Kabul City |
Unfinished journey (79)
(Part seventy nine, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 14
September 2014, 13:24 pm)
Afghanistan can not be separated from the upheaval, after
about eight years in the invasion of the Soviet Union, followed by the United
States and NATO soldiers, political upheaval now still has not been completed:
UN threatens to cut Afghanistan aid
The UN threatened
on Saturday to cut aid to Afghanistan if its staff are harassed, responding to
tensions surrounding its participation in a drawn-out and bitter investigation
into fraud in the still-unresolved presidential election.
The warning came a day after dozens of demonstrators
gathered outside the Kabul headquarters of the world body and accused it of
aiding vote-rigging.
It was another sign of heightened anxiety in the run-up
to the release of final election results over the next week. A two-month-long
crisis over results of the vote to succeed President Hamid Karzai has been
destabilizing Afghanistan just months before most international troops
withdraw.
The UN has been monitoring a vote-rigging investigation
since both candidates — former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah and
ex-Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani — each claimed victory and accused the other
of fraud in early July.
U.N. workers have frequently been caught up in heated
disputes by the rival candidates’ audit observers. After Friday’s small
demonstration, which was peaceful but also featured chants of “Death to the
UN,” the world body apparently decided to draw a line.
“Intimidation and verbal attacks directed at #UN are
unacceptable,” said a tweet by the official UN Assistance Mission in
Afghanistan on Saturday. A second post continued: “If such abuse continues, #UN
will be forced to severely limit its activities, reducing its assistance to
#Afghanistan and its people.”
Afghanistan President Karzai |
Ari Gaitanis, a UN spokesman in Kabul, declined to
elaborate on specific abuse or threats against UN staff.
The threat to cut aid underscored the high stakes in
Afghanistan’s election crisis, which marred hopes for a smooth transition of
power ahead of the foreign troops’ withdrawal. Talks between both sides on
forming a unity government have broken down in recent weeks.
Final results are expected in the next week, though a
specific date has not been set. It is widely believed that Ghani, who was ahead
by 1.2 million votes in preliminary results, will be declared the winner even
after suspect votes are thrown out. Abdullah, who has charged that more than 2
million ballots were fraudulent, has vowed he will reject results that give the
election to Ghani.
History of Afghanistan
The written history of Afghanistan (Pashto: د افغانستان تاريخ
, Da Afġānistān Tārīkh), can be traced back to around 500 BCE when the area was
under the Achaemenid Empire,[1] although evidence indicates that an advanced
degree of urbanized culture has existed in the land since between 3000 and 2000
BCE.[2][3][4] Alexander the Great and his Macedonian army arrived to what is
now Afghanistan in 330 BCE after conquering Persia during the Battle of
Gaugamela.[5] Since then, many empires have established capitals inside
Afghanistan, including the Greco-Bactrians, Mauryas, Kushans, Kabul Shahi,
Saffarids, Samanids, Ghaznavids, Ghurids, Timurids, Mughals, Hotakis and
Durranis.[6]
Afghanistan (meaning "land of the Afghans") has
been a strategically important location throughout history.[7] The land served
as "a gateway to India, impinging on the ancient Silk Road, which carried
trade from the Mediterranean to China".[8] Sitting on many trade and
migration routes, Afghanistan may be called the 'Central Asian roundabout'[9]
since routes converge from the Middle East, from the Indus Valley through the
passes over the Hindu Kush, from the Far East via the Tarim Basin, and from the
adjacent Eurasian Steppe.
The Aryans arrived to Afghanistan from the north after
the 20th century BCE,[2] who left their languages that survived in the form of
Pashto and Dari. The Arab invasions influenced the culture of Afghanistan, as
its Zoroastrian, Macedonian and Buddhist past had long vanished, or had just
started to decline, as it went with Buddhism. Turkic empire-builders such as
the Ghaznavids, Ghurids and Timurids made the region now called Afghanistan of
major importance.
Mirwais Hotak followed by Ahmad Shah Durrani unified
Afghan tribes and founded the last Afghan Empire in the early 18th century
CE.[10][11][12][13][14] Afghanistan's sovereignty has been held during the
Anglo-Afghan Wars, the 1980s Soviet war, and the 2001-present war by the
country's many and diverse people: the Pashtuns, Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks,
Turkmen, Aimak, Baloch and others. The Pashtuns form the largest group,
claiming to be descendants of ancient Israelites or Qais Abdur Rashid but
scholars believe that they are a confederation of various peoples from the past
who united under Pashtunwali.
Main article: Pre-Islamic period of Afghanistan
Tents of Afghan nomads in the northern Badghis province
of Afghanistan. Early peasant farming villages came into existence in
Afghanistan about 7,000 years ago.
Excavations of prehistoric sites by Louis Dupree and
others at Darra-e Kur in 1966 where 800 stone implements were recovered along
with a fragment of Neanderthal right temporal bone, suggest that early humans
were living in what is now Afghanistan at least 52,000 years ago. A cave called
Kara Kamar contained Upper Paleolithic blades Carbon-14 dated at 34,000 years
old.[15] Farming communities in Afghanistan were among the earliest in the
world.[4] Archaeologists have found evidence of human habitation in Afghanistan
from as far back as 50,000 BC. The artifacts indicate that the indigenous
people were small farmers and herdsmen, very probably grouped into tribes, with
small local kingdoms rising and falling through the ages. Urbanization may have
begun as early as 3000 BCE.[16] Zoroastrianism predominated as the religion in
the area, even the modern Afghan solar calendar shows the influence of
Zoroastrianism in the names of the months. Other religions such as Buddhism and
Hinduism flourished later, leaving a major mark in the region. Gandhara is the
name of an ancient kingdom from the Vedic period and its capital city located
between the Hindukush and Sulaiman Mountains (mountains of Solomon),[17]
although Kandahar in modern times and the ancient Gandhara are not
geographically identical.[18][19]
Early inhabitants, around 3000 BCE were likely to have
been connected through culture and trade to neighboring civilizations like
Jiroft and Tappeh Sialk and more distantly to the Indus Valley Civilization.
Urban civilization may have begun as early as 3000 BCE, and it is possible that
the early city of Mundigak (near Kandahar) was a colony of the nearby Indus
Valley Civilization.[3] The first known people were Indo-Iranians,[4] but their
date of arrival has been estimated widely from as early as about 3000 BCE[20]
to 1500 BCE.[21] (For further detail see Indo-Aryan migration.)
Bactria-Margiana[edit]
Main article: Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex
The Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex became
prominent in the southwest region between 2200 and 1700 BCE (approximately).
The city of Balkh (Bactra) was founded about this time (c. 2000–1500 BCE). It
is possible that the BMAC may have been an Indo-European culture, perhaps the
Proto-Indo-Aryans.[20] But the standard model holds the arrival of Indo-Aryans
to have been in the Late Harappan which gave rise to the Vedic civilization of
the Early Iron Age.[22]
Ancient history (700 BCE–565 CE)[edit]
Medes[edit]
Further information: Medes
Different opinions have been expressed about the extent
of the Median kingdom. For instance, according to Ernst Herzfeld, it was a
powerful empire, which stretched from central Anatolia to Bactria, to around
the borders of nowadays India. On the other side, Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg
insists that there is no real evidence about the very existence of the Median
empire and that it was an unstable state formation. Nevertheless, the region of
nowadays Afghanistan came under Median rule for a short time.[23]
Achaemenid Empire[edit]
Main article: Achaemenid Empire
Arachosia, Aria and Bactria were the ancient satraps of
the Achaemenid Empire that made up most of what is now Afghanistan during 500
BCE. Some of the inhabitants of Arachosia were known as Pactyans, whose name
possibly survives in today's Pakhtuns (Pashtuns).
Afghanistan became part of the Achaemenid Empire, after
it was conquered by Darius I of Persia. The area was divided into several
provinces called satrapies, which were each ruled by a governor, or satrap.
These ancient satrapies included: Aria (Herat); Arachosia (Kandahar, Lashkar
Gah, and Quetta); Bactriana (Balkh); Sattagydia (Ghazni); and Gandhara (Kabul,
Jalalabad, Peshawar).[24]
Alexander and the Seleucids[edit]
Main article: Wars of Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great arrived in the area of Afghanistan in
330 BCE after defeating Darius III of Persia a year earlier at the Battle of
Gaugamela.[25] His army faced very strong resistance in the Afghan tribal areas
where he is said to have commented that Afghanistan is "easy to march
into, hard to march out of."[26] Although his expedition through
Afghanistan was brief, Alexander left behind a Hellenic cultural influence that
lasted several centuries. Several great cities were built in the region named
"Alexandria," including: Alexandria-of-the-Arians (modern-day Herat);
Alexandria-on-the-Tarnak (near Kandahar); Alexandria-ad-Caucasum (near Begram,
at Bordj-i-Abdullah); and finally, Alexandria-Eschate (near Kojend), in the
north. After Alexander's death, his loosely connected empire was divided.
Seleucus, a Macedonian officer during Alexander's campaign, declared himself
ruler of his own Seleucid Empire, encompassing Persia and Afghanistan.[27]
Greco-Bactrian Kingdom[edit]
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Main article: Greco-Bactrian Kingdom
Approximate maximum extent of the Greco-Bactrian kingdom
circa 180 BCE, including the regions of Tapuria and Traxiane to the West,
Sogdiana and Ferghana to the north, Bactria and Arachosia to the south.
The Greco-Bactrian Kingdom was founded when Diodotus I,
the satrap of Bactria (and probably the surrounding provinces) seceded from the
Seleucid Empire around 250 BCE. Greco-Bactria continued until c. 130 BCE, when
Eucratides' son, King Heliocles I, was defeated and driven out of Bactria by
the Yuezhi tribes. It is thought that his dynasty continued to rule in Kabul
and Alexandria of the Caucasus until 70 BCE when King Hermaeus was defeated by
the Yuezhi.
One of Demetrius' successors, Menander I, brought the
Indo-Greek Kingdom to its height between 165–130 BCE, expanding the kingdom in
Afghanistan and Pakistan to even larger proportions than Demetrius. After
Menander's death, the Indo-Greeks steadily declined and the last Indo-Greek
king was defeated in c. 10 CE.
Mauryan Empire[edit]
Main article: Mauryan Empire
The territory fell to the Maurya Empire, which was led by
Chandragupta Maurya. The Mauryas introduced Hinduism and Buddhism to region,
and were planning to capture more territory of Central Asia until they faced
local Greco-Bactrian forces. Seleucus is said to have reach a peace treaty with
Chandragupta by given control of the territory south of the Hindu Kush to the
Mauryas upon intermarriage and 500 elephants.
Maurya Empire under Ashoka the Great
Alexander took these away from the Indo-Aryans and
established settlements of his own, but Seleucus Nicator gave them to
Sandrocottus (Chandragupta), upon terms of intermarriage and of receiving in
exchange 500 elephants.[28]
—Strabo, 64 BCE–24 CE
Some time after, as he was going to war with the generals
of Alexander, a wild elephant of great bulk presented itself before him of its
own accord, and, as if tamed down to gentleness, took him on its back, and
became his guide in the war, and conspicuous in fields of battle. Sandrocottus,
having thus acquired a throne, was in possession of India, when Seleucus was
laying the foundations of his future greatness; who, after making a league with
him, and settling his affairs in the east, proceeded to join in the war against
Antigonus. As soon as the forces, therefore, of all the confederates were
united, a battle was fought, in which Antigonus was slain, and his son
Demetrius put to flight.[29]
—Junianus Justinus
Newly excavated Buddhist stupa at Mes Aynak in Logar
Province of Afghanistan. Similar stupas have been discovered in neighboring
Ghazni Province, including in the northern Samangan Province.
Having consolidated power in the northwest, Chandragupta
pushed east towards the Nanda Empire. Afghanistan's significant ancient
tangible and intangible Buddhist heritage is recorded through wide-ranging
archeological finds, including religious and artistic remnants. Buddhist
doctrines are reported to have reached as far as Balkh even during the life of
the Buddha (563 BCE to 483 BCE), as recorded by Husang Tsang.
In this context a legend recorded by Husang Tsang refers
to the first two lay disciples of Buddha, Trapusa and Bhallika responsible for
introducing Buddhism in that country. Originally these two were merchants of
the kingdom of Balhika, as the name Bhalluka or Bhallika probably suggests the
association of one with that country. They had gone to India for trade and had
happened to be at Bodhgaya when the Buddha had just attained enlightenment.[30]
Sakas[edit]
Main article: Saka
Parthians[edit]
Main article: Parthian Empire
Kushans[edit]
Main article: Kushan Empire
Sassanids[edit]
Main article: Sasanian Empire
For a period, much of modern Afghanistan was part of the
Sasanian Empire.
Kidarites[edit]
Main article: Kidarites
Hephthalites (White Huns)[edit]
Main article: Hephthalites
The Hephthalite Empire in Afghanistan extended from
Chinese Sinkiang to Sassanid Iran, from Sogdiana to the Punjab. Their chief
antagonists were the Persian Sassanids. Consequently there was relatively
little peace during this time. At about 565 CE, the Hephthalite Empire was
overthrown by a combined force consisting of western Turks and Sassanids.[31]
Middle Ages (565–1504 CE)[edit]
Map of the region during the 7th century
From the Middle Ages to around 1750 part of Afghanistan
was recognized as Khorasan.[32] Two of the four main capitals of Khorasan
(Balkh and Herat) are now located in Afghanistan. The countries of Kandahar,
Ghazni and Kabul formed the frontier region between Khorasan and Hindustan.[33]
The land inhabited by the Afghan tribes (i.e. ancestors of Pashtuns) was called
Afghanistan, which loosely covered a wide area between the Hindu Kush and the
Indus River, principally around the Sulaiman Mountains.[34][35] The earliest
record of the name "Afghan" ("Abgân") being mentioned is by
Shapur I of the Sassanid Empire during the 3rd century CE[36][37][38] which is
later recorded in the form of "Avagānā" by the Indian astronomer
Varāha Mihira in his 6th century CE Brihat-samhita.[39] It was used to refer to
a common legendary ancestor known as "Afghana", grandson of King Saul
of Israel.[40] Hiven Tsiang, a Chinese pilgrim, visiting the Afghanistan area
several times between 630 to 644 CE also speaks about them.[36] Ancestors of
many of today's Turkic-speaking Afghans settled in the Hindu Kush area and
began to assimilate much of the culture and language of the Pashtun tribes
already present there.[41] Among these were the Khalaj people which are known
today as Ghilzai.[42]
Hindu Shahi[edit]
Main article: Kabul Shahi
Palas[edit]
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Main article: Pala Empire
The Pāla's were a Buddhist and Vaishnav Hindu Bengali
dynasty of India, which lasted for four centuries (750-1120 CE). Dharmapala
expanded the empire into the northern parts of the Indian Subcontinent. This
triggered once again the power struggle for the control of the subcontinent.
Devapala, successor of Dharmapala, extended the empire even further, covering
much of South Asia and several other territories. His empire stretched from
Assam and Utkala in the east, and Afghanistan in the north-west and Deccan in
the south. According to Pala copperplate inscription Devapala exterminated the
Utkalas, conquered the Pragjyotisha (Assam), shattered the pride of the Huna,
and humbled the lords of Pratiharas, Gurjara and the Dravidas. The Pala Empire
eventually disintegrated in the 12th century CE under the attack of the Sena
dynasty.
Islamic conquest[edit]
Main article: Islamic conquest of Afghanistan
In 642 CE, Rashidun Arabs had conquered most of West Asia
from the Sassanids and Byzantines, and from the western city of Herat they
introduced the religion of Islam as they entered new cities. Afghanistan at
that period had a number of different independent rulers, depending on the
area. Ancestors of Abū Ḥanīfa, including his father, were from the Kabul
region.
The early Arab forces did not fully explore Afghanistan
due to attacks by the mountain tribes. Much of the eastern parts of the country
remained independent, as part of the Hindu Shahi kingdoms of Kabul and
Gandhara, which lasted that way until the forces of the Muslim Saffarid dynasty
followed by the Ghaznavids conquered them.
Arab armies carrying the banner of Islam came out of the
west to defeat the Sasanians in 642 CE and then they marched with confidence to
the east. On the western periphery of the Afghan area the princes of Herat and
Seistan gave way to rule by Arab governors but in the east, in the mountains,
cities submitted only to rise in revolt and the hastily converted returned to
their old beliefs once the armies passed. The harshness and avariciousness of
Arab rule produced such unrest, however, that once the waning power of the
Caliphate became apparent, native rulers once again established themselves
independent. Among these the Saffarids of Seistan shone briefly in the Afghan
area. The fanatic founder of this dynasty, the persian Yaqub ibn Layth Saffari,
came forth from his capital at Zaranj in 870 CE and marched through Bost,
Kandahar, Ghazni, Kabul, Bamyan, Balkh and Herat, conquering in the name of
Islam. [43]
—Nancy Hatch Dupree, 1971
The Shahi or Shahiya dynasties ruled portions of the
Kabul Valley (in eastern Afghanistan) and the old province of Gandhara
(northern Pakistan and Kashmir) from the decline of the Kushan Empire up to the
early 9th century CE. The Shahis continued to rule eastern Afghanistan until
the late 9th century until the Ghaznavid invasions.
During the eighth and ninth centuries CE the eastern
parts of modern Afghanistan were still in the hands of non-muslim rulers. The
Muslims tended to regard them as Indians, although many of the local rulers
were apparently of Hunnish or Turkic descent. Yet, the Muslims were right in so
far as the non Muslim population of Eastern Afghanistan was, culturally,
strongly linked to the Indian sub-continent. Most of them were either Hindus or
Buddhists.[44]
Janjau Rajput Empire (900–1050 CE)[edit]
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Jaypala was the most powerful ruler of this empire rule
over what is today Pakistan and Jammu and Kashmir. He was eventually defeated
by Ghazni and lost his empire.
Ghaznavids[edit]
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Main article: Ghaznavids
was ruled from the city of Ghazni in eastern Afghanistan.
Mahmud of Ghazni consolidated the conquests of his
predecessors and turned the city of Ghazni into a great cultural center as well
as a base for frequent forays into the Indian subcontinent.
Ghorids[edit]
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Main article: Ghurid Dynasty
The Ghaznavid dynasty was defeated in 1148 by the Ghurids
from Ghor, but the Ghaznavid Sultans continued to live in Ghazni as the
'Nasher' until the early 20th century. They did not regain their once vast
power until about 500 years later when the Ghilzai Hotakis rose to power.
Various princes and Seljuk rulers attempted to rule parts of the country until
the Shah Muhammad II of the Khwarezmid Empire conquered all of Persia in 1205
CE. By 1219, the empire had fallen to the Mongols, led by Genghis Khan.
Mongol invasion[edit]
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Further information: Mongol invasion of Central Asia and
Mongol invasion of Khwarezmia
The Mongols resulted in massive destruction of several
cities, including Bamiyan, Herat, and Balkh, and the despoliation of fertile
agricultural areas. Large numbers of the inhabitants were also slaughtered.
Most major cities north of the Hindu Kush became part of the Mongol Empire. The
Afghan tribal areas south of the Hindu Kush were usually either allied with the
Khilji dynasty of northern India or independent.
Timurids[edit]
Main article: Timurid dynasty
Timur (Tamerlane), incorporated much of the area into his
own vast Timurid Empire. The city of Herat became one of the capitals of his
empire, and his grandson Pir Muhammad held the seat of Kandahar. Timur rebuilt
most of Afghanistan's infrastructure which was destroyed by his early ancestor.
The area was progressing under his rule. Timurid rule began declining in the
early 16th century with the rise of a new ruler in Kabul, Babur. Taimur, a
descendent of Genghis Khan, created a vast new empire across Russia and Persia
which he ruled from his capital in Samarkland in present-day Uzbekistan. Taimur
captured Herat in 1381 and his son, Shah Rudkh moved the capital of the Timurid
empire to Herat in 1405. The Timurks, a Turkic people, brought the Turkic
nomadic culture of Central Asia within the orbit of Persian civilisation,
establishing Herat as one of the most cultured and refined cities in the world.
This fusion of Central Asian and Persian culture was a major legacy for the
future Afghanistan. A century later, the emperor Babur, a descendent of Taimur,
visited Herat and wrote, "the whole habitable world had not such a town as
Herat." For the next 300 years the eastern Afghan tribes periodically
invaded India creating vast Indo-Afghan empires. In 1500 CE, Taimur's
descendent Babur was driven out of his home in the Ferghana valley. By the 16th
century western Afghanistan again revereted to Persian rule under the Safavid
dynasty.[45][46]
Modern era (1504–1973)[edit]
Mughals and Safavids[edit]
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Main articles: Mughal Empire and Khanate of Bukhara
A miniature from Padshahnama depicting the surrender of
the Shia Safavid garrison of Kandahar in 1638 to the Mughal army of Shah Jahan
commanded by Kilij Khan.
In 1504, Babur, a descendant of Timur, arrived from
present-day Uzbekistan and moved to the city of Kabul. He began exploring new
territories in the region, with Kabul serving as his military headquarters.
Instead of looking towards the powerful Safavids towards the west, Babur was
more focused on the Indian subcontinent, which included the region known as
Kabulistan. In 1526, he left with his army to capture the seat of the Delhi
Sultanate, which at that point was possessed by the Afghan Lodi dynasty of
India. After defeating Ibrahim Lodi and his army, Babur turned Delhi into the
capital of his newly established Mughal Empire.
From the 16th century to the 17th century CE, Afghanistan
was divided into three major areas. The north was ruled by the Khanate of
Bukhara, the west was under the rule of the Iranian Shia Safavids, and the
eastern section was under the Sunni Mughals of northern India. The Kandahar region
in the south served as a buffer zone between the Mughals and the Safavids, with
the native Afghans often switching support from one side to the other. Babur
explored a number of cities in the region before his campaign into India. In
the city of Kandahar his personal epigraphy can be found in the Chilzina rock
mountain.
Hotaki dynasty[edit]
Main article: Hotaki dynasty
Mirwais Hotak, seen as Afghanistan's George
Washington,[47] successfully obtained independence from Safavid Persia in 1709
and founded the Hotaki dynasty.
In 1704, the Safavid Shah Husayn appointed George XI
(Gurgīn Khān), a ruthless Georgian subject, to govern their easternmost
territories in the Greater Kandahar region. One of Gurgīn's main objectives was
to crush the rebellions started by native Afghans. Under his rule the revolts
were successfully suppressed and ruled Kandahar with uncomprising severity. He
began imprisoning and executing the native Afghans, especially those suspected
in having taken part in the rebellions. One of those arrested and imprisoned
was Mirwais Hotak who belonged to an influential family in Kandahar. Mirwais
was sent as a prisoner to the Persian court in Isfahan but the charges against
him were dismissed by the king, so he was sent back to his native land as a
free man.[47]
In April 1709, Mirwais along with his militia revolted
against Gurgīn and the heavily declining Safavids in Kandahar City. The
uprising began when Gurgīn and his escort were killed after a picnic and a
banquet that were prepared by Mirwais at his farmhouse outside the city.
"[48] Around four days later, an army of well-trained Georgian troops
arrived in the town after hearing of Gurgīn's death but Mirwais and his Afghan
forces successfully held off the town. From 1710 to 1713, the Afghan forces
defeated several large Persian armies that were dispatched from Isfahan by the
heavily declining Safavids, which included Qizilbash and Georgian/Circassian
troops.[49]
Several half-hearted attempts to subdue the rebellious
city having failed, the Persian Government despatched Khusraw Khán, nephew of
the late Gurgín Khán, with an army of 30,000 men to effect its subjugation, but
in spite of an initial success, which led the Afghans to offer to surrender on
terms, his uncompromising attitude impelled them to make a fresh desperate
effort, resulting in the complete defeat of the Persian army (of whom only some
700 escaped) and the death of their general. Two years later, in 1713, another
Persian army commanded by Rustam Khán was also defeated by the rebels, who thus
secured possession of the whole province of Qandahár.[50]
—Edward G. Browne, 1924
Modern-day sketch work of Mahmud Hotaki
Southern Afghanistan was made into an independent local
Pashtun kingdom.[14] Refusing the title of a king, Mirwais was called
"Prince of Qandahár and General of the national troops" by his Afghan
countrymen. He died of a natural cause in November 1715 and was succeeded by
his brother Abdul Aziz Hotak. Aziz was killed about two years later by Mirwais'
son Mahmud Hotaki, allegedly for planning to give Kandahar's sovereignty back
to Persia.[51] Mahmud led an Afghan army into Persia in 1722 and defeated the for
decades declining Safavids at the Battle of Gulnabad. The Afghans captured
Isfahan (Safavid capital) and Mahmud became briefly the new Persian Shah, known
after that as Shah Mahmud.
Mahmud began a short-lived reign of terror against his
Persian subjects who defied his rule from the very start, and he was eventually
murdered in 1725 by his own cousin, Ashraf Hotaki. Some sources say he died of
madness. Ashraf became the new Afghan Shah of Persia soon after Mahmud's death,
while the home region of Afghanistan was ruled by Mahmud's younger brother Shah
Hussain Hotaki. Ashraf was able to secure peace, at highly unfavourable terms,
with the Ottoman Empire in 1727 winning against a superior Ottoman army, but
the Russian Empire took advantage of the continuing political unrest, civil
strife and utter disgust and disloyalty by the vast majority of people in the
empire, to seize former Persian territories for themselves, limiting the amount
of territory under Shah Mahmud's control.
The short lived Hotaki dynasty was a troubled and violent
one from the very start as internecine conflict made it difficult to establish
permanent control. The dynasty lived under great turmoil due to bloody
succession feuds that made their hold on power tenuous, and after the massacre of
thousands of civilians in Isfahan; including more than three thousand religious
scholars, nobles, and members of the Safavid family.[52] The vast majority of
the Persians rejected the Afghan regime as usurping from the very start.
Hotaki's rule continued in the region of Afghanistan until 1738 when Shah
Hussain was defeated and banished by Nader Shah of Persia.[53]
The Hotakis were eventually removed from power by 1729,
after a very short lived reign. They were defeated by the emerging Iranian
military commander Nader Shah, head of the Afsharids, in the October 1729
Battle of Damghan, also banishing the Hotaki's to southern Afghanistan. The
last ruler of the Hotaki dynasty, Shah Hussain, ruled southern Afghanistan
until 1738 when the Afsharids and the Abdali Pashtuns crushed him at
Kandahar.[53]
Durrani Empire[edit]
Main article: Durrani Empire
Nader Shah and his Afsharid Persian army arrived in the
town of Kandahar in 1738 and defeated Hussain Hotaki, subsequently absorbing
all of Afghanistan in his empire. Here, the young imprisoned teenager Ahmad
Khan joined his service in his invasion of India.
The greatest extent of the Durrani Empire in 1747 A.D.
Shah Shuja, the last Durrani King, sitting at his court
inside the Bala Hissar before it was destroyed by the British Army.
Nadir Shah was assassinated on June 19, 1747, by several
of his Persian officers, and the Asharid kingdom fell to pieces. At the same
time the 25-year-old Ahmad Khan was busy in Afghanistan calling for a loya
jirga ("grand assembly") to select a leader among his people. The
Afghans gathered near Kandahar in October 1747 and chose Ahmad Shah among the
challengers, making him their new head of state. After the inauguration or
coronation, he became known as Ahmad Shah Durrani. He adopted the title padshah
durr-i dawran ('King, "pearl of the age") and the Abdali tribe became
known as the Durrani tribe after this.[54] Ahmad Shah not only represented the
Durranis but he also united all the Pashtun tribes. By 1751, Ahmad Shah Durrani
and his Afghan army conquered the entire present-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, and
for a short time, the Khorasan and Kohistan provinces of Iran, along with Delhi
in India.[55] He defeated the Maratha Empire in 1761 at the Battle of Panipat.
In October 1772, Ahmad Shah retired to his home in
Kandahar where he died peacefully and was buried at a site that is now adjacent
to the Shrine of the Cloak. He was succeeded by his son, Timur Shah Durrani,
who transferred the capital of their Afghan Empire from Kandahar to Kabul.
Timur died in 1793 and his son Zaman Shah Durrani took over the reign.
Zaman Shah and his brothers had a weak hold on the legacy
left to them by their famous ancestor. They sorted out their differences
through a "round robin of expulsions, blindings and executions,"
which resulted in the deterioration of the Afghan hold over far-flung
territories, such as Attock and Kashmir. Durrani's other grandson, Shuja Shah
Durrani, fled the wrath of his brother and sought refuge with the Sikhs. Not
only had Durrani invaded the Punjab region many times, but had destroyed the
holiest shrine of the Sikhs – the Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar, defiling its
sarowar with the blood of cows and decapitating Baba Deep Singh in 1757. The
Sikhs, under Ranjit Singh, eventually wrested a large part of the Kingdom of
Kabul (present day Pakistan, but not including Sindh) from the Afghans.[56] In
1837, the Afghan army descended through the Khyber Pass on Sikh forces at
Jamrud.[57] The Sikhs were supported by the East India Company until they were
defeated later by the British forces during the First and Second Anglo-Sikh
Wars[citation needed].
Barakzai dynasty and British influence[edit]
Further information: European influence in Afghanistan
and Barakzai dynasty
King Yaqub Khan with Britain's Sir Pierre Louis Napoleon
Cavagnari on May 26, 1879, when the Treaty of Gandamak was signed.
Dost Mohammed Khan gained control in Kabul. Collision
between the expanding British and Russian Empires significantly influenced
Afghanistan during the 19th century in what was termed "The Great
Game". British concern over Russian advances in Central Asia and growing
influence in West Asia and Persia in particular culminated in two Anglo-Afghan
wars and "The Siege of Herat" 1837–1838, in which the Persians, trying
to retake Afghanistan and throw out the British, sent armies into the country
and fought the British mostly around and in the city of Herat. The first
Anglo-Afghan War (1839–1842) resulted in the destruction of a British army; it
is remembered as an example of the ferocity of Afghan resistance to foreign
rule. The Second Anglo-Afghan War (1878–1880) was sparked by Amir Shir Ali's
refusal to accept a British mission in Kabul. This conflict brought Amir Abdur
Rahman, known by some as the "Iron Amir", to the Afghan throne.
During his reign (1880–1901), the British and Russians officially established
the boundaries of what would become modern Afghanistan. The British retained
effective control over Kabul's foreign affairs. Abdur Rahman's reforms of the
army, legal system and structure of government were able to give Afghanistan a
degree of unity and stability which it had not before known. This, however,
came at the cost of strong centralisation, harsh punishments for crime and
corruption, and a certain degree of international isolation.[10]
Afghanistan remained neutral during World War I, despite
German encouragement of anti-British feelings and Afghan rebellion along the
borders of British India. The Afghan king's policy of neutrality was not
universally popular within the country, however.
Habibullah, Abdur Rahman's son and successor, was
assassinated in 1919, possibly by family members opposed to British influence.
His third son, Amanullah, regained control of Afghanistan's foreign policy
after launching the Third Anglo-Afghan war with an attack on India in the same
year. During the ensuing conflict, the war-weary British relinquished their
control over Afghan foreign affairs by signing the Treaty of Rawalpindi in
August 1920. In commemoration of this event, Afghans celebrate August 20 as their
Independence Day.
Reforms of Amanullah Khan and civil war[edit]
Main article: Reforms of Amanullah Khan and civil war
King Amanullah Khan
King Amanullah Khan moved to end his country's
traditional isolation in the years following the Third Anglo-Afghan war. He
established diplomatic relations with most major countries and, following a
1927 tour of Europe and Turkey (during which he noted the modernization and
secularization advanced by Atatürk), introduced several reforms intended to
modernize Afghanistan. A key force behind these reforms was Mahmud Tarzi,
Amanullah Khan's Foreign Minister and father-in-law — and an ardent supporter
of the education of women. He fought for Article 68 of Afghanistan's first
constitution (declared through a Loya Jirga), which made elementary education
compulsory.[58] Some of the reforms that were actually put in place, such as
the abolition of the traditional Muslim veil for women and the opening of a
number of co-educational schools, quickly alienated many tribal and religious
leaders. Faced with overwhelming armed opposition, Amanullah was forced to
abdicate in January 1929 after Kabul fell to forces led by Habibullah Kalakani.
Reigns of Nadir Khan and Zahir Khan[edit]
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Main article: Reigns of Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah
Mohammad Zahir Shah in 1963
Prince Mohammed Nadir Khan, cousin of Amanullah Khan, in
turn defeated and executed Habibullah Kalakani in early November 1929. He was
soon declared King Nadir Khan. He began consolidating power and regenerating
the country. He abandoned the reforms of Amanullah Khan in favour of a more
gradual approach to modernisation. In 1933, however, he was assassinated in a
revenge killing by a student from Kabul.
Mohammad Zahir Shah, Nadir Khan's 19-year-old son,
succeeded to the throne and reigned from 1933 to 1973. Until 1946 Zahir Shah
ruled with the assistance of his uncle Sardar Mohammad Hashim Khan, who held
the post of Prime Minister and continued the policies of Nadir Khan. In 1946,
another of Zahir Shah's uncles, Sardar Shah Mahmud Khan, became Prime Minister
and began an experiment allowing greater political freedom, but reversed the
policy when it went further than he expected. In 1953, he was replaced as Prime
Minister by Mohammed Daoud Khan, the king's cousin and brother-in-law. Daoud
looked for a closer relationship with the Soviet Union and a more distant one
towards Pakistan. However, disputes with Pakistan led to an economic crisis and
he was asked to resign in 1963. From 1963 until 1973, Zahir Shah took a more
active role.
In 1964, King Zahir Shah promulgated a liberal
constitution providing for a bicameral legislature to which the king appointed
one-third of the deputies. The people elected another third, and the remainder
were selected indirectly by provincial assemblies. Although Zahir's
"experiment in democracy" produced few lasting reforms, it permitted
the growth of unofficial extremist parties on both the left and the right. This
included the communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), which
had close ideological ties to the Soviet Union. In 1967, the PDPA split into
two major rival factions: the Khalq (Masses) was headed by Nur Muhammad Taraki
and Hafizullah Amin who were supported by elements within the military, and the
Parcham (Banner) led by Babrak Karmal.
Contemporary era (1973–present)[edit]
File:Afghanistan.ogv
1973 film about contemporary events in Afghanistan
Republic of Afghanistan and the end of monarchy[edit]
Main article: Republic of Afghanistan
Amid charges of corruption and malfeasance against the
royal family and poor economic conditions created by the severe 1971–72
drought, former Prime Minister Mohammad Sardar Daoud Khan seized power in a
non-violent coup on July 17, 1973, while Zahir Shah was receiving treatment for
eye problems and therapy for lumbago in Italy.[59] Daoud abolished the
monarchy, abrogated the 1964 constitution, and declared Afghanistan a republic
with himself as its first President and Prime Minister. His attempts to carry
out badly needed economic and social reforms met with little success, and the
new constitution promulgated in February 1977 failed to quell chronic political
instability.
As disillusionment set in, in 1978 a prominent member of
the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), Mir Akbar Khyber (or
"Kaibar"), was killed by the government. The leaders of PDPA
apparently feared that Daoud was planning to exterminate them all, especially
since most of them were arrested by the government shortly after. Nonetheless,
Hafizullah Amin and a number of military wing officers of the PDPA's Khalq
faction managed to remain at large and organize a military coup.
Democratic Republic and Soviet war[edit]
Main articles: History of Afghanistan (1978–1992),
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan,
Saur Revolution and Soviet war in Afghanistan
Outside the Presidential Palace in Kabul, a day after the
Marxist revolution on April 28, 1978.
The day after the Marxist revolution on April 28, 1978.
On 27 April 1978, the PDPA, led by Nur Mohammad Taraki,
Babrak Karmal and Amin Taha overthrew the government of Mohammad Daoud, who was
assassinated along with all his family members in a bloody military coup. The
coup became known as the Saur Revolution. On 1 May, Taraki became President,
Prime Minister and General Secretary of the PDPA. The country was then renamed
the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA), and the PDPA regime lasted, in
some form or another, until April 1992.
Afghanistan Map |
In March 1979, Hafizullah Amin took over as prime
minister, retaining the position of field marshal and becoming vice-president
of the Supreme Defence Council. Taraki remained President and in control of the
Army. On 14 September, Amin overthrew Taraki, who was killed. Amin stated that
"the Afghans recognize only crude force."[60] Afghanistan expert Amin
Saikal writes: "As his powers grew, so apparently did his craving for personal
dictatorship ... and his vision of the revolutionary process based on
terror."[60]
Once in power, the PDPA implemented a liberal and
Marxist-Leninist agenda. It moved to replace religious and traditional laws
with secular and Marxist-Leninist ones. Men were obliged to cut their beards,
women could not wear a chador, and mosques were placed off limits. The PDPA
made a number of reforms on women's rights, banning forced marriages, giving
state recognition of women's right to vote, and introducing women to political life.
A prominent example was Anahita Ratebzad, who was a major Marxist leader and a
member of the Revolutionary Council. Ratebzad wrote the famous New Kabul Times
editorial (May 28, 1978) which declared: "Privileges which women, by
right, must have are equal education, job security, health services, and free
time to rear a healthy generation for building the future of the country ...
Educating and enlightening women is now the subject of close government
attention." The PDPA also carried out socialist land reforms and moved to
promote state atheism.[61] They also prohibited usury[43] and took a number of
measures in favor of women's rights, by declaring equality of the sexes[43] and
introducing women to political life. The PDPA invited the Soviet Union to assist
in modernizing its economic infrastructure (predominantly its exploration and
mining of rare minerals and natural gas). The USSR also sent contractors to
build roads, hospitals and schools and to drill water wells; they also trained
and equipped the Afghan army. Upon the PDPA's ascension to power, and the
establishment of the DRA, the Soviet Union promised monetary aid amounting to
at least $1.262 billion.
At the same time, the PDPA imprisoned, tortured or
murdered thousands of members of the traditional elite, the religious
establishment, and the intelligentsia.[citation needed] The government launched
a campaign of violent repression, killing some 10,000 to 27,000 people and
imprisoning 14,000 to 20,000 more, mostly at Pul-e-Charkhi prison.[62][63][64]
In December 1978 the PDPA leadership signed an agreement with the Soviet Union
which would allow military support for the PDPA in Afghanistan if needed. The
majority of people in the cities including Kabul either welcomed or were
ambivalent to these policies. However, the Marxist-Leninist and secular nature
of the government as well as its heavy dependence on the Soviet Union made it
unpopular with a majority of the Afghan population. Repressions plunged large
parts of the country, especially the rural areas, into open revolt against the
new Marxist-Leninist government. By spring 1979 unrests had reached 24 out of
28 Afghan provinces including major urban areas. Over half of the Afghan army
would either desert or join the insurrection. Most of the government's new
policies clashed directly with the traditional Afghan understanding of Islam,
making religion one of the only forces capable of unifying the tribally and
ethnically divided population against the unpopular new government, and
ushering in the advent of Islamist participation in Afghan politics.[65]
Soviet troops (in right row) withdrawing from Afghanistan
in 1988. Afghan government BTR on the left.
In the wake of the Iranian Revolution, the US sought
rapprochement with the Afghan government—a prospect that the USSR found
unacceptable due to weakening Soviet leverage over the regime.[66] In February
1979, U.S. Ambassador Adolph "Spike" Dubs was murdered in Kabul after
Afghan security forces burst in on his kidnappers. The U.S. then reduced
bilateral assistance and terminated a small military training program.
To bolster the Parcham faction, the Soviet Union decided
to intervene on December 24, 1979, when the Red Army invaded its southern
neighbor. Over 100,000 Soviet troops took part in the invasion, which was
backed by another 100,000 Afghan military men and supporters of the Parcham
faction. In the meantime, Hafizullah Amin was killed and replaced by Babrak
Karmal.
All remaining US assistance agreements were ended after
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Following the Soviet invasion, the United
States supported diplomatic efforts to achieve a Soviet withdrawal. In
addition, generous U.S. contributions to the refugee program in Pakistan played
a major part in efforts to assist Afghan refugees.
In response to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, the
Carter administration and Reagan administration in the U.S. began arming the
Mujahideen, thanks in large part to the efforts of Charlie Wilson and CIA
officer Gust Avrakotos. Early reports estimated that $6–20 billion had been
spent by the U.S. and Saudi Arabia[67] but more recent reports state that the
U.S. and Saudi Arabia provided as much as up to $40 billion[68][69][70] in cash
and weapons, which included over two thousand FIM-92 Stinger surface-to-air
missiles, for building up Islamic groups against the Soviet Union. The U.S.
handled most of its support through Pakistan's ISI. Saudi Arabia was also
providing financial support.
The 10-year Soviet occupation resulted in the deaths of
between 850,000 and 1,500,000 Afghan civilians.[71][72] About 6 million fled as
Afghan refugees to Pakistan and Iran, and from there over 38,000 made it to the
United States[73] and many more to the European Union. Faced with mounting
international pressure and great number of casualties on both sides, the
Soviets withdrew in 1989. Their withdrawal from Afghanistan was seen as an
ideological victory in the United States, which had backed some Mujahideen
factions through three U.S. presidential administrations to counter Soviet
influence in the vicinity of the oil-rich Persian Gulf. The USSR continued to
support President Mohammad Najibullah (former head of the Afghan secret
service, KHAD) until 1992.[74]
Foreign interference and civil war[edit]
Main articles: Civil war in Afghanistan (1989-1992) and
Civil war in Afghanistan (1992-1996)
1992-1996
After the fall of the communist Najibullah-regime in
1992, the Afghan political parties agreed on a peace and power-sharing
agreement (the Peshawar Accords). The Peshawar Accords created the Islamic
State of Afghanistan and appointed an interim government for a transitional
period. According to Human Rights Watch:
The sovereignty of Afghanistan was vested formally in the
Islamic State of Afghanistan, an entity created in April 1992, after the fall
of the Soviet-backed Najibullah government. [...] With the exception of
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hezb-e Islami, all of the parties [...] were ostensibly
unified under this government in April 1992. [...] Hekmatyar's Hezb-e Islami,
for its part, refused to recognize the government for most of the period
discussed in this report and launched attacks against government forces and
Kabul generally. [...] Shells and rockets fell everywhere.[75]
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar was directed, funded and supplied by
the Pakistani army.[76] Afghanistan analyst Amin Saikal concludes in his book
Modern Afghanistan: A History of Struggle and Survival:
Pakistan was keen to gear up for a breakthrough in
Central Asia. [...] Islamabad could not possibly expect the new Islamic
government leaders [...] to subordinate their own nationalist objectives in
order to help Pakistan realize its regional ambitions. [...] Had it not been
for the ISI's logistic support and supply of a large number of rockets,
Hekmatyar's forces would not have been able to target and destroy half of
Kabul.[77]
There was no time for the interim government to create
working government departments, police units or a system of justice and
accountability. Saudi Arabia and Iran also armed and directed Afghan
militias.[60] A publication by the George Washington University describes:
[O]utside forces saw instability in Afghanistan as an
opportunity to press their own security and political agendas.[78]
According to Human Rights Watch, numerous Iranian agents
were assisting the Shia Hezb-i Wahdat forces of Abdul Ali Mazari, as Iran was
attempting to maximize Wahdat's military power and influence.[60][75][79] Saudi
Arabia was trying to strengthen the Wahhabite Abdul Rasul Sayyaf and his
Ittihad-i Islami faction.[60][75] Atrocities were committed by individuals of
the different factions while Kabul descended into lawlessness and chaos as
described in reports by Human Rights Watch and the Afghanistan Justice
Project.[75][80] Again, Human Rights Watch writes:
Rare ceasefires, usually negotiated by representatives of
Ahmad Shah Massoud, Sibghatullah Mojaddedi or Burhanuddin Rabbani (the interim
government), or officials from the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), commonly collapsed within days.[75]
The main forces involved during that period in Kabul,
northern, central and eastern Afghanistan were the Hezb-i Islami of Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar directed by Pakistan, the Hezb-i Wahdat of Abdul Ali Mazari directed
by Iran, the Ittehad-i Islami of Abdul Rasul Sayyaf supported by Saudi Arabia,
the Junbish-i Milli of Abdul Rashid Dostum backed by Uzbekisten, the Harakat-i
Islami of Hussain Anwari and the Shura-i Nazar operating as the regular Islamic
State forces (as agreed upon in the Peshawar Accords) under the defense
ministry of Ahmad Shah Massoud.
Meanwhile southern Afghanistan was neither under the
control of foreign-backed militias nor the interim government in Kabul, which
had no hands in the affairs of southern Afghanistan during that time. Southern
Afghanistan was ruled by Gul Agha Sherzai. The southern city of Kandahar was a
centre of lawlessness, crime and atrocities fuelled by complex Pashtun tribal
rivalries.[81] In 1994, the Taliban (a movement originating from Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-run
religious schools for Afghan refugees in Pakistan) also developed in
Afghanistan as a politico-religious force, reportedly in opposition to the
tyranny of the local governor.[81] Mullah Omar started his movement with fewer
than 50 armed madrassah students in his hometown of Kandahar.[81] As Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar remained unsuccessful in conquering Kabul, Pakistan started its
support to the Taliban.[60][82] Many analysts like Amin Saikal describe the
Taliban as developing into a proxy force for Pakistan's regional interests
which the Taliban decline.[60] In 1994 the Taliban took power in several
provinces in southern and central Afghanistan.
In 1995 the Hezb-i Islami of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the
Iranian-backed Hezb-i Wahdat as well as Rashid Dostum's Junbish forces were
defeated militarily in the capital Kabul by forces of the interim government
under Massoud who subsequently tried to initiate a nationwide political process
with the goal of national consolidation and democratic elections, also inviting
the Taliban to join the process.[83] The Taliban declined.[83]
Taliban and the United Front[edit]
1996-2001
Main articles: Taliban, Afghan Northern Alliance, Afghan
training camp and Civil war in Afghanistan (1996-2001)
Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf sent more
troops against the United Front of Ahmad Shah Massoud than the Afghan Taliban.
Map of the situation in Afghanistan in late 1996; Massoud
(red), Dostum (green) and Taliban (yellow) territories.
Map of the situation in Afghanistan in August 2001 until
October 2001
The Taliban started shelling Kabul in early 1995 but were
defeated by forces of the Islamic State government under Ahmad Shah
Massoud.[84] Amnesty International, referring to the Taliban offensive, wrote
in a 1995 report:
This is the first time in several months that Kabul
civilians have become the targets of rocket attacks and shelling aimed at
residential areas in the city.[84]
On September 26, 1996, as the Taliban, with military
support by Pakistan and financial support by Saudi Arabia, prepared for another
major offensive, Massoud ordered a full retreat from Kabul.[85] The Taliban
seized Kabul on September 27, 1996, and established the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan. They imposed on the parts of Afghanistan under their control their
political and judicial interpretation of Islam, issuing edicts forbidding women
from working outside the home, attending school or leaving their homes unless
accompanied by a male relative.[86] Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said:
To PHR's knowledge, no other regime in the world has
methodically and violently forced half of its population into virtual house
arrest, prohibiting them on pain of physical punishment.[86]
After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban on September 27,
1996,[87] Ahmad Shah Massoud and Abdul Rashid Dostum, two former nemesis,
created the United Front (Northern Alliance) against the Taliban, who were
preparing offensives against the remaining areas under the control of Massoud
and Dostum.[88] The United Front included beside the dominantly Tajik forces of
Massoud and the Uzbek forces of Dostum, Hazara factions and Pashtun forces
under the leadership of commanders such as Abdul Haq, Haji Abdul Qadir, Qari
Baba or diplomat Abdul Rahim Ghafoorzai. From the Taliban conquest in 1996
until November 2001 the United Front controlled roughly 30% of Afghanistan's
population in provinces such as Badakhshan, Kapisa, Takhar and parts of Parwan,
Kunar, Nuristan, Laghman, Samangan, Kunduz, Ghōr and Bamyan.
According to a 55-page report by the United Nations, the
Taliban, while trying to consolidate control over northern and western
Afghanistan, committed systematic massacres against civilians.[89][90] UN
officials stated that there had been "15 massacres" between 1996 and
2001.[89][90] They also said, that "[t]hese have been highly systematic
and they all lead back to the [Taliban] Ministry of Defense or to Mullah Omar
himself."[89][90] The Taliban especially targeted people of Shia religious
or Hazara ethnic background.[89][90] Upon taking Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998, about
4,000 civilians were executed by the Taliban and many more reported
tortured.[91][92] Among those killed in Mazari Sharif were several Iranian
diplomats. Others were kidnapped by the Taliban, touching off a hostage crisis
that nearly escalated to a full-scale war, with 150,000 Iranian soldiers massed
on the Afghan border at one time.[93] It was later admitted that the diplomats
were killed by the Taliban, and their bodies were returned to Iran.[94]
The documents also reveal the role of Arab and Pakistani
support troops in these killings.[89][90] Bin Laden's so-called 055 Brigade was
responsible for mass-killings of Afghan civilians.[95] The report by the United
Nations quotes eyewitnesses in many villages describing Arab fighters carrying
long knives used for slitting throats and skinning people.[89][90]
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf - then as Chief of
Army Staff - was responsible for sending thousands of Pakistanis to fight
alongside the Taliban and Bin Laden against the forces of
Massoud.[82][83][96][97] In total there were believed to be 28,000 Pakistani
nationals fighting inside Afghanistan.[83] 20,000 were regular Pakistani
soldiers either from the Frontier Corps or army and an estimated 8,000 were
militants recruited in madrassas filling regular Taliban ranks.[95] The
estimated 25,000 Taliban regular force thus comprised more than 8,000 Pakistani
nationals.[95] A 1998 document by the U.S. State Department confirms that
"20-40 percent of [regular] Taliban soldiers are Pakistani."[82] The
document further states that the parents of those Pakistani nationals
"know nothing regarding their child's military involvement with the
Taliban until their bodies are brought back to Pakistan."[82] A further
3,000 fighter of the regular Taliban army were Arab and Central Asian
militants.[95] From 1996 to 2001 the Al Qaeda of Osama Bin Laden and Ayman
al-Zawahiri became a state within the Taliban state.[98] Bin Laden sent Arab
recruits to join the fight against the United Front.[98][99] Of roughly 45,000
Pakistani, Taliban and Al Qaeda soldiers fighting against the forces of Massoud
only 14,000 were Afghan.[83][95]
According to Human Rights Watch in 1997 Taliban soldiers
were summarily executed in and around Mazar-i Sharif by Dostum's Junbish
forces.[100] Dostum was defeated by the Taliban in 1998 with the fall of
Mazar-i-Sharif. Massoud remained the only leader of the United Front in
Afghanistan.
In the areas under his control Ahmad Shah Massoud set up democratic
institutions and signed the Women's Rights Charter.[101] Human Rights Watch
cites no human rights crimes for the forces under direct control of Massoud for
the period from October 1996 until the assassination of Massoud in September
2001.[100] As a consequence many civilians fled to the area of Ahmad Shah
Massoud.[96][102] National Geographic concluded in its documentary "Inside
the Taliban":
The only thing standing in the way of future Taliban
massacres is Ahmad Shah Massoud."[96]
The Taliban repeatedly offered Massoud a position of
power to make him stop his resistance. Massoud declined for he did not fight to
obtain a position of power. He explained in one interview:
"The Taliban say: "Come and accept the post of
prime minister and be with us", and they would keep the highest office in
the country, the presidentship. But for what price?! The difference between us
concerns mainly our way of thinking about the very principles of the society
and the state. We can not accept their conditions of compromise, or else we
would have to give up the principles of modern democracy. We are fundamentally
against the system called "the Emirate of Afghanistan"."[103]
"There should be an Afghanistan where every Afghan
finds himself or herself happy. And I think that can only be assured by
democracy based on consensus."[104]
Massoud wanted to convince the Taliban to join a
political process leading towards democratic elections in a foreseeable
future.[103] His proposals for peace can be seen here: Proposal for Peace,
promoted by Commander Massoud. Massoud also stated:
"The Taliban are not a force to be considered
invincible. They are distanced from the people now. They are weaker than in the
past. There is only the assistance given by Pakistan, Osama bin Laden and other
extremist groups that keep the Taliban on their feet. With a halt to that
assistance, it is extremely difficult to survive."[104] In early 2001
Massoud employed a new strategy of local military pressure and global political
appeals.[105] Resentment was increasingly gathering against Taliban rule from
the bottom of Afghan society including the Pashtun areas.[105] Massoud
publicized their cause "popular consensus, general elections and
democracy" worldwide. At the same time he was very wary not to revive the
failed Kabul government of the early 1990s.[105] Already in 1999 he started the
training of police forces which he trained specifically to keep order and
protect the civilian population in case the United Front would be
successful.[83]
In early 2001 Massoud addressed the European Parliament
in Brussels asking the international community to provide humanitarian help to
the people of Afghanistan.[106] He stated that the Taliban and Al Qaeda had
introduced "a very wrong perception of Islam" and that without the
support of Pakistan the Taliban would not be able to sustain their military
campaign for up to a year.[106] On this visit to Europe he also warned that his
intelligence had gathered information about a large-scale attack on U.S. soil
being imminent.[107]
NATO presence and the Karzai administration[edit]
Further information: Presidency of Hamid Karzai, Taliban
insurgency, Operation Enduring Freedom and War in Afghanistan (2001–present)
Afghan President Hamid Karzai speaking before U.S.
Congress in June 2004
On 9 September 2001, Ahmad Shah Massoud was assassinated
by two Arab suicide attackers inside Afghanistan, and two days later about
3,000 people became victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United
States, when allegedly-U.S.A. backed Taliban suicide bombers high-jacked planes
and flew them into New York City skyscrapers. Then US President George W. Bush
accused Osama bin Laden and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed as the faces behind the
attacks. When the Taliban refused to hand over bin Laden to US authorities and
to disband al-Qaeda bases in Afghanistan, Operation Enduring Freedom was
launched in which teams of American and British special forces worked with
commanders of the United Front (Northern Alliance) against the Taliban.[108] At
the same time the US-led forces were bombing Taliban and al-Qaeda targets
everywhere inside Afghanistan with cruise missiles. These actions led to the
fall of Mazar-i-Sharif in the north followed by all the other cities, as the
Taliban and al-Qaeda crossed over the porous Durand Line border into Pakistan.
In December 2001, after the Taliban government was toppled and the new Afghan
government under Hamid Karzai was formed, the International Security Assistance
Force (ISAF) was established by the UN Security Council to help assist the
Karzai administration and provide basic security to the Afghan
people.[109][110]
Soldiers of the Afghan National Army in 2010, including
the ANA Commando Battalion standing in the front.
While the Taliban began regrouping inside Pakistan, more
coalition troops entered the escalating US-led war. Meanwhile, the rebuilding
of war-torn Afghanistan kicked off in 2002.[111][112] The Afghan nation was
able to build democratic structures over the years, and some progress was made
in key areas such as governance, economy, health, education, transport, and
agriculture. NATO is training the Afghan armed forces as well its national
police. ISAF and Afghan troops led many offensives against the Taliban but
failed to fully defeat them. By 2009, a Taliban-led shadow government began to
form in many parts of the country complete with their own version of mediation
court.[113] After U.S. President Barack Obama announced the deployment of
another 30,000 soldiers in 2010 for a period of two years, Der Spiegel
published images of the US soldiers who killed unarmed Afghan civilians.[114]
In FY 2009, the United States resettled just 328 refugees
from Afghanistan.[115] By contrast, the U.S. admitted more than 100,000
Vietnamese refugees for resettlement during the Vietnam War.[116] On the other
hand, over five million Afghan refugees were repatriated in the last decade,
including many who were forcefully deported from NATO countries.[117][118] This
large return of Afghans may have helped the nation's economy but the country
still remains one of the poorest in the world due to the decades of war, lack
of foreign investment, ongoing government corruption and the Pakistani-backed
Taliban insurgency.[119][120] The United States also accuses neighboring Iran
of providing small level of support to the Taliban insurgents.[121][122][123]
According to a report by the United Nations, the Taliban and other militants
were responsible for 76% of civilian casualties in 2009,[124] 75% in 2010[125]
and 80% in 2011.[126]
NATO's military terminal at Kabul International Airport
In October 2008 U.S. Defense Secretary Gates had asserted
that a political settlement with the Taliban was the endgame for the Afghanistan
war. "There has to be ultimately – and I'll underscore ultimately –
reconciliation as part of a political outcome to this," Gates stated.[127]
By 2010 peace efforts began. In early January, Taliban commanders held secret
exploratory talks with a United Nations special envoy to discuss peace terms.
Regional commanders on the Taliban's leadership council, the Quetta Shura,
sought a meeting with the UN special representative in Afghanistan, Kai Eide,
and it took place in Dubai on January 8. It was the first such meeting between
the UN and senior members of the Taliban.[128] On 26 January 2010, at a major
conference in London which brought together some 70 countries and
organizations,[129] Afghan President Hamid Karzai said he intends to reach out
to the Taliban leadership (including Mullah Omar, Sirajuddin Haqqani and
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar). Supported by NATO, Karzai called on the group's
leadership to take part in a loya jirga meeting to initiate peace talks. These
steps have resulted in an intensification of bombings, assassinations and
ambushes.[130] Some Afghan groups (including the former intelligence chief
Amrullah Saleh and opposition leader Dr. Abdullah Abdullah) believe that Karzai
plans to appease the insurgents' senior leadership at the cost of the
democratic constitution, the democratic process and progress in the field of
human rights especially women's rights.[131] Dr. Abdullah stated:
"I should say that Taliban are not fighting in order
to be accommodated. They are fighting in order to bring the state down. So it's
a futile exercise, and it's just misleading. ... There are groups that will
fight to the death. Whether we like to talk to them or we don't like to talk to
them, they will continue to fight. So, for them, I don't think that we have a
way forward with talks or negotiations or contacts or anything as such. Then we
have to be prepared to tackle and deal with them militarily. In terms of the
Taliban on the ground, there are lots of possibilities and opportunities that
with the help of the people in different parts of the country, we can attract
them to the peace process; provided, we create a favorable environment on this
side of the line. At the moment, the people are leaving support for the
government because of corruption. So that expectation is also not realistic at
this stage."[132]
From left to right: Abdullah Abdullah, John Kerry and
Ashraf Ghani during the 2014 Afghan presidential election
Afghan President Hamid Karzai told world leaders during
the London conference that he intends to reach out to the top echelons of the
Taliban within a few weeks with a peace initiative.[133] Karzai set the
framework for dialogue with Taliban leaders when he called on the group's
leadership to take part in a "loya jirga" – or large assembly of elders
– to initiate peace talks.[134] Karzai also asked for creation of a new
peacemaking organization, to be called the National Council for Peace,
Reconciliation and Reintegration.[133] Karzai's top adviser on the
reconciliation process with the insurgents said that the country must learn to
forgive the Taliban.[135] In March 2010, the Karzai government held preliminary
talks with Hezb-i-Islami, who presented a plan which included the withdrawal of
all foreign troops by the end of 2010. The Taliban declined to participate,
saying "The Islamic Emirate has a clear position. We have said this many,
many times. There will be no talks when there are foreign troops on
Afghanistan's soil killing innocent Afghans on daily basis."[136] In June
2010 the Afghan Peace Jirga 2010 took place. In September 2010 General David
Petraeus commented on the progress of peace talks to date, stating, "The
prospect for reconciliation with senior Taliban leaders certainly looms out
there...and there have been approaches at (a) very senior level that hold some
promise."[137]
After the May 2011 death of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan,
many prominent Afghan figures began being assassinated, including Mohammed Daud
Daud, Ahmad Wali Karzai, Jan Mohammad Khan, Ghulam Haider Hamidi, Burhanuddin
Rabbani and others.[138] Also in the same year, the Pakistani-Afghan border
skirmishes intensified and many large scale attacks by the Pakistani-based
Haqqani network took place across Afghanistan. This led to the United States
warning Pakistan of a possible military action against the Haqqanis in the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas.[139] The U.S. blamed Pakistan's
government, mainly Pakistani Army and its ISI spy network as the masterminds
behind all of this.[140]
"In choosing to use violent extremism as an
instrument of policy, the government of Pakistan, and most especially the
Pakistani army and ISI, jeopardizes not only the prospect of our strategic
partnership but Pakistan's opportunity to be a respected nation with legitimate
regional influence. They may believe that by using these proxies, they are
hedging their bets or redressing what they feel is an imbalance in regional
power. But in reality, they have already lost that bet."[141]
—Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff
U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Cameron Munter, told Radio
Pakistan that "The attack that took place in Kabul a few days ago, that
was the work of the Haqqani network. There is evidence linking the Haqqani
Network to the Pakistan government. This is something that must
stop."[142] Other top U.S. officials such as Hillary Clinton and Leon
Panetta made similar statements.[140][143] On October 16, 2011, "Operation
Knife Edge" was launched by NATO and Afghan forces against the Haqqani
network in south-eastern Afghanistan. Afghan Defense Minister, Abdul Rahim
Wardak, explained that the operation will "help eliminate the insurgents
before they struck in areas along the troubled frontier".[144] In November
2011, NATO forces killed 24 Pakistani Army soldiers around the border region
with Pakistan.
Invasions of Afghanistan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2009)
See also: History of Afghanistan
Afghanistan is a mountainous country landlocked country
in Central Asia and South Asia.[1][2] The Afghanistan area has been invaded
many times in recorded history. Some of these invaders in the history of
Afghanistan include Indians, Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Timur, the
Mughal Empire, various Persian Empires, the British Empire, Sikh Empire, the
Soviet Union, and currently a coalition force of NATO troops, the majority of
which are from the United States, following the US-led invasion which began on
October 7, 2001, Operation Enduring Freedom.
From a geopolitical sense, controlling Afghanistan is
vital in controlling the rest of Southern Asia, or getting a passage through
Central Asia, reflecting its geographic position in the region. Afghanistan
played an important part in the Great Game power struggles. Historically, the
conquest of Afghanistan has also played an important role in the invasion of
India from the west through the Khyber Pass.
History[edit]
Early invasions[edit]
The Medes and the Persians subsequently invaded much of
Afghanistan. With the Medes conquering parts of what is now Afghanistan, their
successors, the Persians managed to put their rule over all of Afghanistan and
beyond, as part of the easternmost territories of their vast empire. The first
historically documented invasion of the Afghanistan region was by Alexander the
Great in 330 BC as part of his string of conquests following his wars against
Persia. Among the cities conquered were nowadays Herat and Kandahar. Soon after
his death, the area was conquered by and incorporated into the expanding Indian
Mauryan Empire. Later conquests and rulers of Afghanistan included the
Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, and Indo-Greek Kingdom. In the next few centuries the
territory of Afghanistan was ruled as the easternmost territories of a new
Persian Empire, the Sassanid Empire, or by their vassals, the Indo-Sassanids.
In the seventh to ninth centuries, following the
disintegration of the Sassanid Persian and Roman Empire, leaders in the world
theatre for the last four centuries and arch rivals, the area was again invaded
from the west in the Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, resulting in the
conversion of most of its inhabitants to Islam. This was one of many Muslim
conquests following the establishment of a unified state in the Arabian
Peninsula by the prophet Muhammad. At its height, Muslim control - during the
period of the Arab Caliphate - extended from the borders of China to the
Iberian Peninsula (modern day Spain and Portugal), the Middle East, North
Africa, parts of southern Europe, parts of south East Europe, parts of central
Asia, and parts of South Asia (South Asia is: Afghanistan, Pakistan &
India).
In the Mongol invasion of Khwarezmia (1219—1221), Genghis
Khan invaded the region from the northeast in one of his many conquests to
create the huge Mongol Empire. Unlike earlier campaigns in Mongolia and China,
Genghis Khan's armies completely destroyed Khwarazmia and brutally killed vast
numbers of its civilians.
From 1383 to 1385, the Afghanistan area was conquered
from the north by Timur, leader of neighboring Transoxiana (roughly modern-day
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and adjacent areas), and became a part of the Timurid
Empire. Timur was from a Turko-Mongol tribe and although a Muslim, saw himself
more as an heir of Genghis Khan. Timur's armies caused great devastation and
are estimated to have caused the deaths of 17 million people. In the next
period, many of the Eastern and Southern parts of Afghanistan came under rule
of various dynasties based in other parts of South Asia, such as by the Delhi
Sultanate. After the slow disintegration of the Timurid Empire in 1506, the
Mughal Empire was later established in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India by
Babur in 1526, who was a descendant of Timur through his father and possibly a
descendant of Genghis Khan through his mother. By the 17th century, the Mughal
Empire ruled most of India, but later declined during the 18th century.
British invasions[edit]
During the nineteenth century, Afghanistan was invaded
twice from British India, during the First Anglo-Afghan War of 1838–1842 and
again in the Second Anglo-Afghan War of 1878–1880, both times with the
intention of limiting Russian influence in the country and quelling local
tribal leaders. For the entire period, tribal cross-border warfare was
constant, and parts of the Pashtun homeland were annexed to British India and
referred to as the North-West Frontier Province. The country was also invaded
by the United Kingdom in 1919, in the Third Anglo-Afghan War.
Soviet intervention[edit]
Soviet troops withdrawing from Afghanistan in 1988.
Main article: Soviet war in Afghanistan
The Soviet Union, along with other countries, was a
direct supporter of the new Afghan government after the Saur Revolution in
1978. However, Soviet-style reforms introduced by the government such as
changes in marriage customs and land reform were not received well by a
population deeply immersed in tradition and Islam. By 1979, fighting between
the Afghan government and various other factions within the country, some of
which were supported by the United States and other countries, led to a virtual
civil war. The Afghan government requested increasing Soviet military support
and eventually direct military involvement. Soviet General Secretary Leonid
Brezhnev sent the 40th Army into Afghanistan on December 24, 1979. This event
led to the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow by the United States
and other countries, and kick-started U.S. funding for Islamic Mujahideen
groups who opposed the Afghan government and the Soviet military presence. The
local Mujahideen, along with fighters from several different Arab nations
(Pathan tribes from Pakistan also participated in the war; they were supported
by ISI), eventually succeeded in forcing the Soviet Union out. This was a
factor in the dissolution of Soviet communism, because it led to protests
(similar to American Vietnam War protests) in the Soviet Union.[3] Eventually,
in-fighting within the Mujahideen led to the rise of warlords in Afghanistan,
and from them emerged the Taliban.[4]
Invasion by the United States and allies[edit]
U.S. Army soldiers prepare a Humvee to be sling-loaded by
a CH-47 Chinook helicopter in Bagram on July 24, 2004.
Main articles: Operation Enduring Freedom and War in
Afghanistan (2001–present)
On October 7, 2001 the United States, supported by some
NATO countries including the United Kingdom and Australia, as well as other
allies, began an invasion of Afghanistan under Operation Enduring Freedom. The
invasion was launched to capture Osama bin Laden, who was accused of the
September 11, 2001 attacks. The US military forces did not capture him, though
they toppled the Taliban government and disrupted bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network.
The Taliban government had given shelter to Bin Laden. On May 2, 2011, bin
Laden was shot and killed by United States Armed Forces in Pakistan. The
Taliban leadership survives in hiding throughout Afghanistan, largely in the
southeast, and continues to launch guerrilla attacks against forces of the
United States, its allies, and the curreUnfinished journey (79)
(Part seventy nine, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 14
September 2014, 13:24 pm)
Afghanistan can not be separated from the upheaval, after
about eight years in the invasion of the Soviet Union, followed by the United
States and NATO soldiers, political upheaval now still has not been completed:
UN threatens to cut Afghanistan aid
The UN threatened
on Saturday to cut aid to Afghanistan if its staff are harassed, responding to
tensions surrounding its participation in a drawn-out and bitter investigation
into fraud in the still-unresolved presidential election.
The warning came a day after dozens of demonstrators
gathered outside the Kabul headquarters of the world body and accused it of
aiding vote-rigging.
It was another sign of heightened anxiety in the run-up
to the release of final election results over the next week. A two-month-long
crisis over results of the vote to succeed President Hamid Karzai has been
destabilizing Afghanistan just months before most international troops
withdraw.
The UN has been monitoring a vote-rigging investigation
since both candidates — former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah and
ex-Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani — each claimed victory and accused the other
of fraud in early July.
U.N. workers have frequently been caught up in heated
disputes by the rival candidates’ audit observers. After Friday’s small
demonstration, which was peaceful but also featured chants of “Death to the
UN,” the world body apparently decided to draw a line.
“Intimidation and verbal attacks directed at #UN are
unacceptable,” said a tweet by the official UN Assistance Mission in
Afghanistan on Saturday. A second post continued: “If such abuse continues, #UN
will be forced to severely limit its activities, reducing its assistance to
#Afghanistan and its people.”
Ari Gaitanis, a UN spokesman in Kabul, declined to
elaborate on specific abuse or threats against UN staff.
The threat to cut aid underscored the high stakes in
Afghanistan’s election crisis, which marred hopes for a smooth transition of
power ahead of the foreign troops’ withdrawal. Talks between both sides on
forming a unity government have broken down in recent weeks.
Final results are expected in the next week, though a
specific date has not been set. It is widely believed that Ghani, who was ahead
by 1.2 million votes in preliminary results, will be declared the winner even
after suspect votes are thrown out. Abdullah, who has charged that more than 2
million ballots were fraudulent, has vowed he will reject results that give the
election to Ghani.
History of Afghanistan
The written history of Afghanistan (Pashto: د افغانستان تاريخ
, Da Afġānistān Tārīkh), can be traced back to around 500 BCE when the area was
under the Achaemenid Empire,[1] although evidence indicates that an advanced
degree of urbanized culture has existed in the land since between 3000 and 2000
BCE.[2][3][4] Alexander the Great and his Macedonian army arrived to what is
now Afghanistan in 330 BCE after conquering Persia during the Battle of
Gaugamela.[5] Since then, many empires have established capitals inside
Afghanistan, including the Greco-Bactrians, Mauryas, Kushans, Kabul Shahi,
Saffarids, Samanids, Ghaznavids, Ghurids, Timurids, Mughals, Hotakis and
Durranis.[6]
Afghanistan (meaning "land of the Afghans") has
been a strategically important location throughout history.[7] The land served
as "a gateway to India, impinging on the ancient Silk Road, which carried
trade from the Mediterranean to China".[8] Sitting on many trade and
migration routes, Afghanistan may be called the 'Central Asian roundabout'[9]
since routes converge from the Middle East, from the Indus Valley through the
passes over the Hindu Kush, from the Far East via the Tarim Basin, and from the
adjacent Eurasian Steppe.
The Aryans arrived to Afghanistan from the north after
the 20th century BCE,[2] who left their languages that survived in the form of
Pashto and Dari. The Arab invasions influenced the culture of Afghanistan, as
its Zoroastrian, Macedonian and Buddhist past had long vanished, or had just
started to decline, as it went with Buddhism. Turkic empire-builders such as
the Ghaznavids, Ghurids and Timurids made the region now called Afghanistan of
major importance.
Mullah Omar, Taliban Laeder |
Mirwais Hotak followed by Ahmad Shah Durrani unified
Afghan tribes and founded the last Afghan Empire in the early 18th century
CE.[10][11][12][13][14] Afghanistan's sovereignty has been held during the
Anglo-Afghan Wars, the 1980s Soviet war, and the 2001-present war by the
country's many and diverse people: the Pashtuns, Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks,
Turkmen, Aimak, Baloch and others. The Pashtuns form the largest group,
claiming to be descendants of ancient Israelites or Qais Abdur Rashid but
scholars believe that they are a confederation of various peoples from the past
who united under Pashtunwali.
Main article: Pre-Islamic period of Afghanistan
Tents of Afghan nomads in the northern Badghis province
of Afghanistan. Early peasant farming villages came into existence in
Afghanistan about 7,000 years ago.
Excavations of prehistoric sites by Louis Dupree and
others at Darra-e Kur in 1966 where 800 stone implements were recovered along
with a fragment of Neanderthal right temporal bone, suggest that early humans
were living in what is now Afghanistan at least 52,000 years ago. A cave called
Kara Kamar contained Upper Paleolithic blades Carbon-14 dated at 34,000 years
old.[15] Farming communities in Afghanistan were among the earliest in the
world.[4] Archaeologists have found evidence of human habitation in Afghanistan
from as far back as 50,000 BC. The artifacts indicate that the indigenous
people were small farmers and herdsmen, very probably grouped into tribes, with
small local kingdoms rising and falling through the ages. Urbanization may have
begun as early as 3000 BCE.[16] Zoroastrianism predominated as the religion in
the area, even the modern Afghan solar calendar shows the influence of
Zoroastrianism in the names of the months. Other religions such as Buddhism and
Hinduism flourished later, leaving a major mark in the region. Gandhara is the
name of an ancient kingdom from the Vedic period and its capital city located
between the Hindukush and Sulaiman Mountains (mountains of Solomon),[17]
although Kandahar in modern times and the ancient Gandhara are not
geographically identical.[18][19]
Early inhabitants, around 3000 BCE were likely to have
been connected through culture and trade to neighboring civilizations like
Jiroft and Tappeh Sialk and more distantly to the Indus Valley Civilization.
Urban civilization may have begun as early as 3000 BCE, and it is possible that
the early city of Mundigak (near Kandahar) was a colony of the nearby Indus
Valley Civilization.[3] The first known people were Indo-Iranians,[4] but their
date of arrival has been estimated widely from as early as about 3000 BCE[20]
to 1500 BCE.[21] (For further detail see Indo-Aryan migration.)
Mujaheedin Prayer |
Bactria-Margiana[edit]
Main article: Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex
The Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex became
prominent in the southwest region between 2200 and 1700 BCE (approximately).
The city of Balkh (Bactra) was founded about this time (c. 2000–1500 BCE). It
is possible that the BMAC may have been an Indo-European culture, perhaps the
Proto-Indo-Aryans.[20] But the standard model holds the arrival of Indo-Aryans
to have been in the Late Harappan which gave rise to the Vedic civilization of
the Early Iron Age.[22]
Ancient history (700 BCE–565 CE)[edit]
Medes[edit]
Further information: Medes
Different opinions have been expressed about the extent
of the Median kingdom. For instance, according to Ernst Herzfeld, it was a
powerful empire, which stretched from central Anatolia to Bactria, to around
the borders of nowadays India. On the other side, Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg
insists that there is no real evidence about the very existence of the Median
empire and that it was an unstable state formation. Nevertheless, the region of
nowadays Afghanistan came under Median rule for a short time.[23]
Achaemenid Empire[edit]
Main article: Achaemenid Empire
Arachosia, Aria and Bactria were the ancient satraps of
the Achaemenid Empire that made up most of what is now Afghanistan during 500
BCE. Some of the inhabitants of Arachosia were known as Pactyans, whose name
possibly survives in today's Pakhtuns (Pashtuns).
Afghanistan became part of the Achaemenid Empire, after
it was conquered by Darius I of Persia. The area was divided into several
provinces called satrapies, which were each ruled by a governor, or satrap.
These ancient satrapies included: Aria (Herat); Arachosia (Kandahar, Lashkar
Gah, and Quetta); Bactriana (Balkh); Sattagydia (Ghazni); and Gandhara (Kabul,
Jalalabad, Peshawar).[24]
Alexander and the Seleucids[edit]
Main article: Wars of Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great arrived in the area of Afghanistan in
330 BCE after defeating Darius III of Persia a year earlier at the Battle of
Gaugamela.[25] His army faced very strong resistance in the Afghan tribal areas
where he is said to have commented that Afghanistan is "easy to march
into, hard to march out of."[26] Although his expedition through
Afghanistan was brief, Alexander left behind a Hellenic cultural influence that
lasted several centuries. Several great cities were built in the region named
"Alexandria," including: Alexandria-of-the-Arians (modern-day Herat);
Alexandria-on-the-Tarnak (near Kandahar); Alexandria-ad-Caucasum (near Begram,
at Bordj-i-Abdullah); and finally, Alexandria-Eschate (near Kojend), in the
north. After Alexander's death, his loosely connected empire was divided.
Seleucus, a Macedonian officer during Alexander's campaign, declared himself
ruler of his own Seleucid Empire, encompassing Persia and Afghanistan.[27]
Greco-Bactrian Kingdom[edit]
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Main article: Greco-Bactrian Kingdom
Approximate maximum extent of the Greco-Bactrian kingdom
circa 180 BCE, including the regions of Tapuria and Traxiane to the West,
Sogdiana and Ferghana to the north, Bactria and Arachosia to the south.
The Greco-Bactrian Kingdom was founded when Diodotus I,
the satrap of Bactria (and probably the surrounding provinces) seceded from the
Seleucid Empire around 250 BCE. Greco-Bactria continued until c. 130 BCE, when
Eucratides' son, King Heliocles I, was defeated and driven out of Bactria by
the Yuezhi tribes. It is thought that his dynasty continued to rule in Kabul
and Alexandria of the Caucasus until 70 BCE when King Hermaeus was defeated by
the Yuezhi.
One of Demetrius' successors, Menander I, brought the
Indo-Greek Kingdom to its height between 165–130 BCE, expanding the kingdom in
Afghanistan and Pakistan to even larger proportions than Demetrius. After
Menander's death, the Indo-Greeks steadily declined and the last Indo-Greek
king was defeated in c. 10 CE.
Mauryan Empire[edit]
Main article: Mauryan Empire
The territory fell to the Maurya Empire, which was led by
Chandragupta Maurya. The Mauryas introduced Hinduism and Buddhism to region,
and were planning to capture more territory of Central Asia until they faced
local Greco-Bactrian forces. Seleucus is said to have reach a peace treaty with
Chandragupta by given control of the territory south of the Hindu Kush to the
Mauryas upon intermarriage and 500 elephants.
Maurya Empire under Ashoka the Great
Alexander took these away from the Indo-Aryans and
established settlements of his own, but Seleucus Nicator gave them to
Sandrocottus (Chandragupta), upon terms of intermarriage and of receiving in
exchange 500 elephants.[28]
—Strabo, 64 BCE–24 CE
Some time after, as he was going to war with the generals
of Alexander, a wild elephant of great bulk presented itself before him of its
own accord, and, as if tamed down to gentleness, took him on its back, and
became his guide in the war, and conspicuous in fields of battle. Sandrocottus,
having thus acquired a throne, was in possession of India, when Seleucus was
laying the foundations of his future greatness; who, after making a league with
him, and settling his affairs in the east, proceeded to join in the war against
Antigonus. As soon as the forces, therefore, of all the confederates were
united, a battle was fought, in which Antigonus was slain, and his son
Demetrius put to flight.[29]
—Junianus Justinus
Newly excavated Buddhist stupa at Mes Aynak in Logar
Province of Afghanistan. Similar stupas have been discovered in neighboring
Ghazni Province, including in the northern Samangan Province.
Having consolidated power in the northwest, Chandragupta
pushed east towards the Nanda Empire. Afghanistan's significant ancient
tangible and intangible Buddhist heritage is recorded through wide-ranging
archeological finds, including religious and artistic remnants. Buddhist
doctrines are reported to have reached as far as Balkh even during the life of
the Buddha (563 BCE to 483 BCE), as recorded by Husang Tsang.
In this context a legend recorded by Husang Tsang refers
to the first two lay disciples of Buddha, Trapusa and Bhallika responsible for
introducing Buddhism in that country. Originally these two were merchants of
the kingdom of Balhika, as the name Bhalluka or Bhallika probably suggests the
association of one with that country. They had gone to India for trade and had
happened to be at Bodhgaya when the Buddha had just attained enlightenment.[30]
Sakas[edit]
Main article: Saka
Parthians[edit]
Main article: Parthian Empire
Kushans[edit]
Main article: Kushan Empire
Sassanids[edit]
Main article: Sasanian Empire
For a period, much of modern Afghanistan was part of the
Sasanian Empire.
Kidarites[edit]
Main article: Kidarites
Hephthalites (White Huns)[edit]
Main article: Hephthalites
The Hephthalite Empire in Afghanistan extended from
Chinese Sinkiang to Sassanid Iran, from Sogdiana to the Punjab. Their chief
antagonists were the Persian Sassanids. Consequently there was relatively
little peace during this time. At about 565 CE, the Hephthalite Empire was
overthrown by a combined force consisting of western Turks and Sassanids.[31]
Middle Ages (565–1504 CE)[edit]
Map of the region during the 7th century
From the Middle Ages to around 1750 part of Afghanistan
was recognized as Khorasan.[32] Two of the four main capitals of Khorasan
(Balkh and Herat) are now located in Afghanistan. The countries of Kandahar,
Ghazni and Kabul formed the frontier region between Khorasan and Hindustan.[33]
The land inhabited by the Afghan tribes (i.e. ancestors of Pashtuns) was called
Afghanistan, which loosely covered a wide area between the Hindu Kush and the
Indus River, principally around the Sulaiman Mountains.[34][35] The earliest
record of the name "Afghan" ("Abgân") being mentioned is by
Shapur I of the Sassanid Empire during the 3rd century CE[36][37][38] which is
later recorded in the form of "Avagānā" by the Indian astronomer
Varāha Mihira in his 6th century CE Brihat-samhita.[39] It was used to refer to
a common legendary ancestor known as "Afghana", grandson of King Saul
of Israel.[40] Hiven Tsiang, a Chinese pilgrim, visiting the Afghanistan area
several times between 630 to 644 CE also speaks about them.[36] Ancestors of
many of today's Turkic-speaking Afghans settled in the Hindu Kush area and
began to assimilate much of the culture and language of the Pashtun tribes
already present there.[41] Among these were the Khalaj people which are known
today as Ghilzai.[42]
Afghanistan War |
Hindu Shahi[edit]
Main article: Kabul Shahi
Palas[edit]
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Main article: Pala Empire
The Pāla's were a Buddhist and Vaishnav Hindu Bengali
dynasty of India, which lasted for four centuries (750-1120 CE). Dharmapala
expanded the empire into the northern parts of the Indian Subcontinent. This
triggered once again the power struggle for the control of the subcontinent.
Devapala, successor of Dharmapala, extended the empire even further, covering
much of South Asia and several other territories. His empire stretched from
Assam and Utkala in the east, and Afghanistan in the north-west and Deccan in
the south. According to Pala copperplate inscription Devapala exterminated the
Utkalas, conquered the Pragjyotisha (Assam), shattered the pride of the Huna,
and humbled the lords of Pratiharas, Gurjara and the Dravidas. The Pala Empire
eventually disintegrated in the 12th century CE under the attack of the Sena
dynasty.
Islamic conquest[edit]
Main article: Islamic conquest of Afghanistan
In 642 CE, Rashidun Arabs had conquered most of West Asia
from the Sassanids and Byzantines, and from the western city of Herat they
introduced the religion of Islam as they entered new cities. Afghanistan at
that period had a number of different independent rulers, depending on the
area. Ancestors of Abū Ḥanīfa, including his father, were from the Kabul
region.
The early Arab forces did not fully explore Afghanistan
due to attacks by the mountain tribes. Much of the eastern parts of the country
remained independent, as part of the Hindu Shahi kingdoms of Kabul and
Gandhara, which lasted that way until the forces of the Muslim Saffarid dynasty
followed by the Ghaznavids conquered them.
Arab armies carrying the banner of Islam came out of the
west to defeat the Sasanians in 642 CE and then they marched with confidence to
the east. On the western periphery of the Afghan area the princes of Herat and
Seistan gave way to rule by Arab governors but in the east, in the mountains,
cities submitted only to rise in revolt and the hastily converted returned to
their old beliefs once the armies passed. The harshness and avariciousness of
Arab rule produced such unrest, however, that once the waning power of the
Caliphate became apparent, native rulers once again established themselves
independent. Among these the Saffarids of Seistan shone briefly in the Afghan
area. The fanatic founder of this dynasty, the persian Yaqub ibn Layth Saffari,
came forth from his capital at Zaranj in 870 CE and marched through Bost,
Kandahar, Ghazni, Kabul, Bamyan, Balkh and Herat, conquering in the name of
Islam. [43]
—Nancy Hatch Dupree, 1971
The Shahi or Shahiya dynasties ruled portions of the
Kabul Valley (in eastern Afghanistan) and the old province of Gandhara
(northern Pakistan and Kashmir) from the decline of the Kushan Empire up to the
early 9th century CE. The Shahis continued to rule eastern Afghanistan until
the late 9th century until the Ghaznavid invasions.
During the eighth and ninth centuries CE the eastern
parts of modern Afghanistan were still in the hands of non-muslim rulers. The
Muslims tended to regard them as Indians, although many of the local rulers
were apparently of Hunnish or Turkic descent. Yet, the Muslims were right in so
far as the non Muslim population of Eastern Afghanistan was, culturally,
strongly linked to the Indian sub-continent. Most of them were either Hindus or
Buddhists.[44]
Janjau Rajput Empire (900–1050 CE)[edit]
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Jaypala was the most powerful ruler of this empire rule
over what is today Pakistan and Jammu and Kashmir. He was eventually defeated
by Ghazni and lost his empire.
War in Afghanistan |
Ghaznavids[edit]
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Main article: Ghaznavids
was ruled from the city of Ghazni in eastern Afghanistan.
Mahmud of Ghazni consolidated the conquests of his
predecessors and turned the city of Ghazni into a great cultural center as well
as a base for frequent forays into the Indian subcontinent.
Ghorids[edit]
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Main article: Ghurid Dynasty
The Ghaznavid dynasty was defeated in 1148 by the Ghurids
from Ghor, but the Ghaznavid Sultans continued to live in Ghazni as the
'Nasher' until the early 20th century. They did not regain their once vast
power until about 500 years later when the Ghilzai Hotakis rose to power.
Various princes and Seljuk rulers attempted to rule parts of the country until
the Shah Muhammad II of the Khwarezmid Empire conquered all of Persia in 1205
CE. By 1219, the empire had fallen to the Mongols, led by Genghis Khan.
Mongol invasion[edit]
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Further information: Mongol invasion of Central Asia and
Mongol invasion of Khwarezmia
The Mongols resulted in massive destruction of several
cities, including Bamiyan, Herat, and Balkh, and the despoliation of fertile
agricultural areas. Large numbers of the inhabitants were also slaughtered.
Most major cities north of the Hindu Kush became part of the Mongol Empire. The
Afghan tribal areas south of the Hindu Kush were usually either allied with the
Khilji dynasty of northern India or independent.
Timurids[edit]
Main article: Timurid dynasty
Timur (Tamerlane), incorporated much of the area into his
own vast Timurid Empire. The city of Herat became one of the capitals of his
empire, and his grandson Pir Muhammad held the seat of Kandahar. Timur rebuilt
most of Afghanistan's infrastructure which was destroyed by his early ancestor.
The area was progressing under his rule. Timurid rule began declining in the
early 16th century with the rise of a new ruler in Kabul, Babur. Taimur, a
descendent of Genghis Khan, created a vast new empire across Russia and Persia
which he ruled from his capital in Samarkland in present-day Uzbekistan. Taimur
captured Herat in 1381 and his son, Shah Rudkh moved the capital of the Timurid
empire to Herat in 1405. The Timurks, a Turkic people, brought the Turkic
nomadic culture of Central Asia within the orbit of Persian civilisation,
establishing Herat as one of the most cultured and refined cities in the world.
This fusion of Central Asian and Persian culture was a major legacy for the
future Afghanistan. A century later, the emperor Babur, a descendent of Taimur,
visited Herat and wrote, "the whole habitable world had not such a town as
Herat." For the next 300 years the eastern Afghan tribes periodically
invaded India creating vast Indo-Afghan empires. In 1500 CE, Taimur's
descendent Babur was driven out of his home in the Ferghana valley. By the 16th
century western Afghanistan again revereted to Persian rule under the Safavid
dynasty.[45][46]
Modern era (1504–1973)[edit]
Mughals and Safavids[edit]
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Main articles: Mughal Empire and Khanate of Bukhara
A miniature from Padshahnama depicting the surrender of
the Shia Safavid garrison of Kandahar in 1638 to the Mughal army of Shah Jahan
commanded by Kilij Khan.
In 1504, Babur, a descendant of Timur, arrived from
present-day Uzbekistan and moved to the city of Kabul. He began exploring new
territories in the region, with Kabul serving as his military headquarters.
Instead of looking towards the powerful Safavids towards the west, Babur was
more focused on the Indian subcontinent, which included the region known as
Kabulistan. In 1526, he left with his army to capture the seat of the Delhi
Sultanate, which at that point was possessed by the Afghan Lodi dynasty of
India. After defeating Ibrahim Lodi and his army, Babur turned Delhi into the
capital of his newly established Mughal Empire.
From the 16th century to the 17th century CE, Afghanistan
was divided into three major areas. The north was ruled by the Khanate of
Bukhara, the west was under the rule of the Iranian Shia Safavids, and the
eastern section was under the Sunni Mughals of northern India. The Kandahar region
in the south served as a buffer zone between the Mughals and the Safavids, with
the native Afghans often switching support from one side to the other. Babur
explored a number of cities in the region before his campaign into India. In
the city of Kandahar his personal epigraphy can be found in the Chilzina rock
mountain.
