The Day

Afghans mark Soviet withdrawal as U.S. negotiates an exit

- By KATHY GANNON and RAHIM FAIEZ

Kabul, Afghanista­n — Afghanista­n on Saturday marked the 31st anniversar­y of the last Soviet soldier leaving the country. This year’s anniversar­y came as the United States negotiates its own exit after 18 years of war, America’s longest.

Some of the same Afghan insurgent leaders who drove out the former Soviet Union have been fighting the U.S., and have had prominent seats at the negotiatin­g table during yearlong talks with Washington’s peace envoy.

Moscow pulled out of Afghanista­n in 1989, a decade after invading the country to support an allied communist government. Afghan mujaheddin, or holy warriors, received weapons and training from the U.S. throughout the 1980s to fight the Red Army. Some of those mujaheddin went on to form the Taliban.

The U.S. and the Taliban agreed Friday to a temporary truce. If successful, it could open the way for another historic withdrawal that would see all American troops leave the country.

The chief negotiator for the Taliban, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, was once an American ally against the Soviets.

So was another Taliban negotiator, Khairullah Khairkhwa. He spent 12 years detained at Guantanamo Bay until his release in 2014 in exchange for U.S. Army Sgt Bowe Bergdahl.

The Taliban are now at their strongest since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion of Afghanista­n ousted them from power.

Kabul’s streets were quiet Saturday, normally the busy start of the Afghan workweek. There were no official public celebratio­ns marking the anniversar­y, and most people took the holiday off.

Shakeb Rohin was only 7 years old when the Soviets pulled out. Now a graduate of Kabul University’s economics department, he said he can’t remember the Soviet occupation. Since then, he said he’s witnessed only war.

“We are so tired of war, we want a peaceful solution for Afghanista­n’s problems,” he said.

Abdul Shakor Ahmadi, 56, recalled how people were very happy on the day of the pullout. But he said the civil war that followed was worse.

With the Cold War over, the U.S. lost interest in Afghanista­n. The mujaheddin government — which included many of the warlords in Kabul today — eventually turned their guns on each other in the early 1990s.

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