Tanai, who has been described alternatively as a "radical
nationalist" and a "hard-line
communist" of the radical
Khalq faction of the
People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan, was fiercely anti-
mujahideen yet launched an unlikely alliance with the
Islamist (but also nationalist) rebel
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar of the
Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin party. Tanai was against Najibullah's peace plans and supported a military solution to the
conflict. Hekmatyar ordered his fighters to intensify their attacks against the Kabul regime in support of Tanai. The success of the coup was taken for granted. A previous coup attempt by Khalqists was foiled in December 1989, to which Tanai has been linked. The coup occurred a year following the
Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan. Tanai was apparently also supported by those important Khalqists who remained in the
Politburo,
Assadullah Sarwari and
Sayed Mohammad Gulabzoy, respectively their country's envoys to
Aden and
Moscow. They were said to have been intimately connected with the coup and with Tanai. Sarwari, an old
comrade of Tanai, was the chief of the Afghan intelligence (
KHAD) under
Nur Muhammad Taraki. He was a Khalqist hardliner known as the assassin of a rival
Parcham faction member. Gulabzoy was minister of interior before being exiled on a diplomatic assignment to Moscow. Tanai stated that he didn't disagree with President Najibullah's views, but rather with his policy on the military. Najibullah was transferring all the privileges of the Army to the tribal militias and in particular to his special guard. I was against this because the Afghan Army was losing efficiency. The Pakistani government supported the Coup in the moment hoping to weaken the Najibullah government although Tanai himself was no friend of Pakistan as he had been insistent to
Najibullah to point
SCUD missiles at
Islamabad in retlation for supporting the rebels. Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto's plea to the other six party leaders to aid Tanai and Hekmatyar was rebuked as a disgrace to the
jihad. Most of the factions viewed General Tanai as an opportunistic
war criminal and
hardline communist who was responsible for carpet-bombings in portions of the major western city of
Herat in
March 1979. The coup attempt was partially financed by
Osama bin Laden, who bribed
Afghan Armed Forces officers into deserting. ==Coup attempt==