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Badaber uprising

The Badaber uprising (26–27 April 1985, Badaber, Pakistan) was an armed rebellion by Soviet and Afghan prisoners of war who were being held at the Badaber fortress near Peshawar, Pakistan. The prisoners fought the Afghan Mujahideen of the Jamiat-e Islami party (who were supported by the Pakistani XI Corps and American CIA advisors) in an attempt to escape.

Badaber uprising
Part of the Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan and Operation Cyclone
Date26–27 April 1985
Location
Result Badaber fort and weapon caches destroyed, all prisoners killed
Belligerents
Soviet POWs
DR Afghan POWs

Afghan mujahideen

Pakistan[1]

Supported by:
United States[2]

Egypt[3][4]

China
Commanders and leaders

Viktor Dukhovchenko 

Aleksandr Alekseevich Matveev 
Burhanuddin Rabbani
Ahmad Shah Massoud
Akhtar Abdur Rahman
Strength

Soviet Union:

12 POWs
Democratic Republic Of Afghanistan: 40 POWs
Total:
52 personnel
70 guards
Unknown
Unknown
Casualties and losses

Afghanistan:
40 dead

Soviet Union:
11 dead

Jamiat-e Islami:[5]

  • 100–120 killed
    (Soviet claim)[1]
    20 killed (Jamiat claim)
  • 3 Grad MLRS destroyed
  • 2 million rounds of ammunition destroyed
  • thousands of rockets destroyed

Pakistan:[5]

  • 40-90 killed (Soviet claim)

Background edit

The Badaber fortress, 24 km south of Peshawar, was a military training centre of the Afghan Mujahideen who opposed Soviet presence in Afghanistan. The Mujahideen were trained by military instructors from the United States (Operation Cyclone) and Pakistan. The fortress was controlled by the Tajik-dominated Jamiat-e Islami party. Burhanuddin Rabbani was the party leader and self-declared president of Afghanistan. The military commander of the fortress was Ahmad Shah Massoud.

In 1983 and 1984, Soviet and Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA) prisoners were brought to the fortress from holding cells (zindans). The prisoners were forced to perform hard labour, for example, quarrying and loading ordnance. In 1985, 12 Soviet (shuravi) and 40 Afghan prisoners were held at the Badaber fortress.[1][2][6]

Uprising edit

On 26 April 1985, at about 6 pm, only two of seventy Mujahideen guards were on duty. The others were gathered at the drill square for evening prayers (namaz). In an uprising, prisoners entered the fortress armory, took weapons and ammunition, and tried to escape. Some may have tried to capture the fortress' radio center to report their location.[1] However, the head guard, Haist Gol, raised the alarm and prevented the escape of the prisoners.[6] The prisoners did seize key locations within the fortress.

Afghan Mujahideen, Pakistani infantry and tank units, and artillery forces of the XI Corps blockaded the fortress. Several attempts to recapture the fortress were repelled by the prisoners. At 9 pm, Burhanuddin Rabbani, arrived at the base and negotiated with the prisoners. He suggested they surrender and their lives would be spared. The prisoners demanded a meeting with the Soviet and Afghan ambassadors to Pakistan and representatives from the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. The prisoners threatened to ignite the armory if their demands were not met. Rabbani rejected the prisoners' demands and fighting continued.[1]

On 27 April 1985 at around 8am, Rabbani's bodyguard was wounded by rockets fired by the prisoners.[1] Rabbani prepared to attack the fortress using rockets (9K51 Grad), tanks, and Pakistan Air Force helicopters. The uprising ended when the fortress was destroyed by an explosion. It is believed that the explosion was caused by the POWs themselves, destroying a large cache of weapons. Any survivors of the explosion were dragged to the walls and killed.[1][6][2][7][8]

