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Operation Cyclone
Inside the CIA’s Secret War in Afghanistan
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Narrado por:
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Brandon Harris
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De:
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Miles Dunsford
Some wars are fought openly, with armies, flags, and formal declarations. Others unfold in silence, shaped by budgets hidden behind code names, weapons that appear without fingerprints, and decisions made with the understanding that no one will ever publicly admit responsibility. Operation Cyclone was one of the largest and most consequential wars of that second kind.
For nearly a decade, Afghanistan became the central battleground of a vast covert campaign designed to bleed the Soviet Union without triggering a direct superpower confrontation. What began as a cautious intelligence effort grew into a massive, multi-billion-dollar operation that armed, trained, and sustained a fragmented resistance across some of the harshest terrain on earth. It was a campaign built on secrecy, deniability, and the belief that indirect pressure could achieve what open war could not.
This book tells the full story of how Operation Cyclone worked, how it expanded, and why its consequences did not end when the Soviets finally withdrew. It follows the operation from its earliest days, when Washington struggled to understand events in Kabul, through the Soviet invasion that shocked policymakers and forced a response. It explains how the CIA constructed a shadow pipeline that moved money, weapons, and support through layers of intermediaries, keeping American hands officially clean while the scale of the war steadily increased.
Central to the story is Pakistan, the essential gatekeeper of the operation. Pakistan’s intelligence services were not passive conduits, but powerful actors with their own priorities, rivalries, and long-term aims. Decisions made in Islamabad shaped which Afghan factions received support, which commanders rose to prominence, and which visions of Afghanistan’s future were quietly favoured.
©2026 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2026 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK