Operation Cyclone: The Weapons America Sent — and Left Behind
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(00:00:41) Afghanistan Before the Pipeline
(00:02:03) Charlie Wilson
(00:03:38) The Stinger Question
(00:05:03) The Pipeline Itself
(00:06:50) The Ideological Frame
(00:08:05) The Soviet Withdrawal and What Followed
(00:09:33) What the Operation Tells Us
(00:11:06) The Legacy
In December 1979, Soviet tanks rolled into Afghanistan — and inside the CIA, a covert operation began almost before the dust had settled. Operation Cyclone would become the largest clandestine programme in the agency's history: a multi-billion-dollar pipeline of weapons, money, and political will, designed to bleed the Soviet Union the way it had bled America in Vietnam.
This episode follows the operation from its cautious beginnings under Carter to its dramatic escalation under Reagan. At the centre of that escalation stands Charlie Wilson — a Democratic congressman from Texas with a seat on the House Appropriations Committee and a fierce personal conviction that America was fighting too small. Wilson doubled the CIA's Afghan budget. Then doubled it again. Working alongside CIA officer Gust Avrakotos, he pushed the programme past institutional resistance and toward the weapon that changed the war: the Stinger missile.
The Stinger debate is one of the Cold War's great hinge moments. CIA leadership feared escalation, technology transfer, and blowback. Wilson and Avrakotos pushed anyway. When the Reagan administration approved the transfer in 1986, Soviet helicopter losses climbed almost immediately. The Mi-24 Hind — the mujahideen's most feared weapon — started coming down.
But the pipeline itself raised questions that outlasted the war. Pakistan's ISI controlled much of the weapons distribution, shaping which Afghan factions were armed and how heavily. The resistance was never a unified movement. The choices made in the 1980s about who received what would echo long after the Soviets withdrew — and long after anyone in Langley was paying attention.
This is the story of a covert war that worked exactly as intended — and what that meant for everything that came after.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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