By
Afghanland.com: To
justify his plan, Auckland issued the Simla Manifesto in October
1838, setting forth the necessary reasons for British intervention
in Afghanistan. The manifesto stated that in order to insure the
welfare of India, the British must have a trustworthy ally on
India's western frontier. The British pretense that their troops
were merely supporting Shuja's small army in retaking what was
once his throne fooled no one. Although the Simla Manifesto stated
that British troops would be withdrawn as soon as Shuja was
installed in Kabul, Shuja's rule depended entirely on British arms
to suppress rebellion and on British funds to buy the support of
tribal chiefs. The British denied that they were invading
Afghanistan, instead claiming they were merely supporting its
legitimate Shuja government "against foreign interference and
factious opposition."
From the British point of view, the
First Anglo-Afghan War (1838-42) (often called "Auckland's
Folly") was an unmitigated disaster, despite the ease with
which Dost Mohammad was deposed and Shuja enthroned. An army of
British and Indian troops set out from the Punjab in December 1838
and reached Quetta by late March 1839. A month later, the
British
took Qandahar without a battle. In July, after a two-month delay
in Qandahar, the British attacked the fortress of Ghazni,
overlooking a plain leading to India, and achieved a decisive
victory over Dost Mohammad's troops led by one of his sons. Dost
Mohammad fled with his loyal followers across the passes to Bamian,
and ultimately to Bukhara. In August 1839, after almost thirty
years, Shuja was again enthroned in Kabul. Some British troops
returned to India, but it soon became clear that Shuja's rule
could only be maintained with the presence of British forces.
After he unsuccessfully attacked the British and their Afghan protégé,
Dost Mohammad surrendered to them and was exiled in India in late
1840.
By October 1841, however,
disaffected Afghan tribes were flocking to support Dost Mohammad's
son, Mohammad Akbar, in Bamian. On January 1, 1842, their presence
no longer wanted, an agreement was reached that provided for the
safe exodus of the British garrison and its dependents from
Afghanistan. Five days later, the retreat began, and as they
struggled through
the snowbound passes, the British were attacked by Ghilzai
warriors. Although Dr. W. Brydon is frequently mentioned as the
only survivor of the march to Jalalabad--out of a column of more
than 16,000 (consisting of about 4,500 military personnel, both
British and Indian, along with as many as 12,000 camp followers)
who undertook the retreat--a few more survived as prisoners and
hostages. His British protectors gone, Shuja remained in power
only a few months before being assassinated in April 1842.
According to Afghanland.com, The complete destruction of the
garrison prompted brutal retaliation by the British against the
Afghans and touched off yet another power struggle for
dominance
of Afghanistan. In the fall of 1842, British forces from Qandahar
and Peshawar entered Kabul just long enough to rescue the few
British prisoners and burn the Great Bazaar. Although the foreign
invasion provided the Afghan tribes with a temporary sense of
unity they had previously lacked, the loss of life and property
was followed by a bitter resentment of foreign influence.
The Russians advanced steadily
southward toward Afghanistan in the three decades after the First
Anglo-Afghan War. In 1842 the Russian border was on the other side
of the Aral Sea from Afghanistan, but five short years later the
tsar's outposts had moved to the lower reaches of the Amu Darya.
By 1865 Tashkent had been formally annexed, as was Samarkand three
years later. A peace treaty in 1868 with Amir Muzaffar al-Din, the
ruler of Bukhara, virtually stripped him of his independence.
Russian control now extended as far as the northern bank of the
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