Wow, guys ... SkyLine Drive, BravoZulu and others (sorry) if you missed anyone. Thanks for this array of photos. I shared a lot with my fellow students of the topic, many for the first time I saw myself. I can share a part myself, but later. I left likes here and there, I hope this will cheer you up a little
And now, to be honest, I would like to present the point of view on the Afghan war as a cross-section of Soviet and Russian society. Maybe my text will be a little big, I don't know yet. Sorry in advance.
The Afghan war at its peak coincided with not the best times in the entire USSR. The very topic of Gorbachev, Perestroika and the collapse of the USSR is very controversial in Russia, but almost everyone hates Gorbachev. The situation when you do not know if the person is a nerd, or did it on purpose. However, I digress.
Soviet troops performed their international duty in Afghanistan. The USSR and Afghanistan have been cooperating since the 1920s. In 1979, Soviet troops arrived in the country at the request of the Afghan government. Afghanistan is a very poor country, most people live there often in small villages at the level of the 15th or 16th century, completely obeying the priest - the mullah. Illiterate, within the framework of stereotypes...
This is what the veterans of Afghanistan say - everyone I met. And the USSR began to fulfill this very international duty. Destroy bandits, destroy poppy fields, heroin stocks, and in their place build Afghan industry, schools, hospitals, new settlements.
The locals, as I said, were completely dependent on the mullahs. And the position of the Soviet troops in the region depended on their location. That is why the Soviet army paid special attention to Islam ... Andrey Prikazchikov, the director of our museum, whom I have already mentioned in passing, had the nickname "Red Mullah" because he could read the Koran and taught him to read Afghans.
Soviet troops fought in Afghanistan. They had successes. They suffered losses. The Americans and Chinese began to actively supply the Mujahideen. The world press began a large-scale propaganda campaign against the OKSVA. I think that "Rambo 3" and the speeches about "Warriors of Light" from American President Reagan are remembered by everyone. Meanwhile, Perestroika began in the USSR. Perestroika, with all the ensuing problems ... Including the so-called "glasnost". What was the result of "glasnost"? But it turned out that journalists who wanted to get rich began to feed gullible Soviet citizens with fairy tales, myths, and so-called. "chernukhoy" (violence, blood, sex, etc.) All this in the most vile forms spilled out on the pages of magazines, books, on the screens of improvised cinemas. The entire Soviet past was sluggish and muddied. Lies and naked girls turned out to be the biggest move - they could get the most money ... They touched everything. From Lenin and the Civil War to World War II and Stalin. They also touched upon the Soviet army and, of course, Afghanistan. And the authorities ... But the authorities were silent and supported.
With Gorbachev's connivance, a negative image of an Afghan warrior began to form, whom the perestroika press portrayed as a drug addict, sadist, murderer of children and old people (even if you serve as a truck driver or a clerk at headquarters). Thoughts from the category "I didn't send you there!" Began to spread massively.
The war was on. Young guys returned from the war, having learned what military brotherhood and war are. And these young guys saw the f***ing happening in the perestroika USSR (sorry for the obscenity, it is difficult to describe in another way the ongoing chaos and agony, and purposefully controlled). We saw a boorish attitude towards them on the part of employees and the state (after that it even got to the point that the CPSU and Gorbachev personally condemned (!) Soviet soldiers in Afghanistan). And the young guys had a lot of questions about justice. This is called the Afghan Syndrome.
Someone came back, someone tried to adapt to a new life. Many are unsuccessful ...
And, in fact, strategically, the USSR never lost that war. But he lost it politically, and from within. And the country received a lot of young guys, ruined by the society that does not understand them. The war ended in 1989, and the USSR ended in 1991. And all of them were scattered by a new life - some to the bottom and some to the top. But that's a completely different story.
I do not know. Perhaps my thoughts are somewhat confused - I should reread my message a few more times and edit it. But in general, this is the whole stream of emotions that required me to go outside. Sorry. In 1989, the USSR left Afghanistan and a bloody civil war began again. The Mujahideen ruined all the undertakings of the USSR, again plunged the country into war and the Middle Ages. And after that they chose the United States as their victim, which fed these very mujahideen ... It was not fun. And, most importantly, American soldiers now have to pay for what their fathers and grandfathers did.
At the end I will leave the final shot from the Soviet film Courier. This film was the first where an Afghan warrior was shown to the Soviet public.