Casualties edit

The identities of the prisoners are uncertain, including all 40 of the Afghan casualties. One was Nikolay Saminj, a Soviet forces junior sergeant, who was posthumously awarded Kazakhstan's Order of Valor, 3rd degree on 12 December 2003.[9][10] Another was Alexandr Zverkovich, a Soviet forces private, who was posthumously memorialised on the 10th anniversary of the withdrawal of the Soviet Army from Afghanistan.[11][12][13]

According to Russian sources, between 100 and 120 Afghan Mujahideen were killed, between 40 and 90 regular Pakistani military.[1][2] The Badaber fortress, its armory and its ordnance (including three 9K51 Grad multiple rocket launchers, thousands of shells and rockets, approximately forty cannons, mortars, 2 million rounds of ammunition and machine guns), and its chancellery, including a list of the prisoners, were destroyed. Soviet satellite data from 28 April 1985 showed an 80 m crater at the site.[6]

Aftermath edit

 
Burhanuddin Rabbani and Russian President Vladimir Putin meeting in 2001

On 29 April 1985, Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, the President of Pakistan, classified all information related to the uprising. Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the head of the Hezbi Islami, said:

Do not capture shuravi (Persian term for the word "Soviet") soldiers in the future, but annihilate them at the taking place.[1]

Yousaf Mohammad, a colonel in the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence service said:

[the incident] could quickly get out of hand, or lead to international confrontation.[14] Details of the uprising were suppressed in Pakistan until 1992 when six names of participants in the uprising were handed to Alexander Rutskoy by Shahryar Khan, the deputy minister of foreign affairs of Pakistan.[8]

On 9 May 1985, a representative of the International Red Cross visiting the Soviet Embassy in Islamabad, confirmed the uprising had occurred.[15] On 11 May 1985, Vitaly Smirnov, the Soviet ambassador, issued a warning to Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. He said:

The Soviet side holds full responsibility for what had happened [with] the Government of Pakistan and expects that it will make appropriate conclusions about the effects posed by [its] complicity in the aggression against the DRA and thereby against the Soviet Union.[15]

On 16 May 1985, the DRA's permanent representative to the United Nations sent a letter concerning this incident to the United Nations Secretary-General, which was circulated as an official document of the General Assembly and the Security Council.[15]

On 10 April 1988, the Ojhri Camp, an ammunition depot near Islamabad, was destroyed, killing 93 and injuring around 1,100 people. The cause of destruction of Ojhri Camp is disputed with some reports suggesting that Soviet Union was responsible for the destruction of the camp. On 17 August 1988, President Zia-ul-Haq's plane crashed in an incident that Pakistan suggested was caused by the Soviet KGB secret services and Afghan KhAD.[16]

In 2002, the Warriors-Internationalists Affairs Committee sent three names of uprising participants, Igor Vaskov, Nikolai Dudkin and Sergei Levchishin to Sergei Ivanov, the defense minister of Russia. He said:

Unfortunately, there is no basis to proceed with the application for [the] award.

POWs edit

This is a partial list of Soviet POWs:

  • Aleksandr Alekseevich Matveev, taliban nickname Abdulo (1963, Altai Krai, Russia), private first class.
  • Nikolai Iosifovich Dudkin (1961, village Volchiha, Russia)
  • Ravil Saifutidonov (village Bolshoi Sars, Russia).
  • Igor Vaskov
  • Sergei Levchishin
  • Sergei Korshenko
  • Alexandr Zverkovich
  • Nikolai Samin', intended to immigrate to France.
  • Nikolai Ivanovich Shevchenko (Abdurahman) (1956; village Dmitrievka, Ukraine), driver, initiated the revolt.
  • Kanat (from Kazakh SSR), lost his mind in this prison.
  • 2 other unknown Soviet soldiers, possibly Vladimir Ivanovich Shipeev (1963; Cheboksary, Russia) and Ivan Belekchi.
  • Nasyrjon K. Rustamov (still alive and lives in Uzbekistan).
  • Mihail Aramovich Varvaryan, nickname Islamutdin (1960; village Ararat, Armenia), private. Deserted to Mujahideen in Bagram, probably alive and was complicit with Rabbani forces.
  • 40 soldiers of DRA armed forces and Sarandoy.[17][5]

In popular culture edit

The Russian–Kazakh movie, Peshavar Waltz (1994) was loosely based on this uprising.

