Sherkat-i Ashami. It was, in fact, a joint stock company which, in addition to regulating money circulation in the country, was engaged in commercial trans actions and had the monopoly of the export and import of certain goods.

Having established a national bank, the government set about organising sherkats with the direct participation of the Afghan National Bank, which was to become a sharehold er. In the early 1930s, more than thirty large sherkats emerged in the country, bringing together a considerable part of national c ee Exercising a monopoly over the ex port and import of many goods, the bank and the sherkats sapped the trading power of foreign merchants. Afghan merchants, organised in sherkats, were granted numerous privileges. The unification of national trading capital in joint stock companies speeded oe the growth of internal capital accumulation. In 1936-1937, the total capital of the larger sherkats exceeded 90 million ‘afghanis.

In the foreign sphere, the government declared a policy of neutrality and equitable relations with all countries, which was registered in the 1931 constitution.

At the same time the regime of Nadir Shah was rather closely oriented on Britain. As has been already mentioned, Britain had supported Nadir Shah from the time he joined the struggle for the throne. With his coming to power his contacts with the British colonial authorities in India had grown still closer. This was seen in his negative attitude to the national liberation movement in the North-Western Border Province of India, which grew into an anti-colonial uprising in Peshawar in 1930. The regime of Nadir Shah prevented the Pashtun tribes in the border area of Afgha nistan from joining the uprising and thereby helped the Brit ish colonial troops to suppress it. Nadir Shah feared that the anti-colonial movement in India, which could be de scribed as democratic, could dangerously influence the situation in Afghanistan. Britain, for its part, rewarded Nadir Shah’s services with military and financial aid.

However, Afghanistan, which had gone through an agonis ing political crisis, needed support for its national indepen dence. That support came from the Soviet Union. On June 24, 1931, the Soviet-Afghan Treaty of Neutrality and Mu tual Non-Aggression was signed in Kabul for a term of five years, to be prolonged automatically every year. The treaty provided for non-interference by each country in the intem al affairs of the other, mutual neutrality, should one of them be involved in a war, and settlement of disputes by peaceful means.

The treaty took pride of place in relations between the two countries, for it was a major international document imbued with a spirit of friendship and goodneighbourliness. It helped to expand Soviet-Afghan trade and economic rela tions. During the world economic crisis, when the volume of Afghan trade with capitalist countries fell sharply, its trade with the Soviet Union increased considerably. By 1932 the USSR had topped the list of the countries importing Afghan goods and was second biggest exporter to Afghanistan.?1 Furthermore, trade with the Soviet Union had a favourable effect on the country’s economic growth, since the USSR purchased Afghan goods at fixed prices, regardless of changes on the world market. This helped Afghanistan to avoid the heavy losses which could otherwise have resulted from the general worsening of foreign trade conditions.

_ Afghanistan developed also its relations with other count ries. The regime of Nadir Shah was especially interested in maintaining close contacts with Turkey and Iran, and signed friendship treaties with them in 1932. It established diplomatic relations with Saudi Arabia and Iraq. Attempts were made to consolidate ties with Germany and France, and to use their economic potential. Little progress was made in this direction, however, after Afghanistan refused to grant them concessions. In 1930, a friendship treaty was signed with Japan, which, however, did not generate broad contacts between the two countries. The regime made an attempt to attract US capital to Afghanistan, and an Afghan mission was sent to the United States. But the US industrial ists, concerned over their own economic difficulties at that time, showed no-interest in Afghanistan. The period of ac tive economic and political US expansion in Afghanistan began later, after World War II.

Socio-political life in the country revived. The system of administration was reorganised. A medical school was opened in 1932, which soon developed into a medical faculty and the nucleus of the future Kabul University. Newspapers and magazines made their appearance. However, the political sit uation in the country remained unstable. Severe persecu tion of the former associates of Amanullah Khan caused retaliatory actions by the opposition. In November 1933, Nadir Shah was assassinated by an Amanullah supporter, and power went to his son; Muhammad Zahir Shah.

Under. the new shah the cabinet of ministers, headed by Nadir Shah’s brother, Muhammad Hashim Khan, remained unchanged, and so did the guidelines of government policy. Concentration and centralisation of national capital was continuing apace. The activities of the en National Bank and the sherkats, in which only han nationals could be shareholders, totally eieanel the role of foreign capital in Afghanistan’s foreign trade. Foreign busi nessmen could not even act as intermediaries in Afghan fo reign trade.

In the latter half of the 1930s, large sherkats were springing up in Kabul, Herat, Qandahar, Mazar-i-Sharif, and other cities. With the participation of the Afghan National Bank several sherkats were set up to conduct trade with the Soviet Union. By 1936 most of the merchants in the country had been shareholders in the sherkats, though they continued independent commercial activities of their own. In the late 1930s, the Afghan National Bank began to play a much greater role as a regulator of foreign trade op erations. Consequently, the top men in national trading capital began to exert increasing political influence. Their leader, Abdul Majid, the bank’s president, was appointed Minister of Economics. The bank aetna abandoned trade operations and began to invest capit in sherkats and to grant credits to them. The accumulation of capital was carried out through the Afghan National Bank and its subsidiary sherkats, whose activity now extended to a con siderable part of trade operations on the home market and to practically the whole of foreign trade.

Private capital was entering the sphere of production with reluctance, preferring trade, which was more profitable. Therefore in the 1930s, when the meagre state finances were being consumed mainly by non-productive spending, industrial development was very slow. The largest alloca _ tions from the state budget went into the building of roads and small irrigation systems. Of the few industrial enterprises

built in that period, the most important were the cotton mill in Jabal Os-Saraj and the silk spinning factory in Qanda har, both fitted out with equipment purchased back in 1928 by Amanullah Khan, and also the textile combine in Pol-e Khomri, whose construction was financed by the govern ment and the trade-industrial sherkat Nasaji, and a few small electricity plants. ‘ In those years considerable aid to Afghanistan in build ing its national industry came from the Soviet Union. The cotton-cleaning plants in the north—in Qunduz, Mazar-i-Sha rif, Imam Sahib and other cities—were built with Soviet assistance.22 Soviet-Afghan relations, based on the princi ples of goodneighbourliness, mutual respect and non-inter ference in each other’s internal affairs, were becoming in creasingly significant for Afghanistan. Trade between the two countries was growing rapidly. The trade policy pursued by the Soviet Union was favourable to Afghanistan. The USSR. also assisted Afghanistan in the development of agriculture, and specifically in combating agricultural pests.

In the late 1930s, international tension escalated. Consider ing Afghanistan’s geographical proximity to the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany and the other countries of the "‘axis" sought to expand their influence there. To that end, wide use was made of Germany’s economic contacts with Afghanistan. In 1936, for instance, Afghanistan received credit to the value of 27 million marks for the purchase of German goods, Germany also provided Afghanistan with military equipment. Nazi agents penetrated Afghan state establishments and industry, and also the Afghan National Bank, under the guise of "advisers", "consultants", and "experts"’.23

While expanding relations with Germany and its allies, the regime of Muhammad Zahir Shah assumed no military political obligations, and in September 1939, soon after the start of the Second World War, Afghanistan officially announ ced its neutrality. Despite this, however, Germany sought to turn Afghanistan into a bridgehead for military actions against the USSR and British India. Its agents infiltrated the area of the Pashtun tribes in the south of Afghanistan and in the north-westem strip of Indian territory, supplying them with weapons and money. In 1940, Germany asked the Afghan government to organise an uprising of the tribes in north-west India against the British authorities to force Britain to withdraw some of its troops from Europe. In retum, Afghanistan was to annex a number of north-westem regions of India, in particular Sind, Baluchistan, the West Punjab and Kashmir.24 However, the Afghan government tumed down the proposal.

Nonetheless, Kabul’s policy of manoeuvring between the imperialist powers created a favourable situation for nazi agents. Operating in Afghanistan as experts and busi nessmen, they were engaged in extensive anti-Soviet activi ties, forming sabotage groups from among counter-revolu tionary emigrés of the early days of Soviet power and smug gling them over to Soviet territory.

After the treacherous attack of nazi Germany on the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, the actions of nazi agents in Afghanistan created a real threat to Afghan neutrality and contradicted the terms of the 1931 Soviet-Afghan Treaty on Neutrality and Mutual Non-Aggression. In October 1941, the Soviet Government sent the Govemment of Af ghanistan a note requesting that the latter curb anti-Soviet activities by nazi agents. A similar request was made by the British Government. The Afghan Government then decided * to expel from the country all German and Italian nationals, except for officials at diplomatic missions, and soon they left Afghanistan.

In November 1941, a Loy jirgah session was held in Ka bul to decide upon the foreign policy to be pursued in the complex conditions created by the Second World War, and it reaffirmed the country’s policy of complete neutrality.

The Second World War seriously damaged Afghanistan’s economy. The disruption of world economic ties brought about an increase in world prices and inflation. The volume of Afghanistan’s foreign trade was sharply reduced. Brit ish India, from which the main deliveries of consumer goods for Afghanistan were coming, had, in fact,amonopoly of Af ghan imports. The geography of Afghan exports also shrank noticeably. The marketing of traditional export goods now involved enormous difficulties. Availing itself of that sit uation, trading capital shifted the burden of declining foreign trade onto the producers of exports and the consum ers of imported goods. The trading bourgeoisie was literal ly robbing them by widening the gap between procurement and marketing prices.25 The Afghan National Bank and the sherkats associated with it now held a monopoly of Afghan exports and greatly increased their capital. The reduction in the amount of goods coming from abroad caused a steep rise in prices and inflation.

The war and the economic difficulties it brought in its wake frustrated Afghanistan’s attempts to fulfil its first five-year plan of economic development, adopted in 1940. During the war the rate of industrial construction slowed down and the volume of work at various irrigation projects was reduced.

In the countryside the landowners, money-lenders, mer chants and local officials continued to buy up the land owned by peasants and the state with the result that more and more peasants were becoming landless.

The general worsening of the economic situation in the country, which hit the working people, artisans and the small bourgeoisie the hardest, provoked dissatisfaction among various sections of the population. In 1944-1945, there were frequent uprisings among Pashtun peasants and poor livestock breeders which were suppressed by troops.

The political situation in the country was growing in creasingly tense. By the end of the war first signs of social conflict appeared, caused by the increasing contradiction between, on the one hand, the largest possessors of trading and credit capital and the feudal landowners associated with them, who in the grim years of the war acted in their own self-seeking interests, and, on the other, the broad mass of working people and the democratic sections of society who carried all the burden of wartime. The rout of nazi Germany and the emergence of People’s Democracies in Europe had a telling effect on public sentiments in Afgha nistan, causing the growth of political activity. Social discon tent now involved not only politically activeintellectuals, but also a large part of democratically-minded masses.

Afghanistan After the Second World War

The economic difficulties caused by the war resulted in a serious deterioration of the economic position of the bulk of the population. The policy pursued by the ruling circles—feudal landowners and top merchants linked with land, whose chief interest lay in profitable commerce—was ever more in contradiction with the economic interests of numerous sections of the middle and petty bourgeoisie and the part of the intelligentsia closely related to them. The growing economic potential of the large sherkats added to their political influence. At the same time there was an in creasing tendency for them to monopolise political power.

The emergence of the world socialist system, the rising tide of the national liberation movement in Asia and Afri ca, and the continuirig disintegration of the colonial sys tem also had a great impact on the political situation in Afghanistan. :

The aggravation of social contradictions compelled the authorities to take some measures. In particular, they re stricted some of the monopoly rights of the large sherkats to foreign trade, and set up elective town councils. But these superficial measures did not affect the socio-politi cal structure, and so, popular discontent continued to spread.

The worsening of the economic situation was accompa nied by the large-scale penetration of US monopolies in to Afghanistan. This process started with the signing in 1946 of a governmental agreement with the American Morrison-Knudsen company on the construction of an irrigation system in the south of the country, on prospect ing for mineral resources, road building, personnel training, and on small construction projects. But the planned con struction was not done in time and the expenses exceeded the calculated costs. Afghanistan had to seek foreign loans.

The increasing political tensions in the country, combined with economic, and later political pressure by the USA, complicated the situation still further. In 1946, the government of Muhammad Hashim Khan resigned. The new cabinet was headed by Shah Mahmud Khan, the king’s another uncle. The widening rift between the bourgeoisie and the landowners, on the one hand, and the small producers in town and country, on the other, gave rise to oppositional sentiments, which found expression in various political movements and groups defending the interests of the broad middle sections of the urban population, and to some ex tent of the poor sections. '

The principal demands put forward by these movements included abolition of economic privileges for large mo nopoly trading associations, democratisation of socio-polit ical life, adoption of a new constitution, and better oppor tunities for the petty and middle bourgeoisie.

The spread of ideas reflecting the interests of the mid dle strata of society led to the formation of the political organisation Wikh-i Zalmaiyan (Awakened Youth). Its social ly variegated membership did not exceed 100. It included people from among the petty bourgeoisie, clerks, intellec tuals and Muslim clergy. The organisation was headed by Muhammad Rasul Khan Pushtun, a small landowner from Qandahar. Among the most active members of the move ment. were Nur Muhammad Taraki, who headed its rad ical left wing, Abdurrauf Benawa, Abdulhai Habibi and Gul Pacha Ulfat. At the initial stage its members were engaged mainly in educational activities, but in the late 1940s they joined the political struggle and took part in the 1949 parliamentary elections. As a result, in the National Assem bly of the seventh convocation there appeared a group of deputies whose activities were based on the ideas of the Awakened Youth. They used parliament as a platform from which to fight for their demands, and at the same time, they sought to turn the National Assembly into an effective organ of power which would regulate the work of the state apparatus.

Radical circles demanded freedom of the press in or der to propagate the ideas of -the opposition. In January 1951, the government adopted a new law on the press, allowing the publication of private newspapers and ma gazines. Immediately following the promulgation of the new law there appeared private newspapers calling themselves national.

The appearance of the private press led to a polarisa tion of the political forces brought together by common


oppositional views. A short while before the private news papers appeared, other political groupings were beginning to emerge in addition to the Awakened Youth, though with a similar political orientation. Most significant among them were Nida-yi Khalq (The Voice’ of the People) and Watan (Homeland). In 1951, they began to issue their own news


papers under the same names.

Prior to this, Wikh-i Zalmaiyan had begun to put out its own newspaper. The first issue of Angar, so named after its publisher and editor Faiz Muhammad Angar, an official of the Ministry of Economics, came off the press on March 1, 1950. Angar was described as "a national, literary, social, and political newspaper". Its first editorial said it would serve the people, helping them overcome their age-old back wardness. The paper, said the editorial, had to seek, with the help of "educated individuals sympathetic to the peo ple and the awakened youth", to identify the causes of the people’s backwardness, to enlighten them and find ways of eliminating the backwardness". The authors of the lead ing articles, which contained political criticism, were the leaders of the movement. The first issue carried an article by Taraki entitled "The Wish of the People. What Do We Want?"’. It expressed the main demands of the opposition: "bread, clothes (later with the addition of the word "hous ing" this became ‘the chief slogan of the People’s Demo cratic Party of Afghanistan), work, and equal opportunities for all in terms of social services".

The publishers saw their mission in devoted service to "the backward nation" in the struggle against "traitors and oppressors", who "do harm to the people, by sacrificing its interests to their personal benefit", and in the struggle against racial discrimination, and for national unity. They believed that these goals could be attained through awak ening and unification of the nation, establishment of a con stitutional monarchical regime, formation of a national government responsible to parliament, and participation of all classes in public affairs.26 Social progress and the -improvement of the living standards of the people, the publishers believed, could be achieved only if the people took an active part in socio-political and economic life, and also in state affairs, through their own political parties. One of the main tasks to be accomplished, wrote A. Mahmudi, the author of the article "What Do We Want? (Aspirations of the People)", was the formation of a "truly democrat ic government", which would "put the destiny of the people into their own hands". "The primary condition of genuinely democratic government is the creation of na tional-democratic parties, and on their basis the holding of free elections, and the election of deputies trusted by the people. Since these deputies would then form the govern ment, a majority rule would prevail and, consequently, vital problems would be solved according to the will of the people, and thus their happiness would be ensured."2? These objectives were to be achieved within the frame work of constitutional monarchy.

The economic part of the programme contained main ly criticism of the existing state of affairs, but made no clear-cut proposals. It drew special attention to the con ditions of the poor sections and demanded the abolition of forced labour (begar). It also suggested ways of improv ing the national economy. For instance, Babrak Gostali, the author of an article in the Angar, proposed to cut the import of luxuries and increase spending on the develop ment of local industry, to care more for the workers, to combat unemployment, and go over to planned economic development, with the opinion of the "toiling people" duly taken into account.28 Some members of the liberal wing in the movement, while speaking about the people’s poverty, pinned their hopes on the monarch’s good will. Thus Abdurrauf Benawa wrote in one of his articles: "Those who are used to sitting in a walnut chair and looking at the world through the windows of their cars, have no idea who ‘the people’ are. And if they are told that the people go barefooted, they would reply that it is more comforta ble to pray that way. But if they came to know the people better, they would see that ordinary people walk barefoot ed because of their poverty. They don’t even know that there is not a single person out of a hundred who is sati sfied :with his conditions. The only hope of the people is the beloved and democratic king. Therefore all patriots, the awakened youth and other enlightened people see in the shah the only and true servant of the nation, and its leader."29

The paper gave much prominence to the role of youth in society. In the "Appeal to the Afghan Youth" it called for the younger generation to awaken and rally together in the struggle to win happiness for the people.2° Great significance was attached to the Students’ Union, founded in 1950, which contributed to the general enlightenment effort.

Thus, the programme of the Wikh-i Zalmaiyan movement basically contained a demand that state political institu tions be démocratised, and criticism of the people’s eco nomic conditions.

Another group, Watan, which emerged in 1950, adopted a similar position, but advanced a broader spectrum of so cial, political and economic demands. Its social make-up was also variegated, including people from various sections of the petty bourgeoisie, clerks and intellectuals. The lead ers of the movement were Mir Muhammad Siddiq Farhang, its ideologist, Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar and Ahmad Ali Kohzad, both well-known historians, and General Fateh. The Watan group had over 100 members.

In March 1951, it began to issue the newspaper Watan. Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar became its publisher and Ali Horush, its chief editor. The latter was soon replaced by M. M. S. Farhang. The first editorial announced the aims of the movement: to popularise the principles of democracy under a constitutional monarchy in every sphere of public life, and to achieve a number of bourgeois liberties, such as freedom to form political organisations, freedom to choose a profession and freedom of movement, personal immunity, and religious and national equality. The paper called for accelerated economic growth and was opposed to "the concentration of capital in private hands". The latter can hardly be viewed as a rejection of private pro perty. Rather it was a call to restrict the economic priv ileges of large private companies. A speech by Mir Ghu lam Muhammad Ghubar in parliament shows this only too well. "Private monopoly exists in the country," he said, "and the profits from it, obtained through the exploita tion of the masses, have been pocketed by a few money lenders and monopolists. This means that monopoly must be taken out of private hands and given to the state. As a result of 20 years of economic activity by a number of monopolist sherkats, capital has been concentrated in the hands of a few individuals. The middle sections of the merchants are being brought to ruin."31 Demanding a restriction. of the economic power of large trading capi tal, the members of the Watan movement insisted on the provision of favourable conditions for the enterprise of the small and middle bourgeoisie, and the development of the domestic crafts.

The paper’s publishers paid particular attention to so cial problems, analysing the social structure of the pop ulation and assessing the position of its various sections. It wrote a good deal about the conditions of the peasants, who accounted for 90 per cent of the population. "Speak ing in terms of material and cultural conditions, the Afghan peasant is at the lowest possible level. He is il literate, sick, sometimes hungry, and always barefooted. He has many debts and no work implements,"32 wrote Far ae in the article "Consolidating the Peasantry"’.

Identifying the causes of the impoverished living con ditions of the peasants, he pointed to large-scale, private landownership and usury. The author remonstrated against the situation in the countryside and suggested ways of im proving it by setting up peasant cooperatives and found ing an agricultural bank to grant credits to the peasants. He proposed also that the size of privately-owned land should be limited and the landownership system revised.33 He considered a change in ownership system to be the central reform. However, he wanted it effected not through political struggle for the peasants’ rights, but through the adoption of relevant legislation by the good will-of the government.34

An important element in the programme of the Watan group, as it was in those of other similar movements, was political demands, the main one being a change in the gov ermment system through the adoption of "praper’’ laws and adherence to them. "We are for constitutional mon archy," wrote Ghubar in his article ‘The Rusting Body of the State’. "But if we want to preserve territorial integri ty, independence, security and progress, and to preclude all kinds of disturbances and anarchy, which only cause dislocation and intensify reaction, we must have a government answerable to the people, and trusted by the people."35 The idea of forming such a government, the paper stressed, was backed up by the people, which was confirmed by the paper’s reader Yar Muhammad Khan Pushtun. "Our people," he said, "are for constitutional monarchy. They sincerely respect the Shah. But the people want only a people’s government, that is, a government elected from the people and for the people."’36

The paper’s publishers came out vigorously in favoyr of democratisation of political institutions by revising and renovating the constitution, approving a new law on the press, ensuring free parliamentary elections, granting the right to form political parties and trade unions, changing the legal procedure, and separating the three powers—le gislative, executive and judicial.

In contrast to the Wikh-i Zalmaiyan, the Watan movement attached great significance to foreign policy. Its paper carried a world events column, not merely stating facts but also voicing support for national liberation move ments and struggle against colonialism, in particular the struggle for the nationalisation of the Suez Canal and Iranian oil. Its contributors linked the strengthening of inde pendence, peace and security with major social problems: guarantees of social justice and democracy, development of education and health protection, elimination of illiteracy and opposition to despotism, and broader participation by the people in the running of the state.3?

In this period there was yet another group in the coun try which published the newspaper Nida-yi Khalq (The Voice of the People), Judging by its social composition, it gtavitated more towards the democratic strata of society: intellectuals, low-ranking officials, handicraftsmen and shop-keepers—not more than 200 members. Its founder, leader and ideologist was Dr, Abdurrahman Mahmudi. The group’s leadership included Maulana Khan Muhammad Hasta of Mazari Sharif; Muhammad Naim Shayan, an official at the Ministry of Finance; engineer Wali Ahmad Atai; and Mahmudi’s brothers, Lieutenant Muhammad Aman, Muham mad Rahim, a physician, and Muhammad Azim, an official.

Dr. Abdurrahman Mahmudi ‘was the publisher and the author of most of the articles printed in Nida-yi Khalq, while Wali Ahmad Atai was the editor. The first editorial was devoted to the aims of the movement, declaring that it was "the servant and leader of the people, and basing it self on the principles of democracy and the struggle for the people’s rights". Appealing to the people’s interests, the paper set itself the task of showing them "the way to achieve government by the people and for the people". Like the other groupings that had been founded on the basis of the Wikh-i Zalmaiyan, the Nida-yi Khalq group based its political programme on the slogans of democracy and social justice, which amounted to demands for "the establishment of a free parliament, free parliamentary elections, an equilib rium between the legislative, executive and judicial pow ers", and the introduction of a number of bourgeois lib erties: freedom of the press, and freedom of expression, personal immunity and the inviolability of the home.

Rejecting armed struggle, the Nida-yi Khalq group believed that democracy could be guaranteed by promulgating democratic laws, by ensuring that the people knew and de fended their rights. Denouncing despotism and tyranny, the paper declared that it was its duty to struggle "against exploitation and the enemies of the people’s interests’’.38 It suggested that the people should take part in running the country through political parties. The party of the majori ty in parliament should form a government trusted by the people. In parliament it would be confronted by a left-wing minority, which was to act as a regulator of government activity, should the latter begin to "play with the will of the people".39 In other words, it proposed fighting for a bourgeois-democratic form of government, which in that phase of the country’s historical development would be a step foreward in the evolution of its political system.

