There were seven major mujahidin groups as recognized by Pakistan and its allies, based in
Peshawar and sometimes called the
Peshawar Seven. They were often categorized into the fundamentalist and traditional; the fundamentalist factions were militarily stronger in the war. ;Political Islamist •
Jamiat-i Islami (
Islamic Society of Afghanistan), a mostly
Tajik faction headed by
Burhanuddin Rabbani, a former professor of theology at Kabul University, advocating for a semi-democratic Islamic revolutionary state - one of the most notable and strongest of the
mujahideen factions •
Hizb-i Islami (Gulbuddin) (
Islamic Party), a radical, oppositionist faction headed by
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar who enjoyed the largest amount of ISI Pakistan funding, Saudi intelligence funding, and American CIA funding; traditionally strongest in
Ghilzai Pashtun tribal regions in the south-east - aimed for a state similar to that founded and led by
Khomeini in
Iran •
Hezb-i Islami Khalis (
Islamic Party), a splinter faction headed by theologian
Mohammad Yunus Khalis, with its supporter base having been Ghilzai Pashtuns - favored cooperation with other factions •
Ittihad-i Islami (
Islamic Union (for the liberation of Afghanistan)), a faction advocating for
Wahhabism, led by fundamentalist
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf and funded by Saudi Arabia; smaller than the other parties, but influential in international recruitment for the jihad ;Afghan traditionalist •
Harakat-i Inqilab-i Islami (
Revolutionary Islamic Movement (of Afghanistan)), a
Pashtun faction led by
Mohammad Nabi Mohammadi, a religious figure and former member of parliament, and gaining support among Pashtun tribes in the south •
Jabha-i Nejat-i Milli (
(Afghan) National Liberation Front), headed by the
Sufi order Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, a
monarchist faction that favored the return of Afghanistan's ousted King,
Zahir Shah, in a traditional Islamic state with a parliamentary democracy; it was said to be the weakest militarily, although with a respected leader •
Mahaz-i Milli (
National (Islamic) Front), the most secular, pro-Western and liberal of the mujahidin factions, rejecting both communism and Islamic fundamentalism, instead adhering to Pashtun nationalism, democracy and a return of the monarchy; led by
Sayid Ahmad Gailani, an Islamic mystical figure, and supported by a number of tribal leaders
Commanders , a mujahidin commander of
Maidan Wardak Province Some of the group leaders also acted as commanders, such as Khalis and Hekmatyar. The other notable mujahidin commanders were
Ahmad Shah Massoud (Jamiat-i Islami),
Abdul Haq (Hizb-i Islami Khalis),
Ismail Khan (Jamiat-i Islami),
Jalaluddin Haqqani (Hizb-i Islami Khalis),
Amin Wardak (Mahaz-e Melli) and
Mohammad Zabihullah (Jamiat-i Islami).
Ideologies and divisions , Afghanistan, 1985 The Afghan
mujahideen were not a united movement. The resistance parties remained deeply divided along ethnic, ideological and personal lines, despite internal and external pressures to unite. Dutch journalist Jere Van Dyk reported in 1981 that the guerillas were effectively fighting two civil wars: one against the regime and the Soviets, and another among themselves.
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's
Hizb-i Islami was most cited as the initiator of cross-mujahidin clashes. Through the years, there were various efforts to create a united front, but all were either non-effective or failed in a short time. At least three different iterations of an "Islamic Unity of Afghan Mujahedin" (IUAM) were tried, none of which lasted. The formation of the Afghanistan Interim Government (AIG) in 1988 also failed to promote unity. Additionally, it only included the select Sunni Muslim groups approved by Pakistan; Shi'ite groups backed by Iran and pro-Chinese (anti-Soviet) leftist groups were excluded.
Mujahideen leader
Mohammad Yunus Khalis thought that the lack of trust among the various leaders was a factor for the many disunited organizations. The issue of the exiled king,
Mohammed Zahir Shah, also caused divisions. Zahir Shah enjoyed considerable popularity among the Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Both Hekmatyar and Khalis were strongly against the king, while Gailani, Mojaddedi and Mohammadi supported an interim coalition with him. Rabbani and Sayyaf were initially against a role for the king, later changing their minds. In 1989, under the patronage of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, an
Afghan Interim Government (AIG) was formed in Pakistan to coincide with the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. The Interim Government had been in exile in Pakistan since 1988. The Interim Government was Headed by traditionalist
Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, with orthodox
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf as prime minister, the AIG represented itself as a
government in exile and a legitimate incoming state following the Soviet withdrawal. visioning a final victory towards Kabul, but were disastrously defeated by the Afghan Army. The rivalry between Hekmatyar and the Jamiat-i Islami only increased, leading to Hekmatyar's resignation from the AIG. He eventually decided to go at the Kabul regime in a very different way: a coalition with
Khalq communists of General
Shahnawaz Tanai, which caused many resignations in his party in protest. Together, they launched a
coup attempt in 1990 to oust the Parchamite
Mohammed Najibullah, but failed. They united as the "
Tehran Eight" in 1987 (called so due to Iranian support). In 1989, most of these merged into one group,
Hezb-e Wahdat (except for the Islamic Movement of Afghanistan and
Hezbollah Afghanistan).
Maoist groups There were also
Maoist militias that fought against the Soviets and the Afghan regime, as well as the Mujahidin. They were initially well organized and carried out attacks in Kabul; the
KGB then had a policy of clearing Kabul of any pro-Chinese elements. A mild suspicion from
KHAD was enough to put someone in prison by accusing them of being a pro-Chinese communist. The
People's Republic of China, which was a backer of the main Pakistan-based Mujahidin, was either unable or unwilling to help the Afghan Maoists.
Majid Kalakani, a prominent figure and leader of the
Liberation Organization of the People of Afghanistan (SAMA), was executed by the Afghan regime in June 1980. Members of
Shola-e Javid ("Eternal Flame") were involved in fighting the government and mujahidin (particularly
Hezb-i Islami). The
Babrak Karmal government arrested many of its members in June 1981.
Smaller groups Smaller mujahidin groups not connected to the main seven parties include the
Sharafat Kuh Front in Farah Province and
Harakat-e-Mulavi. Additionally a
Baloch nationalist group operated called the
Nimruz Front. The
Settam-e-Melli was a small long-time splinter faction of the PDPA based in
Badakhshan Province that fought against the regime and other Mujahidin. They were driven out of
Panjshir Valley by Massoud's mujahidin forces in 1981. By 1983 its resistance seemed to have ceased as it appeared to join the Karmal government. The
Afghan Social Democratic Party (Afghan Mellat), formed in the 1960s, also resisted in the early days of the war. It was treated as a
pariah by the recognized Peshawar-based mujahidin groups. Its guerilla band was heavily damaged in September 1980 following an attack by Hekmatyar's mujahidin forces. The regime in Kabul neutralized an Afghan Mellat unit in the city in 1983. ==Equipment==