Крепость Бадабер (Fortress Badaber) 2018 movie.[18]

A song was written about the incident titled "Mountains of Peshawar" by the Blue Berets about the valiance and the honor the Soviet soldiers showed in their failed uprising.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Shkurlatov R. "АРХИВ: Последнее па Пешаварского вальса." 2012-02-09 at the Wayback Machine Bratishka , July 2006. (in Russian)
  2. ^ a b c d Pahmutov S. "Бадабера: неизвестный подвиг". Фонд "Русская Цивилизация", 25 April 2005. (in Russian)
  3. ^ http://www.bratishka.ru/archiv/2006/7/2006_7_5.php "АРХИВ: Последнее па Пешаварского вальса".
  4. ^ "Бадабера: неизвестный подвиг". S. Pahmutov. "Фонд "Русская Цивилизация"", 11 November 2007.
  5. ^ a b c "Русская линия / Библиотека периодической печати: Бадабера: неизвестный подвиг". rusk.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Elistratov I. "Восстание в Бадабере: в поисках истины." 2007-11-24 at the Wayback Machine Smolensk, July 2007. (in Russian)
  7. ^ Andryuhin V. "Восстание поверженных." 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine Новое дело. Accessed 8 September 2009. (in Russian)
  8. ^ a b Kirichenko E. "Восставшие в аду Бадабера." Trud Newspaper. Accessed 3 May 2007. (in Russian)
  9. ^ "Герои Бадабера." Moskovskij Komsomolets. Accessed 27 April 2005. (in Russian)
  10. ^ Pryanikov V. "Неоконченная война." 2014-01-13 at the Wayback Machine Казахстанская Правда. Accessed 19 February 2004. (in Russian)
  11. ^ Kirichenko E. "Восставшие в аду Бадабера." Trud. Accessed 10 May 2007. (in Russian)
  12. ^ Malishevkiy N. "Последний бой рядового Зверковича." 2012-02-08 at the Wayback Machine РЭСПУБЛІКА. Accessed 3 June 2006. (in Russian)
  13. ^ "Рядовой Зверкович поднял восстание в Пакистане." 2008-04-29 at the Wayback Machine Komsomolskaya Pravda v Belorussii. Accessed 26 April 2007. (in Russian)
  14. ^ Pleshkevich V. "Yousaf Mohammad. Badaber." Art of War website.
  15. ^ a b c Виноградов B. "Афганистан: 10 лет глазами СМИ". 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine RSVA.com (in Russian)
  16. ^ Burki S. "The 1985 Badaber Uprising," Strategy and Tactics Volume 265, November–December 2010.
  17. ^ Тайна лагеря Бадабер. Афганский капкан | Телеканал "История" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PlcUYEnfok
  18. ^ "Крепость Бадабер 2018" (in Russian). Retrieved 30 December 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Yousaf M. and Adkin M. Afghanistan – The bear trap (the defeat of a super-power). 2006 ISBN 81-87330-15-5.
  • Александр Ляховский. 1995. ISBN 5-85844-047-9. (in Russian)
  • "Восстание в тюрьме Бадабера." 2008-05-01 at the Wayback Machine Pobratim 2005 Vol 6. (in Russian)
  • Korobov A. Мятежные узники "Бадабера".[permanent dead link] Boevoe Bratstvo magazine, 2005. (in Russian)
  • Malorodov B. "Мы чести воина не уронили".[permanent dead link] Boevoe Bratstvo magazine 2006. (in Russian)
  • Tibilova E. Yuzhnaya Osetiya magazine, 7 October 2006. (in Russian)
  • Pochtaryov A. "Прокляты и забыты?" Nezavisimaya Gazeta, 13 February 2004. (in Russian)

33°57′28″N 71°34′25″E / 33.957884°N 71.573653°E / 33.957884; 71.573653

badaber, uprising, april, 1985, badaber, pakistan, armed, rebellion, soviet, afghan, prisoners, were, being, held, badaber, fortress, near, peshawar, pakistan, prisoners, fought, afghan, mujahideen, jamiat, islami, party, were, supported, pakistani, corps, ame. The Badaber uprising 26 27 April 1985 Badaber Pakistan was an armed rebellion by Soviet and Afghan prisoners of war who were being held at the Badaber fortress near Peshawar Pakistan The prisoners fought the Afghan Mujahideen of the Jamiat e Islami party who were supported by the Pakistani XI Corps and American CIA advisors in an attempt to escape Badaber uprisingPart of the Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan and Operation CycloneDate26 27 April 1985LocationBadaber Peshawar District PakistanResultBadaber fort and weapon caches destroyed all prisoners killedBelligerentsSoviet POWs DR Afghan POWsAfghan mujahideen Jamiat e Islami Pakistan 1 XI Corps Pakistan Air Force Supported by United States 2 CIA Egypt 3 4 ChinaCommanders and leadersViktor Dukhovchenko Aleksandr Alekseevich Matveev Burhanuddin Rabbani Ahmad Shah Massoud Akhtar Abdur RahmanStrengthSoviet Union 12 POWs Democratic Republic Of Afghanistan 40 POWsTotal 52 personnel70 guards Unknown UnknownCasualties and lossesAfghanistan 40 dead Soviet Union 11 deadJamiat e Islami 5 100 120 killed Soviet claim 1 20 killed Jamiat claim 3 Grad MLRS destroyed 2 million rounds of ammunition destroyed thousands of rockets destroyed Pakistan 5 40 90 killed Soviet claim Contents 1 Background 2 Uprising 3 Casualties 4 Aftermath 5 POWs 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingBackground editThe Badaber fortress 24 km south of Peshawar was a military training centre of the Afghan Mujahideen who opposed Soviet presence in Afghanistan The Mujahideen were trained by military instructors from the United States Operation Cyclone and Pakistan The fortress was controlled by the Tajik dominated Jamiat e Islami party Burhanuddin Rabbani was the party leader and self declared president of Afghanistan The military commander of the fortress was Ahmad Shah Massoud In 1983 and 1984 Soviet and Democratic Republic of Afghanistan DRA prisoners were brought to the fortress from holding cells zindans The prisoners were forced to perform hard labour for example quarrying and loading ordnance In 1985 12 Soviet shuravi and 40 Afghan prisoners were held at the Badaber fortress 1 2 6 Uprising editOn 26 April 1985 at about 6 pm only two of seventy Mujahideen guards were on duty The others were gathered at the drill square for evening prayers namaz In an uprising prisoners entered the fortress armory took weapons and ammunition and tried to escape Some may have tried to capture the fortress radio center to report their location 1 However the head guard Haist Gol raised the alarm and prevented the escape of the prisoners 6 The prisoners did seize key locations within the fortress Afghan Mujahideen Pakistani infantry and tank units and artillery forces of the XI Corps blockaded the fortress Several attempts to recapture the fortress were repelled by the prisoners At 9 pm Burhanuddin Rabbani arrived at the base and negotiated with the prisoners He suggested they surrender and their lives would be spared The prisoners demanded a meeting with the Soviet and Afghan ambassadors to Pakistan and representatives from the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement The prisoners threatened to ignite the armory if their demands were not met Rabbani rejected the prisoners demands and fighting continued 1 On 27 April 1985 at around 8am Rabbani s bodyguard was wounded by rockets fired by the prisoners 1 Rabbani prepared to attack the fortress using rockets 9K51 Grad tanks and Pakistan Air Force