In the Nida-yi Khalq’s programme considerable empha sis was on social problems, and the articles on these prob lems were sharp and to the point. It levelled strong criticism at the existing situation, exposing the country’s social ills. The archaic system of government, arbitrary rule by offi cials, poverty among ordinary people, bribery and embez zlement in the bureaucratic apparatus, forced labour, eco nomic stagnation, and the total illiteracy of the population were all targets of attack. As there was strict censorship, the newspaper presented its material from different points of view in editorials, and in commentaries on various facts, in readers’ letters and even in the reports by an agency called Del-i Haq (The Heart of the Truth). This enabled it to bypass the obstacles erected by censorship and to speak in defence of the people’s rights. Thus, in the article ‘The ~ Rights of the People!!!" Dr. Mahmudi wrote: "If we tell the people that they have the right, without fear and without interference by the authorities, to elect its representatives to parliament, to form a parliament and a government responsible to the people, that is, to make state affairs and parliamentary debates public, then, naturally, the peo ple will start to fight for their rights. But since the struggle by the people for their rights is regarded here as a violation of security and a threat to national unity... I must apologise to the reader for not saying any more on this matter."40

Like the other groups, Nida-yi Khalq came out against the large-scale entrepreneurs’ monopoly of economic power. Having named countries in which the key sectors of the economy had been nationalised, the paper urged the need to do away with the privileges of a handful of millionaires, "exercising their sway in ihe sphere of astrakhan, sugar and petrol’. The publishers saw one of the causes of the people’s impoverishment in the fact that "money and land are being concentrated in the hands of a limited number of people, i.e., becoming their private monopoly".#1

The paper also wrote on foreign policy issues. The Af ghan-Pakistani relations were deteriorating, and this was being exploited by international reaction in order to bring pressure to bear on Afghanistan. The paper declared that the struggle should be aimed not only at strengthening po litical independence, but also at "ensuring economic and so cial independence". It attacked the policy of Pakistan’s ruling circles whom it called ‘servants of despotism and co lonialism’’ who, resorting to "intrigues and deceit, bring discord and schism into the camp of the champions of progress and national unity’".42

Advancing demands similar to those of other groups, Nida-yi Khalg displayed at the same time a greater degree of radicalism in raising the most urgent problems related to the country’s socio-economic development.

One of the forms of opposition by the bourgeois demo crats at the end of the 1940s and the beginning of the 1950s was their parliamentary activity. A group of oppositionally-minded deputies had emerged within parliament in 1949. The Angar group was represented by Gul Pacha Ul fat, Abdulhai Habibi, and Faiz Muhammad Angar; Watan was represented by Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar, and Nida-yt Khalqg, by Abdurrahman Mahmudi—all formally united in the National Front. Though they belonged to dif ferent political trends, they all adopted the same or a sim ilar position on the main issues. In their speeches in par liament they accused the ‘government of violating the constitution. The most heated debate was over the requi sitioning of grain from the population, which was extreme ly harsh for the peasants. Despite a decision by the major ity of the deputies to reject the relevant bill, the govern ment still demanded that the population sell grain to the state at low prices. Another violation of the constitution was the widespread practice of forced labour (begar), mainly in construction and road building. The opposition castigated the state organs for breaking the law banning begar. Many speeches were made on the activities of US monopolies in Afghanistan. Deputy Abdurrahman Mahmudi expressed the common view of the opposition when he declared: "The agreement with the Morrison-Knudsen company has done great harm to the people and to the country’s economy." The activity of the opposition, however, did not bring about any substantial changes in state administration or in the economic structure. However, due to the activities of the opposition groups and their representatives in parlia ment, the chief demands of the opposition were instru mental in determining the main direction of the political struggle waged by various forces in society. One of the re sults of the opposition’s parliamentary activity was a more clear-cut formulation of the basic tasks of the deputies de fending the people’s interests. Such a formulation was published by the Watan leadership and included the follow-. ing demands: implementation of the principles of de mocracy; amendment and extension of the constitution; elaboration of a new and democratic election law; separa tion of the three powers; freedom to form political parties and organisations; elimination of obstacles in the way of developing a free press; abolition of begar; a ban on private and bank monopolies; creation of an agricultural bank and peasant cooperatives; development of industry; consolidation of national unity by cancelling illegitimate priv ileges; and application of the principles of equality and brotherhood.

In 1951, another private newspaper of a national-bour geois trend, Wulus (People) was issued by the publisher Gul Pacha Ulfat. The paper exposed plunder committed by the ruling circles and analysed the appalling living condi tions of the people. However, it proposed nothing concrete to change the situation, only appealing to the reason of the powers that be, in an attempt to make them respond to the people’s sufferings.45 The publishers expressed loyalty to the king, who was portrayed -as defender of national in terests.

In the summer of 1951, despite the lack of corresponding legislation, the leaders of the Nida-yi Khalg trend made an attempt to organise their followers into a political party to be named Khalq (The People), and in the last issue of their newspaper they published their programme. Having taken as its basis general principles of democracy, the par ty declared that it was committed to "forming a people’s government, elected by the people and acting in the in terests of the people". The Khalq supporters saw the achieve ment of social justice via the elimination of oppression and. exploitation as one of the chief ways of winning de mocracy. It paid great attention to observing and propa gating Islam principles. In the opinion of the party’s ideolog ists, free elections to parliament, election of genuinely popular representatives, formation of a new government which would be responsible to parliament, a revision of the constitution and adoption of fair laws, were the main stages in attaining the basic objectives of its programme.

The founder and leader of the Khalq party was Dr. Mah mudi who headed its ten-member leadership. The party was small and had no broad ties with the masses, its leaders con ducting their propaganda work primarily among students at the law:and medical faculties of Kabul University. In the spring of 1952 the party ceased to exist.

In the late 1940s, students in Kabul joined in political activity. In April 1950, the Students’ Union of Kabul Uni versity was set up whose purpose was-to bring about the political awakening of intellectuals .and students. Its members used the stage and held various conferences to spread their views. They demanded refornis in'socio-econom* ic and cultural life and in the sphere of state administra tion, and also freedom of speech and freedom of the press. The student movement was clearly influenced by the oppositional bourgeois-democratic groups. ** '

-Some of the oppositional ‘trends ‘tied religious slogans. One of these was the illegal group headed by Haji Naim, commandant of Kabul. It included officers and minor officials, members of national and religious minorities, and religious fanatics. Their aim was to smash the outdated ab solute monarchy and establish a caliphate. In March 1950, the group was discovered by the authorities and disbanded; more than 20 of its activists were sentenced to long terms in prison. ;

Together with various bourgeois-democratic trends, oppo sitional activity began in those strata of the ruling class which were compelled to reckon with the growing demands of'the miiddle and petty bourgeoisie now emerging onto the political? scene. They banded together to form the Na tional Club whose founder and president was Sardar Mu hammad Daoud, the king’s cousin. The club was financed by Minister of Economics Abdul Majid Zabuli, the richest merchant in Afghanistan. The oppositional activity of the Dadud "group did not go beyond attempts to weaken the position. of the government of Shah Mahmud Khan and to Bive'his’ post of prime minister to Daoud himself. However, When the National Club members failed to win over national patriotic leaders, they attempted to split the opposition.

The activity of various oppositional groups reached its peak in 1952. In the election to the parliament of the eighth convocation, held in April that year, not a single candidate of the opposition was retumed. The leaders of the bour geois-democratic groups responded by staging a massive de monstration of protest in Kabul against the falsification of the parliamentary election and interference by the author ities in the election campaign. The demonstrators were joined by Kabul students, headed by Babrak Karmal, a student at the law faculty of the university. The demonstra tion was dispersed by troops.

Shortly thereafter the authorities launched a large-scale offensive against the opposition movement. The private newspapers Angar, Watan and Nida-yt Khalq were banned, the oppositional groups dispersed, and their leaders impris oned. Nur Muhammad Taraki was sent to the United States as press attaché at the Afghan embassy. Abdulhai Habi bi left the country some time before these events and set tled in Pakistan, where he issued the journal Azad A fgha nistan (Free Afghanistan) criticising the royal regime. At home he was labelled a traitor and was deprived of Afghan nationality. Abdurrauf Benawa was deported to India. Mir Ghulam Muhammad Ghubar was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment. Dr. Mahmudi was sentenced to nine years. In 1962 he was released, but he soon died of tuber culosis. Many activists and supporters of the opposition were sent to prison, Babrak Karmal among them.

The opposition, short-lived as it was, greatly influenced the country’s social development. The growing demands of various sections of the middle and petty bourgeoisie, and the middle urban strata, reflected in the programmes of a number of opposition movements, showed that the pol icy pursued by the government, which catered only for the interests of large landowners and the top echelons of trad ing capital, was a failure.

After the Second World War the foreign policy of Afghan istan changed somewhat. Strategically important, Afgha nistan figured prominently in US plans for economic pe netration into the countries of the Middle East. Lnme diately after the war the United States won a monopo ly position in Afghan foreign trade, specifically in the export of astrakhan, by imposing its own terms of trade on Afghanistan. Other spheres of the Afghan economy were also involved. As has already been mentioned, in 1946 the US embassy imposed an agreement with the US Mor rison-Knudsen firm. But the firm failed to meet its com mitments and key projects were not completed by the agreed time, i.e., by 1949. Furthermore, the original estimate of $17,5 million was exceeded. The Afghan government had to turn for aid to the US government. In 1949, Afghanistan recei ved a US loan to the tune of $21 million, having agreed to prolong the terms of the agreement with Morrison Knudsen which, . in turn, insisted on vastly increased ' allocations on its projects.46 The construction of irriga tion facilities dragged on for many years, delaying land reclamation and bringing into question the ultimate results of the firm’s activities which thus became, in fact, a major channel of US economic penetration, which enmeshed the country in various obligations and debts. To rein force its position in Afghanistan, in 1951 the USA concluded an agreement with it on technical cooperation under the Truman Programme. So Afghanistan found itself entangled in highly destructive obligations.

The action of Morrison-Knudsen evoked an angry outcry in the country. The issue was debated in the press and in parliament. The state commission set up in 1950 revealed numerous facts proving that the company had caused great harm to the Afghan economy.

In the political sphere, the USA aimed at drawing the country into its zone of influence and undermining its traditional course of neutrality. In the early 1950s the USA increased its efforts to involve Afghanistan in the agegres sive military-political groupings being set up at the time.

Western imperialism used the Pashtun issue as a means of pressure on Afghanistan. A short while before the forma tion of the states of India and Pakistan (August 1947) Afghanistan raised the question of the future of the Pash-. tun population in the north-west of British India. The Af ghan government, backed up by public opinion, demanded self-determination for the Pashtuns living beyond the Afghan borders. But Britain refused to consider the matter. After the formation of the state of Pakistan its ruling cir cles, denying the Pashtun the right to self-determination, suppressed the Pashtun national movement, which wors ened relations with Afghanistan.

In the postwar years, when the imperialist colonial sys tem was falling apart and national liberation movements were gaining in strength and scope, the Soviet Union finn ly pursued a policy of expanding relations with Aghan istan. In 1946, an agreement was signed on border ques tions, demonstrating the Soviet Government’s wish to develop bilateral ties. In 1950, an inter-governmental . trade-and-payments agreement was concluded and this served as a basis for the subsequent trade relations between the two countries.

The expansion of goodneighbourly relations with the Soviet Union helped to strengthen Afghanistan’s sovereignty and created a favourable opportunity for stepping up its foreign policy efforts. In November 1946, Afghanistan joined the United Nations and supported the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In 1950, it signed friend ship treaties with India and Lebanon, established politi cal contacts with Syria, and recognised the People’s Re public of China. In 1950-1951, efforts were made to resolve Afghan-Iranian differences on the use of the Helmand River waters.

Meanwhile the economic situation in the country was going from bad to worse, particularly in agriculture. The prevalence of pre-capitalist forms of exploitation in the countryside hampered the growth of the productive forces. The increasing marketability of agricultural output in those conditions caused a still greater differentiation of the peas antry. Usurious operations, gaining in scope, led to the ex propriation of peasant land. The migration of landless peas ants to the towns became a constant process, but the ab sence of developed industry offered little opportunity of employment and the migrant peasants joined the army of the unemployed. Government attempts to take, the edge off the agrarian problem by resettling farmers and semi nomads from southem to northern regions with large re sources of arable land failed to produce the expected eco nomic and social effect, and only caused grave political and national friction. The government’s hopes that large areas of land would soon come under cultivation in the basin of the rivers Helmand and Arghandab, where irrigation work by Morrison-Knudsen was planned, were also dashed.

The worsening situation as regards Afghan exports, a result of US attempts to monopolise Afghan foreign trade, and the difficulties of transporting export goods across Pakistan because of Afghan-Pakistani tension, badly affec ted the economic situation in the country. Heavy spending on the import of consumer goods impaired home trade. The government’s efforts to find more resources by increasing taxes on small-scale production, livestock, etc. caused a rise in prices, particularly on food. Hopes that large trading sherkats would take part in the seven-year economic devel opment plan, announced in 1946, were not justified. The sherkats, receiving financial and other privileges as part of the measures to stimulate their industrial activity, preferred more profitable.trade and carefully avoided investment in industrial development. The acute food crisis made the government turn for aid to the USA, which granted Afghanistan a loan in 1953 for the purchase of American grain. Thus, Afghanistan found itself in ever greater economic dependence on the USA.

In a situation of economic setbacks and political instab ility the Shah Mahmud government resigned. The new cabinet was formed by Sardar Muhammad Daoud, the king’s cousin. The character of political power did not change, but new people were brought into state adminis tration bodies, people who took into account the opinion of the politically active sections of society and the changed international situation, and who were prepared to effect certain changes to bolster up the positions of the exploit er upper crust. However, such changes were impossible without developing the economy and the productive forces. On the whole, the programme of the Daoud cabinet was designed to promote the growth of capitalist relations, with the increasing participation of the state in economic activity. The policy of so-called guided economy announced by Muhammad Daoud offered a chance to expand the social base of the regime.

Among the first measures taken by the government was a change in the credit system, made through the banks new ly established in 1954. Middle and small businessmen were now able to receive credit. The creation of the agricultu ral bank, which granted loans at lower interest rates than the money-lenders, revived agricultural production and somewhat restricted money-lending activity, though it was unable to compete successfully with the latter as the bank’s resources were too meagre. The purchasing prices of astra khan, wool, and industrial crops were increased, and so were the loans granted to the producers. Credit coopera tives were set up to facilitate commercial activities in agricul ture. Though all these ‘measures concemed only the upper stratum of the peasantry, they nevertheless stimulated to some extent the growth of agricultural production. The establishment of banks with mixed capital, which then took part in the activities of the bigger trade-industrial sherkats, increased state participation in economic development.

By 1954 the government was making wider use of foreign capital to develop the national economy. Foreign companies, primarily American, West German, and Japanese, which sought ways of investing their capital directly, be came more active in the country. The Afghan intemational airlines company, Aryana, was set up in 1954 with the par ticipation of Panamerican capital. In the same year the West German electrotechnical company Siemens moved into the Afghan market, flooded the country with its goods and opened a maintenance and repair plant. Japanese and West German companies took part in the construction of the Franklin printing press for the Ministry of Education. A ceramics factory was built in the city of Qunduz with the help of Japanese capital. According to the law on for eign investment, adopted in April 1954, not less than 51 per cent of the shares in mixed companies with foreign capital went to the Afghan side.*

To increase the revenues from domestic resources, new laws were devised on income tax paid by private indus trialists and trade-industrial companies, and measures were taken to improve the accounting system. In particular, a school of accountancy was opened in 1953, together with courses for accounting clerks.

In 1954, preparatory work began prior to drawing up economic development plans. To this end, a consultative council was set up at the Ministry of Finance. It included economic, commercial, financial and technical experts and was headed by General Abdurrahim-zai, adviser to the Daoud cabinet. After a protracted analysis of the economic situa tion in the country, and consultations at the Ministry of Finance, various committees were set up to deal with fi nance, trade, mining, agriculture, transport and communi cations. The committees were to draw up specific proposals to be included in the general economic development plan.*® In addition, a department of economics was set up at the same Ministry to draw up a state budget and supervise state spending. To stimulate foreign trade, the Pashtany Te jaraty Bank (Afghan Commercial Bank) was opened, with an authorised capital of 125 million afghanis,49 and the so-called building fund, which lent money to officials with housing problems, was reorganised into construction and hypothecary bank financing civil construction.

During the Muhammad Daoud govemment trading and transport companies mushroomed all over the country: by the start of the 1960s there had already been 185 private and mixed firms, with 1,900 largeand middle-scale traders operating in home and foreign trade.5°

The economic policy announced by the Daoud govern ment suited the purposes of the ruling circles, which was to develop capitalism in the country under the state’s uncon ditional control. ;

In the early 1950s, Afghanistan was still experiencing economic difficulties, which compelled it to tum to the USA for aid. In 1954, the US government granted Afgha nistan a loan of $18.5 million to finance the delayed con struction of the Helmand Project,51, thereby increasing its influence in the country. Disillusionment was spreading in Afghanistan over the activities of the Western monopo lies, which were of almost no use to the Afghan economy but only derived huge benefits for themselves.

In this situation, economic and trade ties with the So viet Union were becoming ever more important. In 1954, agreements were signed between the two countries on the construction of a large bakery and an asphalt and con crete-mixing factory in Kabul. The construction of these two large enterprises was. highly appreciated by the Afghan pub lic, which noted the Soviet contribution to the development of the Afghan economy. Soviet-Afghan cooperation proved to be a major factor strengthening the national sovereign ty of Afghanistan and its international position in a situa tion of incessant pressure from the West, which wanted to force Afghanistan to follow in the wake of its policies. The expansion of relations with the USSR and other socialist countries* was significant for Afghanistan in that the sit uation in the Middle East in the mid-1950s was causing great damage to the interests of that country in the area. The fact that in 1954 a US-Pakistani treaty on American military aid to Pakistan was signed alarmed public opin ion and the ruling circles in Afghanistan, which regarded it as a threat to peace and security in the region. After the conclusion of the Turkish-Pakistani pact under US aegis in 1954, Afghanistan was increasingly pressurised into joining the pact and giving up its neutrality. At the same time wide use was made of the anti-Soviet propaganda ploy of a "threat from the north’. However, Afghanistan clearly stated that it was not going to join any military-political blocs.

The stepping up of US military-strategic efforts pro voked a negative response in Afghanistan. The military aid given by US imperialism to Pakistan was regarded there as an attempt to turn the North-Western Border Province of Pakistan, populated mostly by Pashtuns, into a bridge head for anti-Afghan strategic schemes. In Afghanistan; calls for support to the Pashtun national liberation move ment in that province became ever more insistent. The population on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border had much in common in ethnic terms. The idea of the na tional unity of all Pashtuns was in the air, which showed that, as the bourgeois nation was taking shape, a nation al-bourgeois ideology was emerging in Afghanistan. Ac tions in support of the Pashtuns’ right to self-determination were now often accompanied by anti-colonial statements, which were becoming part of public thinking. The move ment of the Pashtuns across the border in Pakistan was viewed as part and parcel of the international anti-colonial . and anti-imperialist movement.

In 1954, the Daoud government announced the termi nation of the 1921 Anglo-Afghan treaty. In the summer of 1954, the elders of some of the Pashtun tribes living on both sides of the border, to whom the Afghan authorities promised every support in their struggle for national rights, held a meeting. Afghanistan’s official position on the Pash tun issue amounted to the demand that the Pashtuns liv ing in the territory of Pakistan should be granted the right to self-determination. It was stressed that the Afghan offi cial circles were prepared to settle this matter with Pakis tan through peaceful, political negotiations.

The Afghan posture on the Pashtun issue was a major component of its neutrality and non-participation in mili tary blocs as expressed in Afghanistan’s negative attitude to the Baghdad Pact set up in 1955 and in its active role in the Bandung Conference of Afro-Asian countries, at which it joined the countries that championed peace and international cooperation.

Tension over the Pashtun issue built up after the Pakis tani government decided in 1955 to create a single province of West Pakistan, which was to comprise all the administra tive units that existed in the western part of that state, including those populated by Pashtuns. The national or ganisations of the Pakistani Pashtuns regarded this action as a further infringement of their right to national au tonomy.

The creation of the West Pakistan Province set off a tide of indignation in Afghanistan. The Daoud government issued an official protest. Meetings and demonstrations were held in many Afghan cities, denouncing the, suppres sion of the Pashtun national movement by the Pakis tani ruling circles.

The imperialists in the West sought to use the worsen ing of Afghan-Pakistani relations as a means of pressure on Afghanistan, tried to undermine its foreign policy course and bring the country within the sphere of their influence. Pakistan severed political and trade relations with Afgha nistan in May 1955; all Afghan consulates and trade missions were closed down and goods in transit across Pa kistani territory were stopped. The sharp reduction in foreign trade had a grave effect on the Afghan economy. Amidst the rising tension in its relations with Pakistan, the Afghan government announced a state of emergency and general mobilisation in May 1955.53 Simultaneously, Ka bul supported the mediatory efforts of some Middle East countries to settle the Afghan-Pakistani conflict. Those efforts, however, were resented in the USA, which saw them as a threat to its imperialist plans. The Pakistani gov ernment, for its part, dragged out the settlement, demand ing that Afghanistan should discontinue its support to the Pashtun movement. The ban on the shipment of goods ac ross Pakistan méant, in fact, an economic blockade of Af ghanistan and, in the view of ‘those who had organised it, was to force Afghanistan to make concessions.

At that hour of trial Afghanistan turned for help to the Soviet Union and sent a delegation to Moscow in May 1955. In June that year a Soviet-Afghan treaty was signed on the shipment of goods across the territory of both countries. The economic blockade of Afghanistan was thus breached. The treaty proved important in that it strengthened the international position of Afghanistan and helped it to cope with its economic difficulties.

After they failed in their attempts to exert crude pres sure on Afghanistan, the imperialists, who had kindled the Afghan-Pakistani conflict, had to seek ways of settling it. In September 1955, an understanding was reached on nor malising relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan, af ter which Afghan consulates and trade missions were re opened in Pakistan and the shipment of foreign trade goods to Afghanistan across Pakistani territory was resumed.?*

In November 1955, a special parliamentary session was followed by a Loy Jirgah meeting. The participants in the meeting spoke in favour of continued support of the move ment of the Pashtuns in Pakistan, of not recognising Pash tunistan as part of Pakistan without the consent of the Pashtuns, and called for a build-up of Afghanistan’s de fence potential.55

The development in the region made even the section of the Afghan ruling classes, who advocated the bourgeois evo lution of the country, increasingly aware of the true essence of the neocolonialist policy pursued by Western imperial ist states with regard to Afghanistan, a policy which under mined the foundations of its independence. Foreign policy was reappraised and, as a consequence, there was a shift from the orientation on the capitalist West. The national patriotic forces of Afghan society saw that the Soviet Union and other socialist countries were their sincere friends, and so they looked for assistance from them in improving the national economy and strengthening of Afghanistan’s in ternational position.

In December 1955, a Soviet Government delegation ar rived in Kabul at the invitation of the Afghan Government. After the talks, both sides declared their intention to ex pand Soviet-Afghan relations and decided to prolong the term of the 1931 Treaty on Neutrality and Mutual Non Aggression. The joint communiqué said the Soviet Union was prepared to grant Afghanistan credit to the value of $100 million on easy terms for economic development. An agreement to that effect was signed in January 1956.

From 1957 onwards the Soviet Union began to assist Afghanistan in geological survey and in training native per sonnel. Under the agreement on expanding Soviet-Afghan technical and economic cooperation, signed in Moscow in 1959, the Soviet Union helped Afghanistan in the con struction of the 680-kilometre highway pane pues

andahar. During the same period friendly re Le ilodamet also beirig established with other socialist countries: Bulgaria, Poland, Czechoslovakia and the SDE

Relying on financial aid from the Soviet Union, the Afghan Government drew up the first five-year plan of social and economic development (1956/1957-1960 /1961). The plan envisaged the priority development of agriculture, primarily irrigation, and also of power engineering, trans port and communications, to be financed by the state. The total sum of state investment earmarked for the first five year plan was 10.6 billion afghanis.57

To make a fuller use of internal resources, a system of revenues from various incomes was devised, and taxes and customs duties were increased. The bulk of the allocations— about _75 per cent—was to come by way of foreign aid and loans.58

Soviet technical and economic aid greatly contributed to the achievement of the main objectives of the first five year plan. At that time it accounted for more than 70 per cent of the entire foreign aid to Afghanistan. With Soviet assistance Afghanistan started the construction of its larg est economic projects, which constituted the basis of the developing public sector: the 100,000-kilowatt Naghlu hydroelectric power station; the Jangalak motor repair plant in Kabul; the Jalalabad irrigation system, a motor way across the Hindu Kush, and the Sher Khan river port on the Amu Darya. Some time later an understanding was reached on assistance in prospecting and geological survey for construction.

