Jump to content

Rahmatullah Safi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rahmatullah Safi
General Rahmatullah Safi posing for camera
Personal details
Born1948
Afghanistan
OccupationMilitary General
Military service
Allegiance Kingdom of Afghanistan
National Islamic Front of Afghanistan
Branch/service Royal Afghan Army
Afghan Commando Forces
Rank Brigadier general
Battles/wars1970 Pul-e Khishti Mosque protest
Soviet-Afghan war

Brigadier General Rahmatullah Safi (born 1948) is an Afghan former army officer, former commander of the 444th Commando Battalion under the Kingdom of Afghanistan and mujahideen commander who fought during the Soviet–Afghan War. He was later claimed to have been the representative of the Taliban movement in Europe.[1]

Formerly a colonel in the Royal Afghan Army, he trained an elite commando force of 1,600 men during the reign of king Zahir Shah, known as the 444th Commando Battalion. On 24 May 1970, he led the battalion during an anti-government protest by the Islamic clergy in Pul-e Khishti Mosque, Kabul. The commandos under his command deported the protestors from the capital with supplementary buses parked on Maiwand Road.[2]

When Mohammed Daoud Khan took power, he left Afghanistan for England where he was trained by Britain's MI6. Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, he joined the National Islamic Front of Afghanistan, a mujahideen party led by Pir Sayyed Ahmed Gailani.[3] He and his officers were trained by Britain's MI6 as a pledge to support the resistance against the Soviet Union. He and his men would return a year later an set up his base in Peshawar.[4]

As a mujahideen commander, Rahmatullah Safi operated in Paktia and Kunar provinces, taking part in the 1986 Zhawar fighting.[5] He was in charge of NIFA's training facilities, where he claimed to have trained some 8,000 mujahideen, possibly with British assistance.[3] In 1985 Safi led a delegation of mujaheddin to the United States, where the general spoke at colleges and universities in more than a dozen US cities.[6] Safi was hospitalized in Pittsburgh in 1986 for cardiac evaluation tests; his medical bills were paid by donations and the Committee for a Free Afghanistan.[7]

In 1998, Safi was living in London, England, but departed to Afghanistan along with Nabi Misdak to convince Mullah Omar to hand over Osama bin Laden to foreign authorities;[8] and he was considered the representative of the Taliban in Europe according to a United Nations Security Council press release.[1]

In 2004, Safi resigned his military commission and announced his intention to run in the 2004 Afghan presidential election.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Press Release, AFG/131, SC/7028". United Nations Security Council. Retrieved May 10, 2007.
  2. ^ Azimi, General Nabi (2019-04-11). The Army and Politics: Afghanistan: 1963-1993. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-7283-8701-7.
  3. ^ a b Cooley, John; Said, Edward (2002). Unholy Wars: Afghanistan, America and International Terrorism. Pluto Press. p. 77. ISBN 0-7453-1917-3.
  4. ^ Coles, T. J (2018). Manufacturing Terrorism: When Governments Use Fear to Justify Foreign Wars and Control Society. West Hoathly, W. Sussex: Clairview Books. p. 50. ISBN 9781905570973. OCLC 1076248472.
  5. ^ Isby, David (1989). War in a distant country, Afghanistan: invasion and resistance. Arms and Armour Press. pp. 106. ISBN 0-85368-769-2.
  6. ^ Bend Bulletin - Jan 19, 1985 Afghans Appeal for More Aid
  7. ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Sep 3, 1986 Afghan Rebel Appeals for US Support
  8. ^ Newsweek: Mohammed Omar's Driver Says U.S. Soldiers Came Close to Finding Him; 'Man of the People' Fled His Kandahar Compound in Rickshaw, Slept in Basements
  9. ^ "Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty". Archived from the original on 2008-06-13. Retrieved 2007-07-31.