in Iran, c. 1974. Khan was unsatisfied with King Zahir Shah's constitutional parliamentary system and lack of progress. He planned rebellion for more than a year before he seized power from the King on 17 July 1973. The
coup was bloodless, and backed by a large number of army officers who were loyal to him, facing no resistance. Departing from tradition, and for the first time in Afghan history, he did not proclaim himself
Shah, establishing instead a
republic with himself as
president. The role of pro-communist
Parchamite officers in the coup led to him receiving the nickname "
Red Prince" by some. King Zahir Shah's constitution establishing a parliament with elected members and the separation of powers was replaced by a now largely nominated
loya jirga (meaning "grand assembly"). The parliament was disbanded. Although he was close to the Soviet Union during his prime ministership, Khan continued the Afghan policy of
non-alignment with the Cold War superpowers. Nor did he bring drastic pro-Soviet change to the economic system. In Khan's new cabinet, many ministers were fresh faced politicians, and only Dr Abdul Majid was a ministerial carryover from Khan's Prime Minister era (1953–1963); Majid was Minister of Education from 1953 to 1957, and from 1973 was appointed Minister of Justice until 1977. Initially about half of the new cabinet were either current members, former members or sympathizers of the
PDPA, but over time their influence would be eradicated by Khan. A coup against Khan, which may have been planned before he took power, was repressed shortly after his seizure of power. In October 1973,
Mohammad Hashim Maiwandwal, a former prime minister and a highly respected former diplomat, was arrested in a coup plot and died in prison before his trial set for December 1973. This was at a time when Parchamites controlled the Ministry of Interior under circumstances corroborating the widespread belief that he had been tortured to death by the leftists. According to one account, Daoud Khan planned to appoint Maiwandwal as prime minister, leading to the
Parchamite Minister of Interior,
Faiz Mohammad, along with fellow communists, framing Maiwandwal in a coup plot, then torturing him to death without Daoud Khan's knowledge.
Louis Dupree wrote that Maiwandwal, one of few Afghan politicians with an international reputation, could have been a leader in a democratic process and therefore a target for communists. One of the army generals arrested under suspicion of this plot with Maiwandwal was
Mohammed Asif Safi, who was later released. Khan personally apologized to him for the arrest. In 1974, he signed one of two economic packages that aimed to greatly increase the capability of the Afghan military. At this time, there were increasing concerns that Afghanistan lacked a modern army comparable to the militaries of Iran and Pakistan. In 1975, his government
nationalized all banks in Afghanistan, including
Da Afghanistan Bank, Afghanistan's
central bank. Khan wanted to lessen the country's dependence on the Soviet Union and attempted to promote a new foreign policy. In 1975 he visited some countries in the Middle East, including
Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Iran, all of which were anti-Soviet states, to ask for aid, He also visited
India.
Relations with Pakistan As during his time as prime minister, Daoud Khan again pressed on the question of
Pashtunistan, again leading to sometimes tense relations with Pakistan. Daoud hosted General Secretary of the
National Awami Party Khan Abdul Wali Khan,
Ajmal Khattak, Juma Khan Sufi, Baluch guerrillas, and others. Khan's government and forces also commenced training of anti-Pakistani groups to conduct militant action and sabotage in Pakistan. The campaign was significant enough that even one of Bhutto's senior colleagues, minister of interior and head of the provincial branch of
Bhutto's party of/in the then-
North-West Frontier Province (renamed
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 2010),
Hayat Sherpao, was killed, ostensibly on the orders of the later-acquitted Awami Party. As a result, Afghanistan's already strained relationship with Pakistan further dipped and Pakistan likewise started similar kinds of cross-border interference. By 1975,
Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, through its
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), had begun to engage in promoting a
proxy war in Afghanistan. Since coming to power, under pressure from the PDPA and to increase domestic Pashtun support, Khan took a stronger line on the Pashtunistan issue and promoted a proxy war in Pakistan. Trade and transit agreements with Pakistan were subsequently severely affected. The year 1975 was a watershed in Afghan-Pakistan relations. Pakistan blamed Afghanistan for unrest in
Bajaur agency and the bombing of a
PIA B707 at Islamabad airport in 1975. The 130 passengers of PIA B707 had deplaned before the explosion took place and thus no one was harmed in the explosion inside the aircraft. At the same time, Afghanistan also faced several short lived uprisings in retaliation in eastern Afghanistan and in
Panjshir valley, which Afghanistan blamed on Pakistan. There was also deployment of additional troops by both the countries along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. By October 1976, the head of Pakistan intelligence agency,
Jilani was informing a US diplomat that Afghanistan was no longer creating troubles for Pakistan.
Diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union Khan met
Leonid Brezhnev on a state visit to Moscow from 12 to 15 April 1977. He had asked for a private meeting with the Soviet leader to discuss with him the increased pattern of Soviet actions in Afghanistan. In particular, he discussed the intensified Soviet attempt to unite the two factions of the Afghan communist parties,
Parcham and
Khalq. Brezhnev described Afghanistan's non-alignment as important to the USSR and essential to the promotion of peace in Asia, and warned him about the presence of experts from NATO countries stationed in the northern parts of Afghanistan. Daoud bluntly replied:"we will never allow you to dictate to us how to run our country and whom to employ in Afghanistan. How and where we employ the foreign experts will remain the exclusive prerogative of the Afghan state. Afghanistan shall remain poor, if necessary, but free in its acts and decisions" After returning to Afghanistan, he made plans that his government would downscale its relationship with the Soviet Union, and instead forge closer contacts with the West as well as the oil-rich
Saudi Arabia and
Iran. Afghanistan signed a co-operative military treaty with
Egypt and by 1977, the Afghan military and police force were being trained by
Egyptian Armed Forces. This angered the
Soviet Union because
Egypt took the same route in 1974 in distancing itself from the Soviet Union.
Communist coup and assassination (the presidential palace, formerly the chief royal palace) in Kabul, the day after the
Saur Revolution (28 April 1978) After the murder of
Mir Akbar Khyber, the prominent
Parchamite ideologue, his funeral on 19 April 1978 served as a rallying point for the Afghan communists. An estimated 1,000 to 3,000 people gathered to hear speeches by PDPA leaders such as
Nur Muhammad Taraki,
Hafizullah Amin and
Babrak Karmal. Shocked by this demonstration of communist unity, Khan ordered the arrest of the PDPA leaders, but he acted too slowly. It took him a week to arrest Taraki, Karmal managed to escape to the
USSR, and Amin was merely placed under house arrest. Khan had misjudged the situation and believed that Karmal's Parcham faction was the main communist threat. In fact, according to PDPA documents, Amin's Khalq faction had extensively infiltrated the military and they outnumbered Parcham cells by a factor of 2 to 3. Amin sent complete orders for the coup from his home while it was under armed guard, using his family members as messengers. The army had been put on alert on 26 April because of a presumed coup. On 27 April 1978, a
coup d'état, beginning with troop movements at the military base at
Kabul International Airport, gained ground slowly over the next twenty-four hours as rebels battled units loyal to Daoud Khan in and around the capital. Khan and most of his family were shot dead during the coup by members of the
People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). The coup climaxed in
the Arg, the former chief royal palace, during the early hours of 28 April 1978, involving heavy fighting and many deaths. Shortly afterwards, the new military leaders announced that Khan had been killed for refusing to pledge allegiance to the new regime by Lieutenant Imamuddin of the 444th Commando Battalion. Upon Daoud's assassination, Afghan singer Fazal Ghani wrote the song “
Khalqi Nizam” which mocked the former president for his baldness and for being “finished with one strike”, which was aired on
Radio Television Afghanistan. ==Body and state funeral==