The Red Army's Unwinnable War: How Afghanistan Broke the Soviet Myth
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Narrated by:
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(00:00:49) The Decision No One Owned
(00:02:10) The Red Army Meets Its Limits
(00:03:45) The Cost That Didn't Appear in Official Figures
(00:05:27) The Myth That Died in the Mountains
(00:07:01) Gorbachev Inherits the Trap
(00:08:42) The Connection to Everything Else
(00:10:47) The Graveyard Does What It Always Does
When the Politburo authorized the invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, aging men around a declining Brezhnev expected a quick stabilization — another Hungary, another Czechoslovakia. What they got was a decade of grinding attrition that the Soviet state could neither win nor honestly admit was happening.
This episode follows the full arc of the Afghan disaster: the mismatch between a military built for European tank warfare and a tribal, mountainous insurgency it could never pacify; the coffins arriving home under orders of silence; the economic drain on an already stagnating command economy; and the generation of Afgantsy veterans who came back traumatized, organized outside Party control, and quietly fractured one of the Soviet system's most important monopolies — the monopoly on organized social life.
But the deepest damage wasn't measured in rubles or body counts. The Soviet empire was held together not by consent but by the credible threat of force. When Afghanistan showed the non-Russian republics inside the USSR that Red Army power had real limits, the logic underpinning the whole imperial structure began to shift. Slowly, silently — and irreversibly.
This is chapter five in the story of how the Soviet Union came apart from the inside. Understanding the Afghan wound is essential to understanding everything that follows: Gorbachev's impossible reform gamble, the nationalities crisis, and the final unraveling of 1991.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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