This is a tremendous feat of national fantasy. During Russia’s nine-year war in Afghanistan, at least 1 million Afghans and 15,000 Soviet soldiers died. Afghanistan was devastated, its agriculture was ravaged, and one-third of its people fled and became refugees. The Soviet invasion is widely seen as the beginning of what Afghans now call their “forty-year war.” Soviet citizens at the time were bewildered and privately furious about the officially imposed silence and mounting casualty toll — all while the state was collapsing.

Viktor Khabarov, now 67, was then a major in the Soviet military, working among the troops as a photographer. While the Kremlin made lofty decisions about the conflict from Moscow, he saw it close up, on the ground. From 1986 to 1989, he hopped in and out of Afghanistan on assignment for Red Star, the Soviet (and now Russian) military newspaper.

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Photographing war today is not what it was then. There were few rules and restrictions on Soviet photographers in Afghanistan, and Khabarov relished his independence. “I was a free hunter,” he says. He was able to observe his subjects at length, to befriend them, to gain their trust. “The masks fall from people’s faces, and you see their natural state and emotions. For a photographer, this is a gold mine,” he recalls.

In early 1989, he was working around the USSR’s border with Afghanistan. Three days before the withdrawal, Khabarov found himself on the Soviet side. Worried he would miss the final days, he asked Boris Gromov, the last Soviet commander of the war, if he could return. “He turned to me and said, ‘Are you f—ing crazy?’ But he’s a cool guy. He gave me his armored personnel carrier and said, ‘Just go.’ ”

Khabarov and a colleague raced across 300 miles of Afghan terrain in search of great photos before Soviet troops stopped them from going further. “Everyone was leaving, and we were trying to get back in. That ended up being some of the best photography I took in Afghanistan.” The airborne forces were jetting away; soldiers packed away their munitions; mothers slathered their returning sons with kisses. Khabarov was one of the last Soviets to leave the country, walking out by foot on the final day of the withdrawal, 30 years ago Friday.

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