Kailash Kumar
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'Jihad By Camera': How U.S.-Trained Afghans Photographed The Soviet Invasion
Rare color photos from the 1980s bring the the U.S.S.R.'s "hidden war" to light.
Amos Chapple
January 28, 2019
A fighter watches a Soviet bombardment hammer an Afghan valley. A bloody communist coup in Afghanistan in 1978 was followed a year later by a full-scale invasion by the U.S.S.R.
A militant in training scrabbles through an obstacle course. The 1979 Soviet invasion was widely condemned at the United Nations and helped fuel one of the most expensive CIA operations in history.
Members of the anti-Soviet "mujahedin," as the jihadist fighters opposing the Soviets became known, with stacks of weaponry. Reportedly beginning in 1979, the CIA began secretly funding the Muslim militant groups that would spend the next decade fighting against the Soviets.
U.S. President Ronald Reagan meeting with Afghan mujahedin leaders in 1983. Soon the United States, together with Saudi Arabia, was funneling hundreds of millions of dollars each year to anti-Soviet militants in Afghanistan in an effort to "bleed" the Soviet Union.
(U.S. Government photo)
A mujahedin fighter scans the sky after an air strike. As conditions became increasingly risky for foreign journalists inside Afghanistan (in 1984 a Soviet diplomat vowed any journalist caught with mujahedin fighters would be killed), Washington also funded a controversial program to supply Afghan rebels with cameras.
A photographer snaps a portrait of mujahedin. Beginning in 1985, American journalists began training Afghans in visual reporting.
The Afghan Media Resource Center (AMRC) handed out some 50 cameras to teams embedded with mujahedin groups to document what had become a "hidden" war because of the obstacles to foreign reporting. The photographs in this gallery are some of the 94,000 images made during the project.
A Soviet field base. More than 20 of the photographers and journalists working for the AMRC project were injured, and two were killed.
Mujahedin during a meeting in Parwan Province.
A Soviet helicopter thunders low over a village.
A Soviet-made missile being fired by the mujahedin. Most of the CIA-funded weapons supplied to the Islamic militants were made in the U.S.S.R.
Mujahedin fighters firing a recoilless rifle. A U.S. official recalled that the CIA bought such weapons from various sources, including a corrupt unit of the Soviet Army in Afghanistan.
As well as their main task of chronicling the war, the teams of AMRC photographers shot everyday life, like these money changers in Peshawar.
Soviet weaponry depicted on a carpet woven by Afghan refugees.
An air strike shatters an Afghan village. Much of the fighting was a brutal back-and-forth with mujahedin ambushes on Soviet convoys followed by Soviet aircraft wiping out villages near the sites of the attacks.
A mujahedin fighter holds the remains of a parachute bomb. The design allows ground-attack jets to drop bombs at low altitude without being caught up by the explosion.
Dummies of Soviet soldiers. The sign reads, "The sisters of Shahr-e Naw" -- a neighborhood in Kabul -- "are crying, while the sisters of communists are prettying up their eyes."
A rare picture of Soviet soldiers with Afghan men. One soldier bitterly recalled being told that "we were helping the Afghan people to end feudalism and build a wonderful socialist society."
A defaced communist mural.
https://www.rferl.org/a/jihad-by-camera-how-afghans-photographed-the-soviet-invasion/29735470.html
Rare color photos from the 1980s bring the the U.S.S.R.'s "hidden war" to light.
Amos Chapple
January 28, 2019

A fighter watches a Soviet bombardment hammer an Afghan valley. A bloody communist coup in Afghanistan in 1978 was followed a year later by a full-scale invasion by the U.S.S.R.

A militant in training scrabbles through an obstacle course. The 1979 Soviet invasion was widely condemned at the United Nations and helped fuel one of the most expensive CIA operations in history.

Members of the anti-Soviet "mujahedin," as the jihadist fighters opposing the Soviets became known, with stacks of weaponry. Reportedly beginning in 1979, the CIA began secretly funding the Muslim militant groups that would spend the next decade fighting against the Soviets.

U.S. President Ronald Reagan meeting with Afghan mujahedin leaders in 1983. Soon the United States, together with Saudi Arabia, was funneling hundreds of millions of dollars each year to anti-Soviet militants in Afghanistan in an effort to "bleed" the Soviet Union.
(U.S. Government photo)

A mujahedin fighter scans the sky after an air strike. As conditions became increasingly risky for foreign journalists inside Afghanistan (in 1984 a Soviet diplomat vowed any journalist caught with mujahedin fighters would be killed), Washington also funded a controversial program to supply Afghan rebels with cameras.

A photographer snaps a portrait of mujahedin. Beginning in 1985, American journalists began training Afghans in visual reporting.

The Afghan Media Resource Center (AMRC) handed out some 50 cameras to teams embedded with mujahedin groups to document what had become a "hidden" war because of the obstacles to foreign reporting. The photographs in this gallery are some of the 94,000 images made during the project.

A Soviet field base. More than 20 of the photographers and journalists working for the AMRC project were injured, and two were killed.

Mujahedin during a meeting in Parwan Province.

A Soviet helicopter thunders low over a village.

A Soviet-made missile being fired by the mujahedin. Most of the CIA-funded weapons supplied to the Islamic militants were made in the U.S.S.R.

Mujahedin fighters firing a recoilless rifle. A U.S. official recalled that the CIA bought such weapons from various sources, including a corrupt unit of the Soviet Army in Afghanistan.

As well as their main task of chronicling the war, the teams of AMRC photographers shot everyday life, like these money changers in Peshawar.

Soviet weaponry depicted on a carpet woven by Afghan refugees.

An air strike shatters an Afghan village. Much of the fighting was a brutal back-and-forth with mujahedin ambushes on Soviet convoys followed by Soviet aircraft wiping out villages near the sites of the attacks.

A mujahedin fighter holds the remains of a parachute bomb. The design allows ground-attack jets to drop bombs at low altitude without being caught up by the explosion.

Dummies of Soviet soldiers. The sign reads, "The sisters of Shahr-e Naw" -- a neighborhood in Kabul -- "are crying, while the sisters of communists are prettying up their eyes."

A rare picture of Soviet soldiers with Afghan men. One soldier bitterly recalled being told that "we were helping the Afghan people to end feudalism and build a wonderful socialist society."

A defaced communist mural.
https://www.rferl.org/a/jihad-by-camera-how-afghans-photographed-the-soviet-invasion/29735470.html