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Hafizullah Amin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hafizullah Amin
Hafizullah Amin

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In office
September 14, 1979 – December 27, 1979
Preceded by Nur Muhammad Taraki
Succeeded by Babrak Karmal

Born August 1, 1929
Paghman, Afghanistan
Died December 27, 1979
Kabul, Afghanistan
Political party People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan

Hafizullah Amin (August 1, 1929December 27, 1979) was the second President of Afghanistan during the period of the communist Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.

Amin tried to broaden his internal base of support and to bring the interest of Pakistan and the United States in Afghan security. During the 104 days of his rule, except for one failed military rebellion, no major uprising took place.

On December 27, 1979, his political opponents of a rival faction killed him and Babrak Karmal became President.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Amin was born in 1921 in Paghman, a town near Kabul. His father was a civil servant. Amin studied mathematics and physics at Kabul University and became a high school teacher and principal.

In 1957 he won a scholarship to study at Teachers College, Columbia University in New York, and on completion of his course he returned home to administer teacher-training courses. Returning to Columbia to complete his doctorate in 1962, Amin became involved in the politics of the Associated Students of Afghanistan, an overseas student group in the United States.

It was apparently during his sojourn in the student world of Morningside Heights on Manhattan’s upper west side near Columbia’s campus that he became interested in Marxism, although Columbia had not yet experienced the radical tumult of the late 1960s.

In 1965 he returned to Afghanistan without his doctorate and accepted a teaching post at a girls’ high school. He quickly joined the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), becoming a prominent member of the marxist Khalq (People) faction.

President Mohammed Daoud Khan in 1978 was still in the besieged palace when Amin took command of the coup, after he and his comrades were released from the prison.

The PDPA seized power after the Daoud's death, with Nur Mohammad Taraki becoming President of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and secretary general of the PDPA, while Amin and Babrak Karmal became deputy prime ministers. An attempt to institute Marxist-Leninist reforms provoked widespread resistance and a number of violent revolts.

In February 1979 the U.S. Ambassador Adolph Dubs was killed. The Khalq faction was gaining political power over the Parcham faction, with Karmal exiled to Europe. Amin had gained considerable control by March 1979 and was named Prime Minister although Taraki retained his other posts. The unrest continued however and the regime was forced to seek more Soviet aid. It was in that meeting between Taraki and Leonid Breznev that the decision to remove Amin took place.

[edit] Assassination of Taraki

After Taraki returned to Kabul he requested that Amin meet with him. Amin agreed to the meeting only if his safety was guaranteed by the Soviet Ambassador, Alexander Puzanov. Such assurances were provided, but not in good faith.

Amin however knew Taraki's intentions, and the demand for the ambassador to guarantee his safety was probably a shrewd ploy on the part of Amin to mislead Taraki.

When Amin arrived at the People's Palace, a shootout occurred. Amin escaped unhurt, returned later to the palace with some of his supporters and used the Palace Guard to take Taraki prisoner.

On September 14, 1979 Amin took control of the government. A few days later, Amin's government announced that Taraki died of an "undisclosed illness".

[edit] President of the Republic ( September 1979 – December 1979 )

His rule was notable for its brutality. The Soviets admitted that perhaps 500 PDPA members had forfeited their lives. Amin now assumed leadership and carried out his own purges of the PDPA. Attempting to pacify the population, he released a list of some 18,000 people who had been executed and blamed the executions on Taraki. The official Afghan figures are much higher-15,000 to 45,000.


Additional to that, Amin was not a popular person. He was rapidly accumulating as enemies a large group of very angry relatives of victims, and PDPA members must have lived in fear of their lives.

During this period, many Afghans fled to Pakistan and Iran and began organizing a resistance movement to the "atheistic" and "infidel" communist regime backed by the Soviets. Although the groups organizing in the Pakistani city of Peshawar would later, after the Soviet invasion, be described by the western press as "freedom fighters".

In mid-November 1979 Amin launched a large military operation against the resistance at Sayd Karam in Paktia Province. The offensive was successful, eliminating as many as 1,000 or more resistance fighters, relatives, and supporters, driving most of the remainder into Pakistan, and obliterating sympathetic villages.

Amin also began unfinished attempts to moderate what many Afghans viewed as an Anti-Islam regime. Promising more religious freedom, repairing mosques, presenting copies of the Koran to religious groups, invoking the name of Allah in his speeches, and declaring that the Saur Revolution was "totally based on the principles of Islam." Yet many Afghans held Amin responsible for the regime's harshest measures and the Soviets, worried about their huge investment in Afghanistan might be jeopardized, increased the number of advisers in Afghanistan.

