Mohammed Fahim Information & Mohammed Fahim Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Dr. Fahim Rahim , MD - Free Doctor Profile - Nephrology, located in...
Dr. Fahim Rahim , MD - Free Doctor Profile - Nephrology, located in...
healthgrades.com
  Fahim Rahim, M.D. - Bingham Memorial Hospital
Fahim Rahim, M.D. - Bingham Memorial Hospital
binghammemorial.org
  Mohammed R. Safdar, MD
Mohammed R. Safdar, MD
missouridelta.com
 Dr. Saadia Mohammed
Dr. Saadia Mohammed
pbpdcares.com
 
Mohammad Qasim Fahim in the US

Mohammad Qasim Fahim (محمد قسيم فهيم) (born 1957 in Omarz, Afghanistan) (also known as "Marshal Fahim") is a prominent Afghan military commander, politician and the current First Vice President since November 2009[1]. He was the Defense Minister of the Afghan Transitional Administration, beginning in 2002 and also served as Vice President from June 2002 to December 2004. Fahim was replaced by Abdul Rahim Wardak, who was appointed as defense minister by President Hamid Karzai on December 23, 2004 when the transitional administration gave way to a popularly-elected administration. Fahim is a member of Afghanistan's Tajik ethnic group. Fahim is the recipient of the Ahmad Shah Baba Medal. He is fluent in Persian, Pashto and Arabic. He is affiliated with Jamiat Islami party of Afghanistan.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Fahim is the son of Abdul Matin from the Panjshir Valley. He is reported to have finished his studies in Islamic Sharia at an Arabic institute in Kabul in 1977. He went to Peshawar, Pakistan in 1978 where upon returning to Afghanistan joined Ahmad Shah Massoud in the Panjshir Valley. With the collapse of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul in 1992, Fahim was appointed head of KHAD under interim president Sibghatullah Mojaddedi and continued to serve under president Burhanuddin Rabbani. (Bhatia, 2007[2];Brown & Oliver, 2001[3]; also [1][2][3][4][unreliable source?][5][unreliable source?][6]


In 1994, he was national chief of security in the mujaheddin government, which was dominated by his group, Jamiat-e-Islami. He once arrested and brutally interrogated Hamid Karzai, who was not trusted by the ex-fighters, on suspicion of his being a spy for Pakistani intelligence.[4]

He has been blamed by Pakistani authorities for the 1996 attack on Pakistan's embassy in Kabul. [7]

In 1996, Fahim also personally offered to evacuate Najibullah, then in custody in Kabul, from the advancing Taliban forces, but Najibullah refused before being captured and executed by a Taliban mob. [5]

[edit] Post 9/11

On September 13, 2001, Fahim was confirmed as the defence minister of the Northern Alliance, succeeding Ahmad Shah Massoud. Masood had been assassinated four days earlier on September 9, 2001 by al-Qaeda operatives posing as journalists. The idea to launch the first major strike of the war against Mazar-i-Sharif came following a meeting between American General Tommy Franks with Fahim in Tajikstan on October 30.[6]

"Fahim was appointed general commander of the mujahideen resistance forces. In November 2001, he marched on Kabul together with U.S. Coalition Forces to rescue the country from terrorism and to secure democracy. After the Bonn Agreement in December 2001 and the subsequent establishment of the Afghan Interim Authority, he was appointed as the First Vice President and Minister of Defense."

By September 22, Fahim was in Tajikistan holding talks with Russian army chief Anatoly Kvashnin. As defence minister, Fahim was the effective leader of the Northern Alliance, along with his supporters Yunus Qanuni and Dr Abdullah. In the transitional administration, many commentators considered him to be more powerful than the President, Hamid Karzai.

As Defense Minister he toured army bases in the United Kingdom, negotiated security issues with U.S. General Tommy Franks and Canadian Defense Minister John McCallum, NATO Secretary General George Robertson, visited Moscow and Washington, DC. He also replaced 15 ethnic Tajik generals with officers from the Pashtun, Uzbek and Hazara ethnic groups.

While holding the position, he continued to command his own militia which he inherited from the United Front or more commonly known as the Northern Alliance. However, on December 10, 2003, he ordered part of his militia to transport their weapons (including 11 tanks, 10 rocket-launchers and two scud missiles) to an Afghan National Army installation near Kabul.

