Panjdeh incident
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The Panjdeh Incident or Panjdeh Scare (Russian: Афганский кризис, Afghan Crisis or Бой за Кушку, Battle of Kushka) was a military skirmish that occurred in 1885 when Russian forces seized Afghan territory south of the Oxus River around an oasis at Panjdeh. Competing Russian and British interests in Central and South Asia had for years been the cause of a virtual cold war known euphemistically as The Great Game, and the Panjdeh Incident came close to triggering full scale armed conflict.
An Afghan force was encamped on the west bank of the Kushk River, with a Russian force on the east bank. On 29 March 1885, the leader of the Russian forces, General Komarov, sent an ultimatum demanding an Afghan withdrawal. On their refusal, the Russians attacked them at 3 a.m. on 30 March and drove them across the Pul-i-Khishti Bridge with a loss of some 40 men. Afghan troops were reported to have been 'wiped out to a man' in their trenches, with losses of up to 600.
The incident nearly gave rise to war between Britain and Russia, but the emir Abdur-Rahman, who was present at the Rawalpindi conference with Lord Dufferin at the time, regarded the matter as a mere frontier scuffle. However, members of Gladstone's cabinet, namely Lord Ripon (the new Indian Viceroy), believed withdrawal could lead to a breakdown in law and order and possible intervention from Russia. Outright war was averted with diplomacy, and Lord Dufferin managed to secure a settlement in which Russia kept the Merv Oasis, but relinquished further territories taken in their advance, and promised to respect Afghan territorial integrity in the future.
Following the incident, the Anglo-Russian Boundary Commission was established to delineate the northern frontier of Afghanistan. The commission did not have any Afghan involvement, and effectively led to Afghanistan becoming a buffer state between British India and the Russian Empire. The incident brought the southward expansion of Imperial Russia to a halt. The Russians founded the border town of Kushka in the conquered territory; it was the southernmost settlement of both the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union.
The 1921 Afghan-Soviet Treaty was the first international agreement the Soviets entered into after seizing power. Under its terms, inter alia, "the Soviets agreed to return to Afghanistan, subject to plebiscites, territories in the Panjdeh area ceded under duress by Afghanistan to Russia or Bukhara in the nineteenth century..."[1] "...Meanwhile, the Soviets reneged on some of their important pledges, under the Treaty of 1921 and several Memoranda of Mutual Understanding. They embarked on a path of blatant expansion in Muslim Central Asia in the clear knowledge that a weak, unprotected, and necessarily friendly Afghanistan would be unable to pose an impediment. First they failed to return the most important border district, which from the Afghan point of view, was Panjdeh... "[2]
Sources
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the - R.A.Johnson, The Penjdeh Incident, 1885 in Archives: The Journal of the British Records Association, volume XXIV, 100, (April 1999): 28-48.
- Afghanistan: The First Five Years of Soviet Occupation by J. Bruce Amstutz Pg. 12
- Modern Afghanistan: A History of Struggle and Survival by Amin Saikal, Ravan Farhadi, Kirill Nourzhanov Pg. 70
References
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=RUSNyMH1aFQC&pg=PA12&lpg=PA12&dq=Panjdeh+return&source=bl&ots=2yT3sNyQEW&sig=FM4hPrJky9bgOygAy0tByO7VfQM&hl=en&ei=jcbcSeDSCsOSkAXeoa2WDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=MuF55mSIt4EC&pg=PA70&lpg=PA70&dq=Panjdeh+return&source=bl&ots=Sb69DkgCgi&sig=fi3LWSJlaafDi4r0jsHuEUG-rBc&hl=en&ei=XsTcSb_nFYz6kAWHg8SbDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result#PPA73,M1