The main emphasis in the five-year plan was on agricul ture, in which 85 per cent of the population were then employed. As many as 2.3 billion afghanis were allocated to agriculture, of this, about 1,060 million to be spent on con tinuing the construction of the Helmand project.59 The programme of social development in the countryside was drawn up and the first steps taken to implement it, with considerable emphasis on combating agricultural pests, on irrigation and rural road building, and also on developing primary education. All of these measures suited the ruling circles, which wanted to adapt the existing agrarian relations to the needs of capitalist development. At the same time such a policy did not change the form of landown ership. The landowners’ total monopoly of land helped preserve the feudal exploitation of the peasants.

The results of the fulfilment of the first five-year plan as regards its main objectives proved to be below the set targets. The average annual growth rate of the gross social product was 1.5 per cent.69 But the existence of a number of large new enterprises in the public sector of the economy, including some in the infrastructure, created conditions for more rapid progress in the next period.

In the latter half of the 1950s, the number of primary, secondary and vocational schools increased. As it was in the interest of the state developing along bourgeois lines to draw women into public affairs, the obligatory wearing of the yashmak by women was cancelled in 1959—a measure that was backed by broad sections of the Afghan youth and women. This enabled women to do socially useful work. According to Afghan researcher G, D. Panjsheri, the first groups of nurses kegan working in several outpatient hospi tals as early as 1959; several women were employed at the state-owned printing press, and by 1962 about 500 women were working in various sectors of the state apparatus.

Certain changes were taking place in the socio-class structure of Afghan society. The wide scope of money-lend ing operations in the countryside helped to increase the number of private estates and furthered social differen tiation among the peasants.

The economic policy of the Daoud govemment, which expanded state participation and state control over the major spheres of production, somewhat limited the mo nopoly of the larger trade sherkats of commercial activity, including foreign trade. Therefore it was supported by a considerable section of the bourgeoisie. However, petty bourgeois circles were, on the whole, opposition-minded, though, in contrast to the period from the late 1940s to the early 1950s, these sentiments did not grow into -an opposition movement. Within the framework of state capitalist policy pursued by the Daoud government, the petty bourgeoisie was not given sufficient opportunity to ex pand its business. In addition, the existing political system restricted its participation in public affairs.

The number of industrial enterprises was growing, as was the number of workers. In the early 1960s, the working class included 15,800 people employed at factory-type en terprises. :

However as it was numerically small and unorganised and as the level of its political awareness was still low, it was a long way from occupying a place of its own in public life.

The policy of strengthening central power, backed up by major economic measures, limited the power of separat ist-minded tribal khans and elders. But despite resistance, covert and overt, on the part of the khans, who were si multaneously rich landowners, the ruling circles man aged to carry out a number of administrative, economic and cultural measures in the area populated by the tribes.

The Muslim clerical elite appeared to be the most conser vative social force which, allied with the landed aristocra cy, opposed socio-economic change. However the changes taking place in the country could not but influence the positions of that social estate as a whole. There emerged a social stratum which gradually began to call for a re newal of many outworn traditional attitudes in an attempt to adapt Islam to the needs of the time. Seeking to use religion for its own purposes, the government backed loyal members of the Muslim clergy, appointing some of them to key posts in the state apparatus, in education and in courts.

Afghanistan’s equitable and mutually beneficial relations with the socialist countries helped it to strengthen its na tional sovereignty and consolidate its international posi tion, forcing the imperialist powers to manoeuvre and seek new ways and means of implementing their schemes with regard to that country. In 1956, the USA agreed to assist Afghanistan in developing its agriculture, mining industry and education. In 1958, Pakistan granted Afghanistan the right to ship goods across Pakistani territory. In the late 1950s, West German monopolies stepped up their activi ties by taking part in the construction of power plants and factories in the manufacturing industry.

In 1962, Afghanistan launched the second five-year plan for social and economic development (1962-1967). The main stress was on the development of the basic sectors of the economy: mining, power engineering, transport, and agriculture. Much attention was given to building factories for the light industry. It was also planned to com plete the construction of a number of projects in the commu nications started during the first five-year plan. An impor tant part of the new plan was personnel training. The total sum of capital investment under the new plan was 25 billion afghanis. As before, provision was made for the extensive use of foreign aid (to the sum of 18 billion afghanis).62 Of the 7 billion afghanis allocated from local sources, only 400 million were invested by the private sector, the rest being invested by the state.63 Though the second five-year plan was named the "industrialisation plan", much empha sis, as before, was on developing agriculture. Capital in vestment in agriculture was increased by 240 per cent as compared with the first five-year plan, and amounted to 4.4 billion afghanis,64 with the main emphasis on the de velopment of those sectors which were to develop the raw material and export base.

As in the period of the first five-year plan, the Soviet Union offered substantial aid to Afghanistan in its efforts to fulfil the second five-year plan. The Soviet-Afghan agree ment on technical cooperation, signed in 1961 in Moscow, provided for Soviet assistance, in geological survey, pros pecting for, and extraction of, oil and gas, the building of chemical plants, road building, the development of ag riculture, and personnel training. In 1962, an understand ing was reached on. assistance in housing construction.

The attitude of Western countries to assisting Afgha nistan in the fulfilment of its second five-year plan hinged on the general goals of the imperialist countries in the region. The USA, contrary to its former statements, re fused to offer substantial aid and cooperation on the basis of long-term programmes, and agreed merely to participate in the construction of a few projects. A similar stance was taken by some other Western countries. The reduction of Western aid made it harder for Afghanistan to complete its main projects and called into question the practicability of the five-year plan as a whole.

Afghanistan’s policy of positive neutrality ran coun ter to the plans of the imperialist powers and weakened their influence in that part of Asia. In the early 1960s, the Western imperialists resumed their attempts to undermine the country’s foreign policy, which did not suit them. The Western press distorted the essence of Soviet Afghan relations and issued absurd allegations that the USSR was using its aid to Afghanistan for its own political ends in the region. It even alleged that the Soviet Union was ; attempting to "invade India". But as the flyblown assertions about a "Soviet threat" proved ineffective, Western pro paganda set about discrediting Afghanistan’s policy of neutralism. Afghan positive neutrality, it was alleged, might isolate the country in the region, which presented a danger to its "traditional classes". This propaganda campaign was ‘accompanied by pressure on Afghanistan.

The main pressure point was still the differences be tween Afghanistan and Pakistan over the Pashtun issue. By the beginning of 1961 tension had again increased on the Afghan-Pakistani border. Afghan Ambassador to Washing ton, M. H. Maiwandwal, protested to the US Government against US weapon deliveries to Pakistan. In September 1961, the Pakistani Government again closed Afghan consulates and trade missions on its territory, which resulted in the suspension of Afghan export shipment ac ross Pakistan. This led to the rupture of diplomatic rela tions between the two countries. In the difficult economic situation caused by the suspension of shipments, the West ern imperialists were building up pressure on Afghanistan, insistently reiterating the‘idea that its conflict with Pa kistan could be settled only along the lines of cooperation with the West and the member countries of military-polit ical groupings. In 1962, an Iranian-Afghan agreement on transit deliveries of Afghan goods across Iran was signed.

The economic and social measures being implemented in Afghanistan influenced the evolution of social relations. The ‘‘guided-economy" policy was designed to restrict ar chaic social relations and provide broader opportunities for the business activities of the middle and petty bourgeoisie. However, the ruling circles did not carry through any measures designed to meet the interests of the working people. The class character of government policy was most pronounced in agrarian relations. The planned adaptation of existing feudal institutions to the requirements of the de veloping capitalist sector in agriculture did not contradict the economic and social interests of big landowners. Insignificant measures, such as the increase in state credits, the creation of credit cooperatives, and a rise in the purchas ing prices of farm produce, did not change the form of land ownership and social relations in the countryside.. Underdeveloped agriculture limited the economic possi bility of carrying through the planned measures and ham pered the business activity of the petty and middle bour geoisie. The agonising and perverse character of capital ist evolution had a negative effect on the economic posi tion of the direct agricultural producers, above all the poor peasants.

The numerical growth of the industrial proletariat, that is, of workers employed in modern factories, and its devel opment into an independent class, gave rise to contradic tions between labour and capital—a new phenomenon in the sphere of social relations in Afghanistan. The slow rate of industrial growth combined with continuing agra rian overpopulation increased the number of the unem ployed. The ruling circles were confronted with the need to solve the problems attecting the working class. Most important among them were the unsettled relations between workers and employers, the civil rights of workers, their role in social production, and the rational distribution of labour resources. However, the National Employment Committee, set up in 1962, confined itself merely to studying these problems.

The state-capitalist measures taken by the government, and its social programme of "supra-class unity" stimulated activity among some of the middle sections of society, as a result of which the social base of the regime became a little broader. A larger expansion of that base was impossi ble because of the class character of the government’s poli cy which, on the whole, was aimed at defending the inter ests of the ruling upper crust.

The country’s. economic and social advancement was slowed down a great deal by the preservation of outdated political institutions, a fact which provoked dissatisfaction among the champions of change. During its rule the Daoud government did not satisfy a smgle demand concerning the reform of state administration as proposed by the opposi tion in the early 1950s. All of this left a negative imprint on the political situation in the country.

The class limitations of the regime’s domestic policy, combined with its weakness in the sphere of foreign poli cy, undermined its stability. The Afghan-Pakistani conflict, which had grown acute in the early 1960s, and the worsen ing of relations with Western imperialist circles, caused concern among the conservatives who, naturally, preferred the traditional ways of political and economic devel opment. They saw the situation as the result of the lack of flexibility in government policies, which had, narrowed down Afghanistan’s possibility for manoeuvre in its rela tions with other countries. Oriented on Western support, these forces attacked the foreign policy of the Daoud govem ment. In March 1963, the Daoud government had to resign.

The new cabinet was formed by Muhammad Yusuf, who had been the Minister of Mining and Industry under Daoud. On the whole, the class set-up of state power did not chan ge, but the advent of anew govemment marked the beginn ing of political changes in keeping with the growing require ments of the country’s economic evolution.

In its economic programme the Yusuf government an nounced that it would continue the former "guided econ omy" policy, but would give greater support to private ini tiative.

In the political area the government intended to intro duce certain changes in state administration. It announced, in particular, that a new constitution would be drawn up to extend civil rights, a new election law would be passed, and political parties organised.

Simultaneously efforts were made to normalise Afghan Pakistani relations. Both countries held talks in the spring of 1963 through the mediation of Iran. As a result, diplo matic relations between them were restored, the consu lates were reopened in both countries, and Afghanistan was given the right to‘ship its goods through Pakistan.

The programme put forward by the new govemnment, and its practical measures were welcomed by the public at large, which began to give increasing support to state-po litical change. Though a large section of the public adhered to a national-bourgeois position, bourgeois-democratic de mands, typical only of a small number of opposition groups in the late 1940s and early 1950s, were gradually expanding in scope. Now they were advanced at the national level. As there was no private press, nor any political organisations at that time, public views were expressed in the semi-official press, which began to carry an increasing number of articles on agricultural problems and the position of the peas ants, to criticise the dominance of money-lenders in the countryside, to focus public attention on the continued impoverishment of the peasants and examine the problem of agrarian overpopulation. The debt bondage of the peas ants was named as one of the main factors intensifying so cial contradictions in rural areas.6

Public concern was also aroused by the many unsolved ‘social problems faced by the urban population. The indus ‘trial proletariat was growing, and so was the number of trans port, construction and agricultural workers, and the nation al press pointed to the need to solve the social problems of these categories of working people, which also warranted public attention. The most important of these problems were, as was noted before, the unsettled relations between hired labour and employers and also the problem of the la bour market. After insistent demands that an attempt be made to resolve these problems, the draft of a new labour law was drawn up in 1965, and it was necommended that it be extended to the private sector as well.§

At a time when the working people i not advance independent ideological and political programmes, their demands were included in the programmes of the bourgeois democratic forces, that is, the petty and middle bourgeoisie and the intelligentsia. The struggle by the radical members of these forces for the earliest possible democratisation of state-political institutions, in opposition of those who ad vocated a gradual adaptation of the existing political system to the needs of bourgeois development, largely determined the general direction of Afghanistan’s domestic political activity in those years.

With the appearance of more developed forms of social awareness and a higher level of political activity among var ious sections of society, the domestic political practice of. the ruling circles also changed. In the official press there appeared more frequent calls for a democratisation of pub lic life on the principles of the "unity and cooperation" of all classes, with the emphasis often placed on"improving the living conditions of the masses". Popular support for government measures was regarded as an earnest of their successful implementation.. Therefore many government declarations had a "social aspect". Official propaganda at tached special significance to influencing intellectuals and students who, in the opinion of government circles, were to play the important role of a link between the government and the masses in implementing the policy of change. Know ing that radical views were widespread among students, the ruling circles, in an attempt to enlist their cooperation and also to retain control over all forms of political activi ty in the country, called upon the public to prevent mani festations of "fanaticism and free-thinking" and ‘"‘to respect law and order".67

In its economic policy the Yusuf government planned to expand the activity of private capital. On the one hand, the authorities made persistent efforts to establish tighter con trol over large groups of entrepreneurs who sought to satisfy their own narrow, self-seeking interests, and to make more effective use of their capital in order to fulfil the eco nomic development plans. On the other hand, the govern ment wanted to grant benefits to the private sector in or der to stimulate its participation in the expansion of indus trial construction. Great attention was paid to mixed state and private enterprises in the framework of the "guided mixed economy’’. Having undertaken to finance the devel opment of key sectors of the economy (power engineering, transport, and mining), the state provided the private sec tor with the opportunity to invest more in other industries that were less capital-intensive and brought a quick return. At the same time the areas and amounts of private capital investment were taken into account in the overall plans for the country’s economic development. The heightened at tention given to the development of private enterprise was backed up by the demand to hand over a number of state enterprises to the private sector. However, those measures did not substantially expand participation by private capital in industrial construction. Private capital still pre ferred more profitable commerce.

Under the programme of socio-economic measures, a new constitution was drafted and discussed by the Coun cil of Ministers late in 1963. In August 1964, afier it had been completed and approved by the government, the draft was published; in September that year it was approved at Loy Jirgah sessions and in October, by the king. The new Basic Law confirmed the preservation of a con stitutional monarchy in Afghanistan, with the king having supreme executive, legislative and judicial powers. Mem bers of the royal family were not allowed to occupy posts in parliament, the government and the Supreme Court. Provision was made for the separation of the three powers. The constitution confirmed the principles of national sovereignty and civil rights and liberties: the inviolability of the home and property; freedom of speech, of the press and of assembly; the equality of all citizens before the law; and freedom of residence and movement. An im portant new provision ‘ii the constitution was the dec lared right to form societies and political parties, with a reservation that their activities and aims should not con tradict the Basic Law. pee ae Pashtu and Dari were declared the official languages of Afghanistan, with Pashtu being the national language, which was in keeping with the spirit of the developing na tional-bourgeois ideology (Pashtun nationalisin). ‘Islam’ of the Khanifite variety was declared the state religion. At thé same time the Basic Law limited the influence .of the Mus lim clergy, specifically in education-and legal procedure, which were placed under the direct control of the state. Changes were introduced in the constitutional -provi sions regarding parliament. The deputies to its lower house— the National Assembly—were now to be elected by direct vote for a term of four years. Its chairman was to be elect ed from among the deputies. In the upper house—the Se nate—two-thirds of the deputies were appointed by the king and one-third was elected. Its chairman was also appoint ed by the king. The government was individually and collectively answerable to the National Assembly, whose deputies could demand that the cabinet of ministers report on their work. The lower house could declare a vote of no confidence in the government. However, the king had the right to dissolve parliament, thereby limiting its control over the government. _ Thus, the broader functions given to parliament accord ing to the constitution, together with the right to form political organisations, provided more opportunities for politically active sections of the population to participate in state and public affairs.

On the whole, the 1964 constitution, which was largely bourgeois in character, was designed to protect the inter ests of the ruling classes and reflected the general need to update the state structure. But the ruling circles that were carrying out the constitutional reform could not ignore public demands for democratic changes.

The adoption of the constitution was a significant event in the life of the country. The rights and liberties proclaimed in it, the formal limitation of the prerogatives of the royal family, the extension of parliamentary functions, the freedom to form political organisations, the restriction of the sphere of influence of the orthodox theologians, and other legislative changes served to stimulate the activity of public movements reflecting various political trends, in cluding the general democratic trend. Following the adoption of the new constitution, the campaign by those forces de manding further democratic reforms had a growing in fluence on the political situation in the country.

The period from the adoption of the constitution to a parliamentary election was declared transitional, and during that period legislative power was in the hands of the govern ment. A new election law, which for the first time gave women the right to vote in elections; came into force in May 1965.

The election campaign revealed the growing interest of people from various social strata in the work of legislative bodies. The nominees got the opportunity to address the electorate, though under the supervision of the authorities. The election was held in August and September 1965. The majority of the 216 deputies58 elected to the lower house of parliament were supporters of the government pro gramme of reforms. For the first time a small group of representatives of democratic circles, including those of the radical trend, were elected to parliament.

At one of its first sessions, on October 24, 1965, par liament was expected to pass a vote of confidence in the gov ernment formed, with royal assent, by Muhammad Yusuf. However, on that day thousands of people, many of them students from Kabul University, gathered at the parliament building (some even managed to get inside) demanding permission to be present at the parliamentary session. The session was adjourned. On the following day, large demonstra tions in Kabul ended in clashes with the police. The dem onstrators demanded changes in the proposed cabinet and accused a number of ministers of corruption and bribery. The authorities used force against the demonstrators and some of the students were injured. Kabul University and schools were closed for a week.

The Yusuf government was supported by the majority of the deputies and was then approved by the king. On Oc tober 26, the head of the new cabinet set forth the govern ment programme, stressing faithfulness to the spirit of the constitution, and called for social measures to improve re lations between landowners and peasants, between employ ers and workers. The government confirmed the policy of developing the "guided mixed economy’ on a planned basis. In foreign policy, the principles of non-alignment and positive neutrality remained unchanged.

At the same time the government said nothing about the dramatic events of October 24 and 25, and this was viewed as disregard for public sentiments. Student disturbances in Kabul continued. On October 29, the Yusuf government resigned.

The new cabinet was headed by Muhammad Hashim Maiwandwal, who had been the Minister of Information and the Press in the previous government. According to the members of the new cabinet, its programme could be summed up as encouragement to the population to take part in political affairs. Speaking about his desire to promote progress, the new prime minister stressed that the govern ment intended to give more thought to the conditions of workers and small farmers, and to create the conditions nec essary for the free functioning of political parties and the press. The main lines of economic and foreign policy re mained almost unchanged.

In its proclamations the Maiwandwal government focused on problems concerning the position of students, though the main aim was to pacify them. However, student protest actions did not abate, often going beyond purely academic demands. In December 1965, demonstrations and meetings were held at Kabul University, and leaflets were distributed. Some of the students involved were arrested.

Meanwhile the newly elected parliament approved, af ter prolonged debate and in accordance with the consti tution, the bill on political parties. This was doubtlessly a major gain for the democratic forces, as it made it possible to organise political action. However, under the law, po litical parties were placed under government control, which restricted open political and ideological struggle.*

The 1960s saw an acceleration of economic growth in the framework of the second five-year plan (1962-1967). Thanks to Soviet technical aid large industrial enterprises and economic infrastructure projects were either complet ed or were under construction: the 680-kilometre-long motor highway linking Kushka, Herat and Qandahar (1965); the 470-kilometre highway between Kabul and port Sher Khan, built in. difficult conditions across the Hindu Kush

range (1966); the Naghlu hydroelectric power station with ‘a capacity of 100,000 kilowatts, the biggest of its kind in Afghanistan (1967); the Jalalabad irrigation system with the Darunta power station (1965), which made it possible to establish four farms in the region in subsequent years; gas fields in the north, and a 365-kilometre gas pipeline between Afghanistan and Soviet Central Asia (1968), af ter which Afghanistan began. to export gas to the Soviet Union; and the Kabul Polytechnic (1968), to mention just a few. The number of small artisan enterprises increased considerably. Many of them were fitted out with primitive machines and equipment. The role of private capital, which was encouraged by the government, somewhat in creased. The attraction of foreign loans and credits for financing Afghan five-year plans was followed by arise in for eign capital investments, and this process was further promo ted by the 1967 law on private foreign capital investments.

While the economic assistance given to Afghanistan by the Soviet Union and other socialist countries was expand ing, the Western states, the USA above all, were cutting back their financial participation in the construction proj ects for the public sector of the Afghan economy. The general talk by the ruling circles in the imperialist countries about their economic aid to Afghanistan was not followed by practical assistance, which betrayed their unwilling ness to facilitate accelerated economic growth in the coun try. The protracted construction of the irrigation system in the Helmand valley was a case in point, and the prospects for the completion of the project were bleak.

With the fulfilment of the two first five-year plans, the public sector in the economy expanded considerably. State investment in economic development accounted for almost all the total allocations for both five-year plans (90.3 and 98.3 per cent respectively). The structure of the public sector also changed. New industries emerged: motor repair, gas, chemical, cement and house building. The output of state-owned enterprises increased 4.4-fold over the period: of the two five-year plans.69 Industrial construction went hand in hand with the training of national personnel, for the most part industrial workers and technicians. The ma jority of Afghan skilled workers were trained at major proj ects built with the technical and economic assistance of the Soviet Union. The number of workers and technicians trained by 1967 totalled 30,000.79

The changes in the economy caused by the construction of industrial projects in the public sector, were followed by a growth inthe productive forces, which inevitably influenced the social make-up and, consequently, the alignment of major class forces. In the process of the national-bourgeois evolution, those sections of the population whose activity was one way or another linked with the nascent capitalist structures were expanding and gaining in strength, These were the national bourgeoisie, the industrial proletariat, the technical intelligentsia, the officials, a part of the petty bourgeoisie, and the students. In the mid-1960s the first ideological trends emerged, reflecting the interests of those social strata. Later on those trends grew into independent political parties and groups. In a situationin which the pop: ulation was for the most part illiterate, especially the rural population, which was disunited and psychologically con servative, the political struggle in the towns became particu larly tense.

The radical sections of the intelligentsia and students, the most educated and politically conscious part of the population, was in the van of the political movement. At the initial stage of the formation of political parties differing in ideological and political programmes (the mid-1960s), the publications in privately issued newspapers and perio dicals were the chief form of political activity. Private news papers appeared after the new law on the press was ap proved by parliament in 1965. Most of the publications were critical or debated possible ways of achieving the social, eco nomic and political development of the country. Most of the private newspapers served as the ideological and organi sational nuclei of future political parties.

As more and more political groups emerged, the ruling circles presented their own programme as a universal means of satisfying the interests of the entire population. Such a policy, it was stressed, would be based on drawing various social groups, united in a "front of progressive forces", into the common effort to ensure social progress and democ racy.’1 These views gave rise to the idea of forming a political party which, guided by the interests of the ruling classes and supported by the government, would control social and political activity and have a monopoly of influence over public opinion. Prime Minister Maiwandwal tried to create such a party.