Amin worked to broaden his base of support and purged the PDPA of his perceived enemies. His regime was still under pressure from the insurgency in the country and he tried to gain Pakistani or American support and refused to take Soviet advice.

Because of or in spite of this, Amin attempted to solidify his hold on the country militarily. This display of independent nationalism was not tolerated by Moscow, and on December 1979, the Soviets began their invasion of Afghanistan.

[edit] Soviet invasion

Islamic guerrillas in the mountainous countryside harassed the Afghan army to the point where the government of President Hafizullah Amin turned to the Soviet Union for increasingly large amounts of aid.

The Soviets decided to increase military aid to Afghanistan in order to maintain the Communist government, but they were dissatisfied with Amin as a leader capable of accomplishing this goal. Soviet leaders, based on information from the KGB, believed that Amin destabilized the situation in Afghanistan.


The last arguments to overthrow Amin were obtained by the KGB from its agents in Kabul. It was reported that two of Amin's guards killed the former president Nur Muhammad Taraki and that Amin possibly is a CIA agent. There were, however, some sceptics among the Soviet advisors in Afghanistan, chiefly General Vasily Zaplatin, a political advisor at that time, who claimed that four of Taraki's young ministers were responsible for the destabilization.

Amin feared the Soviet troops would be used to depose him. Fearing for his survival and uncertain of whom he could trust, he started putting his relatives into positions of power. Amin put one of his nephews in charge of the secret police, but that nephew was assassinated. Being concerned for his own safety, Amin then moved his headquarters out of Kabul .

[edit] Assassination

On December 22, the Soviet advisors to the Afghani Armed Forces advised them to undergo maintenance cycles for tanks and other crucial equipment. Meanwhile, telecommunications links to areas outside of Kabul were severed, isolating the capital. Seeing this, Amin moved the presidential offices to the Tajbeg Palace, believing this location to be more defendable against an invasion.


Five days later, on December 27, elements of the KGB OSNAZ (Alpha Group), wearing Afghan uniforms, stormed the Presidential Palace, killing President Hafizullah Amin and his 200 elite guards in the process.

The Soviet Spetsnaz blew up Kabul's communications hub, paralyzing the Afghani military command at 7:00 P.M. By 7:15, they had seized the Ministry of Interior. The Soviet military command at Termez did not wait until Amin's capture to announce on Radio Kabul (in a broadcast prerecorded by Babrak Karmal) that Afghanistan had been liberated from Amin's rule.

According to the Soviet Politburo, they were only complying with the 1978 Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Good Neighborliness that former President Taraki signed. The execution of Hafizullah Amin was, according to the Soviets, the action of the Afghan Revolutionary Central Committee. That committee then elected Babrak Karmal, who was in exile in Moscow, as head of government.

[edit] Accusations of being a CIA agent

The Soviet government and press repeatedly referred to Amin as a "CIA agent", a charge which was greeted with great skepticism in the United States and elsewhere. One strong argument against that belief, was that he always and everywhere showed official friendliness to the Soviet Union. After the assassination of Amin and two of his sons, his wife claimed that she and her remaining sons only wanted to go to the Soviet Union, because her husband was loyal to them until the end. She did eventually go to the Soviet Union to live.

Preceded by:
Nur Muhammad Taraki
President of Afghanistan
September 14, 1979December 27, 1979
Succeeded by:
Babrak Karmal
Preceded by:
Nur Muhammad Taraki
Prime Minister of Afghanistan
March 27, 1979December 27, 1979
Succeeded by:
Babrak Karmal
Preceded by:
None - Position Created
Head of the AGSA
May 1, 1978September 14, 1979
Succeeded by:
Asadullah Amin

(as Head of the KAM)

Preceded by:
Mohammad Aslam Watanjar
Minister of Defense
July 1979 – December 27, 1979
Succeeded by:
Mohammed Rafie
Preceded by:
Nur Muhammad Taraki
General Secretary of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan
September 14, 1979December 27, 1979
Succeeded by:
Babrak Karmal
Preceded by:
Nur Muhammad Taraki
Chairman of the Revolutionary Council
September 14, 1979December 27, 1979
Succeeded by:
Babrak Karmal

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Red Flag Over Afghanistan: The Communist Coup, the Soviet Invasion, and the Consequences - Thomas T. Hammond - ISBN 0-86531-444-6
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