“...... Following the deployment, the Soviet troops were
unable to establish authority outside Kabul. As much as 80% of the
countryside still escaped effective government control. The initial
mission, to guard cities and installations, was expanded to combat the
anti-communist Mujahideen forces, primarily using Soviet reservists.
The Soviet Army was unfamiliar with such fighting, had no
counter-insurgency training, and their weaponry and military equipment,
particularly armored cars and tanks, were sometimes ineffective or
vulnerable in the mountainous environment.
The Soviets used helicopters as their primary air attack force,
supported with fighter-bombers and bombers, ground troops and special
forces. Of particular significance was the donation of American-made
FIM-92 Stinger anti-aircraft missile systems, which increased aircraft
losses of the Soviet Air Force.
The inability of the Soviet Union to break the military stalemate, gain
a significant number of Afghan supporters and affiliates, or to rebuild
the Afghan Army, required the increasing direct use of its own forces
to fight the rebels. Soviet soldiers often found themselves fighting
against civilians due to the elusive tactics of the rebels. They did
repeat many of the American Vietnam mistakes, winning almost all of the
conventional battles, but failing to control the countryside.
(More)
Yep. And instructive as hell, since we know how that superpowers attempt to straighten out a Muslim nation by force ended.
But it's not just that, it's not that it ended in failure, but
precisely what it was that ended it. What ended it were Stinger
shoulder mounted anti-aircraft missiles, (“Manpadsâ€) secretly supplied
to the Mujahideen by the US.
“Its long range and sophisticated guidance made the Stinger highly
effective against Soviet airplanes and helicopters, and Stingers were
credited with turning the tide of the war in the Mujahideen's favor,
according to the Center for Nonproliferation Studies. (More)
In all the Soviets lost over 130 helicopters and other aircraft to these deadly accurate little missiles.
(See list here)
While George W. Bush may not be a fan of history, some folks are.
Apparently among those history buffs are the Iranians. They took note
of what it was that caused the once powerful Soviets to cut and run out
of Afghanistan.
Which brings me back to why I think that bit of news this morning marks
the beginning of the end for the US occupation of Iraq – and why we've
suddenly lost five helicopters in less than three weeks. Because, you
see, the Iranians have their
own versions of the Stinger, and they are providing them to anti-US insurgents in Iraq.
(See also
Anza are a series of Chinese developed, IR-guided shoulder-fired surface to air missiles, under licensed production in Pakistan.
That's why this is feels different, yet the same – different superpower, same solution.
It's not —- no pun intended — rocket science. All you have to do is ask
yourself this: What was the only tactical advantage the Soviets had
over the Mujahideen?
Answer: Air power.
Except for the lack of air power, the Mujahideen held every other
tactical advantage. First, they lived there, while the Russians were
just heavily armed visitors. Also, they knew the terrain like the backs
of their little brown hands, while Soviet troops were, quite literally,
lost much of the time.
Back then the US clearly understood that air-power was the Soviet
Achilles heel in Afghanistan. Which is precisely why we slipped the
Mujahideen a couple a hundred Stinger missiles. Once the Soviets lost
their air power advantage, they lost the war.

Today
US forces in Iraq are in the same sinking boat the Soviets found
themselves in 25 years ago. We can't move our forces safely or quickly
on the ground, so we move them by helicopter. And, when Iraqi troops
get their asses in a sling – (which appears to be whenever anyone
shoots back at them.) – they call in US air support to do the heavy
killing for them. No US air support would mean Iraqi troops refusing to
venture far from base.
Then there's the Baghdad airport –
the main lifeline into and out of that hell hole of country. Lumbering
transports and troop-ladened passenger planes already have to perform
corkscrew-dive bomber style landings to avoid getting hit by
conventional ordinance. Such aerial dodge-ball antics don't confuse the
new Iranian-supplied Manpad missiles.
So now what? Well, for starters don't expect many of those photo-op
visits to Baghdad by US officials after the first commercial or
military transport gets hit. After that the once routine task of flying
in fresh US troops and flying out the exhausted and wounded troops will
become a life and death crap shoot.
All of which raises the obvious question; does the Bush administration realize they are repeating the Soviet's mistakes?
Apparently not. Iran provides deadly ground-to-air missiles to the
insurgents and the Bush administration does what? It moves two aircraft
carriers brimming with planes and helicopters into the Gulf — a move
that can only be read as another swaggering “bring-it on†from
you-know-who.
I've given up hoping anyone in the Bush administration is going to “get
it,†when it comes to the futility of this kind of anachronistic
superpower behavior in the Middle East.
That leaves Congress. Though hope is slim, and seems to be getting
slimmer by the day, Congress is our last hope that adults will step in
and put an end to this abortion of war.
And end it Congress could, if only they would. Congress is the
paymaster for this war. So, the next time you talk to your elected
members of Congress, ask them; are they going to just keep writing
checks for replacement sitting duck helicopters for Iraq? The Soviets
did, until they ran out of money — and those willing to fly them.
Is Congress going to allow Bush to pack 25,000 additional US troops
into planes and fly them into Iraq now? What's it going to take, a 737
or C130 being blown out of the sky over Baghdad rainging the bodies of
a couple of hundred troops onto the airport tarmack? Is that what it'll
take — and aerial Beirut barracks — before you stop paying for this
madness?
If so then Congress — Democrats and Republicans — are no better,
smarter or more worthy of our votes than those in the administration
who started all this.
So Congress, cut the funding and cut the losses. Because, not only has
the war itself changed, but the reason we are being told for being
there. Bush may have started this war to protect our access to oil, but
now he's just trying to protect his own legacy. And he's paying for
that protection with the lives of other Americans children, wives,
husbands, mothers and fathers.
Make no mistake about it — Congress is the enabler in this
dysfunctional relationship. The enabling agent is funding. Like the
alcoholic he is — one war-funding resolution is too much for George W.
Bush and a thousand fundings not enough. The time for a Congressional
intervention is long overdue.
Give the administration six more months of funding and tell them to use
it to begin an orderly withdrawal for Iraq. Or else be ready to
explain to the American people why you need to appropriate more of our
tax money for helicopters, a lot more helicopters, and the people
willing to pilot those flying coffins.
I don't care how it's described, or how other's may describe it. Call
it whatever you like; a “redeployment,†a “strategic withdrawal,†or
“cutting and running.†(Wanna bet Gen. Custer wishes he had?)
Anyway, Congress — HELLO — please “get it†— it's over. So, senators,
representatives, get our troops – and pilots — the hell out of there –
and sooner rather than later.
Otherwise just shut the hell up and ask Bush if there's room in his bunker for his enablers.