
Ahmed
Shah Massoud (c. 1953 - September
9, 2001) (variant transliterations include Ahmad, Masood, etc.) was a Kabul
University engineering student who later became a prominent figure in
Panjsher valley under Soviet occupation in Afghanistan. He was the leader of
Jamiat e Islami, one of the seven guerilla groups fighting USSR.
Ahmad Shah Masood's Jamiat e Islami has always been suspected for an
alleged peace treaty with Soviet. According to the treaty Soviet forces
wouldn't wage war on Panjsher valley as long as Masood and Jamiat e Islami
did not get involved in the Soviet military atrocities in the rest of the
country. No hard facts have, however, been found supporting these
allegations.
There are also documents and researchs which point towards a very close
cooperation between Masood and Pakistan's intellegence ISI.
(For example the book "Silent Soldier" by General Akhtar, chief of ISI from
1979 - 1987)
In the early 1990s he became Defence Minister under President Burhanuddin
Rabbani. Following the collapse of Rabbani's government and the rise of the
Taliban, Massoud became the military leader of the Northern Alliance, a
coalition of various Afghani opposition groups in a prolonged civil war. As
the Taliban established control over most of Afghanistan, Massoud's forces
were increasingly forced into the mountainous areas of the north, where they
controlled some 10% of Afghanistan's territory and perhaps 30% of its
population.
Massoud was the victim of a suicide attack which occurred at Khvajeh Ba
Odin on September 9, 2001, two days before the September 11, 2001 Terrorist
Attack in the United States, a timing considered significant by some
commentators. The attackers were two Arabs who claimed to be Belgians
originally from Morocco. However their passports turned out to be stolen.
According
to some accounts they were posing as journalists, perhaps intending to
attack several Northern Alliance council members simultaneously. They set
off a bomb hidden in either a video camera or a belt worn by one of the
attackers. It appears that Massoud died within 30 minutes, although his
death was denied until September 13. The explosion also killed Mohammed Asim
Suhail, a Northern Alliance official, while Mohammad Fahim Dashti and
Massoud Khalili were injured. One of the attackers was killed by the
explosion and the other was shot while trying to escape.
The French secret service revealed October 16, 2003 that the camera used
by Massoud's assassins had been stolen in December 2000 Grenoble, France
from a photojournalist, Jean-Pierre Vincendet, who was then working on a
story on that city's Christmas store window displays. By tracing the
serial number that appeared in the camera, the FBI was able to determine
Vincendet as the original owner. The French secret service and the FBI then
began working on tracing the route that the camera took between the time it
was taken from Vincendet and the Massoud assassination.
Massoud is the subject of Ken Follett's Lie Down With Lions, a novel about
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Back
|
Home
------------------------
The End.
Oct 10 2004 |