Power on the Move — Soviet Armor in Kabul, 1980
(watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Power on the Move — Soviet Armor in Kabul, 1980. Verso.
AP Newsfeatures Photo
20.3 x 25.4 cm
John Rogers Archive
March 28th, 1980.
In this stark and unsettling Cold War image, a Soviet soldier stands exposed in the open hatch of an armored personnel carrier as it rumbles through the streets of Kabul, Afghanistan, only weeks after the Soviet invasion shocked the world. His gaze—alert, guarded, and unyielding—captures the moment when military force became the primary language of geopolitics in Central Asia.
Taken in early 1980, the photograph documents a pivotal escalation: the first direct use of Soviet military power outside the Warsaw Pact bloc. The invasion, launched in late 1979, reverberated across Washington and Western capitals like an alarm bell. U.S. Defense Secretary Harold Brown warned that this action—combined with a decade-long Soviet naval buildup—signaled a new willingness by Moscow to project power far beyond its traditional sphere of influence.
The image’s grainy immediacy and raw composition underscore the tension of the era. Urban balconies loom overhead, civilians unseen but implied, while Soviet armor asserts dominance at street level. More than a record of military patrol, this photograph stands as a visual marker of a turning point in the Cold War—when Afghanistan became the front line of a global ideological struggle.
A compelling and historically significant Type 1 AP press photograph, this work embodies the urgency of breaking news photography and the lasting weight of world-changing events.
Provenance
AP Newsfeatures PhotoJohn Rogers Archive
Past in Present.com Inc private historical archive.