helicopters The uprising ended when the fortress was destroyed by an explosion It is believed that the explosion was caused by the POWs themselves destroying a large cache of weapons Any survivors of the explosion were dragged to the walls and killed 1 6 2 7 8 Casualties editThe identities of the prisoners are uncertain including all 40 of the Afghan casualties One was Nikolay Saminj a Soviet forces junior sergeant who was posthumously awarded Kazakhstan s Order of Valor 3rd degree on 12 December 2003 9 10 Another was Alexandr Zverkovich a Soviet forces private who was posthumously memorialised on the 10th anniversary of the withdrawal of the Soviet Army from Afghanistan 11 12 13 According to Russian sources between 100 and 120 Afghan Mujahideen were killed between 40 and 90 regular Pakistani military 1 2 The Badaber fortress its armory and its ordnance including three 9K51 Grad multiple rocket launchers thousands of shells and rockets approximately forty cannons mortars 2 million rounds of ammunition and machine guns and its chancellery including a list of the prisoners were destroyed Soviet satellite data from 28 April 1985 showed an 80 m crater at the site 6 Aftermath edit nbsp Burhanuddin Rabbani and Russian President Vladimir Putin meeting in 2001 On 29 April 1985 Muhammad Zia ul Haq the President of Pakistan classified all information related to the uprising Gulbuddin Hekmatyar the head of the Hezbi Islami said Do not capture shuravi Persian term for the word Soviet soldiers in the future but annihilate them at the taking place 1 Yousaf Mohammad a colonel in the Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence service said the incident could quickly get out of hand or lead to international confrontation 14 Details of the uprising were suppressed in Pakistan until 1992 when six names of participants in the uprising were handed to Alexander Rutskoy by Shahryar Khan the deputy minister of foreign affairs of Pakistan 8 On 9 May 1985 a representative of the International Red Cross visiting the Soviet Embassy in Islamabad confirmed the uprising had occurred 15 On 11 May 1985 Vitaly Smirnov the Soviet ambassador issued a warning to Muhammad Zia ul Haq He said The Soviet side holds full responsibility for what had happened with the Government of Pakistan and expects that it will make appropriate conclusions about the effects posed by its complicity in the aggression against the DRA and thereby against the Soviet Union 15 On 16 May 1985 the DRA s permanent representative to the United Nations sent a letter concerning this incident to the United Nations Secretary General which was circulated as an official document of the General Assembly and the Security Council 15 On 10 April 1988 the Ojhri Camp an ammunition depot near Islamabad was destroyed killing 93 and injuring around 1 100 people The cause of destruction of Ojhri Camp is disputed with some reports suggesting that Soviet Union was responsible for the destruction of the camp On 17 August 1988 President Zia ul Haq s plane crashed in an incident that Pakistan suggested was caused by the Soviet KGB secret services and Afghan KhAD 16 In 2002 the Warriors Internationalists Affairs Committee sent three names of uprising participants Igor Vaskov Nikolai Dudkin and Sergei Levchishin to Sergei Ivanov the defense minister of Russia He said Unfortunately there is no basis to proceed with the application for the award POWs editThis is a partial list of Soviet POWs Aleksandr Alekseevich Matveev taliban nickname Abdulo 1963 Altai Krai Russia private first class Nikolai Iosifovich Dudkin 1961 village Volchiha Russia Ravil Saifutidonov village Bolshoi Sars Russia Igor Vaskov Sergei Levchishin Sergei Korshenko Alexandr Zverkovich Nikolai Samin intended to immigrate to France Nikolai Ivanovich Shevchenko Abdurahman 1956 village Dmitrievka Ukraine driver initiated the revolt Kanat from Kazakh SSR lost his mind in this prison 2 other unknown Soviet soldiers possibly Vladimir Ivanovich Shipeev 1963 Cheboksary Russia and Ivan Belekchi Nasyrjon K Rustamov still alive and lives in Uzbekistan Mihail Aramovich Varvaryan nickname Islamutdin 1960 village Ararat Armenia private Deserted to Mujahideen in Bagram probably alive and was complicit with Rabbani forces 40 soldiers of DRA armed forces and Sarandoy 17 5 In popular culture editThe Russian Kazakh movie Peshavar Waltz 1994 was loosely based on this uprising Krepost Badaber Fortress Badaber 2018 movie 18 A song was written about the incident titled Mountains of Peshawar by the Blue Berets about the valiance and the honor the Soviet soldiers showed in their failed uprising See also editBattle of Qala i Jangi a similar uprising of the Taliban and al Qaeda captives in a fortress prison in Afghanistan in 2001 References edit a b c d e f g h i Shkurlatov R ARHIV Poslednee pa Peshavarskogo valsa Archived 2012 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Bratishka July 2006 in Russian a b c d Pahmutov S Badabera neizvestnyj podvig Fond Russkaya Civilizaciya 25 April 2005 in Russian http www bratishka ru archiv 2006 7 2006 7 5 php ARHIV Poslednee pa Peshavarskogo valsa Badabera neizvestnyj podvig S Pahmutov Fond Russkaya Civilizaciya 11 November 2007 a b c Russkaya liniya Biblioteka periodicheskoj pechati Badabera neizvestnyj podvig rusk ru in Russian Retrieved 20 July 2023 a b c d Elistratov I Vosstanie v Badabere v poiskah istiny Archived 2007 11 24 at the Wayback Machine Smolensk July 2007 in Russian Andryuhin V Vosstanie poverzhennyh Archived 2011 10 03 at the Wayback Machine Novoe delo Accessed 8 September 2009 in Russian a b Kirichenko E Vosstavshie v adu Badabera Trud Newspaper Accessed 3 May 2007 in Russian Geroi Badabera Moskovskij Komsomolets Accessed 27 April 2005 in Russian Pryanikov V Neokonchennaya vojna Archived 2014 01 13 at the Wayback Machine Kazahstanskaya Pravda Accessed 19 February 2004 in Russian Kirichenko E Vosstavshie v adu Badabera Trud Accessed 10 May 2007 in Russian Malishevkiy N Poslednij boj ryadovogo Zverkovicha Archived 2012 02 08 at the Wayback Machine RESPUBLIKA Accessed 3 June 2006 in Russian Ryadovoj Zverkovich podnyal vosstanie v Pakistane Archived 2008 04 29 at the Wayback Machine Komsomolskaya Pravda v Belorussii Accessed 26 April 2007 in Russian Pleshkevich V Yousaf Mohammad Badaber Art of War website a b c Vinogradov B Afganistan 10 let glazami SMI Archived 2011 07 23 at the Wayback Machine RSVA com in Russian Burki S The 1985 Badaber Uprising Strategy and Tactics Volume 265 November December 2010 Tajna lagerya Badaber Afganskij kapkan Telekanal Istoriya https www youtube com watch v 2PlcUYEnfok Krepost Badaber 2018 in Russian Retrieved 30 December 2021 Further reading editYousaf M and Adkin M Afghanistan The bear trap the defeat of a super power 2006 ISBN 81 87330 15 5 Tragediya i doblest Afgana Aleksandr Lyahovskij 1995 ISBN 5 85844 047 9 in Russian Vosstanie v tyurme Badabera Archived 2008 05 01 at the Wayback Machine Pobratim 2005 Vol 6 in Russian Korobov A Myatezhnye uzniki Badabera permanent dead link Boevoe Bratstvo magazine 2005 in Russian Malorodov B My chesti voina ne uronili permanent dead link Boevoe Bratstvo magazine 2006 in Russian Tibilova E K podvigu vsechasno ne gotovlyas on byl vsechasno k podvigu gotov Yuzhnaya Osetiya magazine 7 October 2006 in Russian Pochtaryov A Proklyaty i zabyty Nezavisimaya Gazeta 13 February 2004 in Russian 33 57 28 N 71 34 25 E 33 957884 N 71 573653 E 33 957884 71 573653 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Badaber uprising amp oldid 1220933994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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