Alongside the tank commander on the ground, Colonel
Aslam Watanjar, of the 1st Battalion of the 4th Tank Brigade. Together, the troops under their command took
Kabul. The government fell, and Daoud was killed. Following the seizure of power, Amin and Karmal disagreed on how the party should announce their seizure of power with Amin wanting Taraki to claim power since he was the most recognizable face of the movement while Karmal disagreed. As a compromise Taraki decided that military officers, Watanjar and Qadir should announce the revolution. At 19:00 on 27 April, Qadir and
Aslam Watanjar made an announcement over Radio Afghanistan, with Qadir giving the announcement in the
Dari language and
Watanjar in
Pashto, that a Revolutionary Council of the Armed Forces had seized power. The council's initial statement of principles, issued late in the evening of 27 April was a noncommittal affirmation of
Islamic,
democratic, and nonaligned ideals: The
Revolutionary Council was formed by himself,
Hafizullah Amin, and Major
Mohammad Aslam Watanjar, it assumed the control of the country until a civilian government was formed. On 30 April the newly created PDPA's Revolutionary Council (with
Nur Mohammad Taraki and
Babrak Karmal in its leadership) issued the first of a series of fateful decrees. The decree formally abolished the military's revolutionary council. A second decree, issued on 1 May, named the members of the first cabinet that included Qadir as
Minister of Defence. When interviewed by
French journalists from
Télévision Française 1, on 11 May 1978, Abdul Qadir appeared to be sweating profusely. == Member of the Khalqist Government ==