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Afghanistan Between the Great Powers, 1938–1945
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
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The increased interest in Afghanistan, highlighted by the Soviet invasion of that country in December 1979, calls for the reassessment of the more recent political history of Afghanistan, particularly its relations with the great powers. In this connection the period of World War 11 has often been treated superficially, and until today there has been only one book (L. W. Adamec, Afghanistan's Foreign Affairs to the Mid- Twentieth Century: Relations with the USSR, Germany, and Britain [Tucson, 1974]) which contains adequate coverage of the war years. These years ought to be considered as a watershed for the entire region since they clearly foreshadowed the events to come, which we are observing today with great amazement and alarm.
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References
NOTES
2 Agabekov, G. S., Cheka za rabotoi (Berlin, 1931), pp. 276–283;Google ScholarAnonymous, , “The Borderlands of Soviet Central Asia: Afghanistan,” Central Asian Review 4 (1956), 177–181.Google Scholar
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6 Term borrowed from L. B. Poullada's paper “Afghan-American Relations: The Crucial Years,” presented at the 9th Wisconsin Conference on South Asia, Madison, , 11 8, 1980.Google Scholar See also Hauner, M., “Anspruch und Wirklichkeit: Deutschland als Dritte Macht in Afghanistan, 1915–1939,” in: Kettenacker, L. et al. , eds., Festschrfi für Paul Kluge (Munich, 1981), pp. 222–244.Google Scholar
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9 Fraser-Tytter to Halifax, No. 151 of 16/11/1938, para. 4, FO 371/22257.
10 COS (40)252 of 8/3/1940.
11 Halder, F., Kriegstagebuch 1939–1942, Jacobsen, H. A., ed., Vol. 1 (Stuttgart, 1962), pp. 150, 156;Google ScholarDocuments on German Foreign Policy 1918–1945, Series, D., Vol. VIII (London, HMSO, 1961–1964), No. 514 (hereafter DGFP/D/ VIII);Google Scholar more comprehensively in Hauner, , India in Axis Strategy: Germany. Japan, and Indian Nationalists in the Second World War (Stuttgart, 1981), p. 176.Google Scholar
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13 Afghanistan: Political Review for 1940, para. I, FO 371/27032.
14 Ibid., para. 4 and 5.
15 See Hauner, , “Soviet Threat,” p. 307.Google Scholar For the text of the Soviet-Afghan Trade Agreement of 23 July 1940, see Teplinsky, L. B., 50 let Sovetsko-Afghanskikh Otnosheniy (Moscow, 1971), p. 105.Google Scholar
16 As under. note 13 above, para. 8.
17 Ibid.
18 DGFP/D/X, Nos. 158, 220, 228; GFO 2345H/E48421–48.
19 Bhagat, Ram Talwar, The Talwars of Pathan Land and Subhas Chandra 's Great Escape (New Delhi, 1976), pp. 55–121;Google ScholarChand, Uttam, When Bose Was Ziauddin (Delhi, 1946);Google Scholar GFO 195/239117– 126; see also Adamec, L. W., Afghanistan's Foreign Affairs to the Mid- Twentieth Century (Tucson, Ariz., 1974), pp. 247–248.Google Scholar
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22 Fraser-Tytler to Amery, No. 36 of 29/5/1941. IOR L/ P&S/ 12/1572; CAB 68/8:W.P.(R)(41)28.
23 Dispatch No. 36 of 29/5/ 1941, paras. 6 & 19, IOR L/P&S/12/1572.
24 Ibid., para. 12.
25 GF0 617/249965–70.
26 DGFP/D/Xlll, No. 44.
27 Fraser-Tytler to Eden, No. 227 of 11/7/1941, WO 106/3765.
28 Hauner, , India in Axis Strategy, pp. 316–17; see also Adamec, Afghanistan, pp. 251–253.Google Scholar
29 Hauner, , India in Axis Strategy, pp. 309–310, 314–315.Google Scholar
30 Kabul to FO London, No. 328 of 27/9/ 1941, IOR L/P&S/12/1778.
31 IO to 001, No. 10880 of 6/9/ 1941, repeated to Moscow and Kabul, WO 208/26.
32 Ibid., Kabul to FO London, Nos. 307 and 308, 11/9/ 1941.
33 Minutes by M.l.2., dated 8, 13, 14 and 15/9, 1/10/1941, WO 108/26.
34 Ibid., M.l.2. file: Policy for Afghanistan, September–November 1941.
35 Ibid.: GOl to 10, No. 6338 of 127sol;11/1941, and comments by M.l.2. and D.D.M.1. of 15/11/1941; General Headquarters Weekly Summary of North-West Frontier and Afganistan, No. 44 of 7/11/1941; Kabul Weekly Intelligence Summary, No. 46 of 15/11/1941.
36 Hauner, , India in Axis Strategy, pp. 326–327.Google Scholar
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39 Wylie to Eden, No. 41 of 6/3/1942, IOR R/ 12/1/149; see also Mansergh, N. et al. , eds., The Transfer of Power 1942–1947: Constitutional Relations between India and Britain, Vol. I (London, HMSO, 1971), No. 256.Google Scholar
40 Wylie to Eden, Afghanistan, Political Review for 1942, para. 2, FO. 371/34920.
41 General Headquarters Weekly Intelligence Summary of North-West Frontier and Afghanistan, No. II of 20/3/ 1942.
42 GF0 86/62935–38, 617/250201; see also Kircheisen, , Umkampftes Vorfeld, pp. 259–260.Google Scholar
43 GF0 86/62925–40, 329/195469–70, 5147H/ E303610.
44 GF0 86/62945–6.
45 IO Minutes of the Approach by the Afghan Government to the Axis, Ext. 4727, dated 2– 3/9/ 1942, FO 371/31324, IOR L/P&S/12/1789.
46 Wylie to Eden, 8/8/1942, LOR RI 12/1/128, L/P&S/ 12/1789.
47 CAB 68/9 W.P.(R)(42)38.
48 GF0 86/62965, 195/140279–82. 617/250197, 1065/312912; correspondence in files FO 371/ 34928–30, IOR L/P&S/12/ 1798, 1799, 1933, WO 208/30.
49 Conversation between Sir Olaf Caroe, Foreign Secretary to the GOI, and the Afghan Prime and Foreign Ministers, 12/4/1943, FO 371/51841.
50 Afghanistan, Political Review for 1944, para. 7, IOR L/P&S/l 12/1572.
51 Ibid., para. I; see also Afghanistan, Political Review for 1945, para. 2, IOR LI P&S/ 12/1572.
52 Afghanistan, Political Review for 1944, paras. 3, 4, 5, 8, 10; Afghanistan: Political Review for 1945, paras. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
53 Afghanistan. Political Review for 1944, para. 7. See also FO 371/399957.
54 Afghanistan, Political Review for 1945, para. 10.
55 Compiled from GFO 195/140279–82, 140339–46, 1064/312647, 1066/312998, 313045, 313076, 1081/316375–8, 316381–428, 1082/316604; see also WO 208/30, FO 371/34930, 39945–9, 39957, 39972, IOR L/P&S/12/1661, 1798.
56 Afghanistan, Political Review for 1943, para. II.
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