In a speech delivered on Independence Day in August 1966 the Prime Minister set forth the main provisions of his party’s programme, which were designed to implement "progressive and democratic ideals". Therefore the party was named the Progressive Democratic Party. The aims and the tactics of the progressive democratic movement were described in detail in its newspaper Mossawat (Equality), first published in January 1967. The chief aim of the party, the paper wrote, was to "open up the way to economic re forms (on the basis of the "guided economy") and to posi tive reforms in social, cultural and intellectual life’. The current task of the party was "the struggle in the name of the principles of Islam, constitutional monarchy, national ism, democracy, and socialism", "for economic, political and social democracy; for the rights of the dispossessed and oppressed classes; against poor living conditions, social in justice and the remains of feudalism"? 2

In, advancing this reformist programme, the Progressive Democrats declared that it should be carried out through a "silent", or "lawful" revolution, with the laws and the constitution strictly observed. Elaborating on this thought, the paper wrote: ‘‘By supporting the ideas of progressive de mocracy, it is possible, in a peaceful and lawful way and in accordance with historical reality, to break the chains of oppression and build an edifice of freedom and genuine equality".73 As for practical ways of eliminating social injustice, the party’s ideologists proposed that new labour legislation be worked out to grant the workers the right to participate in administering enterprises and receiving a part of their profit.?4 Concerning the exploiter classes, the pub lishers of the newspaper recommended admonition and exhortation. Explanatory work must be conducted among them, the paper wrote, for "they make mistakes, and we sympathise with them, explain their mistakes to them ina peaceful, brotherly way, so that they could reform".?5

"The Mossawat paid special attention to the desperate plight of the poor peasants. In its publications on this issue, it adhered to the position of social criticism. Here is what it wrote in an article entitled "Our Peasants": "The posi tion of our peasants is the worst manifestation of the epoch of feudalism in our age. Hardships and misery are the peasant’s eternal lot. He works, creates values, but the fruit of his labour is misappropriated by his masters. He has nothing!"’? 6 Acting as champions of social justice, the Progres sive Democrats proposed that an agrarian reform be carried out, which would not, however, change social relations in the countryside or theforms of landownership, but introduce a few superficial measures to somewhat improve the eco nomic conditions of the peasants. The reform envisaged an insignificant limitation on landownership, a revision of the terms of land lease, the distribution to peasants of state owned and newly-reclaimed land, the setting up of state farms and peasant marketing and consumer cooperatives, and aid to farmers by providing them with seeds, farm implements and fertilisers. The refusal to abolish feudal landownership— the basis of social inequality in the countryside—doubtless ly detracted from the effectiveness of the proposed measures.

The programme of the Progressive Democratic Party lacked a clear-cut ideological platform. Having joined to gether incompatible principles (as, for instance, monarchy and socialism), the party failed to become the political spokesman of any one section of society or class and remained a small group of people supporting the ideas of Muhammad Hashim Maiwandwal. Furthermore, Mai wandwal’s programme" and his far-reaching promises, which did not, however, provide for radical measures, found no broad support among the public due to the mounting strug gle to ensure the implementation of the main provisions of the constitution. In 1967, the Maiwandwal govemment re signed. In the years that followed his party did not win any significant influence and was preoccupied more with an in depth analysis of the sophisticated details of its conception than with practical activity. Its newspaper Mossawat, how ever, proved viable and existed till the end of 1971.

The situation in Afghanistan in the mid-1960s was increasingly influenced by major international factors. The strengthening of the socialist world system, the powerful growth of the national liberation movement, the collapse of the colonial system and the emergence of new independent states brought about substantial changes in the world. Left wing radical elements, who reflected both the national and the social aspirations of the people, gained ground within the national iiberation movement. The spontaneous pro-so cialist drive of the working people, who were fighting for a better life, created favourable conditions for the dissemina tion of the ideas of scientific socialism. These ideas were spreading throughout the developing countries.

As the Afghan working class was small and politically immature, the ideas of scientific socialism were propound ed by members of the left-radical, progressive section of the petty bourgeoisie, in particular the petty-bourgeois in telligentsia. In 1965, separate Marxist circles and socialist groups of democratic intellectuals united together in the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). Its First (founding) Congress was held illegally on January 1, 1965 in Kabul. The Congress elected the party’s Central Committee which consisted of seven members: Nur Mu hammad Taraki (who was elected its General Secretary), Babrak Karmal, S. A. Keshtmand, and others. In April 1966, the PDPA founded the newspaper Khalq (The People) and published its programme in its first two issues.

The programme contained an analysis of the international and domestic situation and stressed that the main cause of ‘the slow-down in the development of the productive forces and the disastrous economic position of the people was the economic and political domination of the feudal class, the wealthy local and compradore merchants, the bureaucrats and agents of international monopolies whose class interests ran counter to the interests of the popular masses in Afgha nistan"’.?? The PDPA, the programme said, undertook to solve these problems by forming a national-democratic government supported by "‘the united national front of all progressive, democratic and patriotic forces, i.e., workers, peasants, progressive intellectuals, handicrafts men, and the petty and national bourgeoisie, fighting for national independence, the democratisation of public life and the victorious conclusion of the anti-feudal and anti imperialist struggle". At the stage of national-democratic development, the paper said, the feudal system should be smashed and the country should move over to the path of non-capitalist development.

Describing the political goals of a national-democratic government, the PDPA programme envisaged establish ment of genuine democracy, achievement of economic independence and national sovereignty, democratisation of the legal system and provision of political rights: freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom to form political organisations and tradeunions, and freedom to strike and organise demonstrations. It also promised to seek a democratic solution to the nationalities question.

The economic policy of a national-democratic govern ment, the paper stressed, should be directed at the planned development of the public sector. ‘The public sector," wrote Khalq, ‘"‘which is anti-feudal, anti-colonial and anti-imper ialist, will form the basis for the development of the econ omy and true democracy".’8 This policy also provided for the accelerated industrialisation of Aghanistan.

The agrarian policy, the programme said, should be aimed at liquidating feudalism through the implementation of a democratic land reform in the interest of landless and land hungry peasants and with their direct participation, through the cancellation of debts to money-lenders, and the creation of peasant cooperatives, with the state giving them every possible assistance.

The PDPA programme provided for the accomplishment of a number of major social tasks, including introduction of a 42-hour working week, paid leave, a reduced working day for arduous or hazardous jobs, old-age pensions and free medical service, prohibition of child labour, creation of trade unions, conclusion of collective labour agree ments, construction of cheap housing for all the dispos sessed, extension of women’s rights, measures to combat arbitrary rule and lawlessness, and also a large number of cultural measures, above all to combat illiteracy.

In the foreign policy sphere, the PDPA adhered to a peaceful policy of positive neutrality, and supported the struggle for peace and peaceful coexistence and the na tional liberation movement, and fought against colonialism and neocolonialism.

At the end of its programme, the Party briefly outlined its tactics and strategy: "Coming out in support of the constitution and fighting, openly and peacefully at this stage, for the formation of a national-democratic govern ment and a non-capitalist path of development on the basis of an advanced ideology and world outlook, we never forget our responsibility to the people, to the working people of Afghanistan, or our ultimate goal—the building of a new, socialist society."79

This democratic programme expressed the ideological platform of the PDPA. In the subsequent issues Khalq

‘set forth the class essence of the Party and the goals of the newspaper itself, which were "‘to rally all the progres sive, patriotic and democratic forces into one national democratic organisation which would defend the interests of the people, and to form the nucleus of the organisation’s ideological unity".8° Describing the class nature of the Party, the paper wrote that this "new type of political orga nisation in Afghanistan will consist of the vanguard of the working class and, acting as a guiding force in the democrat ic movement, will work together with the peasants and progressive intellectuals. This force has set itself the goal of uniting the people in the struggle against despotism and reaction, and showing the working people how to build a free and democratic society, of awakening the nation, broadening the movement against feudalism and imperialism, establishing a constitutional-democratic system, and liquidating the absolutist forces and obsolete relations of production.’’81

The publications carried in Khalq initiated the vigorous dissemination of the ideas of scientific socialism among various sections of the intelligentsia and the working people. At the same time, they became the object of fierce attacks by the rightist circles. Some press organs, including semi official ones, hit out at the Khalq. Some of the private newspapers strove to discredit the basic provisions of the democratic programme published in Khalg, contrasting them against the idea of the unity of all classes and assert ing that "the class struggle is a drag on progress and re vival’?.82

The authorities did not confine themselves to attacks on Khalq in the press but also charged the newspaper with violating the constitution. In May 1966, the govern ment banned the newspaper. Only six issues of Khalg had come out.

Among the other papers demanding the implementation of constitutional provisions was Peyame Emruz (Today’s News), which began publication in February 1966. The paper pointed to the main social evils and shortcomings, resolutely defending the right of the people to take part in political and public affairs. In May 1966, it was also banned, though its publication was resumed six months later.

The newspaper Seda-i Awam (The Voice of the Masses), which adopted the position of petty-bourgeois radicalism, was close to Khalq in spirit and in the subject-matter of its publications. Its first issue came off the press in March 1968. The paper was greatly influenced by Khalg’s ideas, as could be seen even in its political terminology.

Describing their aims, the publishers of Seda-1-Awam wrote in their first editorial that the newspaper served the interests of the working people, was searching for "new ways of liberating them from poverty and injustice and struggling to ensure their social well-being". They grouped all the social strata and classes in two opposing camps. One of them, the camp of poverty and oppression, included ‘progressive intellectuals, intellectual workers, teachers, the progressive youth,. office employees in the middle bracket, manual workers, land-hungry and landless peasants, small landowners, nomads, handicraftsmen, small em ployers"’, i.e.,’ all the working people, who accounted for 98 per cent of the population. The second camp, the one of oppression and exploitation, included ‘large landowners, capitalists and a handful of ruling oppressors".83 Examin ing the position of the working people, the paper stressed that they were deprived not only of economic benefits, but even of social and political rights. Proclaiming a struggle for the "provision of rights and the emancipation of all working masses", the ideologists of Seda-t Awam put forward a programme for that struggle which envisaged the formation of a national-democratic government by ‘handing’ political and economic power to the people, in accordance with the will of the people" and by effecting a series of socio-economic reforms for the benefit of the working people and along non-capitalist lines. The public sector, it said, would be enlarged and strengthened, more effective economic planning would be introduced, agri culture would be mechanised, and the public health system expanded.8* The forms of struggle to attain these goals were not specified, though it was supposed that it would be legal activity based on the unity and solidarity of the working people.

For all their positive content, the Seda-i Awam slogans did not go beyond general declarations.85 The paper did not mention the ways and means of implementing the proposed reforms in the socio-political structure of the state.86 Incidentally, one of the slogans proclaimed by the paper—"Food, Clothing and Housing’—was sub sequently widely used and became central to the program me of socio-economic, change carried out by the PDPA.

In the late 1960s, there emerged a trend whose ideolo gists were petty-bourgeois extremists. The ideas propounded by the leaders of this group, whose members called them selves "new democrats", enjoyed support among a part of the petty bourgeoisie, some toiling intellectuals and semi-proletarians, all of whom were most susceptible to extreme radicalism. In 1968, they began to publish the newspaper Shitla-yi Jawed ("The Eternal Flame") mirroring the basic theoretical conceptions of Afghan leftist extre mists. The ideologists of the group, ignoring the class struggle in the capitalist countries and belittling the signifcance of contradictions between the socialist world system and imperialism, regarded the national liberation movement in the developing eOUD TSS as the vanguard of the world revolutionary process.87 Their theories were clearly bor rowed from Maoist ideology. The publishers of Shula-yi jawed minimised the role of the working class’’ and called the peasantry the leading class capable of rallying round itself other democratic and semi-democratic social strata.8 9

In a bid to discredit the PDPA programme and split the democratic movement, the Afghan Maoists directed their attack against its main principles. They rejected the PDPA’s idea of transition to non-capitalist development, accusing the Party of conciliation with the bourgeoisie and of attempts to lead the oppressed people away from the class struggle. The ideologists of: Shula-yi Jawed held that a national front of the progressive and democratic forces could not be established so long as the exploiter classes exercised political domination. They were likewise opposed to the principles of peaceful coexistence.

The newspaper hit out at the public sector which, it alleged, only helped to bolster the economic position of the bourgeoisie and was a means of exploiting the working people.2! On the whole, the ideological concepts of the Afghan Maoists were designed to smear the ideas of scien tific socialism and hamstring the democratic movement in the country. The ‘new democrats", who were headed by Dr. Hadi Mahmudi and engineer Muhammad Osman, had the greatest influence among Kabul students and schoolchildren. The Afghan Maoists conducted also exten sive propaganda work among the national minorities, particularly in Herat and Hazarajat. Having no representa tives in parliament and guided by the Maoist slogan "The rifle brings power", the Afghan leftist extremists brought to the political struggle an element of disorder, anarchy and unjustified conflict with the authorities. Thus, in May 1968, members of the Shula-y: Jawed group provoked a clash between participants ina meeting and the police. As a result, the Maoist leaders were arrested and sent to prison and their newspaper was closed down.

A noteworthy phenomenon in the political life of fhe country in the latter-half of the 1960s was the publication of the private newspaper Afghan Mellat (Afghan Nation), which united the proponents of bourgeois nationalist ideas, who proclaimed themselves social-democrats. Their leader and chief ideologist was Ghulam Muhammad Farhad, pub lisher of the newspaper, president of the energy department, and later the mayor of Kabul. His political views were influenced to some extent by his years of study in nazi Germany, and he had borrowed many of his ideas from national;socialism. The newspaper’s recurrent theme was the creation of a "common spirit of the nation" —a panacea for all social ills. It insisted on the idea of "uniting all the peoples, races and tribes of Afghanistan into one nation, and the traditions and social and legal factors which made up their material and cultural life into one culture". The publishers of the paper saw this idea as a means of "attain ing the common goal determined by the common wishes of the nation, the common spirit and common concepts"’.92 But they saw the idea of a single nation through the prism of the national interests of the ethnic majority—the Pash tuns, to the detriment of the national minorities. The Pashtun nationalism of Afghan Mellat was nourished by the ideas of the "Afghan spirit" which was allegedly in herent in the nation and determined its route towards social and political advancement. Exploiting democratism, the paper appealed to the workers and peasants, suggesting to them the best way of freeing themselves from "poverty, unemployment and injustice’. "There is only one way," it declared, "which is unity: the unity of place, the unity of colour, and the unity‘of thought under the protection of the nation and for the benefit of the nation. And until nationalism becomes' rooted among the various classes, your destiny, workers, will remain unchanged."93 Ignoring, in effect, the class nature of society, the so-called social democrats produced no positive economic programme and confined themselves merely to general declarations.

The private newspaper Wahdat (Unity) adhered to the si milar ideological position. Expressing its concern over the so cio-economic disorder in society, it called for the unity of all classes, for "‘class harmony" in the struggle for social justice (by social justice it implied a situation in which the inter ests of both the propertied classes and the working people would be satisfied). The way to this kind of justice, the paper declared, was the improvement of the existing socio political system within the framework of the law. The Wahdat publishers denounced class struggle in any form. Class struggle, they maintained, could only lead to distur bances and the disruption of public order.9

The process of ideological and political polarisation also involved the Muslim theologians. The conservative clergy, who defended the obsolete socio-economic order in the latter half of the 1960s, felt that their influence was waning in various spheres of government and political activity. By the end of the 1960s, the Muslim clergy whose number ranged between 220,000 and 230,000,298 were a heterogeneous estate in terms of property status and political views. Some of them (mostly people from the middle urban strata who had received a modern theolog ical education abroad or at home) began to preach the idea of renovating Islam, of modernising it and adapting it to the political views of their time. Their political views were influenced by various bourgeois theories and also by socialist ideas, which had become comparatively wide spread in Afghanistan, especially after the emergence of the PDPA. The Islamic modernists had assimilated some of these views. Having found in early Islam ideas consonant with some socialist categories (as, for instance, equality and justice), they tried to prove that the teaching of Muhammad and socialism were compatible and called their conception "Islamic socialism". Censuring greed, avarice and the use of wealth by the powers that be for their own selfish ends, the supporters of "Islamic socialim" sought the means of achieving social justice in self-perfection and in pursuing the path of Islam. Their number though was small.

The conservative section of the Afghan Muslim clergy, represented by outstanding doctors of Muslim law, heads of religious sects and orders, and the imams of large mosques economically linked with feudal landownership and big trade capital, continued to oppose any reforms that could undermine traditional principles.

Criticising capitalism and its vices, and rejecting social ism, the right-wing. clergy proposed a path of special, Islamic social development, and styled themselves the defenders of "religious, social, political and national freedom". They published their material in the private newspaper Gahiz (Morning), which first appeared in January 1969. Denouncing the vices of Western bourgeois civilisa tion, mostly its outward manifestations (night clubs, al coholic drinks, pomography, etc.), the publishers of the newspaper also opposed the ideas of scientific socialism. They were particularly outraged at socialism’s denial of private ownership of the means of production, which, in their view, made the socialist system unacceptable for Muslim countries.27-98 Rejecting socialism and socialist ideas, the Gahiz .publishers were opposed to any form of class struggle which, they alleged, was brought about by the "infidels" and led to "pessimism, discord, wrath and hatred". The slogans and ideas proclaimed by the paper showed that the forces that grouped round Gahiz were in the extreme right wing of the political struggle, diametrical ly opposed to all the left-wing and democratic trends. The ideological principles of the paper* made up the main part of the programme of the extreme right political groups— the Muslim Brothers and the Muslim Youth.

The ideological struggle over the choice of possible courses of national development involved ever larger sec tions of the population, particularly the nascent working class, with the PDPA acting as its vanguard. The formation of a working-class party in Afghanistan proceeded in dif ficult conditions. The classes had not yet taken their final shape in the framework of the multi-structural economy. The working class was numerically small, territorially dis united and politically immature. It had not yet reached that level of organisation which would enable it to act as an independent political force. The peasantry was totally illiterate and was under the strong influence of the so called traditional leaders—the Muslim clergy, khans and tribal elders. In these conditions the newly emergent PDPA had to conduct its work mainly among the democratic part of the intelligentsia and the students—a politically active but. socially heterogeneous section of the population, a large part of which was influenced by petty-bourgeois radicalism and nationalistic prejudices. Moreover, it had no legal status and could not use the various usual forms and methods of political struggle. Nor did it have broad intemational ties. The PDPA came under attacks from the reactionaries and the right and leftist extremists and was subjected to repression by the authorities. Its composition, which was not uniform, also affected its activities. The majority of its members were intellectuals, mostly teachers, students, minor officials and junior officers. Due to all these objective and subjective factors, the Party went through growing pains at the initial stage of its formation.

The differences within the Party, mostly over tactical issues, disrupted its organisational unity in 1966, and in 1967 the PDPA found itself split into two factions. One of them was headed by Babrak Karmal, whose supporters were in favour of a wider use of legal means of struggle (later this faction assumed the name of the Party newspaper Parcham |The Flag], which first appeared in 1968). The other faction was headed by Nur Muhammad Taraki, and took the name Khalq. Both factions had one and the same programme and rules and pursued the same goals. In the Party Rules, published illegally in 1967, the PDPA declared itself "the vanguard of the working class and all working people" and said that its activities were based on the princi ples of Marxism-Leninism.

Parcham took over from Khalq the subject-matter and ideological thrust of its publications. It specified and developed the main provisions of the PDPA programme, set the current tasks and formulated the ultimate goal of the struggle. A revolution in Afghanistan, said the Parcham leaders, should go through two stages: the national-demo cratic stage and the stage of socialist transformations. During the first stage a national-democratic government would be formed to represent the progressive and patriotic forces united in a national front: workers, peasants, intellectuals, and the petty and national bourgeoisie. The movement should be led by the proletariat, the most revolutionary class, allied with the peasantry. The main task at the stage of the national-democratic revolution would be the struggle against feudalism along the lines of non-capitalist develop ment. Inthe course of that struggle, the stage would be set for socialist changes.99

The paper devoted much attention to an analysis of the class structure of the population and the economic conditions of the working people. It informed its readers about political actions by the working masses. Parcham was published until April 1970, when it was closed down by the authorities in response to demands by reactionary mullahs after the publication in the paper ofa considerabie volume of material to mark the centenary of Lenin’s birth.

The revival of political activity, which was assuming more diverse forms, reflected growing tension in the sphere of social relations. Though the economic potential of the country had grown somewhat over the period of the two five-year plans, the conditions of the main categories of workers had not been improved. In 1967, the third five-year plan of socio-economic development (1967-1972) was drawn up. As distinct from the previous two plans, in which the main emphasis had been on the infrastructure, the bulk of capital investment under the third five-year plan went to industry and farming. More than 70 per cent of the in vestment required was covered by foreign aid.t9° All in all, 33 billion afghanis were earmarked for development under the third five-year plan, of which 32.4 per cent was ear marked for industry, 29.4 per cent for agriculture, 16.7 per cent for education and medical care, and 12.4 per cent for transport and communications.!91 As before, the main portion of the investment (31 billion afghanis) came from the public sector.192

The elaboration of the third five-year plan raised the problem of financing industry and agriculture—the main aspect of the government’s economic policy. As the number of large and medium-scale industrial enterprises in Afghani stan was small and their returns were low, taxation became the main source of state revenue. The taxation system had not undergone any serious change for decades. As a result, in the early 1960s the land-tax accounted for a mere 2 per cent of the budget revenues. The government attempted to revise the tax system, to introduce progressive taxation and to increase taxation on large landowners and livestock breeders. Its proposals to this effect sparked off heated debate at the parliament session of the 12th convocation. The parliamentary majority, which was made up of large landowners and mullahs (the latter constituted 20 per cent of the deputies in the lower house! 93, i.e., the social groups associated with large landed estates and the pre-capitalist mode of production, rejected the bills on taxation proposed by the government and other measures to increase state revenue, seeing in them an encroachment on their class interests.

Consistent socio-economic transformations to suit the interests of the working people were demanded in parlia ment by the deputies of the PDPA faction headed by Babrak Karmal, and by other groups. They insisted on a radical agrar ian reform which would change the form of landownership.

The parliamentary centre, speaking for the national bourgeoisie, proved unable clearly to define its position and to resist the conservative majority, and this revealed the weakness of the bourgeois elements in the political structure of the state. In the end, all attempts by the gov ermment to get parliament approve its major bills, which could have secured a more successful fulfilment of the five-year plan, were blocked by the right-wing deputies. This was equally true of the discussion on the draft of the third five-year plan. .

As the five-year period progressed, it became clear that the amount of foreign financial aid was a good deal less than expected (about 80 per cent in the first two years and 51 per cent‘in the third year).19¢ The govemment was thus compelled to revise the draft as a whole and to offer a new draft for parliament’s consideration. In the end, the draft of the third-five year plan was not fully approved by parliament. The friction between parliament and the government extended over a wide range of problems. The conservatism of the majority of the deputies acted as a brake on any, even fairly moderate, changes within the framework of ‘regulated’? economic and social evolution. The Maiwandwal govemment, which was trying to use the Progressive Democratic Party it had formed to win parliamentary support for its social measures, came under fierce criticism and in the autumn of 1967 it had to resign.

The next government, headed by Nur Ahmad Etemadi, failed to introduce any substantial changes in the relations between the legislative and executive organs of power. The tension between them, often taking the form of latent conflict, made itself felt for a number of years. By 1969 the Etemadi government, continuing the efforts of its predecessors to find new sources of revenue, elaborated a programme of measures by regulating and increasing taxa tion on cattle and land, raising the prices of petrol, increas ing road tolls, etc. These measures were expected to bring in a further 362 million afghanis.195 However, this pro gramme was also blocked by parliament. The government resorted to floating a large internal loan, which only served to increase inflation. On the whole, as a result of the shor tage of domestic revenue and the reduction of foreign finan cial aid, the actual fulfilment of the third five-year plan in terms of capital investment amounted to 20,8 billion afghanis as against the 33 billion afghanis,!2° initially planned. The rate of economic growth during the third five-year plan was less than 3 per cent, which was slower than in the preceding period. The country’s forcion, debt was growing rapidly to reach $600 million by 1973.19?

In 1971, with the general deterioration of the economic situation, (rapidly increasing prices, declining industrial output, the increasing numbers of smali entrepreneurs and handicraftsmen ruined, unemployment rising steeply), and the intensification of the political struggle, the Etemadi government resigned, to be succeeded by the cabinet of Abdul Zahir.

The democratic forces, represented in parliament by only a few deputies, had little opportunity to influence the decisions taken by the legislature. Therefore, using par liament as a legal means of struggle against the ruling circles in defence of the working people’s interests, they simultaneously stepped up their activities, legal and illegal, outside parliament.

The democratic forces were led by the PDPA, represented by the two groups, Khalq and Parcham, the most consistent defenders of the working people’s interests.

The nationalistic group Setem-i Melli (Against National Oppression), formed in 1968 by Taher Badakhshi, who had left the PDPA, adopted the slogan "Emancipate the national minorities". However, this only added to na tional strife, and thus acted in the interest of the proper tied classes in regions populated by national minorities.

The various sections of the amorphous Afghan bourgeoi sie also had their political groups. One such group was Karwan (Caravan), whose news were represented in a liberal bourgeois newspaper issued under the same name. They had close links with national big business and had ample financial resources. They advocated reforms within the framework of national-bourgeois development. An other such group was called Ittihad-i Melli (National Unity), which brought together the champions of limited reforms that preserved traditional Islamic norms in social life. The group of Progressive Democrats also continued to function. It was oriented on bourgeois reforms in the spirit of "Islamic socialism". Another rather active group was the Afghan Mellat, adherents of Pashtun nationalism propagating the ideas of a "national revival of great Af ghanistan".

In the late 1960s, the Muslim Brothers organisation emerged on the extreme right wing of the political struggle. It was the spokesman of the most reactionary part of the large landowners and the Muslim clerical elite, the circles which had economic ties with the compradore section of the big bourgeoisie. This organisation, and also the Muslim Youth, an offshoot of the Muslim Brothers, whose members were fanatical students and schoolchildren, proclaimed a battle to the end against left-wing forces.

The 1960s ended with a powerful upsurge of the class struggle, the first indication and the focal point of a general national crisis. The struggle involved practically all sections of the working population, and in 1968 the largest demon strations extended to the whole country. The main partic ipant was the young working class, which was emerging onto the scene of s.cuggle as a significant component of the country’s social structure. According to the democratic press, there were 880,000 hired workers in the country in 1968, including 32,000 industrial proletarians employed at modern factories.1 98

The economic conditions of the working class had se riously deteriorated by the end of the 1960s. With the com pletion of large projects in the infrastructure, on which the bulk of building workers had been employed, the majority of the workers lost their jobs. The wage level of the workers was far below their real family expenditure. According to Parcham, between 1962 and 1967 workers’ wages increased by 47 per cent, while food prices more than doubled over the same period.199 The press reported on the arduous conditions of work, severe exploitation, the violation of workers’ trade-union rights and poor living conditions. The conditions of other categories of working people— handicraftsmen, shop-keepers, farm labourers, and day labourers—were no better. This accounted for the active participation of the broad masses of the city poor, with the working class at their head, in the class battles—in demonstrations, strikes, meetings and protest marches.

The students of the Kabul school of mechanics were the first to go on strike in April 1968. Then the workers of the Jangalak motor repair plant in Kabul called a strike. That year a large May Day demonstration was held in the capital, the first in the country’s history. The people who gathered at the meetings that day demanded that May Day should be made a national holiday and called for a campaign to establish labour unions. In May, a wave of workers’ demonstrations swept the country: meetings and demonstra tions held by workers at Gulbahar, who were joined by peasants and secondary school pupils; a march by oilmen in Shibirghan and workers at cement and textile factories in Pol-e Khomzyi, and strikes by the workers at the Jangalak plant and the workers at the state-run printing house in Kabul. Most of the workers’ demonstrations, which contin ued all through 1968, were spontaneous, without adequate political leadership. The PDPA and other left-wing organi sations, which did not yet enjoy broad political influence among the workers, could not lead the strike actions at the initial stage, though:many PDPA members took an active part in the strikes and demonstrations, acquiring their first experience of the class struggle. Altogether the demonstrations involved industrial. workers, clerical staff and minor officials, students, schoolchildren, peasants, small traders, and the soldiers of the Labour Corps. From April till August in 1968, about 30,000 people took part in more than 40 strikes.116

The strikes were staged at both private and state enter prises, with the most active strike campaign being conduct ed by workers at the larger industrial enterprises: the Jangalak motor repair plant, the Spinzar textile company in Qunduz, the textile mills of the Nasaji Company, the textile combine in Gulbahar, the gas fields in Shibirghan, and the Kabul integrated house-building factory. The industrial workers were supported by building workers.

On June 9, 1968, a large demonstration was held by workers building the road between Pol-e Khomri and Shibirghan. In the summer the unemployed marched in a demonstra tion in’ Herat, and in October seasonal workers went on strike in Qandahar. Class actions by the working people assumed nationwide proportions.

At this stage in the strike movement economic demands prevailed. The workers demanded higher wages, paid leave, better working conditions, medical services, social security, and the right to form trade unions. The local and central authorities responded with repression: many of those taking part in the strikes and demonstrations were sacked or ar rested. But in some instances the strikes were successful and the management of enterprises and the local authorities were compelled to meet the strikers’ demands. On the whole, the strike movement in 1968 demonstrated the growing political maturity of the workers and the ability of the working class to become the vanguard of the demo cratic movement, tuming it into a class movement. However, without political leadership this movement remained spontaneuos, disunited and_ disorganised, which doomed a large number of the demonstrations to failure.

In 1969, the political struggle was joined by students from Kabul University and the Polytechnic, which was opened in 1968. Student action started back in mid-1968. The students were protesting against the meagre sums allocated by the government for public education, and against its discrimination against workers during enrolment at educational establishments. Many school leavers and university graduates could not find jobs. Elementary schools were attended by only 14.5 per cent of school-age children, secondary schools by 4.6 per cent, and lycées by 2.8 per cent.111 The schools were understaffed. The education system was obsolete. The pupils at secondary schools and lycées went out into the streets demanding more attention to the needs of education. In the autumn of 1968, demon strations were held by students in Kabul protesting against the way the higher education system was run, concentrating their criticism on the 1968 law pruhibiting students from taking part in political activities. The students also demanded the extension of the civil rights and liberties proclaimed in the 1964 constitution. In their protest actions they were often joined by teachers.

The student actions were largely spontaneous and often ended in clashes with the police who on many occasions burst into the university campus to make arrests. The in volvement of the students in the political struggle in 1968 1969 showed they had become a radical political force capable of independent action.

In 1971-1972, at the second stage of the student move ment, their actions became more purposeful and acquired a class character. In August 1971, the Kabul University Student League was formed and adopted its statute. The League declared it would fight for "the provision and protection of the professional, democratic, personal and social rights of students’, "in support of the liberation movement, for a just peace and intolerance of reactionary activity", that they would "struggle against exploitation and colonialism", and "resist any oppression, violence and discrimination".112 Thus student action became organised. The League elected a Supreme Council, in which the major ity was held by members of the Maoist grouping Shula-yi Jawed. The Supreme Council was the leading, regulating and coordinating centre of the student movement. In accord with a Supreme Council decision taken on November 13, 1971, the students of Kabul University called a large strike, which was later joined by students of diverse political leanings.

The Supreme Council, however, failed to elaborate a common programme of action and therefore could not lead the student movement. Separate student groups acted in support of various political groups. The greatest influence among Kabul University students in the early 1970s was exercised by Khalq, Parcham, Shula-yi Jawed and the Muslim Youth. During the November strike by Polytechnic students, a Union of Teachers was set up with Khalq mem bers winning the majority. The student movement, opposi tional by character, was becoming increasingly hetero geneous in terms of class affiliation. The process of polit ical delimitation among the students had reached such a degree that supporters of various political groups engaged in a sharp ideological struggle. Students and representatives of other social groups often acted together on the basis of the slogans of one or other groups.* In this way the political activity by students and schoolchildren merged with demonstrations by the working people to create a single national campaign by the broad masses of the popula tion against the policy of the ruling circles. That campaign was becoming part and parcel of the political struggle in Afghanistan at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s. It was a sign of the oncoming crisis in the pollit ical system which was less and less suited to the socio economic development level of the country.

The democratic movement had gained momentum by the late 1960s and was joined by working people on a large scale; the PDPA was conducting an active political struggle and becoming the vanguard of the working people; the ideas of scientific socialism were becoming increasingly wide spread. All of this added to the intensity of the class strug gle. The right-wing extremists, with the Muslim Brothers as their political vanguard, became an increasingly im portant factor. In May 1970, they organised meetings and marches in Kabul. They issued leaflets demanding that the spread of communist ideas be prevented and that women be forbidden to work in state establishments. Some of the leaflets called for a "holy war" against all progressives.

The democratic forces, the PDPA above all, were the object of the fiercest attacks. Right-wing activity, which threatened to cause violence and disorder in Kabul, forced the government to use severe measures against them. Some of the fanatics were arrested, others were deported from the city.

The actions organised by right-wing religious forces spilled over to other towns. They were most acute in Jalalabad. Here the organisers were joined by some elders of the Shinwari tribe, small traders, handicraftsmen and artisans. The demonstrations, followed by violence, involved about 5,000 people. The protesters destroyed the Spinghar Hotel, the largest in the city, and troops were called in to quell them.

These events were exploited by the top Muslim clergy to pressurise the government into renouncing its liberalisa tion plans and taking strong action against the democratic forces. One of the major aims of the rightists was to worsen Soviet-Afghan relations. Anti-government demonstrations . by the right-wing clergy also took place in 1971, in response to the country’s first May Daydemonstrations organised by the PDPA and other democratic forces.

In 1971-1972, another wave of strike action swept Afghanistan, again involving mainly the workers at the largest industrial enterprises. As in 1968, the class demon strations of the early 1970s were characterised by their broad social composition. Now the struggle was often joined by peasants and handicraftsmen, though industrial workers and Kabul students were in the van, as before. These demonstrations were more organised and were headed by the leaders of democratic political groups. The political leadership of the strike movement ensured a fairly high level of consciousness among the strikers and ensured the prevalence of political demands related to the struggle against tyranny, exploitation, and neocolonialism, and to the campaign for democratic rights and freedoms, and for the unity of the working people. The strike movement was intensifying and often could not be controlled by the authorities.

Political instability in the country increased as the economic situation deteriorated followmg two successive severe draughts (in 1970/71 and 1971/72), which caused loss of crops and livestock. The food shortage that ensued could not be compensated for by domestic resources, since by the late 1960s the deficit of marketable grain in the country has reached 200,000 tons and was covered by grain deliveries from the USA, the USSR and Pakistan.113 The government had to ask other countries for aid.

However, food imports were insufficient to eliminate the acute shortage of foodstuffs. Some of the remote re gions were hit by famine. Food prices soared; and large scale commerce profiteered. Many members of the ruling circles also benefited from the hardships of the people. The food coming from abroad was often misappropriated, particularly during distribution. In March 1972, protest demonstrations against high prices were staged in many provinces. By the early 1970s the food crisis had exposed many social vices. Embezzlement, bribery, corruption, and smuggling were rampant. Over one million head of livestock were smuggled into Iran annually, and illegal trading in astrakhan exceeded the volume of official foreign trade operations.114

The growth of class demonstrations, combined with economic disorder, made radical social and economic measures imperative. However, the parliament of the 13th convocation, which opened in 1969 and whose deputies were, for the most part, large estate owners, and conserva tive-minded theologians, again strongly opposed any at tempts to carry out the socio-economic reforms proposed by the more far-sighted members of the ruling classes. Only the small PDPA faction headed by Babrak Karmal and the deputies from other democratic groups that sup ported it came out resolutely in defence of the vital in terests of the people, castigating the egoism and inconsis tency of the leaders of the right-wing and pro-government camp. Speeches by deputies were broadcast over the radio and so became known to the public. The conflict between the legislative and executive branches of power was widen ing, causing the critical political situation in the country to deteriorate still further.

The inability and unwillingness of the monarchy to solve urgent socio-economic problems, the deepening economic crisis, the mounting class struggle by the working people, and the growing confrontation between different social forces both within parliament and outside it were followed by serious differences within the ruling classes. Fearing possible class upheavals which could shake the entire system of the feudal-monarchic state, the more far-sighted members of the ruling classes opposed the monarchical regime, which was unable to speed up the national-bourgeois evolution. The monarchy, which had considerable legislative and exec utive powers invariably hampered the introduction of any reforms, even the most limited programmes of social change. The governments that succeeded each other* proved in capable’ of winning parliamentary approval for most of their bills. Serious differences in parliament itself rendered its work ineffective, which resulted in a crisis of state power.

The acute social contradictions which manifested them selves at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s also affected the army, and in particular the officers. The Afghan armed forces, with 90,000 officers and men, had undergone considerable modernisation in the 1960s, The measures taken to update military technology and training had affected the social composition of the officer corps, which underwent the intensive political polarisation typical of all sections of society in that period. The senior officers, most of whom were from families belonging to the feudal aristocracy, the wealthy merchant estate and the top bureaucracy, supported the existing social system, while most of the junior officers came from the urban population and partly from among the working people. Many of them had been trained abroad where they became acquainted with other socio-political systems and ideologies and could compare the level of socio-economic develop ment in their own country and in other countries. On re tuming home they saw the backwardness of Afghanistan andthe miserable conditions of its people, and came gradually to realise that the ruling elite was riddled with corruption.

Despite the brainwashing of servicemen in the spirit of loyalty to the monarchy, oppositional political views were spreading among the officers. The polarisation among them was accelerated by the struggle of ideas going on outside the army. In the early 1970s, many officers gravi tated towards democratic political groups and supported them. In particular, in’ ‘the late 1960s an underground PDPA organisation was formed in the army and brought together progressive-minded officers.

In a situation of general political instability, the Abdul Zahir government survived a mere year and a half, bringing nothing new either in political administration or in the economic system. The political leaders who succeeded each , other did not possess any real power. None of them could become the prime: minister without the king’s support. Therefore the head of the government, even if he was a reformist, was unable to put forward a programme that ran counter to the interests of the monarchy. Musa Shafiq, who headed the new cabinet in December 1972, was exactly such a leader.

The Anti-Monarchist Coup and the Proclamation of a Republic

The critical situation in Afghanistan called for radical changes that would affect the entire structure of the socio political institutions and the economic foundations of society;. As there was no political party in the country that would enjoy mass support and could head a strong opposi tion, it was the army that toppled the doomed regime. On the night of July 16, 1973, a group of officers led by former Prime Minister Muhammad Daoud, staged a virtual ly bloodless coup. The monarchy was overthrown and Afghanistan was proclaimed a republic. The new regime was immediately supported by the garrisons and the popu lation of most of the big cities, which demonstrated once again the total lack of popular support for the overthrown monarchy. King Muhammad Zahir Shah, who was staying in Italy at the time of the coup, abdicated from the throne a month later. The supreme body of state power was ‘now the Central Committee of the Republic. Most of the officers who took part in or led the coup became members of the council.

The coup had been prepared and carried through, among others, by members of several political organisations. Among them were supporters of the PDPA, who formed the left wing in the republican regime. In the government formed in August 1973 four ministerial posts were occupied by members and supporters of the PDPA. At the same time, people who represented the interests of the ruling classes, who were opposed to the monarchical regime and who wanted reforms to speed up the national-bourgeois revolu tion, which was expected to strengthen the class basis of their power, occupied a strong position in the state apparatus and in the army. This group was headed by Muhammad Daoud and his brother Muhammad Naim. Thus, the governing bodies of the republic were composed of a socially heterogeneous but at the first stage politically united group.

On July 17 Muhammad Daoud addressed the nation over the radio to explain the aims of the coup. Conditions should be created, he said, in which the people, "especially the poorer sections of the population and the youth", could contribute to the country’s development. That was his "only goal", he declared, and one which could be attained by establishing "genuine and reasonable democracy". The basis of that democracy, according to Daoud, should be "the granting of all rights to the people and a full re cognition of the principles of national sovereignty". He accused the toppléd monarchical regime of violating the principles of the constitution and announced the creation of a "new, republican system that fully accorded with the spirit of Islam". The struggle for peace, non-alignment, and friendship with’ all nations was proclaimed the main principle of foreign policy.

In the first days following the coup the Central Com mittee of the Republic published decrees abrogating the 1964 constitution and dissolving parliament. The publica tion of private newspapers and magazines was suspended.

On August 23, Muhammad Daoud, who by the decision of the Central Committee of the Republic became the Prime Minister and the head, of state, made his Appeal to the Afghan People, in which he set forth the main principles of the government programme. It contained a pledge to carry out "radical reforms in the economic, social and political life of the country". He denounced the economic policy of the toppled regime, which had taken no account of the needs of the nation and catered only for the narrow interests of the ruling elite. In agriculture, the programme said, there prevailed "backward relations of production and extremely primitive methods of farming which caused the impoverishment of the peasants, a curtail ment of the national market and a shortage of agricultural products". In the political sphere the programme set the task of "concentrating power in the hands of the people and strengthening national sovereignty"; provisions were made for ensuring "equal rights for all people and popular participation in government". The programme promised to guarantee and expand democratic rights and freedoms, and also provided for the adoption of a new, republican constitution. The nationalities question, the programme pointed out, must be solved on the basis of the principles of "equality, brotherhood and friendship" among all the peoples of Afghanistan, and "‘all forms and types of dis crimination" must be abolished.

As regards the economy, the main emphasis was on the priority development of the heavy industry, with every encouragement for private initiative and on efforts to combat competition by foreign capital and goods. A land reform "in the interest of the majority of the people, and the setting up of cooperatives" were to be the most im portant measures in agriculture. The programme contained promises to improve working conditions for office em ployees and workers. To that end, new labour legislation was.to be drawn up. The programme also envisaged a num ber of measures to improve the system of education, devel op national culture and democratise public life. The basic principles of foreign policy did not undergo any substantial change in the programme. It was announced that the Republic of Afghanistan would "take part in the struggle to ensure peace and security, settle international conflicts and secure ‘the success of the policy of detente". In the concluding part the programme formulated its main task, which was to "put an end to social inequality and to elimi nate the poverty and backwardness which had existed in the country for centuries and obstructed the strengthening of political, and the achievement of economic independence for the state". It also stated that the reforms should be carried out without "haste and excesses, putting one’s faith in God and avoiding delusions". It was impossible to accomplish this task, the programme said, unless "all the national progressive and patriotic forces in the country are united in one broad front".116

Thus, the programme of Daoud’s republican government, vague and. declarative as it was in parts, reflected many of the demands put forward by the democratic forces of the country before the coup. Therefore it was widely supported by the population, which saw in it a way to major reforms for the benefit of the working people and to the democrat isation of public life. The participation of the democratic forces, including the radical left, in the higher echelons of power largely determined the content of the programme.

In the first months after the abolition of the monarchy the republican government carried through a number of important measures in the socio-economic sphere, which affected a considerable part of the population. This was done on the initiative of the left forces and with their active support. The government made efforts to stabilise prices of prime necessity goods. District committees of the poor were set up in Kabul with the aid of the PDPA to combat profiteering and control trading operations of small shop-keepers. The central authorities fixed the prices on staple foodstuffs and price-lists were put up in every shop. The police were instructed to see that the regulations governing retail trade be observed and profiteering preven ted. A campaign was launched to combat bribery, corrup tion and smuggling.

During this initial period the government also announced plans to draw up new labour legislation. Some measures to improve the conditions of workers and clerical staff were taken even before the new labour legislation was adopted. The 7.5-hour working day and maximum 45 hour working week were introduced at state-owned enter prises. Overtime work was to receive additional remunera tion. The government doubled the minimum wage for industrial workers (from 450 to 900 afghanis). Apprentices at industrial enterprises began to receive wages. The right to paid leave and social insurance was legalised and the pension fund was increased.

The Supreme Economic Council, set up late in 1973, was to deal with long-term planning and to coordinate the work of key industries and farming. In that period some private industrial companies charged with embezzlement, bribery and smuggling were nationalised. Among them was Spinzar, a major textile company. In the autumn of 1973 the Industrial Development Bank of Afghanistan was founded. In 1974 a new law was adopted regulating foreign and local investment and limiting the operation of local private and foreign capital to the light and food industries, with the share of foreign capital in those industries not to exceed 49 per cent.1!8 Under this same law easier terms were provided for local entrepreneurs. In 1974 all private banks in the country were nationalised.119 In 1973-1974 some measures began to be effected in the financial sphere. In 1974 direct taxes were increased by 60 per cent as against 1972 and accounted for 11 per cent of the budget revenue. After the adoption of a new law on customs and on tightening control over foreign trade, which became the monopoly of the state, customs duties on imports also increased in 1974 by 60 per cent over the 1972 level.120

In place of the previously adopted five-year plan for the 1973-1977 period, the government drew up a new, seven-year plan for the period from 1976 to 1982. It envis aged the construction of over 200 socio-economic proj ects, with priority given to the building of large dams, irrigation systems, hydro-electric power stations and roads, to the mechanisation of farming, and to mining mineral deposits.121

In agriculture the republican government began work on a draft land reform law. Before the law was adopted, landless and land-hungry peasants were given plots from state-owned newly-irrigated land. Land was received by slightly more than 5,000 peasant families, that is less than 1 per cent of the peasants who, according to official data, either had no land at all, or owned tiny plots and lived in poverty. The Law on Land Reform was promulgated on August 6, 1975, and announced the restriction of land ownership to 20 hectares of irrigated land. The surplus was to be handed over to the peasants for a ransom.!22

The initial period of the republican regime saw attempts to reform the education system. The main emphasis was on increasing the number of schools, on reorganising secondary education and promoting vocational training. The govern ment increased allocations for primary education. A na tional department to combat illiteracy was set up. All private schools, including those functioning at mosques, were placed under state control.

However, the republican regime began gradually to de part from its initial programme. Muhammad Daoud and his rightist associates felt that the presence of representatives of democratic forces in the higher echelons of power was a burden on them, for their activity naturally led to the expansion of democratic changes in the interests of broad sections of the population and undermined or weakened the economic and political positions of the traditional ruling classes closely associated with the feudal-monarchical structure. '

As the regime stabilised politically, the personal posi tions of Muhammad Daoud and his closest associates grew stronger. Having occupied the posts of head of state, prime minister, foreign minister and minister of defence, and capitalising on democratic slogans, Muhammad Daoud managed to win the support of various sections of society. He was trusted by many entrepreneurs and the new bureau crats, who were undisturbed by his shallow reforms, which did not exceed the limits of the bourgeois system. At the same time the democratic purport of the government programme appealed to liberal-minded intellectuals and the petty bourgeoisie. The promises to carry out a land reform "in the interest of the majority" won Muhammad Daoud the support of a large part of the peasantry. And, last but not least, the army, especially young officers who after the coup felt to be an influential political force, were on his side.

Having thus obtained real political power and strength ened his influence among various sections of the population, Muhammad Daoud began, with the support of the rightists, gradually to oust the leftists, who did not enjoy wide support among the masses and lacked unity, from the state apparatus. In March 1974, Pacha Gul Wafadar, Minister of Frontier Affairs, was removed from his post and appointed ambassador to Bulgaria,!23 and a month later Abdul Hamid Mohtad, Minister of Communications, was dismissed and removed from the Central Committee of the Republic.124 Both were supporters of Khalq. Faiz Muhammad (a sup porter of Parcham), a leader of the anti-monarchist coup and then the Minister of the Interior, was first appointed Minister of Frontier Affairs and then ambassador to Indo nesia. Some time later, Minister of Agriculture Ghilani Ba khtari was removed from the government and Chief of Military Police Mauladad and Chief of the Republican Guard Ahmad Ziya were dismissed from their posts. All of them were Parcham supporters. An increasing role in the Central Committee of thie Republic, the state appara tus and the army was now played by Muhammad Naim, Daoud’s brother, who had links with the Muslim Brothers and was a leader of the rightists, by Sayed Abdulillah, Minister of Finance, General Ghulam Haider Rasuli, Com mander of the Central Forces, known for his anti-commu nist views, and others. In November 1975 the king’s son-in law, General Abdul Wali, former Commander of the Central Forces, who before the events of July 17, 1973, had been preparing a fascist-type coup, and his closest associates, all rabid monarchists who had been prosecuted, were released from prison. They were given the opportunity to emigrate to Italy, where they joined the royal family.

During the initial period of republican rule, when a number of the reforms envisaged in the government pro gramme were under way, some members of the ruling classes began to express doubts regarding the government’s policy. Some of the big landowners and tribal khans, rich com prador merchants and a part of the conservative Muslim clergy, alarmed by the radical character of the programme proclaimed by the regime and its first practical measures, came out against the reforms. Dissatisfied at the leftists’ influence in the apparatus of central power, those forces embarked, immediately after the overthrow of the monar chy, on organised anti-government actions.

A plot, led by former prime minister Maiwandwal, to overthrow the republican government, was discovered in September 1973. Among those involved were top army officers and members of the wealthy commercial bourgeoi sie. The conspirators were arrested. According to official press reports, Maiwandwal committed suicide in prison. Another coup was attempted in December 1973. Its leader was Habibullah Rahman, former chief of the security ser vice. After the plot had been discovered, those involved were arrested and five of its leaders were executed.!

July 1975 saw the largest anti-government action—an armed rebellion which spread to a number of the eastern regions. At the centre of the plot were the Muslim Brothers and the Muslim Youth, who declared that their aim was to topple the republican government and create an Islamic state. They were joined by Shula-yi Jawed and Setem-i Melli. Army units were used to quell the rebellion. Offic ial quarters in Kabul voiced their opinion that certain forces in the CENTO bloc, who wished to put an end to the democratic changes in Afghanistan, had a hand in the plot. The weapons taken away from the rebels were of US and Chinese make.

As he squashed the rightist opposition, Daoud also built up pressure on the left forces. Central and local government bodies were purged of left and democrat ic elements. The Daoud regime was gradually showing its class essence. It went back on its main promises contained in the government programme. Thus, the 1974 labour legislation did not grant the working people the right to form trade unions. The Land Reform Law, promulgated in 1975, burdened the peasants with many years of re demption payments for the redistributed landowners’ lands. On the other hand, big landowners were granted all kinds of benefits. No time limit was set for implementing the reform, which called in question the effectiveness of the planned agrarian changes, all the more so as many of the landowners began to-divide their land among relatives and confidential agents. The seven-year plan for social and economic development adopted in 1976 envisaged the growth of agricultural and industrial output, but failed to create conditions for a radical change of social relations in the country. Abandoning the idea of mustering domestic resources to fulfil government plans, Muhammad Daoud, just like his predecessors, relied mainly on foreign financial aid. Beginning with the mid-1970s the growing social contra dictions began seriously to affect the foreign policy of the ruling quarters in Afghanistan. Alarmed iy the growing activity of the democratic public and by mounting popular discontent, they established closer contacts with foreign reaction. Without discontinuing economic cooperation with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries, the Daoud regime extended its contacts with the ruling quarters in some Middle Eastern countries, above all with the shah’s regime in Iran. Some of the major economic programmes now hinged on financial aid from the oil-producing coun tries of the Persian Gulf which cooperated closely with neocolonialist forces. Iran agreed to grant Afghanistan a lavish loan (about $2,000 million) for the construction of economic projects. It was planned, for example, to build a trans-Afghan railway from the Iranian-Afghan border, through Herat, Qandahar and Kabul, to Peshawar. The project had been designed by French experts. Official quarters in Kabul, prompted by Iranian leaders, even sug gested that a branch line towards the Indian Ocean might possibly be built. The stratagem of Iranian quarters asso ciated with the West was to sap traditional Afghan-Soviet cooperation and draw Afghanistan into the orbit of the political influence of imperialism and its allies in the region. Continuing their persecution of the left, Muhammad Daoud and his closest associates increasingly concentrated political power in their hands. At the end of 1976, in order to legally justify the ban on progressive groups, the ruling quarters announced the formation of the National Revolu tion Party, which was given a monopoly of political activity. In November 1976, Muhammad Daoud announced the crea tion of the party’s Central Council which consisted of five rightist cabinet ministers.

The Loy Jirgah session held in Kabul in January 1977 marked the turning point in the evolution of the structure of the republican power. The Loy Jirgah elected Muham mad Daoud President of the Republic and approved a new, republican constitution. The people and the progressive forces were not allowed to take part in the elaboration and discussion of the draft. The new Constitution legalised the power of the dominating classes and the structure of power that took shape after the 1973 coup. Important legislative and executive functions were given to the President. The constitutional extension of the powers of the head of state was to some extent motivated by the political ambitions of Muhammad Daoud, who sought to concentrate all power in his own hands. Article 40 of the Constitution proclaimed a one-party system in Afghanistan, with the National Revolution Party (NRP) being the ruling party. The party was given exceptional prerogatives: only mem bers of the NRP could be presidential nominees or elected to parliament. The National Revolution Party was given the right to determine the main directions of domestic and . foreign policy and te control the activities of all sections of the state apparatus. Since the NRP was not a mass or ganisation, all political power was actually concentrated in the hands of Muhammad Daoud and his closest associates. In other words, the 1977 Constitution legalised the political power that had taken shape by that time—the regime of the personal dictatorship of the Muhammad Daoud.

The Constitution proclaimed the formation of a one chamber parliament, elections to which were scheduled for 1979. By postponing parliamentary elections for two years, Daoud gave himself more opportunity to take per sonal legislative decisions, thus legalising the authoritarian form of government. Despite the relatively democratic character of both the election mechanism and the composition of parliament (under the Constitution, 50 per cent of its deputies were to represent the workers and peasants), its functions were limited to taking decisions concerning the budget, ratifying state treaties and sending armed forces abroad. At the head of the government was the President, who was simultaneously the Commander-in Chief of the Armed Forces. Judicial power was also con trolled by the President, who now had the right to ap point judges.

Thus, the Constitution, having formalised the exception ally broad rights and prerogatives of the President in the absence of a parliament, public organisations, political parties and a free press, legalised his dictatorial rule. Daoud’s power was to be further consolidated by the direct subordi nation of the army to the President and by its participation in state policy-making through the Supreme Council of the Army, also headed by Muhammad Daoud. Deprived of a right to legislative initiative, the Central Committee of the Republic continued a purely formal existence.

The introduction of a one-party system meant a ban on all other political parties and groups. The PDPA had to go underground. Faced with a real threat not only to its ac tivities but to its very existence, both its groups—Khalq and Parcham—set about building up party unity. In March 1977, representatives of both groups met to discuss ways of settling their differences and achieving unity. The unity conference of the PDPA Central Committee, held in July 1977, was attended by the leaders of both factions. It passed a decision to elaborate a programme of action and to carry through the organisational merger of the two groups. The conference elected a new Central Committee which consisted of 30 members. As at the First Congress of the Party, Nur Muhammad Taraki was elected General Secretary and Babrak Karmal, Secretary of the Central Committee. The question of putting an end to the dictatorship of Mu hammad Daoud was put on the’ agenda for the first time at the plenary meeting.

After the conference the party, overcoming the split and rallying its members, began a campaign to mobilise the working people and all progressive forces for the strug gle against the anti-people, pseudo-republican regime.

Party membership was growing rapidly, and so was its prestige among the people. The network of party cells was expanding in the capital and in the provinces. The party paid special attention to work among servicemen, and there fore it created and strengthened its party organisation in the army. Apart from patriotic officers taking part in party work were sergeants and soldiers.

The virtual refusal of the Daoud regime to carry through the radical reforms proclaimed in its programme led to a deterioration in the economic conditions of the urban and rural working people. Despite the output growth in in dustry and farming, the living standards of the overwhelm ing majority of the population continued to drop because the Daoud regime had left unchanged the forms of owner ship and the system of income distribution.

Afghanistan remained one of the world’s poorest and most underdeveloped countries: in 1977 its per capita national income was a mere 162 dollars. The greater part of the GNP was produced in the traditional natural and small-scale commodity sectors of the national economy. The modern branches of the manufacturing industry were producing only 3.3 per cent of the GNP. Nearly 70 per cent of the able-bodied population were engaged in agriculture, but due to the extremely low level of the productive forces and the persisting vestiges of the pre-capitalist relations of production, more than half of the arable land was left uncultivated. Afghanistan had to import 85 per cent of its sugar, and a large part of its requirements in grain and fats were met through imports. A great number of farmers were deep in debt to money-lenders, paying them annual interest of up to 45 per cent. About one third of peasant families had no land of their own. Almost 2.5 million people in the country were nomads or semi nomads.

The archaic feudal and semi-feudal forms of landowner ship, unrestrained usury which brought misery to millions of peasants, and growing agrarian overpopulation led to the further impoverishment of the peasants. In 1977 there were over 600,000 peasant families that either worked for landowners as sharecroppers or owned small plots of land not larger than:0.5 hectare. About 40,000 big landowners owned the greater part of all the cultivated land, and the best at that. The unresolved agrarian problem added to the tensions in the countryside.

Various regions in Afghanistan were at different de velopment levels. For instance, Badakhshan, Hazarajat, Kunar and the region populated by the Pashtun tribes in the south-east and the south lagged far behind Kabul, Herat and some other provinces in economic, social and cultural development.127 Other signs of backwardness were numerous groups among the rural and urban popu lation closely linked with pre-capitalist economic struc tures and retaining many features of the traditional social organisation; the numerically small and weak industrial proletariat, which hardly numbered 50,000; the tenacious vestiges and traditions of communal and patriarchal (tribal) organisation, particularly among the Pashtuns and also among the Baluchis and Braguis inhabiting the southern regions; and, as a result, the considerable influence still enjoyed among the local population by the so-called tradi tional leaders, such as tribal khans, maliks and sardars, and by the Muslim clergy.

This uneven development of various regions was com pounded by the national (ethnic) heterogeneity of the population and the ages-old tensions between the upper strata of the Pashtuns (Afghans) and the national-ethnic minorities, particularly in the northern and central parts of the country. In some regions, as in Hazarajat and Bada khshan, the national tensions were aggravated by sectarian differences between the Sunnites (Pashtuns) and Shiites, and also the Ismaelites who made up a significant part of the population in Hazarajat and Badakhshan.

In industrial development the main stress still was on foreign aid, which was used for the most part for the expansion of the economic infrastructure, thereby facili tating private capitalist enterprise. Part of foreign loans and credits, as a result of inadequate accounting and their poorly organised distribution, was pocketed by the ruling elite infected with the corruption that had marked it under ‘the monarchy. Afghanistan’s foreign debt was rising every year, to reach $1,000 million in 1977. Accordingly, the total sum of payments to clear off the debt was increasing and accounted for a considerable portion of the state budget spending.

The traditional system of state administration, with its characteristic red tape, bribery, embezzlement and cor ruption, offered the ruling classes ample opportunities to plunder the country. The big bourgeoisie and the land owners were transferring a large part of their income abroad. The ruling elite was no better. The royal family, which lived abroad and had hundreds of millions of dollars depos ited in West European and American banks, received a monthly pension and income from its property, including property in land, which the Daoud regime did not touch.

Most of Afghanistan’s population were engaged in hard labour and lived on the verge of starvation assailed by want, ignorance and disease. About 88 per cent of the people were illiterate and only 28.8 per cent of children attended schools, 70 per cent of which were in a dilapidated state. There were only 71 hospitals with 3,600 beds per 16 mil lion of the population and 84 per cent of the physicians were employed in Kabul.

Political parties were banned, and labour unions and other organisations of the working people did not exist.

The Daoud regime came out to eliminate the gains of the republic’s initial period, sweeping away whatever there remained of democracy. At the end of 1977 and early in 1978 the political situation in the country grew explosive after the regime launched severe repression against the left. In December 1977 arrests were made among PDPA members and supporters. The ruling elite, with Daoud at its head, rallied the rightist forces around themselves in a bid to check the spreading dissatisfaction with dictatorial rule. A number of influential persons close to Daoud maintained close contacts with the Muslim Brothers and other reac tionary groups. The last patriots were removed from the government. Muhammad Hasan Shark, first deputy Presi dent, who was respected by the progressive public, was dismissed from his post and appointed ambassador to Japan.

The mounting discontent was expressed in different ways. Spontaneous protest actions by the population and rebellions among the Pashtun tribes flared up now and again, many of those actions culminated in clashes with the army. The situation was aggravated by frequent in stances of arson, robbery and terrorism. On November 16, 1977, Ali Ahmad Khuram, Minister of Planning, one of the most efficient cabinet ministers, was assassinated in the centre of Kabul.

Unable to cope with the rising tide of popular discon tent and to root out the causes of the extremely acute social contradictions, the authorities increasingly resorted to violence.

The political crisis culminated in the assassination, on

. April 17, 1978, of Mir Akbar Khyber, a PDPA leader who enjoyed great popularity among the workers, an organiser of the first mutual-aid funds, the prototype of the future trade unions, at Kabul industrial enterprises. This political assassination evoked strong indignation among the Kabul population. The funeral, which took place on April 19, 1978, grew into a political demonstration. The funeral procession was joined by thousands of people from all walks of life—workers, peasants from nearby villages, stu dents, handicraftsmen, white-collar workers and numerous progressive intellectuals. The procession was led by PDPA leaders. The people who took part in the demonstration carried red banners and posters saying "Down with tyranny!" and "Long live democracy!". The funeral train passed through the central streets. A meeting was held in front of the presidential palace and the US embassy. The speakers at the meeting lashed the regime’s policy and protested against political terror. The fact that a large number of people attended the funeral of Mir Akbar Khyber testified to the growing prestige and influence of the PDPA among the popular masses.

Aware of the broad popularity of the PDPA, which, in fact, had become a nucleus of organised opposition to the regime, Daoud and his men decided to remove the party leadership and the activists. On April 25, the PDPA leaders Nur Muhammad .Taraki, Babrak Karmal, Nur Ahmad Nur, Anahita Ratebzad, Ghulam Dastagir Panjsheri and dozens of party activists were arrested on false charges of criminal actions against the state.

The PDPA supporel: responded by raising to revolu tionary action the army units loyal to them on April 27, 1978 (Saur 7, 1357, according to the Afghan calendar). The insurgents were soon joined by the rest of the Afghan army.

As a result of their effective action, the Daoud regime was overthrown and power went to the Revolutionary Council of the Armed Forces of Afghanistan.

The Victory of the National-Democratic April Revolution and the Foundation of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan

The national-democratic revolution on April 27, 1978, was the logical and inevitable result of the mounting antag onistic contradictions between the overwhelming majority of the population and a handful of exploiters who for centuries had misappropriated the fruits of their labour.

The PDPA, which led the armed uprising, sought to resolve in practice and in the interest of all the peoples of Afghanistan, big and small, the pressing problems of national development; to eliminate the national inequality inherited from the past; and to provide conditions for grad ually drawing the country’s peoples ever closer together on the basis of equal rights, economic and cultural prog ress and joint participation in building a new Afghanistan.

The goals, proclaimed by the Party way back in 1966, could be acliieved only as a result of the April Revolution which made the PDPA the ruling party. The realisation of these goals met the vital interests of the absolute majority of the population, including the national bourgeoisie, the greater part of the officials, the Muslim clergy, and the army—officers and men. Therefore the revolution met actually no resistance. Even the commanding officers of the Central Corps’ divisions quartered near Kabul did noth ing to support the Daoud government, and the call for help by the Minister of Defence, General G. H. Rasuli, was ignored.

No one in the country, either among the civilian popu lation, in the police or the army, came to the defence of the authoritarian Daoud regime which had fully discredited itself and met the egoistic interests of a handful of rich landlords (mostly Pashtuns) and the big bourgeoisie, merchants for the most part, having close ties with foreign capital. That is why the PDPA-led revolutionary uprising on April 27 ended in victory.

In the evening on that day the Kabul radio broadcast the statement by the Revolutionary Council of the Armed Forces of Afghanistan that all power in the country had passed to the people and the armed forces had taken it upon themselves to defend the country and ensure the national independence of its people.

The first decree of the Revolutionary Council of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, published on April 29, 1978, said that the revolutionary uprising of the patriot ic officers and men of Afghanistan, which had taken place by the will of the people on Saur 7, 1357, which signalled the start of the national democratic ‘revolution, put an end to the despotic Daoud regime within less than 24 hours and laid the foundations of a national-democratic system in Afghanistan.

In order that the revolution accomplish its tasks fully and effectively, the Revolutionary Council of the Armed Forces handed down its powers to the Revolutionary Council of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and itself became part of it.

The Revolutionary Council proclaimed the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA) and elected General Secre tary of the PDPA Central Committee Nur Muhammad Taraki President of the Revolutionary Council and Prime Minister of the DRA. Babrak Karmal, who was a Political Bureau member and Secretary of the PDPA Central Com mittee, occupied the posts of Deputy Chairman of the Rev olutionary ‘Council and Deputy Prime Minister. Colonel Abdul Qader, commander and chief-of-staff of the air force and anti-aircraft defence, who headed the Revolution ary Council of the Armed Forces which exercised direct leadership of the revolutionary action, was appointed Minister of National Defence.

The Revolutionary Council appointed new governors and armed forces commanders. All the property that belonged to the members of the family of the former kings Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah and ex-President Muhammad Daoud was confiscated.

On May 1, the Revolutionary Council approved the list of the new government, the highest executive body. State activity began to be regulated by decrees of the Revolution ary Council and decisions of the DRA Government.

The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan received broad international recognition. The first to recognise the new revolutionary government were the Soviet Union, Bulgaria, India, Mongolia, Czechoslovakia, Cuba and Poland. On May 5, 1978, NurMuhammad Taraki was visited by Pakistani Ambassador in Kabul Ali Arshed who announced his country’s recognition of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. On that day the DRA was recognised by Tur key, the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen, Vietnam, Yugoslavia and Iran. On May 6, recognition of the DRA was announced on behalf of their governments by Theodore L. Eliot, Jr., Ambassador of the USA, and by K. R. Crook, Ambassador of Great Britain; by the GDR, the FRG and Italy. A few days later the DRA was recognised by the People’s Republic of China, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Bangladesh, Japan, Canada, Australia, Nepal, Iraq, Egypt, Ethiopia, Greece, Lebanon, Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Kuwait, Jordan and other countries. On May 9, recognition of the DRA by Libya was announced to the Afghan government by a special envoy who had arrived in Kabul with a message from Muammar Kaddafi.

On May 9 that year the government issued the Main Directions of the Revolutionary Tasks of the DRA Govern ment. Under that programme major progressive reforms began to be effected in Afghanistan.

The revolutionary government announced that its top priority task was to defend the country’s territorial integri ty, national sovereigi.cy and independence and the gains of the April Revolution, and to build the unity of all na tional progressive and patriotic forces.

In home policy the emphasis was on eliminating eco nomic backwardness, building an independent national economy, developing industry, modemising agriculture, and raising the living standards of the population. To that end, a number of radical social and economic reforms were planned—a democratic land reform for the benefit of working peasants and the abolition, with their help, of feudal and pre-feudal relations, the strengthening of the public sector in the economy through planning and by exercising effective control over the use of natural resources, democratisation of public life and solution of the na tional question in a democratic way. It was announced that the state apparatus should be purged of counter-revolutiona ries and the army be strengthened. Provisions were made for guaranteeing democratic rights and fréedoms and securing the political and economic interests of workers, peasants, officers, soldiers, handicraftsmen, intellectuals and other sections of the population. Measures were envis aged to introduce general compulsory and free primary education, to launch an effective campaign to combat illiteracy, to train scientific and technical personnel by expanding free secondary and higher education and voca tional training, and to create a free public health service.

In foreign policy it was decided to pursue an independ ent policy of peace and positive and active neutrality and non-alignment on principles of peaceful coexistence; to promote goodneighbourly relations, friendship and co operation with all neighbouring countries; to expand in every way the relations with the Soviet Union, to promote friendly relations with India; and to ensure friendly ties with Iran, Pakistan and China. The DRA supported the maintenance of world peace, general disarmament, dis mantling military bases on foreign territory, and promotion of international detente.

The system of state adininistration was being restructured in the centre and in the periphery: new heads of divisions and districts and chiefs of government services were bein appointed. The officials found guilty of embezzlement and corruption were removed from the organs of power.

Labour unions and women’s and youth organisations were being formed. The low-paid brackets of workers and other employees received a pay rise. A decree was issued to introduce a new and fair system of distributing food among the workers and other employees of state-run industrial enterprises and offices and among servicemen. People’s power took effective measures to lower the prices of foodstuffs and consumer goods.

Much prominence was given to measures on eliminating unemployment. The construction of new and expansion of the existing agricultural projects was expected to provide a large number of jobs. Already in the first months after the revolution the Ministry of Education offered jobs to 5,000 unemployed teachers. Housing construction was under way. ‘

The government introduced free first medical aid and allocated considerable sums for purchasing the equipment and medicines required.

Juridical commissions were being set up to supervise the work to ensure democratic rights for the people. Aided by democratic social organisations, the courts and procura tor’s offices conducted investigation of the civil and crimi nal cases left after the Daoud regime. Nearly 10,000 people were released from prisons (many of them had been in detention without trial for 10 to 15 years).

Implementing the programme of compulsory and free school education, the revolutionary government returned to schools thousands of senior pupils who had been expelled under the Daoud regime. About 600 new schools and a few colleges were opened and hundreds of thousands of text books were printed and distributed among schoolchildren. A plan was drawn up for setting up new educational estab lishments of all types, in towns and in rural areas. Free lit eracy courses were established at many state offices in Kabul and in the provinces. More scientists, technicians and teachers were being trained. The Soviet Union assisted Afghanistan in accomplishing this important task.

Considerable attention was paid to cultural reforms: a national academy of sciences was set up and new news papers and magazines were issued (not onlv in Pashtu and Dari but also in other languages spoken in the country).

Drawing women in socially useful work, the government paid special attention to eliminating illiteracy among them. Women were granted equal rights with men. The revolu tionary authorities prohibited early marriages and payment of brideemoney. A decision was passed on celebrating Women’s Day on March 8 to commemorate the struggle for women’s equality. More women became teachers, medical workers and office employees.

The Revolutionary Council issued a decree on easing the burden of debts to usurers for 11 million landless and land-hungry peasants. In the rural areas committees were set up from among representatives of the PDPA, local administrations and poor farmers for preparing and carrying out agrarian reforms. The state extended financial and technical aid to the peasants who wished to join in all kinds of farm cooperatives. Measures were taken to improve the life of impoverished nomads.

In November 1978, a plenary meeting of the PDPA Cen tral Committee discussed and unanimously approved the bill on a land reform. An end was put to big landownership; no family in Afghanistan was allowed to own more than 30 jeribs (six hectares) of land. The surplus land was divided among landless and land-hungry peasants and farm labourers. As a result, about 290,000 peasant families received land plots free.

A five-year plan for social and economic development was drawn up and put into operation.

The revolutionary reforms being effected by the govern ment were welcomed by the peasants, workers, handicrafts men, impoverished nomads, small traders, intellectuals, patriotic sections of the national bourgeoisie, Muslim theologians and others.

All the reforms were being carried out with the active support and direct and voluntary participation of all patriots of Afghanistan, the national and religious customs and traditions of the peoples and tribes being observed. During the first year of the revolution the working people and numerous members of the national bourgeoisie donated hundreds of millions of afghanis to various funds established to carry through the democratic reforms.

Many outstanding Muslim theologians in the country voiced unreserved support for the Democratic Republic, the revolutionary government and the measures it had set out to effect.

There emerged new public movements, such as the vol untary labour movement, and competitions among facto ries and city districts.

The consistent pursuance by the PDPA and the goverm ment of the foreign policy of peace helped to strengthen the international positions of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.

In September 1979, a DRA delegation headed by Nur Muhammad Taraki attended a summit conference of non aligned countries in Havana.


The April Revolution offered good opportunities for expanding the relations. of friendship and fruitful coopera tion with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries: Bulgaria, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, Mongolia, Poland, Romania, and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. On January 9, 1979, the DRA officially recognised the People’s Revolutionary Coun cil of Kampuchea.

The DRA’s cooperation with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries in trade, economy, science, technology and culture was developing on a stable long-term basis, to the mutual benefit of the sides, and acquired a new dimension.

In the economic and technical cooperation with the USSR the construction and servicing of over 120 projects continued practically in every sphere of the national econ omy; and so did designing and prospecting. The share of the USSR in assistance to Afghanistan exceeded 50 per cent. In 1979, the volume of Afghan-Soviet trade increased by more than 30 per cent and mounted to 323,900,000 roubles, against 215 million roubles in 1978.

The official friendly visit to the USSR of a DRA party and government delegation headed by Nur Muhammad Taraki on December 4-7, 1978, proved to be an outstanding event in the history of relations between the two countries. During that visit the sides signed the Treaty of Friendship, Good-Neighbourliness and Cooperation between the USSR and the DRA. The significance of this Treaty, signed for the benefit of both countries and in the interest of peace in Asia and the rest of the world, for the protection of the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Afghanistan and the revolutionary gains of its people came to the fore when the DRA became the target of undeclared aggression launched by imtermational imperialism and reaction. The sides signed also an agreement on setting up a standing inter-governmental Soviet-Afghan commission on economic cooperation.

During the Moscow talks the Soviet and Afghan sides reaffirmed their determination to carry on the struggle for peace and intemmational security, for general and com plete disarmament, for detente. They demonstrated the common views of the USSR and the DRA and their com mon approach to a large number of major international issues.

However, as progressive changes were being made, the revolution came up against serious difficulties caused by various factors. Some of these have been already men tioned earlier in the book: the extreme poverty and back wardness of Afghanistan; the absence of an experienced and sufficiently numerous working class steeled in class battles; and acute shortage of the required number of skilled personnel and leaders on all levels.

As was pointed out by the PDPA Central Committee in April 1980, in the post-revolutionary period "the tradi tions of democratic centralism and collective leadership were not adequately developed in the party. Therefore, important decisions were often made without thorough preliminary preparations."428 The party, which for many years before the revolution had had to do underground work and had been subjected to severe repression and persecution by the reactionaries, lacked experience in ad ministering the state and in economic and cultural develop ment. ‘ The PDPA jacked unity: there had emerged a group headed by Hafizullah Amin who after the victory of the revolution occupied the posts of Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs. Amin sought to place his supporters in the key positions in the party and the govern ment. Kindling factional struggle, he succeeded, in the summer and autumn of 1978, in removing from the leader ship a large group of party leaders who were faithful to the revolution. In March 1979 he managed to take over the post of Prime Minister and early in 1979 he became the Minister of Defence. In September that same year Hafizul lah Amin forcibly removed and then killed Nur Muhammad Taraki, after which he seized the posts of General Secretary of the PDPA Central Committee and President of the Revo lutionary Council.

Amin and his men used inadmissible methods in carrying out major reforms, such as the agrarian reform and the elimination of illiteracy among the adult population, dis torting their progressive meaning. The traditions and reli gious beliefs of people were ignored and revolutionary law was grossly violated.

The difficulties experienced by the country were com

pounded many times over by the criminal actions of Amin and his group and were skilfully used by reactionaries at home and abroad.}29 Backed up by conservative and right wing sections in some of the neighbouring states, who feared that the revolutionary events in Afghanistan would have a negative effect on the situation in their own coun tries, they began a vigorous struggle against the April Revolu tion and the goals it had proclaimed. A massive campaign was launched to misinform the population and many politically inexperienced and illiterate people believed that misinformation. The Amin administration subjected peaceful residents, specifically in the border regions, to unjustified repressions. Thousands of refugees fled across the Afghan borders. Armed counter-revolutionary detachments were being formed and trained, with Afghan counter-revolutionary leaders receiving lavish material, financial and other as sistance from various governmental and non-governmental organisations in the USA, some other Western countries and Muslim states. The activities of these detachments against the DRA, according to the information available, were not curbed but encouraged by the authorities of the countries in whose territory they had been formed and from where they made armed incursions into Afghanistan.

The April 1978 Revolution in Afghanistan (and the subsequent events in Iran and the collapse of the aggressive CENTO alliance), having exposed the weakness and vulner ability of the positions of international imperialism in the Middle East, considerably influenced the policy of the imperialists and their allies in that part of the world. The anti-popular and reactionary thrust of this policy and its aggressiveness increased. Its inspirers and organisers stepped up their efforts to form a united front of imperialist and pro-imperialist forces in the Middle East, spearheaded against the growing national liberation movement in the region.

The forces of international imperialism, having rapidly expanded their military presence in the Middle Fast and launched an unheard-of propagandist, psychological war against the DRA and its friends (against the Soviet Union, above all), pursued far-reaching goals. They were trying (and they still do) to reverse the revolutionary social, economic and political changes in the region. Their goal is to bring the peoples that have carried out a revolution back into the orbit of imperialist, neocolonialist influence and exploitation, to use them as an instrument of their reactionary global and regional strategy and policy. They seek to turn the countries of the region, which have broken away from the trammels of the imperialist anti-popular policy, into an instrument of torpedoing detente, increasing international tensions, and -stepping up the arms race. They want to turn the region into an anti-Soviet bridgehead.

Thus, two opposite attitudes to the events in the country were clearly manifest practically right after the April Revolu tion and the formation of the Democratic Republic of Afgha nistan. The forces of imperialism and its reactionary allies assumed a hostile attitude to the revolutionary developments in Afghanistan. The Soviet Union and other peace-loving peoples came resolutely to the aid of the DRA and its people.

As is seen from the evidence provided by numerous eyewitnesses and from the research done by outstanding Orientalists, the first camps for training terrorists and saboteurs against revolutionary Afghanistan were set up by . Afghan reactionary emigrés in the north-western part of

Pakistan already a few weeks after the April Revolution.

In March 1979 the right-wingers staged a rebellion in Herat, the third largest city in Afghanistan, and seized army barracks, the arsenal, and food storehouses. Counter revolutionary armed actions continued even after the re bellion was put down.

The obtaining situation could not only lead to the loss of the revolutionary gains by the Afghan people. It also threatened the territorial integrity and state sovereignty of Afghanistan.

By the end of 1979 armed counter-revolutionary de tachments operated in 18 of Afghanistan’s 26 provinces. Their acts of sabotage and terror caused heavy damage to the economy, thwarted progressive reforms launched soon after the revolution, and brought suffering and death to vast numbers of people. During 1979 the sown area in the country shrank by almost 9 per cent, the output of cereals dropped by 10 per cent, and that of industrial crops, by 25-30 per cent.130 The national per capitaincome for that year went down by almost 14 per cent and amounted to as little as $139.

Analysing the situation taking shape in Afghanistan and along its south-eastern borders as a result of the activity of armed counter-revolutionary groups which had infiltrated from abroad, many observers and analysts concluded that "it was becoming increasingly dangerous not only for the destiny of the April Revolution, but also for the unity of Afghanistan. There is no doubt that the extensive aid and support rendered to the counter-revolutionaries from abroad were not only interference into the DRA’s internal affairs but were tantamount to aggression as it is defined in the widely known documents adopted by the United Nations.

The danger looming over the April Revolution and the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan was seen clearly not only by foreign political scientists, but also by Afghan leaders who, proceeding from the provisions of the Treaty of Friendship, Good-Neighbourliness and Cooperation, signed between the USSR and the DRA on December 5, | 1978, and in keeping with Article 51 of the UN Charter, repeatedly requested the Soviet Union during 1979 to send Soviet Army units into the DRA. In response to these repeated requests a limited contingent of Soviet troops was sent to Afghanistan.

The situation which obtained in Afghanistan at the end of 1978 and all through 1979 caused growing concern and protest among many leading and rank-and-file members of the PDPA and among non-party patriotic-minded people from every section of Afghan society. Dissatisfaction with the activities of Hafizullah Amin was spreading. It was becoming obvious that only by overthrowing the Amin regime would it be possible to translate into practice the ideals of the April Revolution and improve the situation in the PDPA and in the whole of the country. By the end of 1979, left without support in the PDPA, in the army and among the people, Amin found himself in complete isola tion. On December 27, 1979, the patriotic majority in the PDPA, in the Revolutionary Council and in the armed forces overthrew the Amin regime. That action, which was received with understanding by the world progressive and peace-loving public, and which was welcomed by all genuine patriots in Afghanistan, foiled the schemes of the imperialists and their reactionary allies in the region and prevented them from isolating the DRA, from leaving it all alone, without international aid, confronted with’ the joint forces of reactionaries abroad and counter-revolutionaries at home. If it were not for the timely Soviet help, Babrak Karmal noted later, there would be no free, independent and sover eign Afghanistan today.

On December 28, 1979, a new Revolutionary Council Presidium and a-:new government were formed..The posts of the President of the Revolutionary Council and Prime Minister were occupied by Babrak Karmal, the newly elected General Secretary of the PDPA Central Committee. Among the ministers in the new government were PDPA members and non-party people. Shortly before that, many of the ministers had been released from prisons, while others had re-emerged after being underground.

The events of December 27-28, 1979, signalled the start of a new stage in the April Revolution. As a result, the popular and progressive character of the national-demo cratic revolution, as was pointed out by the PDPA Central . Committee, grew stronger and obtained new and better conditions for development. The necessary prerequisites were created for restoring the organisational, political and ideological unity of the PDPA undermined by the divisive actions of Hafizullah Amin, and for restoring in the party an atmosphere ofrevolutionaryprinciples, sincerity and trust. It became possible to ensure democratic liberties for the peoples of Afghanistan andgenuine respect for their traditions and religious beliefs, and to improve their living standards.

The new stage of the April Revolution also provided the opportunity for implementing the main‘ provisions of the PDPA programme envisaging the merger of all patriotic, progressive and democratic forces in the country to form a broad Fatherland Front.

Already in the first weeks after the start of the new stage of the April Revolution, the PDPA Central Committee, the Revolutionary Council and the DRA government set the main tasks and objectives in economic, social, cultural and foreign policies with a view to protecting the gains of the

April Revolution, state sovereignty and territorial integri ty of the DRA.

In the political and social sphere the tasks and objectives were:

—to consolidate the unity of all peoples—big and small— and .tribes in Afghanistan; to eliminate completely any dis crimination against the citizens of Afghanistan on grounds of their nationality, language, race, tribe, sect, origins, education, sex, residence, or property status;

—gradually to overcome the existing differences in the levels of economic, social and cultural development of various regions;

—to ensure for the Muslims of Afghanistan all the neces sary conditions, full freedom and reliable protection in per forming the religious rites of Islam, render assistance to the ulemas in exercising their duties;

—to promote democracy on principles of collective leadership and democratic centralism; steadily to expand the participation of the working people and their organi sations that are united in the broad Fatherland Front under the leadership of the PDPA, in running the state and so ciety;

fully to eradicate such vestiges of the past as despotism, corruption, lawlessness, arbitrariness, bureaucracy, em bezzlement, chauvinism, and local nationalism;

—constantly to improve the work of the bodies charged with state security and law and order so as to provide conditions for the peaceful life and work of the peoples of Afghanistan,

—to strengthen the DRA Armed Forces in every way.

In the economic sphere the following tasks and objec tives were set:

—to develop the economy with a view to raising the living standards and well-being of the peoples of every family, and every working man;

—to promote various forms of collective labour, their organisation and gradual introduction in all the key sectors of the economy;

—to improve the living and working conditions of the working class and other working people; to provide jobs to the unemployed, especially young people;

—to give every assistance to the national private sector in light industry, handicrafts, trade, transport, agriculture, and livestock breeding, and to protect it from the ruinous competition of foreign capital.

In the cultural area the main tasks and objectives were:

—to raise in every way the educational, cultural, profes sional and technical level of the popular masses;

—to preserve and develop everything that is best and most valuable in the rich cultural heritage of the peoples of Afghanistan;

—to provide favourable conditions for the creative work of the Afghan intelligentsia.

In foreign policy the tasks and goals of the DRA at this new stage of the April Revolution envisaged consistent adherence to the principles of peaceful coexistence, non alignment, positive neutrality and international solidarity and cooperation with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries and with the revolutionary forces of our time.

The DRA reaffirmed its being interested in promoting every form of bilateral, regional and international cooper ation, its preparedness to settle its relations with neigh bouring states in accordance with the generally recognised principles and norms of peaceful coexistence, and its resolve to respect the purposes and principles of the UN Charter in the efforts of the United Nations to ensure a lasting world peace, halt the arms race and end the danger ous escalation of international tensions.

The PDPA Central Committee, the Revolutionary Coun cil and the DRA Government affirmed that the revolu tionary changes taking place in the country were irreversible, and expressed their resolve to ensure the advancement of Afghanistan from backwardness to progress.

The tasks and objectives put forward by the PDPA Central Committee, the Revolutionary Council and the DRA Government were formulated following an analysis of the social, economic and political situation in the country at the initial stage of the national-democratic revolution. Their purpose was to eliminate the harmful consequences of the blunders and crimes committed by Amin, gradually to overcome the harsh legacy of the pre-revolutionary past, to improve the living, educational and cultural standards of the Afghan people, and to establish a firm political alliance (within the framework of the broad and united Fatherland Front) between the working class and the peasants, handicraftsmen, intellectuals, other sections of the working people and also all patriotic forces favouring social progress and anti-imperialism. Measures were taken to improve the living conditions of the Afghan working people, and wages were increased considerably for low paid workers. The state allocated considerable funds to provide free meals for the workers and other employees in the low-income bracket employed in the public sector of the national economy, and effected measures to regulate the prices of food and other vital consumer goods and medicines.

The tasks and objectives advanced by the People’s Dem ocratic Party and the revolutionary government of Afghan istan were intended to repulse internal and international counter-revolution and reaction, the rightand left-wing extremists and adventurers, to ensure peace in the country in order to carry out large-scale general democratic reforms with the active participation of the working people’s organi sations and under their control and, on that basis, to ac complish the tasks and attain the goals of the April Rev olution.

Comparatively little time has passed since the onset of the new stage in the April Revolution. However, despite the considerable difficulties experienced by the country, extensive ‘work has been done to attain the tasks and goals listed above. Of great importance in this respect were measures to rectify the criminal violations of revolutionary law perpetrated by Amin.13

The activity of the Afghan working people and their organisations was stepped up and began to play a growing role in the public and political life of society.

Early in the summer of 1980, trade unions functioning under PDPA guidance were set up at all state-owned and also at large mixed and private enterprises, both in Kabul and in the provinces.

At the end of May 1980, the first congress of Afghan teachers was held -in Kabul. It concentrated, among other things, on measures to combat illiteracy. It was noted at the congress that over 30,000 literacy courses already functioning in the country were being attended by hundreds of thousands of workers, peasants and handicraftsmen.

The medical congress held in June 1980 passed a resolu tion on solving urgent problems involved in the develop ment of the public health system.

In July 1980, the Central Council of the Trade Unions of Afghanistan held its first plenary meeting, which called on all Afghan working people to defend their country from the enemies of the April Revolution, to increase labour efficiency, build up the unity of all working people in the country, and to strengthen solidarity with the Soviet Union and all progressive forces in the world.

In August 1980, the Political Bureau of the PDPA Central Committee passed a resolution On the Role and Tasks of the Trade Unions of the Democratic Republic of Afghan istan. It outlined the main directions and forms of trade union activities and instructed the Central Council of the Afghan Trade Unions to elaborate and adopt the Rules of the DRA Trade Unions and the Statute on the Rights of Primary Trade Union Organistations. The resolution made it binding on all PDPA organisations, on ministries and state-run and mixed enterprises and institutions to render assistance in setting up primary trade union organisations. It helped to step up, expand and normalise the activities of the Afghan trade unions and to strengthen their ties with the working people.

The first congress of the Afghan trade unions, held early in March 1981, was attended by over 500 delegates from the provinces and by guests from 20 countries, includ ing the Soviet Union. The congress discussed the results of the work done by the Central Council of the Trade Unions, approved their rules, emblem and flag and outlined prospects for the trade union movement in Afghanistan.

-It adopted a resolution: strongly denouncing the actions of international reaction and imperialism against the DRA and the April Revolution.

Over the time passed since the start of the new stage in the April Revolution the Afghan trade unions have be come a large and influential mass organisation functioning under the guidance of the PDPA.132 Now they have a bigger role to play in the solution of problems related to the social and economic advancement of Afghanistan. Trade union members are active in forming groups to maintain law and order and to combat the counter-revolutionary elements and terrorist and sabotage groups infiltrated into the DRA. The trade unions help to set up libraries at industrial enterprises, and literacy courses. Special atten tion is paid to forming a "movement for voluntary labour" for the benefit of the revolution, which has been joined by tens, of thousands of working people. The trade unions render considerable material aid to low-income and large families of factory and office workers.

The meeting of the Democratic Youth Organisation of Afghanistan (DYOA), heldin July 1980, resolved to strength en the unity and promote influence of this organisation primarily among workers and peasants. The first national conference of the DYOA late in September 1980 was attended by guests from 50 countries, including the Soviet Union. The conference called on all DYOA members to join law-and-order groups and armed youth detachments and to consider the rout of counter-revolutionary forces the chief goal of the younger generation. .The newspaper Darafshe Jawanan, which began to.be published with the DYOA’s assistance in the autumn of 1980, came to play no mean role in mobilising Afghan young people for the defence of the revolution.

DYOA members, effective assistants of the PDPA in defending the revolution and effecting progressive reforms, explained to the working people the policy pursued by the PDPA and the DRA Govemment and fought against the forces of counter-revolution. The first Young Pioneer organisations were set up in the autumn of 1980 at the initiative of the DYOA and under its leadership. By the summer next year the total membership of the Young Pioneer organisations exceeded 20,000 members. Young Fioneer camps were set up for the poor families for the first time in the country.

In mid-September 1980 the founding congress of the Union of Journalists of Afghanistan was held in Kabul. It was attended by nearly 450 delegates from newspapers, magazines, radio, television, publishing houses, and the Bakhtar news agency.

The Union of Artists, set up in October 1980, united artists, actors, musicians, film makers and architects. Its foundation congress was attended by nearly 1,000 people. Around the same time, over 500 Afghan men of letters representing all the nationalities and ethnic groups of Afghan istan, met at the foundation congress of the Union of Writers.133 The formation of these creative unions, as delegates to these congresses pointed out, helped to rally the Afghan public in support of the April Revolution.

The PDPA, the Revolutionary Council and the Govermn ment of the DRA, and also patriotic organisations paid much attention to ways and means of improving agriculture and solving the food problem (which is only natural for a country where the majority of the population are peasants and the economy is based on agriculture and the processing of farm produce). During the second stage of the land re form, planned for a term of three years, the state guaranteed the ownership of land and water by the peasants. Measures were taken to mechanise, with Soviet aid, the production of cotton, wheat and sugar beet. Farm-machine hiring stations were set up. The state helped to organise supply and-marketing, producer and other cooperatives in the countryside. Measures were taken to reclaim arable land and increase crop yields. The purchasing prices of cotton and sugar beet were increased by 25 to 30 per cent. The state distributed seeds and chemical fertilisers among peasants at reduced prices (on credit to the poor) and helped them purchase farm implements. The first Cooperative Institute was set up. Teams formed in large cities by the DYOA went to the countryside to help the peasants. Self-defence detachments were formed from among the peasants.

The country’s first congress of rural cooperators, at tended by 650 delegates, was convened in December 1980. It discussed the development of the cooperative move ment, ways of overcoming economic and cultural back wardness in the Afghan countryside, improving the living and working conditions of peasants and handicraftsmen, boosting agricultural production, turing Afghan fanning into a highly developed and effective branch of the national economy, reforming agrarian relations and, in the process, eliminating poverty and backwardness among peasants.

At the new stage of the April Revolution the revolutionary authorities of Afghanistan drew up a programme of progressive reforms to be implemented in Afghan agri culture for a few years, taking due account of the interests of peasants, the traditions and specific conditions of differ ent regions, and the customs long established among the people. On June 20, 1981, the PDPA Central Committee and the DRA Council of Ministers passed a resolution On the Land Reform in the DRA to help improve the living conditions of peasants, regulate land tenure, and boost agricultural production.

As it was noted late in 1981 at the plenary meeting of the Central Council of Agricultural Cooperatives, the people’s authorities assist the cooperatives a good deal, helping them to attract new members. The state provides . the cooperatives with credits, fertilisers, seeds and farm implements (at reduced prices). The peasants were shown the advantages of agricultural production with the use of modern methods and instruments of labour.

The first machine and tractor stations have been set up in the country. Following a decision of the Revolutionary Council the debt to the state for 1978-81 was cancelled for 860,000 peasant families. Large sums have been ear marked for the repair and construction of irrigation canals and other hydrotechnical projects in Badakhshan, Qunduz, Parvan, WNimroz and other provinces, thereby enabling the country to irrigate tens of thousands of hectares of dry and virgin lands. As a result, the total harvest of the main crops in 1981 exceeded the 1980 results. The share of these crops increased in the Afghan exports, which is evidenced by the DRA’s trade agreements with the USSR and also with India, the GDR, Czechoslovakia, Britain, Japan, the Netherlands and other countries.

The decision of the Revolutionary Council to set up the Chief Board of Islamic Affairs at the DRA Council of Ministers contributed to the normalisation of the situa tion in the country. This decision was approved at Afghani stan’s first conference of ulemas, held late in June and early in July’ 1980 and attended by over 800 people. The delegates to the conference voiced their support for the constructive processes going on in Afghanistan at the new stage of the April Revolution and denounced the campaign of misinformation on the position of Islam in the DRA conducted by the mass media in a number of countries. The conference was addressed by Babrak Karmal, who said that a new Muslim association was being established on the basis of profound respect for Islam and its principles of justice and equality. The decree issued by the Revolutionary Council in August 1981 allotted to Muslim religious insti tutions their ‘ands and other property (so-called waqfs) and allowed the ulemas to retain the land surplus they had. The major positive changes that had occurred in the country were legalised in the Fundamental Principles of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, approved by the Revolutionary Council, the supreme body of state power in the DRA, on April 20-21, 1980. The Fundamental Principles of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan consist of 68 articles grouped into 10 chapters. Chapter One points out that the DRA "‘is an independent democratic _ State belonging to all Muslim working people’; that the state "shall make efforts to ensure for the people a pros perous, happy, peaceful, secure and tranquil life"; that _ the power of the working people of the DRA" is based on the vast national fatherland front’’. Article 4 of the Funda mental Principles defines the PDPA as ‘"‘the party of the working class and all the toilers of the country" and as "the guiding and mobilising force of society and state" Article 28 says that "the equality of rights among the citizens is ensured in all economic, political, social and cultural fields".

The Fundamental Principles point out that "respect, observance and preservation of Islam as a sacred religion will be ensured" in the country and all Muslims are en sured "freedom of religious rites" (Article 5). Articles 17, 18, 19, 21, and 22 say that "‘the state preserves and pro tects all forms of ownership", and that it will preserve and protect private ownership according to law"’; it ‘"‘will encour age, protect and control private enterprises’’; it "respects and guarantees ownership of the peasants and other land holders ... according to the provisions of law"’; that the state encourages the participation of national entrepreneurs in the development of industry, the services, transport and agriculture and guarantees, "in accordance with law, the security of private investments with a view to developing national economy". It is pointed out also that property cannot be expropriated from its owner, the exception being "expropriation of private property against payment in accord with social justice and law".155

The consistent efforts of the PDPA, the Revolutionary Council, the DRA Government, and patriotic mass organisa tions working under their leadership to insplement the ideals and attain the goals of the April Revolution, helped to stabilise the political situation in Afghanistan and to rally the working people and all patriotic forces (includ ing the influential sections of the national bourgeoisie, the Muslim clergy and many tribal elders) round the revo lutionary leadership headed by Babrak Karmal. The social base for counter-revolutionary activity was narrowed down. All this made it possible to withdraw some of the units of the limited contingent of Soviet troops sent in the country in December 1979, as their presence there was no longer necessary. This decision was published on June 22, 1980, and implemented at the end of the month.

Thanks to the PDPA’s efforts to bring together and mobilise all patriotic, progressive and national-democratic forces of Afghanistan in defence of the April Revolution, it became possible to convene a conference of national patriotic forces in Kabul in December 1980. The conference was attended by almost 2,000 delegates of the PDPA, the trade unions, agricultural cooperatives, the Democratic Youth Organisation of Afghanistan, the Democratic Organi sation of Afghan Women, the unions of writers, journalists and artists, and other social organisations, the business circles of the country (the Chambers of Commerce and Industry) Muslim theologians, and the Pashtun tribes.

The conference decided to form a National Fatherland Front and to set up a supreme organising commission in order to prepare and convene its inauguration congress.

The inauguration congress was held on June 15, 1981, in Kabul. It was attended by 940 delegates from all classes and sections of Afghan society. Of them, 340 represented workers and peasants. The congress was addressed by Babrak Karmal with a report on the tasks and objectives of the National Fatherland Front (NFF).

The delegates to the inauguration congress unanimously approved the Rules of the National Fatherland Front and elected its leading bodies—the National Committee (95 members) and the Executive Committee (21 members). Saleh Muhammad Zeray, Political Bureau Member and Secretary of the PDPA Central Committee, was unanimous ly elected NFF Chairman. Four vice-chairmen were elected (among them Sayed Afghani, Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Ulema of Afghanistan).

The formation of the National Fatherland Front was widely supported in the country. Public meetings were held, welcoming the formation of the Front and funds were raised to be donated to the Front’s branches set up in the localities.

The significance and irreversible character of the posi tive changes in Afghanistan were noted by the delegates of the International Meeting of Solidarity with the Afghan .People held in Kabul in June 1980. The meeting, sponsored by the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity Organisation was attended by delegates from 22 countries and many inter national non-governmental and _ religious organisations, as the World Fellowship of Buddhists and the World Peace Council. The meeting expressed support for the Afghan people carrying on the struggle for peace and progress and for a political settlement of the situation in the region.

The peoples of developing countries reaffirmed their solidarity with the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan at the 10th session of the Presidium of the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity Organisation held in November 1981 in Kabul.

The major positive changes that occurred in the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan at the new stage of the national-democratic April Revolution are the result of the consistently revolutionary, creative activity and guidance by the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan. A major event in the party’s history was the adoption of the new Rules, which define the PDPA as the highest form of political organisation, a new type of party, and the van guard of the working class and all working people in the republic. The PDPA Rules say that the party’s activity is based on principles of scientific revolutionary theory, and expresses and defends the interests of the working people of Afghanistan.

At the new stage of the revolution the PDPA has over come many difficulties and temporary setbacks and rallied the more politically active and advanced patriotic sections of society for the defence of the country and the revolu

. tion. The successful undertakings of the party were facili tated by the constant efforts of its leadership to restore the atmosphere of trust, unity and revolutionary principles in the PDPA, to find new organisational methods of work, to raise the ideological and political level of the party cadres and strengthen discipline in the party at all levels.

Besides, the consistent implementation of the resolution on ensuring observance of revolutionary law in Afghanistan, adopted by the Political Bureau of the PDPA Central Com mittee in November 1980, helped achieve the goals set for the new stage of the April Revolution.

The PDPA Central Committee has concentrated re lentlessly on strengthening party leadership and building up the country’s armed forces, border troops, security service, and detachments for the defence of the revolution, increasing their efficiency, and improving their material and technical supplies and steeling them ideologically and politically.

Addressing the fifth plenary meeting of the PDPA Central Committee in March 1981, Babrak Karmal, General Sec retary of the Central Committee, said that when the new stage began in the April Revolution, the party grew stronger organisationally and numerically (largely due to the inflow of new members from among workers and peasants), its social base expanded, the party functionaries grew more experienced and efficient and the number of its politically educated activists increased. The PDPA’s prestige among the popular masses had grown. During the latter half of 1981 about 10,000 candidate members became members. Of these, 40 per cent were workers, handicraftsmen and peasants (in the economically advanced regions of the country the figure was 75 per cent). January and February 1982 saw the preparations for the first national conference of the PDPA (its convocation had been announced at the seventh plenary meeting of the PDPA Central Committee in December 1981). That party forum was to adopt the PDPA Action Programme— a basic document of revolutionary power for the near future. Party conferences were held in the towns and in the provinces. Delegates to the PDPA conference were elected.

The conference was convened on March 14, 1982 in Kabul. It was attended by delegates of workers, peasants, intellectuals, servicemen—of all sections of Afghan society, of all its peoples. The 841 delegates to the conference represented 62,800 members and candidate members united in 1,656 party organisations.

Addressing the conference with an opening speech, Babrak Karmal told those present that the conference had received messages of greeting from fraternal revolutionary parties. He fed out the greeting from the Central Commit tee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which said that the CPSU Central Committee and all Soviet people, following the profound traditions of Soviet-Afghan friend ship and guided by the principle of international solidarity, resolutely supported the revolutionary people of Afghani stan in their striving to build a new society.

In the report on the draft of the PDPA Action Programme and the tasks of strengthening the party and consolidat ing its ties with the people, Babrak Karmal told the con ference that the main strategic goal of the first PDPA Programme (adopted in 1966)—the winning of political power—was achieved. Now, he said, the party was faced with new tasks which were to be formulated and ways of their solution were to be found. This was the ‘chief purpose of the conference. To that end, the party needed a new policy document, an action programme which would serve as the basis for rallying the party members still closer and mustering all forces for accomplishing the tasks of the national-democratic revolution and defending its gains.

The report noted the historic importance of the social, . economic and political changes that had occurred in Afgha nistan after the April Revolution, The domination by a handful of oppressors—the richest landlord aristocracy and usurers—had been abolished.

The main political achievement of the April Revolu tion was revolutionary people’s power. This power, Babrak Karmal said, was at the same time the chief political instru ment of the revolution, for it ensured its expansion and deepening in the interest of the broad popular masses and a reliable protection of the revolution from encroachments by domestic and foreign counter-revolution and reaction.

The April Revolution, he said, had laid the foundations of an entirely new political system in Afghanistan. This system incorporated (apart from state bodies) the National Fatherland Front—a support for the working people’s power in Afghanistan.

The report said that the backwardness and underdevel opment of Afghanistan were temporary. Effecting pro gressive economic improvements in the interest of the people and with their direct participation and carrying through a programme of deep-going social and cultural reforms, the PDPA was convinced that the Democratic aa dere of Afghanistan would become an economically

socially advanced state in the foreseeable future. To achieve this, the party intended, in keeping with its Action Programme, to pursue steadily the course towards a dem ocratic solution of the agrarian question and to build advanced industry.

The purpose of the Action Programme is that during its implementation the vital interests of the whole people should be met. The PDPA’s goal is that all the peoples and tribes of Afghanistan, big and small, should be drawn in material and cultural progress for the first time in the long history of Afghanistan, that all of them should be guaran teed full equality and be given opportunities for an all-round economic, social and cultural development. The PDPA deems it imperative that all that is best and most valuable in their rich cultural and historical legacy should be pre served and developed and their religious, cultural and historical traditions be respected.

Since a great part of the population in Afghanistan is illiterate, or almost illiterate, the educational work done by the party and the social organisations which are members of the National Fatherland Front is of great importance, for it helps to spread political awareness among the working people, build up their patriotic unity, wipe out illiteracy, and draw broad masses of the population in the defence of the gains of the April Revolution.

The main direction in the PDPA’s political activities is the maintenance of close ties between the party and the people. Herein is the source of the PDPA’s power and vitali ty. In approving its Action Programme, the PDPA is guided by a clear and simple goal—to make the people happy and their motherland flourishing. This is the purpose of the April Revolution and of the PDPA’s activities.

The revolution in Afghanistan, Babrak Karmal went on, caused frenzy and frantic resistance on the part of imper ialism and reaction. People are dying in Afghanistan because of the fratricidal war provoked by the counter-revolution aries and acts of violence and terror committed by them in the country, and because of the large-scale outside inter ference and the unprovoked and undeclared war and aggres sion being waged against the DRA for the restoration in the country of the rule by a handful of exploiters over thrown by the people. All this hampers urgent social and economic reforms. Therefore, the primary task facing the party and revolutionary power today, stressed Babrak Karmal, was to complete the rout of the armed counter revolution, to establish and reliably secure the revolutionary power in the localities and ensure a lasting civil peace in the country.

The normalisation of the situation in Afghanistan, the strengthening of the revolutionary regime and the defeat of the armed counter-revolution will greatly contribute to the stabilisation of the situation in the region, in the whole of Asia, and in the rest of the world. This would help provide conditions for peaceful coexistence among states and mutually beneficial cooperation among thein, for the benefit of all the peoples.

The main aspects in the approach of the PDPA and the DRA Goverment to international issues are consistent actions for peace in the Middle East and South Asia and in the whole world. In this context, said Babrak Karmal, the state sovereignty and independence of the DRA and its people could be reliably secured only if fraternal friend ship and fruitful cooperation with the Soviet Union continued and grew stronger. The PDPA and the revolutionary government of the DRA lay much stress on promoting re lations and cooperation with all countries of the socialist community, strictly observe the Charter of the United Nations, reaffirm their invariable adherence to the princi ples of the non-aligned movement and, at the same time, express determination to shape its relations with all states on the basis of mutual respect for state sovereignty and independence, equality and non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries.

The PDPA and the DRA Government will work consis tently for building up the unity of all peoples in the com mon struggle for peace, detente, disarmament, prohibition and ultimate liquidation of nuclear arms, for friendship among peoples, democracy, human rights and social prog ress, for creating a lasting atmosphere of cooperation and trust in the world, and for the solidarity of the peoples in the struggle against the forces of imperialism, aggression and reaction.

The PDPA and the DRA Government will do all they can to promote friendship and cooperation with Muslim coun tries and peoples. To that end they continue the search for peaceful ways, through negotiations with its neighbours— Pakistan and Iran— of solving the international problems facing Afghanistan today.

All the speakers at the conference who joined the dis cussion of the report by Babrak Karmal unanimously backed up the proposals and conclusions it contained. The participants in the national conference of the PDPA unanimously adopted the party’s Action Programme and the appeal to the people of Afghanistan.

The Action Programme says that it is aimed at turning the DRA into a modern prosperous state with developed agriculture, at building a sound and fast-growing industry in Afghanistan, and at strengthening and expanding the public sector. The working class of Afghanistan is a sec tion of society which is more rapidly increasing and is better organised, while the peasants constitute the largest section taking part in progressive reforms and fighting vigorously for the revolution.

The Action Programme stresses the need to establish one comprehensive system of defending the revolution and the people, comprising the army, the border troops, the security service, militia, detachments for the defence of the revolution, and tribal volunteer corps.

The defence of the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Afghanistan is the chief goal of the PDPA’s foreign policy. The comerstone of this policy is promotion of close friendship and traditional coopera tion with the Soviet Union and the other countries of the socialist community.

During the time passed since the national conference of the PDPA the role of the party has increased in Afghan society and state. By the summer of 1983 its membership exceeded 90,000 (65 per cent of the PDPA members and candidate members were aged under 30). Speaking at the 12th Plenary Meeting of the PDPA Central Committee on July 3, 1983, Babrak Karmal noted that a new factor—a ‘ far-flung system of party organisations and committees— had been created in the DRA and was functioning well, constantly increasing its role.

Despite the positive changes that occurred since the start of the new stage in the April Revolution, the situa tion in Afghanistan remained tense. This was caused mainly by the stepping up of undeclared aggression launched against the republic by the forces of counter-revolution, intemational imperialist reaction and its allies.

In 1980-83, armed revolutionary units, extensively aided from abroad, operated in Nangarhar, Gilmend, Herat, Parvan, Farah, Baglan, Badakhshan, Qunduz, Balkh, Jowjan, Faryab, Badghis, Qandahar, Kabul, Bamian, Logar, Kapisa, Samangan, Wardak, Takhar, Nimruz, Ghor, Kunar, Zabol, and Paktia.

Counter-revolutionaries destroyed crops, granaries, and killed livestock; burned farm buildings and dwelling houses, food storages, and ruined irrigation systems, which had been built through generations. As estimated by Afghan experts, the total damage caused by counter-revolution aries to agriculture exceeded 1,500 million afghanis in 1981 alone.

They burned down several lycées and about 1,200 schools, blew up bridges, attacked truck -columns which carried food, clothes and medicines to the civilian popula tion. Attempts were made to hijack Afghan airliners. Bombs were planted and exploded in the premises of Kabul University. Factories and mines were raided, boring ma chines, diesel power stations and radio stations were put out of operation. Oil and gas pipelines were blown up.

Striking on the sly, mostly at uight, counter-revolution ary terroristic and sabotage groups killed activists of the PDPA and progressive mass organisations, high-ranking party and government officials, teachers, students, school children and the ulemas who had refused to cooperate with them, and other people. The terrorists wanted to create an atmosphere of fear and insecurity in the country, to frustrate progressive social, economic and cultural reforms and prevent a stabilisation of the situation in Afghanistan.

Some outstanding public figures, organisers and leaders of the National Fatherland Front fell victim to the ter rorists. The terrorists murdered retired general Fateh Muhammad Farkemishr (who had spent over 20 years in prisons before the revolution) and Maulana Abdul Hamid, imam at one of the largest Kabul mosques, a well-known alim in the country. They killed Sayed Muhammad Amin, member of the DRA Revolutionary Council; Wali Yusufi, Deputy Minister of Higher and Vocational Education, and Khan Karabaghi, a popular folk singer.

Supported by imperialist powers and some reactionary regimes in the region, the counter-revolutionary forces did not give up attempts to destroy the gains of the April Revolution.

The undeclared aggression against the Democratic Re public of Afghanistan was escalating. The peace proposals of the revolutionary government on a political settlement were rejected. Thus, constructive proposals advanced by the Afghan Govemment on May 14, 1980, and August 24, 1981, evoked practically no response from the USA and its allies, though the proposals covered the main foreign policy aspects of the settlement problem.

Centres for coordinating armed actions against the DRA were set up in Peshawar and Quetta (Pakistan). New bases and camps for training sabotage and terrorist detachments cropped up. The terrorists began to be trained by foreign instructors. In the summer of 1980, the then Foreign Minister of Iran Gotbzade openly declared that Iran de livered and would continue to deliver weapons to Afghan counter-revolutionaries. At that time President of Egypt Anwar Sadat announced his readiness to provide sabotage and terrorist groups with arms.

In July 1980, leaders of Afghan counter-revolutionary organisations paid visits to the capitals of a number of West European states where they negotiated deliveries of weapons. They were satisfied with the outcome of the negotiations, as they themselves admitted. In the autumn of 1980, Sabhatullah Mojadidi, a well-known leader of Afghan counter-revolutionaries, visited the United States to raise funds for the counter-revolution.

As is seen from numerous bourgeois press reports (and also from recently published studies by American, British, Canadian and Pakistani political writers), Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and some other countries in the region rendered, and still render, lavish financial and other aid to the counter revolutionary organisations entrenched in the territory of . Pakistan close to the Afghan border. These resources are used for purchasing arms and ammunition, including anti tank missiles and anti-aircraft weapons. The Pakistani press has written on many occasions about aid to Afghan counter-revolutionaries and their sabotage and _ terrorist organisations provided by a number of conservative regimes in the Middle East and by numerous governmental and non governmental organisations of Britain, Japan, the USA and the FRG. Reports to that effect appeared in the US and West European press.136

The opening of a representation of the counter-revolu tionary Afghan Press Agency in London late in 1980 cannot be regarded otherwise than as complicity with the Afghan counter-revolution and gross ‘interference in the internal affairs of the DRA.

The government and the people of Afghanistan and progressives the world over regarded the repeated state ments by the US administration spokesmen in 1981-84 on the intention to continue to deliver weapons to the counter revolutionary detachments operating in Afghanistan as crude interference in the DRA’s internal affairs.

There are numerous facts proving that the total volume of financial, military, technical and other aid coming to Afghan counter-revolutionaries from the imperialist and reactionary forces has been steadily growing, which is evidence of their intention to go ahead with the undecla red aggression against the Democratic Republic of Af ghanistan.

All these actions, grossly violating international law and the UN Charter, tend further to aggravate the situa tion around Afghanistan and in the whole of South-West Asia, putting up new barriers in the way of political settle ment, for which the revolutionary government of the DRA, supported by its allies, has been striving. Various projects of "neutralising" the DRA, advanced now and again by leaders of the diplomatic services of some Western states, pursue anti-Afghan aims.

The Presidium of the DRA Revolutionary Council was compelled to enact the law on universal military service on January 9, 1981, providing for a call-up to the armed forces of Afghanistan of men aged from 20 to 40.

The PDPA Central Committee and the DRA Government have carried extensive work at the new stage of the April Revolution to strengthen the armed forces, which are now better organised, trained and equipped. New commanding officers have been trained. The Afghan army has inflicted heavy damage on the counter-revolutionaries, destroyed many of their bases and strong points and seized large amounts of weapons and ammunition. Hundreds of armed counter-revolutionary detachments, whose members let themselves be involved in the fratricidal struggle, have laid down arms.

At the same time the revolutionary authorities of the DRA have always advocated a reasonable combination of military and peaceful ways and means to normalise the situa tion in the country, stop the bloodshed and establish peace. The PDPA Central Committee and the DRA Government amnestied those who had given up armed struggle against the motherland. They held talks with leaders and rank and-file members. of counter-revolutionary detachments misled by hostile propaganda, helping them to go back to peaceful life in their native land.

At the new stage of the April Revolution, just as in the past, the peoples of Afghanistan have been invariably relying on the friendly aid and support of the Soviet Union.

The growth of all-round and mutually beneficial ties with the USSR has become most important for the DRA when the undeclared aggression against the Afghan people escalated, and when the USA and many other capitalist countries discontinued or cut drastically trade, economic, crediting and financial relations with Afghanistan. The shipment of Afghan exports and imports across Pakistan and Jran have become extremely complicated. Some inter national economic organisations (actually controlled by US monopolies or transnational corporations) have ceased all aid to Afghanistan or reduced it to the minimum.

In these conditions cooperation with the Soviet Union (and also with the other countries of the socialist com munity) has enabled the Democratic Republic of Afghani stan to hold out against imperialist pressure and to over come many negative effects of what had amounted to a blockade of the DRA by the imperialists, and even to use most effectively the national economic potential for its own benefit. After the April Revolution, specifically after the start of its new stage, Soviet-Afghan relations have reached a new level and become fraternal relations of rev olutionary solidarity. The mutually beneficial trade, eco nomic, technical, scientific and cultural cooperation be tween the Soviet Union and Afghanistan has grown. It has been constantly expanding and improving, acquiring a new content, and becoming more dynamic and stable.

Mutually beneficial cooperation between the DRA and the USSR offers Afghanistan a wide access to the newest technology and modern scientific knowledge. This co operation has a very important role to play in strengthening state sovereignty and political and economic independence of Afghanistan, in the development of the public sector in all the major sections of the national economy. It assists Afghanistan in fulfilling various plans of: social, economic and cultural advancement, thereby enabling it to overcome the hard legacy of the pre-revolutionary past, eliminate backwardness, improve living standards, and build up its defence potential. Finally, cooperation with the Soviet Union, conducted on an equitable basis, offers Afghanistan every opportunity for defending its legitimate interests and demanding equal trade and economic relations with capitalist countries.

Thus, the USSR accounts for 54 per cent of all foreign loans and credits granted to the DRA. Over 160 national economic projects have been built, or are under construc tion, in Afghanistan with Soviet aid. They account for 70 per cent of the industrial output of the public sector. The Soviet Union renders considerable aid in the develop ment of Afghan agriculture, power engineering, transport, communications, housing construction, and in the training of the national personnel so badly needed by the country’s growing economy. About 70,000 skilled workers have been trained for Afghanistan with Soviet aid. The USSR grants Afghanistan loans and credits on easy terms, to be repaid by traditional Afghan export goods or by a part of the out put of the enterprises built with Soviet aid. In 1979-83 alone, the DRA’s trade with the USSR more than tripled.137 The conditions for goods shipment between the two coun tries greatly improved after the motor-road and railway bridge was built across the Amu Darya in May 1982.

Other socialist countries, too, render economic and technical assistance to the Democratic Republic of Afghani stan.

‘The official friendly visit by Babrak Karmal to the Soviet Union in October 1980 gave a fresh impetus to the growth of Soviet-Afghan relations. During the talks the head of the Afghan state and Soviet leaders discussed the further development of cooperation between the two coun tries, major international issues and the situation in the Middle East. In a joint statement the USSR and the DRA expressed their intention to encourage the growth of Soviet-Afghan friendly ties established in the days of Lenin. Both sides stressed the complete identity of views on all the questions discussed and spoke in favour of a polit ical settlement of the situation around the DRA, which would have a positive effect not only on the situation in the Middle East but would also help improve the political climate in the world. The sides emphasised that to achieve such a political settlement it was important that any interference in the internal affairs of Afghanistan should be stopped and that appropriate understanding should be reached between the governments of Afghanistan and its neighbours, Pakistan above all, on the basis of the DRA Government’s proposals,138

In December 1980, another agreement on economic and technical cooperation between Afghanistan and the USSR was signed in Moscow, together with a protocol on free Soviet aid to Afghanistan in training the national personnel which the DRA so badly needs. New agreements on the expansion of Soviet-Afghan economic and trade coopera tion and on Soviet assistance in the DRA’s social and economic advancement were signed in July 1983 and in March 1984.

The peoples of Afghanistan are not alone in their struggle for social progress, freedom and independence. As was pointed out in the Report of the CPSU Central Committee to the 26th Party Congress, "Afghanistan’s sovereignty, like its non-aligned status, must be fully protected’".13

The 26th Congress of the CPSU reaffirmed the Soviet Union’s preparedness to withdraw the Soviet military con tingent, with the agreement of the Afghan Government, after the infiltration to Afghanistan of counter-revolu tionary terrorist and sabotage groups from abroad would be completely stopped. Dependable guarantees are required that there will be no new intervention against the Dem ocratic Republic of Afghanistan. The cessation of the undeclared war against Afghanistan should be sealed by agreements between the DRA and its neighbours.

The 26th Congress also stated that the Soviet Union was prepared for constructive talks on international aspects of the Afghanistan issue through a separate settlement of the situation around Afghanistan and also through a discussion of problems concerning the DRA in the context of the security of the Persian Gulf.

On November 15 and December 23, 1982, and on Febru ary 15, 1984, Babrak Karmal met with Soviet leaders in Moscow. On March 14, 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev, General Secretary of the CC CPSU, received Babrak Karmal in the Kremlin. In their comradely talk they discussed the basic aspects of Soviet-Afghan relations and the situation around Afghanistan. Both sides condemned the continuing aggressive actions of outside forces against the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and stressed the inalienable right of the Afghan people to shape their life as they saw fit. . They expressed the belief that stopping the armed inter vention and any other outside interference in the affairs of people’s Afghanistan was an important condition for con solidating peace and stability in Asia. Both sides were plea sed to note the growing friendly relations between the CPSU and the PDPA, the Soviet Union and the Democ ratic Republic of Afghanistan, and reaffirmed their willing ness to further strengthen these relations.149

The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, being a sover eign non-aligned state, pursues an active policy of peace aimed at promoting international cooperation. In the inter national arena, the DRA enjoys increasing support and recognition. In 1985, seven years after the national-democra tic April Revolution, the DRA maintained diplomatic rela tions with almost eighty countries. And the fraternal ties of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan with 103 Communist, Workers’ and revolutionary-democratic parties and national liberation movements and organisations have been developing well.

One hundred and thirty years ago Engels wrote that revolutions are a mighty motive force of social and political progress which helps the country in which it has been ac complished to "‘pass in five years over more ground than it would have done in a century under ordinary circum stances."141 The April 1978 national-democratic revolution in Afghanistan overthrew the autocratic, exploiter regime and created conditions for carrying out radical changes in a short period of time and advancing the country from back wardness towards progress. A new epoch, one of revolution


ary renewal of the ancient country, has begun in the history of Afghanistan.