The Soldiers Who Wouldn't Stay Silent: How the Afgantsy Cracked the System
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Narrated by:
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By:
(00:01:10) The Architecture of Controlled Truth
(00:02:53) The War That Couldn't Be Explained
(00:04:24) The First Cracks in the Monopoly
(00:06:03) An Economy That Couldn't Feed Itself
(00:07:46) Gorbachev's Miscalculation
(00:09:15) The Republics Watching Carefully
(00:10:51) The System Begins to Come Apart
(00:12:12) August 1991 and the End of the Party
(00:13:48) What the Veterans Left Behind
A million Soviet soldiers served in Afghanistan. They came home to a country that had spent a decade insisting the war was going well — and some of them decided they were done keeping the secret.
This episode is the story of the Afgantsy: the veterans of a war the Soviet state refused to name as a war. Fifteen thousand dead. Tens of thousands more wounded, addicted, or permanently changed. Coffins delivered at night. Families told their sons had died in accidents. And a system that depended, above all else, on the gap between what citizens privately knew and what they were willing to say in public.
Afghanistan began closing that gap. The veterans who organised — not as dissidents, but as men who had served and been betrayed — cracked the Communist Party's monopoly on collective life simply by existing outside it. They gathered. They shared information. They made demands without party permission. And because they had served, they had a moral standing that made them nearly impossible to suppress.
When Gorbachev's glasnost began opening space for public speech from 1986, the Afgantsy stepped into it. They named the casualties. They contradicted the official version. They asked why so many had died for a war now quietly being abandoned. Their testimony landed in a country where growth had collapsed to 1.6 percent, queues were endemic, and up to 40 percent of factory goods arrived defective.
The system had always survived in the space between private doubt and public challenge. The Afgantsy — ordinary young men, not intellectuals or ideologues — began to close it for good.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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