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December 2007

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"Zinky Boys" and the ironies of history

Like angry dragonflies, Soviet helicopter gunships roared over the barren, brown landscape. A stern major with a hawk's face ordered our contingent of Moscow-based western correspondents to disembark the Soviet Air Force transport plane. Hopping aboard a military bus, we rode through the dusty city of Termez in the now former Soviet republic of Uzbekistan. Soon we reached our vantage point, a hill overlooking a rusty steel bridge over the Amu Darya River that stretched over to the border with Afghanistan. After a wait, we heard a loud rumbling. Into our view came a long column of camouflaged Soviet tanks and personnel carriers, red banners flying. It was February 1989 and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev wanted us to tell the world that the Soviet armed forces were withdrawing from Afghanistan. Coming to a close was the Kremlin's hopeless, 10-year campaign to suppress the mujahadeen, fundamentalist Muslims regarded as the best fighters in the world.

What a difference 12 years make. A big, big difference with roles reversed and presumptions turned on their heads. Back then, President Ronald Reagan had dubbed the mujahadeen "freedom fighters." He armed them with critical supplies, including shoulder-held anti-aircraft missiles. He described the Soviet Union as the "Evil Empire."

Today, some of those same "freedom fighters" are members of the Taliban, the fanatical Islamic group that President George W. Bush believes supported the terrorists that killed more than 5,000 Americans in attacks on Washington and New York City Sept. 11. The Soviet Union has since disappeared. The new republic of Uzbekistan is welcoming U.S. troops and planes as a staging area for operations in Afghanistan, letting Washington use some of the very same military bases that I visited in 1989. And the Kremlin fully supports the move.

This isn't the only bizarre aspect of the current crisis. As our cover in this month's issue shows, Virginia business executives are undertaking precautions unimaginable not long ago. They are shoring up their corporate databases, hardening the security of their offices and factories and sending employees to self-defense classes. Fearing anthrax attacks, some are ordering gas masks.

At the very end of the Cold War, many Americans regarded the Soviet intrusion into Afghanistan as a massive human rights violation, not unlike the invasions of Budapest in 1956 and Prague in 1968. The Kremlin's line at the time was that Moscow had to do something about the Islamic fanaticism that had gripped strategic countries such as Iran and was creeping toward its borders. Ordinary Soviets couldn't quite fathom the war and weren't permitted to protest it. Their dead sons, nearly 15,000, were known as "Zinky Boys" because they came home in sealed, zinc-lined coffins. Russians would tell me privately: "Of course it's a waste, but you have no idea how vicious some of those people are." Interesting advice from the other side during the now distant time of the Cold War.

Peter Galuszka
Executive Editor
Peter Galuszka

 


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