Page 164 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 164

the  Mujahideen and waited for her parade. Waited for her sons' enemies

                        to fall.



                        * * *



                          And, eventually, they did. In April 1992, the year Laila turned fourteen.
                            Najibullah  surrendered  at  last  and  was  given  sanctuary  in  the  UN

                        compound near Darulaman Palace, south of the city.
                            The  jihad  was  over.  The  various  communist  regimes  that  had  held

                        power since the night Laila was born were all defeated. Mammy's heroes,

                        Ahmad's and Noor's brothers-in-war, had won. And now, after more than

                        a decade of sacrificing everything, of leaving behind their families to live
                        in  mountains  and  fight  for  Afghanistan's  sovereignty,  the  Mujahideen

                        were coming to Kabul, in flesh, blood, and battle-weary bone.



                          Mammy knew all of their names.



                            There  was  Dostum,  the  flamboyant  Uzbek  commander,  leader  of the

                        Junbish-i-Milli faction,  who  had a reputation  for shifting allegiances. The
                        intense, surly Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, leader of the Hezb-e-Islami faction,

                        a Pashtun who had studied engineering and once killed a Maoist student.

                        Rabbani,  Tajik  leader  of  the  Jamiat-e-Islami  faction,  who  had  taught
                        Islam at Kabul University in the days of the monarchy. Sayyaf, a Pashtun

                        from  Paghman  with  Arab connections, a stout Muslim and leader of the

                        Ittehad-i-Islami  faction.  Abdul  Ali  Mazari,  leader  of  the  Hizb-e-Wahdat

                        faction,  known  as  Baba  Mazari  among  his  fellow  Hazaras,  with  strong
                        Shi'a ties to Iran.

                          And, of course, there was Mammy's hero, Rabbani's ally, the brooding,

                        charismatic Tajik commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, the Lion of Panjshir.

                        Mammy had nailed up a poster of him in her room. Massoud's handsome,
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