On September 12, 2003, Miloon Kothari, appointed by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights to investigate housing rights in Afghanistan, announced that many of the government ministers including Fahim and Education Minister Yunus Qanuni were illegally occupying land and should be removed from their posts. However, three days later, Kothari sent a letter to Lakhdar Brahimi, the head of the U.N. in Afghanistan, saying he had gone too far in naming the ministers.

Mohammed Fahim was not chosen by Karzai's to be one of his Vice Presidents; subsequently he backed the candidacy of his fellow Tajik, Yunus Qanuni. After Karzai's victory in the presidential elections, he was not reappointed Defense Minister. However in a decree made in December 2004, Karzai confirmed that Fahim would hold the rank of Marshal, Afghanistan's highest, for life, with all rights and privileges. In 2006, Karzai, faced with a resurgent Taliban, returned Fahim to Government as an advisor.

Some Afghan analysts attest that, despite losing his military position, Fahim still remains a powerful figure in the political arena of the country. “[He] is particularly popular among people in the north, because he had fought Soviet Russia, and later the Taleban and Al-Qa'idah. He spent many years fighting aggressors.” (Erada, 2005)

Later in the year 2006, in an interview Karzai said, "Marshal Fahim is one of the sons of our [mujahedin], a patriot and [a man who loves] his country. I have a great deal of respect for Marshall Fahim. He has been my close friend and confidant. He has his own unique place in Afghanistan. He has been a respectable military man. He is a five-star general. And he is a senator." Regarding his decision in appointing Fahim as one of his advisors, Karzai added that "I hope that officially as my adviser, he will continue to cooperate with me. He comes to all of the National Security Council meetings. His is my dear brother. No one can ever reduce the respect that Marshal Fahim has earned for himself."(Azadi Radio, April 5, 2006)

[edit] Assassination Attempts

As of late 2001, Fahim has survived several assisssnation attempts. His convoy was targeted when a mine exploded underneath the central car in Fahim’s convoy. He had been on an official visit to the eastern city of Jalalabbad “to discuss a new government campaign to stop farmers growing poppies for the opium trade and other issues with local commanders and tribal leaders.” (BBC, April 8, 2002)

The Marshal survived another attack later in the year 2002. However, this time, the man behind the attack was arrested by the intelligence agency. The alleged person carried with him “22 pounds of explosives in the pockets of his jacket, attached to wires and apparently ready to explode.” (The New York Times, November 24, 2002)

In June 2003, a bomb was found in front of his home. Later in the year, the head of his personal security died at the hands of a suicide bomber.

Fahim survived another assassination attempt in the northern Kunduz province. Only July 26, 2009, as the running mate of President Karzai for the 2009 elections, Fahim's convoy was attacked in an ambush staged by the Taliban. The Taliban attacked Fahim's convoy using automatic rifles and rocket propelled grenades.[7]

[edit] Current Activities

He is a member of the leadership council of the United National Front, which is a coalition of top national and regional leaders. Other members include former President Professor Burhanuddin Rabbani, House Speaker Yunus Qanuni, Vice-President Ahmad Zia Massoud and others.

In June 2007, Fahim stated that his advisery role was merely symbolic and that he never had the chance to advise the President. He further said that after the 2004 elections President Karzai formed a "one-sided" cabinet and began to employ unilateralism as his main policy driver. Fahim argued that without the backing of foreign forces President Karzai's regime would not last longer than a week. (The Daily Times, Monday, June 4, 2007)

In 2009, he was one of Hamid Karzai's running mates in the presidential election. The selection was condemned by Human Rights Watch.[8]. In a comment on the Canadian Afghan detainee abuse scandal columnist Eric Margolis of the Canadian newspaper the Edmonton Sun wrote " Today, Fahim is officially Karzai's No. 2. But as commander of the Tajik-Uzbek militia and secret police, Fahim is the Afghan regime's most powerful figure and strongman. Every child in Afghanistan knows this."[9].

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Ahmed Shah Masood
Minister of Defense of Afghanistan
September 2001 – December 2004
Succeeded by
Abdurrahim Wardak



Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots