Kabul, Jan 30 : The first sign of
officialdom you see when you drive from the Kabul airport car park is a
government billboard looming above a traffic jam.
It is the size of a
highway billboard in the United States, but closer to the ground, so that you
can make out every nuance of the faces on it. Those faces belong to, on the
right of the coat of arms of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, President
Hamid Karzai, and on the left, slain Northern Alliance leader Ahmad Shah Masoud,
dead some 11 years.
With Karzai, you note those tired eyes and that
child’s chin, unaided by a trimmed grey beard. Masoud comes off vastly more
dashing. He appears to be in conference with the paradises: The eyes smoulder
from within, the strong chin and bushy goatee angle out like a divining rod. A
pakol, the traditional hat of the Hindu Kush, sits like a column capital on his
head.
The billboard calls to mind a prizefight poster, and the champ is
obvious. It also happens to capture the attitude of many Afghans and foreigners
working here.
In the years since Masoud was assassinated by Al Qaida,
just two days before 9/11, and Karzai installed as Afghanistan’s interim
president the following summer, their reputations have moved in inverse
proportion.
Karzai’s popularity has steadily contracted, while Masoud’s
legend in Afghanistan has grown. As though he had just been killed last week,
Afghans still talk about what a great president the guerrilla leader would have
made.
The implicit slight on Karzai, once dismissed as merely ineffectual
and now as ineffectual, corrupt and deluded, is obvious. Abroad, after years of
worshipful portrayals of him by foreign reporters and historians, Masoud has
become the Che Guevara of Central Asia.
A young Norwegian woman staying
in the same guest house as me here in Kabul went weak in the knees when she
learnt the house’s driver fought under Masoud. “I want to meet him,” she
breathed, referring to the driver, but really meaning the Lion of
Panjshir.
Oddly, the billboard captures at least some portion of Afghan
officialdom’s attitude, too. Lately, no one has promoted the cult of Masoud as
much as Karzai’s government.
In October, a month after the 11th
anniversary of his death, the barrier walls of ministry buildings and the homes
of officials were covered with Masoud’s stoic visage, as were awnings, shop
windows, street-food carts, car windshields and so on.
Wherever possible,
as at the airport, Karzai is placed alongside Masoud, as though they were
running mates in the 2014 election — an election for which Karzai is ineligible
to run, though there is talk that he may be so oblivious to his unpopularity he
will attempt to amend the constitution to allow himself a third term.
In
fact, Masoud has been a kind of unwelcome spectral running mate to Karzai all
along, a Kalashnikov-slung Banquo, against whom, by comparison, the president is
always falling short.
Karzai’s inability or unwillingness to rein in
graft, his failure to halt the Taliban, his perceived timidity and indecision —
Masoud’s ubiquitous image is a rebuke to all of it. His years spent fighting the
Soviet invaders and then the Taliban from within Afghanistan contrast with the
years Karzai spent safely in exile in Pakistan.
The exception is in the
department of political survival, where Karzai is at least Masoud’s match, maybe
his better. The president may venerate Masoud’s memory or he may not, but he
knows he must appear to do so to keep ex-Mujahideen and ethnic hostilities in
check.
In an Afghanistan largely managed by foreign governments and
defined by internal division — most importantly the rivalry between the powerful
Tajik minority, among whom Masoud is the favourite son, and the Pashtun
majority, among whom Karzai is among the least favourite sons — Masoud is,
regrettably, the closest thing Afghans have to a national hero.
I say
regrettably, because, while many Afghans venerate him, many others see Masoud as
a false idol — as just one in a rogue’s gallery of militia commanders, living
and dead, with their own personal fan clubs. His legacy is a matter of bitter
divisiveness. His most ardent admirers are confined largely to Tajik strongholds
in the north and west and in the capital.
Recently, I visited Herat,
Afghanistan’s second-largest city, and saw only a few Masoud photos around. That
the Taliban had just staged a firing-squad execution of accused kidnappers
outside the city was not, I was assured, the reason for this.
In many
Pashtun-dominated areas in the south and east, and not just those where the
Taliban is gaining control, Masoud is more of a national anti-hero. As one
friend put it to me, “You can’t say in the north that he’s not a hero. People
will kill you. And you can’t say in the south that he’s a hero. People will kill
you.”
But even in Tajik-heavy Kabul, you need only to start speaking to
residents to find that Masoud is a touchy matter. Part of this is opposition to
his political party, Jamiat-e Islami, and part suspicion of foreign intelligence
services with a history of designs on Afghanistan — Masoud took money from all
of them, from the CIA, MI6 and Pakistan’s Inter-Intelligence Service (ISI), from
the French, probably the KGB and even the Chinese.
Part is class
resentment — Marxism has never entirely left Afghanistan. Masoud, whose father
was a general in King Zahir Shah’s army, was raised in upper middle-class wealth
and attended a lycée. There is a feeling, even among other Tajiks, that Tajiks
from the Panshjir Valley, where Masoud is from, are an arrogant
bunch.
When I asked him what he thought of Masoud, a Tajik taxi driver
and former army officer when Masoud was defence minister, said “Panjshiris, they
...” and instead of finding an adjective, he hunched up his shoulders, puckered
his face and snorted haughtily.
“They like British.” (That is an insult
in Afghanistan.) The real scepticism about Masoud, though, arises from the facts
of his life and what he eventually did to the city and people of
Kabul.
Afghans of a certain age and education know, for instance, that
far from starting out the conciliator he would later become, Masoud began his
political career as an Islamist radical agitator at Kabul’s Polytechnic
College.
He fled to Pakistan in 1975 with the Muslim Youth Organisation,
years before the communist coup and Soviet invasion made this exodus a tragic
necessity for millions of other Afghans.
There he didn’t teach himself to
be a soldier, as the story goes, but rather was taught to be one by the ISI. It
was under the direction of Ali Bhutto, who created Pakistan’s covert war in
Afghanistan, and was, many would argue, the progenitor of the Taliban.
If
there is anyone Afghan Pashtuns and Tajiks distrust more than one another, it is
a Pakistani, and particularly a Bhutto. Afghans up on their history know, too,
that Masoud began his fighting career as a failed agent provocateur — he was
drafted by the ISI and its despised Afghan satrap, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, to start
an uprising against the Afghan government in the Panjshir.
It didn’t
work. According to some KGB memoirists, Masoud may have gone on to receive
training from that agency in Lebanon. If that is true, it comes as little
surprise that from the moment he became a Mujahid and began to do battle with
Soviet soldiers, after they invaded Afghanistan in 1979, making his legend,
Masoud was also bargaining with the Soviet authorities.
He made a series
of truces with them in the early 1980s. This duplicity is now explained away as
a typically shrewd move by Masoud — whose courage and battlefield brilliance
cannot be questioned — to win respite for his weary troops and recruit more
support.
No doubt it was. Nonetheless, the deals also helped bring the
Soviet side hammer down on less-equipped Mujahideen, and provided Masoud the
opportunity to pursue a private war with Hekmatyar in the 1990s. (By that point,
Hekmatyar was using many of his American-taxpayer-bought weapons to try to kill
his old protégé).
Talking to Kabulis who don’t buy into the hype, you
learn that this is what what galls them the most about Masoud: the personal feud
that played out in the streets of this city and caused incalculable destruction
and loss of life.
Hekmatyar and his Uzbek sometime-helpmeet, Abdul Rashid
Dostum, were the more wanton combatants, certainly, but Masoud brought his fair
share of ruin, levelling whole districts of Kabul.
“Masoud is responsible
for half the atrocities of this country,” said a prominent Afghan intellectual
who did not want to named. Nor did the ruin end when he was elevated to defence
minister in 1992.
Many members of Afghanistan’s second-largest ethnic
minority, the Hazaras, will never forgive him for massacring Hazaras in south
Kabul the next year. Masoud’s men abused residents and looted shops. In part for
that reason, many Kabulis welcomed the Taliban takeover three years
later.
“It’s a very difficult legacy,” the prominent Afghan said, because
of “his stubbornness, his lack of will to dispense with remote political
masters, and his lack of willingness to resolve the issue of division of power
peacefully”.
Over a cup of coffee at Kabul University, a friend whose
family stayed in Kabul through the Soviet occupation, civil wars, and Taliban
years, explained to me there are three Masouds.
There is the Masoud who
fought the Russians. Everybody loves him. There is the Masoud who fought the
Taliban and held together the Northern Alliance. Many love him. “Then there is
the Masoud who came to Kabul and lost control. No one loves that Masoud,” he
said.
But when they compare him with the other brigands who built
militias and made Afghanistan’s cities and villages their battlegrounds, he
comes out the best of a bad lot. “That’s why a lot of people can use his name to
be in power.”
Masoud learnt insurgent tradecraft not just from the
enemies of Afghanistan, but from Mao and Che, whose books he toted from camp to
camp and often quoted. The comparison to the Argentine revolutionary is apt: as
with Che, the whitewashed legacy and the bloody reality overlap only in
convenient corners.
Afghans have their own reasons for perpetuating the
myth. Retirees from intelligence services and diplomat corps, now watching the
United States and Nato flounder about in the provinces, regret not having backed
him against the Taliban; for them, Masoud is a kind of tragic noble
savage.
For the rest, cult membership comes with a predictable Byronic
sentimentality. Not just Norwegian co-eds are susceptible. An American woman I
know who has lived in Kabul since Masoud was a boy insisted to me, with a sigh,
that he was “the only real patriot” among the civil war commanders.
When
I pointed out that we happened to be near a neighbourhood Masoud destroyed, she
said “War is a nasty business. They were all killers.” Indeed, they were. No one
knows this better than Karzai, whose government is stocked with those killers —
the “warlords,” as they’re now collectively known. Some took control of
ministries after the Taliban’s fall, others he installed.
Opinions differ
as to who is the keenest to use Masoud for propaganda purposes. Some say it is
certain ministers, some Karzai. His picture hangs outside the ministries and the
presidential palace. Some suggest officials put up portraits of Masoud precisely
in order to humiliate Karzai.
Then there are Masoud’s five surviving
brothers, a not-terribly accomplished crew but a rising political force. They
nearly got the family name inserted into the national constitution. Whoever it
is, their reasoning is sound: Every regime needs a hero, and if it doesn’t have
one among its own ranks, it must pluck one from history.
Masoud’s image
is an encouragement to the untold numbers of ex-Mujahideen and their families
still living in poverty. It also serves as a sop to Tajiks, who feel more and
more threatened as the Pashtun-dominated Taliban reasserts control around the
country.
This imperative is forcing Karzai into awkward positions. Ahead
of the 2009 elections, he named the Tajik commander Mohammad Fahim
vice-president — after Washington had convinced Karzai to remove Fahim, who is
accused of human rights abuses and whom Karzai is known to distrust, from his
cabinet. Fahim replaced Ahmad Zia Masoud — Masoud’s younger
brother.
Whatever his own feelings about Masoud, Karzai at times seems to
try to govern like the Lion at his worst: that is, as an embattled,
self-regarding, and capricious general. He is ever more prey to paranoia and
delusion, we are told, and increasingly given to outbursts against his foreign
protectors, as in the recent flap over the Bagram prison.
One can’t help
but wonder how much the burden of Masoud’s memory has driven him to this point.
A shame, because Karzai has managed to do the one thing Masoud never could: He
has stitched together Afghanistan’s ethnic threads into some semblance of a
fabric.
Of course, he has done this in part by bringing a cast of
unsavoury characters into the fold, creating a shaky coalition that has come at
the cost of Augean corruption.
Ironically, that is one area where he
really could use Masoud’s help. For all his opportunism, the Lion never cared
about personal enrichment, unlike the other warlords. He was happiest on the
front lines with his troops, on a cot in a cave reading a book.
Masoud
didn’t make much of a politician, and probably wouldn’t have done much better
than Karzai as a president. In fact, every Afghan I have spoken with about
Masoud, including his most ardent admirers, agree that he probably couldn’t have
been elected had he lived, even if he does look fantastic on a billboard. But he
might have proved an exemplary Treasury
secretary.
Ends
SA/EN
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Behind the cult of Masoud
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