Soviet special forces stop to gather water from a creek, marching through enemy territory.
Afghanistan. 1986.Wikimedia Commons
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Soviet troops interrogate a captured mujahideen fighter.
Afghanistan. 1987.Wikimedia Commons
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Mujahideen fighters return to their village to find it in ruins, destroyed by Soviet shells.
Afghanistan. 1986.Wikimedia Commons
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A Soviet soldier stands on guard.
Afghanistan. 1988.Wikimedia Commons
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Afghan refugees who have fled across the border with Pakistan protest against the Soviet occupation of their home country.
Pakistan. 1979.Pascal Manoukian/Sygma/Sygma via Getty Images
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Mujahideen fighters pray.
Kunar, Afghanistan. 1987.Wikimedia Commons
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An Afghan refugee camp in Pakistan.
After the Soviets took control of the country, many people fled Afghanistan for Pakistan. Some are still there today.
Pakistan. 2001.Flickr/United Nations
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A young Afghan child in a refugee camp in Pakistan.
Chaman, Pakistan. 2001.Flickr/United Nations
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Wounded Mujahideen soldiers are taken to the United States for medical treatment.
United States. 1989.Wikimedia Commons
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Medics rush a mujahideen fighter into a plane, to be taken to the United States for treatment.
Pakistan. 1986.Wikimedia Commons
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Afghan guerrillas hold a press conference in the United States, telling the American people about their injuries and their battles against the Soviet army.
California, USA. 1986.Wikimedia Commons
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President Ronald Reagan sits down with mujahideen fighters inside the White House.
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf as an Afghan mujahideen commander.
Sayyaf would soon invite Osama Bin Laden into Afghanistan. Together, the two would start a school called the "Call of Jihad" that trained many of the world's worst terrorists.
Jaji, Afghanistan. 1984.Wikimedia Commons
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Taliban soldiers make use of a captured Soviet tank.
Where Al-Qaeda Began: 48 Photos From The Soviet-Afghan War
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The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan changed the world.
This nine-year power struggle in a small, landlocked country ultimately led to some of the most profound moments in modern history. This one conflict sparked the collapse of the Soviet Union, the rise of Osama bin Laden, the age of jihadist terrorism, and the birth of the Taliban and Al Qaeda.
In time, the ripples of the Soviet-Afghan War brought the Twin Towers to the ground, brought American troops to the Middle East, and created a new era of wars and terrorism that plague the world today.
It all began in Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world. In 1979, a successful coup by the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (DRA) caused the formation of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, which set off a wave of rebellions from the mujahideen: largely rural, conservative, Islamist Afghanis resistant to the DRA's forced change.
In response, the Red Army, aligned with the DRA, invaded Afghanistan and took power over the country. Mujahideen rebel fighters rose up against them, waging what at first seemed like an unwinnable war.
All that changed, however, when the United States got involved. The American government helped set up training schools in Pakistan. They encouraged fighters from around the Middle East to join the war. And, in a campaign spearheaded by Congressman Charlie Wilson, they equipped the mujahideen fighters with advanced weaponry like the Stinger missile launcher.
The tide of battle then shifted. With American weapons in their hands, the mujahideen had a fighting chance that the Soviet Union hadn't prepared for. By 1989, the Soviet Army gave up. They abandoned Afghanistan, leaving tanks and armored vehicles behind, and went home. The Soviet-Afghan War had come to an end.
For the people of Afghanistan, though, the fighting was far from over. International attention may have wandered elsewhere, but their fight raged on. Now, though, it had irrevocably changed.
The Pakistani training schools that the United States had helped established had trained some of the most dangerous terrorists the world would come to know, including Osama bin Laden, and they had placed incredibly powerful weapons in their hands.
Eventually, the Afghanistan Civil War would end with the Taliban on top. Extremists would take power over the country and would help spark a new wave of international terrorism. And what transpired would have effects that the world continues to deal with today — and likely well into the future.
After exploring these photographs from the Soviet war in Afghanistan, discover most fascinating facts about Osama bin Laden.
A former associate editor for All That's Interesting, Leah Silverman holds a Master's in Fine Arts from Columbia University's Creative Writing Program and her work has appeared in Catapult, Town & Country, Women's Health, and Publishers Weekly.
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Oliver, Mark. "Where Al-Qaeda Began: 48 Photos From The Soviet-Afghan War." AllThatsInteresting.com, August 8, 2021, https://allthatsinteresting.com/soviet-afghan-war. Accessed February 22, 2025.