Hotaki dynasty[edit]
Main article: Hotaki dynasty
Mirwais Hotak, seen as Afghanistan's George
Washington,[47] successfully obtained independence from Safavid Persia in 1709
and founded the Hotaki dynasty.
In 1704, the Safavid Shah Husayn appointed George XI
(Gurgīn Khān), a ruthless Georgian subject, to govern their easternmost
territories in the Greater Kandahar region. One of Gurgīn's main objectives was
to crush the rebellions started by native Afghans. Under his rule the revolts
were successfully suppressed and ruled Kandahar with uncomprising severity. He
began imprisoning and executing the native Afghans, especially those suspected
in having taken part in the rebellions. One of those arrested and imprisoned
was Mirwais Hotak who belonged to an influential family in Kandahar. Mirwais
was sent as a prisoner to the Persian court in Isfahan but the charges against
him were dismissed by the king, so he was sent back to his native land as a
free man.[47]
In April 1709, Mirwais along with his militia revolted
against Gurgīn and the heavily declining Safavids in Kandahar City. The
uprising began when Gurgīn and his escort were killed after a picnic and a
banquet that were prepared by Mirwais at his farmhouse outside the city.
"[48] Around four days later, an army of well-trained Georgian troops
arrived in the town after hearing of Gurgīn's death but Mirwais and his Afghan
forces successfully held off the town. From 1710 to 1713, the Afghan forces
defeated several large Persian armies that were dispatched from Isfahan by the
heavily declining Safavids, which included Qizilbash and Georgian/Circassian
troops.[49]
Several half-hearted attempts to subdue the rebellious
city having failed, the Persian Government despatched Khusraw Khán, nephew of
the late Gurgín Khán, with an army of 30,000 men to effect its subjugation, but
in spite of an initial success, which led the Afghans to offer to surrender on
terms, his uncompromising attitude impelled them to make a fresh desperate
effort, resulting in the complete defeat of the Persian army (of whom only some
700 escaped) and the death of their general. Two years later, in 1713, another
Persian army commanded by Rustam Khán was also defeated by the rebels, who thus
secured possession of the whole province of Qandahár.[50]
—Edward G. Browne, 1924
Modern-day sketch work of Mahmud Hotaki
Southern Afghanistan was made into an independent local
Pashtun kingdom.[14] Refusing the title of a king, Mirwais was called
"Prince of Qandahár and General of the national troops" by his Afghan
countrymen. He died of a natural cause in November 1715 and was succeeded by
his brother Abdul Aziz Hotak. Aziz was killed about two years later by Mirwais'
son Mahmud Hotaki, allegedly for planning to give Kandahar's sovereignty back
to Persia.[51] Mahmud led an Afghan army into Persia in 1722 and defeated the for
decades declining Safavids at the Battle of Gulnabad. The Afghans captured
Isfahan (Safavid capital) and Mahmud became briefly the new Persian Shah, known
after that as Shah Mahmud.
Soviet Tank |
Mahmud began a short-lived reign of terror against his
Persian subjects who defied his rule from the very start, and he was eventually
murdered in 1725 by his own cousin, Ashraf Hotaki. Some sources say he died of
madness. Ashraf became the new Afghan Shah of Persia soon after Mahmud's death,
while the home region of Afghanistan was ruled by Mahmud's younger brother Shah
Hussain Hotaki. Ashraf was able to secure peace, at highly unfavourable terms,
with the Ottoman Empire in 1727 winning against a superior Ottoman army, but
the Russian Empire took advantage of the continuing political unrest, civil
strife and utter disgust and disloyalty by the vast majority of people in the
empire, to seize former Persian territories for themselves, limiting the amount
of territory under Shah Mahmud's control.
The short lived Hotaki dynasty was a troubled and violent
one from the very start as internecine conflict made it difficult to establish
permanent control. The dynasty lived under great turmoil due to bloody
succession feuds that made their hold on power tenuous, and after the massacre of
thousands of civilians in Isfahan; including more than three thousand religious
scholars, nobles, and members of the Safavid family.[52] The vast majority of
the Persians rejected the Afghan regime as usurping from the very start.
Hotaki's rule continued in the region of Afghanistan until 1738 when Shah
Hussain was defeated and banished by Nader Shah of Persia.[53]
The Hotakis were eventually removed from power by 1729,
after a very short lived reign. They were defeated by the emerging Iranian
military commander Nader Shah, head of the Afsharids, in the October 1729
Battle of Damghan, also banishing the Hotaki's to southern Afghanistan. The
last ruler of the Hotaki dynasty, Shah Hussain, ruled southern Afghanistan
until 1738 when the Afsharids and the Abdali Pashtuns crushed him at
Kandahar.[53]
Durrani Empire[edit]
Main article: Durrani Empire
Nader Shah and his Afsharid Persian army arrived in the
town of Kandahar in 1738 and defeated Hussain Hotaki, subsequently absorbing
all of Afghanistan in his empire. Here, the young imprisoned teenager Ahmad
Khan joined his service in his invasion of India.
The greatest extent of the Durrani Empire in 1747 A.D.
Shah Shuja, the last Durrani King, sitting at his court
inside the Bala Hissar before it was destroyed by the British Army.
Nadir Shah was assassinated on June 19, 1747, by several
of his Persian officers, and the Asharid kingdom fell to pieces. At the same
time the 25-year-old Ahmad Khan was busy in Afghanistan calling for a loya
jirga ("grand assembly") to select a leader among his people. The
Afghans gathered near Kandahar in October 1747 and chose Ahmad Shah among the
challengers, making him their new head of state. After the inauguration or
coronation, he became known as Ahmad Shah Durrani. He adopted the title padshah
durr-i dawran ('King, "pearl of the age") and the Abdali tribe became
known as the Durrani tribe after this.[54] Ahmad Shah not only represented the
Durranis but he also united all the Pashtun tribes. By 1751, Ahmad Shah Durrani
and his Afghan army conquered the entire present-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, and
for a short time, the Khorasan and Kohistan provinces of Iran, along with Delhi
in India.[55] He defeated the Maratha Empire in 1761 at the Battle of Panipat.
In October 1772, Ahmad Shah retired to his home in
Kandahar where he died peacefully and was buried at a site that is now adjacent
to the Shrine of the Cloak. He was succeeded by his son, Timur Shah Durrani,
who transferred the capital of their Afghan Empire from Kandahar to Kabul.
Timur died in 1793 and his son Zaman Shah Durrani took over the reign.
Zaman Shah and his brothers had a weak hold on the legacy
left to them by their famous ancestor. They sorted out their differences
through a "round robin of expulsions, blindings and executions,"
which resulted in the deterioration of the Afghan hold over far-flung
territories, such as Attock and Kashmir. Durrani's other grandson, Shuja Shah
Durrani, fled the wrath of his brother and sought refuge with the Sikhs. Not
only had Durrani invaded the Punjab region many times, but had destroyed the
holiest shrine of the Sikhs – the Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar, defiling its
sarowar with the blood of cows and decapitating Baba Deep Singh in 1757. The
Sikhs, under Ranjit Singh, eventually wrested a large part of the Kingdom of
Kabul (present day Pakistan, but not including Sindh) from the Afghans.[56] In
1837, the Afghan army descended through the Khyber Pass on Sikh forces at
Jamrud.[57] The Sikhs were supported by the East India Company until they were
defeated later by the British forces during the First and Second Anglo-Sikh
Wars[citation needed].
Barakzai dynasty and British influence[edit]
Further information: European influence in Afghanistan
and Barakzai dynasty
King Yaqub Khan with Britain's Sir Pierre Louis Napoleon
Cavagnari on May 26, 1879, when the Treaty of Gandamak was signed.
Dost Mohammed Khan gained control in Kabul. Collision
between the expanding British and Russian Empires significantly influenced
Afghanistan during the 19th century in what was termed "The Great
Game". British concern over Russian advances in Central Asia and growing
influence in West Asia and Persia in particular culminated in two Anglo-Afghan
wars and "The Siege of Herat" 1837–1838, in which the Persians, trying
to retake Afghanistan and throw out the British, sent armies into the country
and fought the British mostly around and in the city of Herat. The first
Anglo-Afghan War (1839–1842) resulted in the destruction of a British army; it
is remembered as an example of the ferocity of Afghan resistance to foreign
rule. The Second Anglo-Afghan War (1878–1880) was sparked by Amir Shir Ali's
refusal to accept a British mission in Kabul. This conflict brought Amir Abdur
Rahman, known by some as the "Iron Amir", to the Afghan throne.
During his reign (1880–1901), the British and Russians officially established
the boundaries of what would become modern Afghanistan. The British retained
effective control over Kabul's foreign affairs. Abdur Rahman's reforms of the
army, legal system and structure of government were able to give Afghanistan a
degree of unity and stability which it had not before known. This, however,
came at the cost of strong centralisation, harsh punishments for crime and
corruption, and a certain degree of international isolation.[10]
Afghanistan remained neutral during World War I, despite
German encouragement of anti-British feelings and Afghan rebellion along the
borders of British India. The Afghan king's policy of neutrality was not
universally popular within the country, however.
Habibullah, Abdur Rahman's son and successor, was
assassinated in 1919, possibly by family members opposed to British influence.
His third son, Amanullah, regained control of Afghanistan's foreign policy
after launching the Third Anglo-Afghan war with an attack on India in the same
year. During the ensuing conflict, the war-weary British relinquished their
control over Afghan foreign affairs by signing the Treaty of Rawalpindi in
August 1920. In commemoration of this event, Afghans celebrate August 20 as their
Independence Day.
Reforms of Amanullah Khan and civil war[edit]
Main article: Reforms of Amanullah Khan and civil war
King Amanullah Khan
King Amanullah Khan moved to end his country's
traditional isolation in the years following the Third Anglo-Afghan war. He
established diplomatic relations with most major countries and, following a
1927 tour of Europe and Turkey (during which he noted the modernization and
secularization advanced by Atatürk), introduced several reforms intended to
modernize Afghanistan. A key force behind these reforms was Mahmud Tarzi,
Amanullah Khan's Foreign Minister and father-in-law — and an ardent supporter
of the education of women. He fought for Article 68 of Afghanistan's first
constitution (declared through a Loya Jirga), which made elementary education
compulsory.[58] Some of the reforms that were actually put in place, such as
the abolition of the traditional Muslim veil for women and the opening of a
number of co-educational schools, quickly alienated many tribal and religious
leaders. Faced with overwhelming armed opposition, Amanullah was forced to
abdicate in January 1929 after Kabul fell to forces led by Habibullah Kalakani.
Reigns of Nadir Khan and Zahir Khan[edit]
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Main article: Reigns of Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah
Mohammad Zahir Shah in 1963
Prince Mohammed Nadir Khan, cousin of Amanullah Khan, in
turn defeated and executed Habibullah Kalakani in early November 1929. He was
soon declared King Nadir Khan. He began consolidating power and regenerating
the country. He abandoned the reforms of Amanullah Khan in favour of a more
gradual approach to modernisation. In 1933, however, he was assassinated in a
revenge killing by a student from Kabul.
Mohammad Zahir Shah, Nadir Khan's 19-year-old son,
succeeded to the throne and reigned from 1933 to 1973. Until 1946 Zahir Shah
ruled with the assistance of his uncle Sardar Mohammad Hashim Khan, who held
the post of Prime Minister and continued the policies of Nadir Khan. In 1946,
another of Zahir Shah's uncles, Sardar Shah Mahmud Khan, became Prime Minister
and began an experiment allowing greater political freedom, but reversed the
policy when it went further than he expected. In 1953, he was replaced as Prime
Minister by Mohammed Daoud Khan, the king's cousin and brother-in-law. Daoud
looked for a closer relationship with the Soviet Union and a more distant one
towards Pakistan. However, disputes with Pakistan led to an economic crisis and
he was asked to resign in 1963. From 1963 until 1973, Zahir Shah took a more
active role.
In 1964, King Zahir Shah promulgated a liberal
constitution providing for a bicameral legislature to which the king appointed
one-third of the deputies. The people elected another third, and the remainder
were selected indirectly by provincial assemblies. Although Zahir's
"experiment in democracy" produced few lasting reforms, it permitted
the growth of unofficial extremist parties on both the left and the right. This
included the communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), which
had close ideological ties to the Soviet Union. In 1967, the PDPA split into
two major rival factions: the Khalq (Masses) was headed by Nur Muhammad Taraki
and Hafizullah Amin who were supported by elements within the military, and the
Parcham (Banner) led by Babrak Karmal.
Contemporary era (1973–present)[edit]
File:Afghanistan.ogv
1973 film about contemporary events in Afghanistan
Republic of Afghanistan and the end of monarchy[edit]
Main article: Republic of Afghanistan
Amid charges of corruption and malfeasance against the
royal family and poor economic conditions created by the severe 1971–72
drought, former Prime Minister Mohammad Sardar Daoud Khan seized power in a
non-violent coup on July 17, 1973, while Zahir Shah was receiving treatment for
eye problems and therapy for lumbago in Italy.[59] Daoud abolished the
monarchy, abrogated the 1964 constitution, and declared Afghanistan a republic
with himself as its first President and Prime Minister. His attempts to carry
out badly needed economic and social reforms met with little success, and the
new constitution promulgated in February 1977 failed to quell chronic political
instability.
As disillusionment set in, in 1978 a prominent member of
the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), Mir Akbar Khyber (or
"Kaibar"), was killed by the government. The leaders of PDPA
apparently feared that Daoud was planning to exterminate them all, especially
since most of them were arrested by the government shortly after. Nonetheless,
Hafizullah Amin and a number of military wing officers of the PDPA's Khalq
faction managed to remain at large and organize a military coup.
Democratic Republic and Soviet war[edit]
Main articles: History of Afghanistan (1978–1992),
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan,
Saur Revolution and Soviet war in Afghanistan
Outside the Presidential Palace in Kabul, a day after the
Marxist revolution on April 28, 1978.
The day after the Marxist revolution on April 28, 1978.
On 27 April 1978, the PDPA, led by Nur Mohammad Taraki,
Babrak Karmal and Amin Taha overthrew the government of Mohammad Daoud, who was
assassinated along with all his family members in a bloody military coup. The
coup became known as the Saur Revolution. On 1 May, Taraki became President,
Prime Minister and General Secretary of the PDPA. The country was then renamed
the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA), and the PDPA regime lasted, in
some form or another, until April 1992.
In March 1979, Hafizullah Amin took over as prime
minister, retaining the position of field marshal and becoming vice-president
of the Supreme Defence Council. Taraki remained President and in control of the
Army. On 14 September, Amin overthrew Taraki, who was killed. Amin stated that
"the Afghans recognize only crude force."[60] Afghanistan expert Amin
Saikal writes: "As his powers grew, so apparently did his craving for personal
dictatorship ... and his vision of the revolutionary process based on
terror."[60]
Once in power, the PDPA implemented a liberal and
Marxist-Leninist agenda. It moved to replace religious and traditional laws
with secular and Marxist-Leninist ones. Men were obliged to cut their beards,
women could not wear a chador, and mosques were placed off limits. The PDPA
made a number of reforms on women's rights, banning forced marriages, giving
state recognition of women's right to vote, and introducing women to political life.
A prominent example was Anahita Ratebzad, who was a major Marxist leader and a
member of the Revolutionary Council. Ratebzad wrote the famous New Kabul Times
editorial (May 28, 1978) which declared: "Privileges which women, by
right, must have are equal education, job security, health services, and free
time to rear a healthy generation for building the future of the country ...
Educating and enlightening women is now the subject of close government
attention." The PDPA also carried out socialist land reforms and moved to
promote state atheism.[61] They also prohibited usury[43] and took a number of
measures in favor of women's rights, by declaring equality of the sexes[43] and
introducing women to political life. The PDPA invited the Soviet Union to assist
in modernizing its economic infrastructure (predominantly its exploration and
mining of rare minerals and natural gas). The USSR also sent contractors to
build roads, hospitals and schools and to drill water wells; they also trained
and equipped the Afghan army. Upon the PDPA's ascension to power, and the
establishment of the DRA, the Soviet Union promised monetary aid amounting to
at least $1.262 billion.
At the same time, the PDPA imprisoned, tortured or
murdered thousands of members of the traditional elite, the religious
establishment, and the intelligentsia.[citation needed] The government launched
a campaign of violent repression, killing some 10,000 to 27,000 people and
imprisoning 14,000 to 20,000 more, mostly at Pul-e-Charkhi prison.[62][63][64]
In December 1978 the PDPA leadership signed an agreement with the Soviet Union
which would allow military support for the PDPA in Afghanistan if needed. The
majority of people in the cities including Kabul either welcomed or were
ambivalent to these policies. However, the Marxist-Leninist and secular nature
of the government as well as its heavy dependence on the Soviet Union made it
unpopular with a majority of the Afghan population. Repressions plunged large
parts of the country, especially the rural areas, into open revolt against the
new Marxist-Leninist government. By spring 1979 unrests had reached 24 out of
28 Afghan provinces including major urban areas. Over half of the Afghan army
would either desert or join the insurrection. Most of the government's new
policies clashed directly with the traditional Afghan understanding of Islam,
making religion one of the only forces capable of unifying the tribally and
ethnically divided population against the unpopular new government, and
ushering in the advent of Islamist participation in Afghan politics.[65]
Soviet troops (in right row) withdrawing from Afghanistan
in 1988. Afghan government BTR on the left.
In the wake of the Iranian Revolution, the US sought
rapprochement with the Afghan government—a prospect that the USSR found
unacceptable due to weakening Soviet leverage over the regime.[66] In February
1979, U.S. Ambassador Adolph "Spike" Dubs was murdered in Kabul after
Afghan security forces burst in on his kidnappers. The U.S. then reduced
bilateral assistance and terminated a small military training program.
To bolster the Parcham faction, the Soviet Union decided
to intervene on December 24, 1979, when the Red Army invaded its southern
neighbor. Over 100,000 Soviet troops took part in the invasion, which was
backed by another 100,000 Afghan military men and supporters of the Parcham
faction. In the meantime, Hafizullah Amin was killed and replaced by Babrak
Karmal.
All remaining US assistance agreements were ended after
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Following the Soviet invasion, the United
States supported diplomatic efforts to achieve a Soviet withdrawal. In
addition, generous U.S. contributions to the refugee program in Pakistan played
a major part in efforts to assist Afghan refugees.
In response to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, the
Carter administration and Reagan administration in the U.S. began arming the
Mujahideen, thanks in large part to the efforts of Charlie Wilson and CIA
officer Gust Avrakotos. Early reports estimated that $6–20 billion had been
spent by the U.S. and Saudi Arabia[67] but more recent reports state that the
U.S. and Saudi Arabia provided as much as up to $40 billion[68][69][70] in cash
and weapons, which included over two thousand FIM-92 Stinger surface-to-air
missiles, for building up Islamic groups against the Soviet Union. The U.S.
handled most of its support through Pakistan's ISI. Saudi Arabia was also
providing financial support.
The 10-year Soviet occupation resulted in the deaths of
between 850,000 and 1,500,000 Afghan civilians.[71][72] About 6 million fled as
Afghan refugees to Pakistan and Iran, and from there over 38,000 made it to the
United States[73] and many more to the European Union. Faced with mounting
international pressure and great number of casualties on both sides, the
Soviets withdrew in 1989. Their withdrawal from Afghanistan was seen as an
ideological victory in the United States, which had backed some Mujahideen
factions through three U.S. presidential administrations to counter Soviet
influence in the vicinity of the oil-rich Persian Gulf. The USSR continued to
support President Mohammad Najibullah (former head of the Afghan secret
service, KHAD) until 1992.[74]
Foreign interference and civil war[edit]
Main articles: Civil war in Afghanistan (1989-1992) and
Civil war in Afghanistan (1992-1996)
1992-1996
After the fall of the communist Najibullah-regime in
1992, the Afghan political parties agreed on a peace and power-sharing
agreement (the Peshawar Accords). The Peshawar Accords created the Islamic
State of Afghanistan and appointed an interim government for a transitional
period. According to Human Rights Watch:
The sovereignty of Afghanistan was vested formally in the
Islamic State of Afghanistan, an entity created in April 1992, after the fall
of the Soviet-backed Najibullah government. [...] With the exception of
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hezb-e Islami, all of the parties [...] were ostensibly
unified under this government in April 1992. [...] Hekmatyar's Hezb-e Islami,
for its part, refused to recognize the government for most of the period
discussed in this report and launched attacks against government forces and
Kabul generally. [...] Shells and rockets fell everywhere.[75]
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar was directed, funded and supplied by
the Pakistani army.[76] Afghanistan analyst Amin Saikal concludes in his book
Modern Afghanistan: A History of Struggle and Survival:
Pakistan was keen to gear up for a breakthrough in
Central Asia. [...] Islamabad could not possibly expect the new Islamic
government leaders [...] to subordinate their own nationalist objectives in
order to help Pakistan realize its regional ambitions. [...] Had it not been
for the ISI's logistic support and supply of a large number of rockets,
Hekmatyar's forces would not have been able to target and destroy half of
Kabul.[77]
There was no time for the interim government to create
working government departments, police units or a system of justice and
accountability. Saudi Arabia and Iran also armed and directed Afghan
militias.[60] A publication by the George Washington University describes:
[O]utside forces saw instability in Afghanistan as an
opportunity to press their own security and political agendas.[78]
According to Human Rights Watch, numerous Iranian agents
were assisting the Shia Hezb-i Wahdat forces of Abdul Ali Mazari, as Iran was
attempting to maximize Wahdat's military power and influence.[60][75][79] Saudi
Arabia was trying to strengthen the Wahhabite Abdul Rasul Sayyaf and his
Ittihad-i Islami faction.[60][75] Atrocities were committed by individuals of
the different factions while Kabul descended into lawlessness and chaos as
described in reports by Human Rights Watch and the Afghanistan Justice
Project.[75][80] Again, Human Rights Watch writes:
Rare ceasefires, usually negotiated by representatives of
Ahmad Shah Massoud, Sibghatullah Mojaddedi or Burhanuddin Rabbani (the interim
government), or officials from the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), commonly collapsed within days.[75]
The main forces involved during that period in Kabul,
northern, central and eastern Afghanistan were the Hezb-i Islami of Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar directed by Pakistan, the Hezb-i Wahdat of Abdul Ali Mazari directed
by Iran, the Ittehad-i Islami of Abdul Rasul Sayyaf supported by Saudi Arabia,
the Junbish-i Milli of Abdul Rashid Dostum backed by Uzbekisten, the Harakat-i
Islami of Hussain Anwari and the Shura-i Nazar operating as the regular Islamic
State forces (as agreed upon in the Peshawar Accords) under the defense
ministry of Ahmad Shah Massoud.
Meanwhile southern Afghanistan was neither under the
control of foreign-backed militias nor the interim government in Kabul, which
had no hands in the affairs of southern Afghanistan during that time. Southern
Afghanistan was ruled by Gul Agha Sherzai. The southern city of Kandahar was a
centre of lawlessness, crime and atrocities fuelled by complex Pashtun tribal
rivalries.[81] In 1994, the Taliban (a movement originating from Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-run
religious schools for Afghan refugees in Pakistan) also developed in
Afghanistan as a politico-religious force, reportedly in opposition to the
tyranny of the local governor.[81] Mullah Omar started his movement with fewer
than 50 armed madrassah students in his hometown of Kandahar.[81] As Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar remained unsuccessful in conquering Kabul, Pakistan started its
support to the Taliban.[60][82] Many analysts like Amin Saikal describe the
Taliban as developing into a proxy force for Pakistan's regional interests
which the Taliban decline.[60] In 1994 the Taliban took power in several
provinces in southern and central Afghanistan.
In 1995 the Hezb-i Islami of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the
Iranian-backed Hezb-i Wahdat as well as Rashid Dostum's Junbish forces were
defeated militarily in the capital Kabul by forces of the interim government
under Massoud who subsequently tried to initiate a nationwide political process
with the goal of national consolidation and democratic elections, also inviting
the Taliban to join the process.[83] The Taliban declined.[83]
Taliban and the United Front[edit]
1996-2001
Main articles: Taliban, Afghan Northern Alliance, Afghan
training camp and Civil war in Afghanistan (1996-2001)
Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf sent more
troops against the United Front of Ahmad Shah Massoud than the Afghan Taliban.
Map of the situation in Afghanistan in late 1996; Massoud
(red), Dostum (green) and Taliban (yellow) territories.
Map of the situation in Afghanistan in August 2001 until
October 2001
The Taliban started shelling Kabul in early 1995 but were
defeated by forces of the Islamic State government under Ahmad Shah
Massoud.[84] Amnesty International, referring to the Taliban offensive, wrote
in a 1995 report:
This is the first time in several months that Kabul
civilians have become the targets of rocket attacks and shelling aimed at
residential areas in the city.[84]
On September 26, 1996, as the Taliban, with military
support by Pakistan and financial support by Saudi Arabia, prepared for another
major offensive, Massoud ordered a full retreat from Kabul.[85] The Taliban
seized Kabul on September 27, 1996, and established the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan. They imposed on the parts of Afghanistan under their control their
political and judicial interpretation of Islam, issuing edicts forbidding women
from working outside the home, attending school or leaving their homes unless
accompanied by a male relative.[86] Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said:
To PHR's knowledge, no other regime in the world has
methodically and violently forced half of its population into virtual house
arrest, prohibiting them on pain of physical punishment.[86]
After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban on September 27,
1996,[87] Ahmad Shah Massoud and Abdul Rashid Dostum, two former nemesis,
created the United Front (Northern Alliance) against the Taliban, who were
preparing offensives against the remaining areas under the control of Massoud
and Dostum.[88] The United Front included beside the dominantly Tajik forces of
Massoud and the Uzbek forces of Dostum, Hazara factions and Pashtun forces
under the leadership of commanders such as Abdul Haq, Haji Abdul Qadir, Qari
Baba or diplomat Abdul Rahim Ghafoorzai. From the Taliban conquest in 1996
until November 2001 the United Front controlled roughly 30% of Afghanistan's
population in provinces such as Badakhshan, Kapisa, Takhar and parts of Parwan,
Kunar, Nuristan, Laghman, Samangan, Kunduz, Ghōr and Bamyan.
According to a 55-page report by the United Nations, the
Taliban, while trying to consolidate control over northern and western
Afghanistan, committed systematic massacres against civilians.[89][90] UN
officials stated that there had been "15 massacres" between 1996 and
2001.[89][90] They also said, that "[t]hese have been highly systematic
and they all lead back to the [Taliban] Ministry of Defense or to Mullah Omar
himself."[89][90] The Taliban especially targeted people of Shia religious
or Hazara ethnic background.[89][90] Upon taking Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998, about
4,000 civilians were executed by the Taliban and many more reported
tortured.[91][92] Among those killed in Mazari Sharif were several Iranian
diplomats. Others were kidnapped by the Taliban, touching off a hostage crisis
that nearly escalated to a full-scale war, with 150,000 Iranian soldiers massed
on the Afghan border at one time.[93] It was later admitted that the diplomats
were killed by the Taliban, and their bodies were returned to Iran.[94]
The documents also reveal the role of Arab and Pakistani
support troops in these killings.[89][90] Bin Laden's so-called 055 Brigade was
responsible for mass-killings of Afghan civilians.[95] The report by the United
Nations quotes eyewitnesses in many villages describing Arab fighters carrying
long knives used for slitting throats and skinning people.[89][90]
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf - then as Chief of
Army Staff - was responsible for sending thousands of Pakistanis to fight
alongside the Taliban and Bin Laden against the forces of
Massoud.[82][83][96][97] In total there were believed to be 28,000 Pakistani
nationals fighting inside Afghanistan.[83] 20,000 were regular Pakistani
soldiers either from the Frontier Corps or army and an estimated 8,000 were
militants recruited in madrassas filling regular Taliban ranks.[95] The
estimated 25,000 Taliban regular force thus comprised more than 8,000 Pakistani
nationals.[95] A 1998 document by the U.S. State Department confirms that
"20-40 percent of [regular] Taliban soldiers are Pakistani."[82] The
document further states that the parents of those Pakistani nationals
"know nothing regarding their child's military involvement with the
Taliban until their bodies are brought back to Pakistan."[82] A further
3,000 fighter of the regular Taliban army were Arab and Central Asian
militants.[95] From 1996 to 2001 the Al Qaeda of Osama Bin Laden and Ayman
al-Zawahiri became a state within the Taliban state.[98] Bin Laden sent Arab
recruits to join the fight against the United Front.[98][99] Of roughly 45,000
Pakistani, Taliban and Al Qaeda soldiers fighting against the forces of Massoud
only 14,000 were Afghan.[83][95]
According to Human Rights Watch in 1997 Taliban soldiers
were summarily executed in and around Mazar-i Sharif by Dostum's Junbish
forces.[100] Dostum was defeated by the Taliban in 1998 with the fall of
Mazar-i-Sharif. Massoud remained the only leader of the United Front in
Afghanistan.
In the areas under his control Ahmad Shah Massoud set up democratic
institutions and signed the Women's Rights Charter.[101] Human Rights Watch
cites no human rights crimes for the forces under direct control of Massoud for
the period from October 1996 until the assassination of Massoud in September
2001.[100] As a consequence many civilians fled to the area of Ahmad Shah
Massoud.[96][102] National Geographic concluded in its documentary "Inside
the Taliban":
The only thing standing in the way of future Taliban
massacres is Ahmad Shah Massoud."[96]
The Taliban repeatedly offered Massoud a position of
power to make him stop his resistance. Massoud declined for he did not fight to
obtain a position of power. He explained in one interview:
"The Taliban say: "Come and accept the post of
prime minister and be with us", and they would keep the highest office in
the country, the presidentship. But for what price?! The difference between us
concerns mainly our way of thinking about the very principles of the society
and the state. We can not accept their conditions of compromise, or else we
would have to give up the principles of modern democracy. We are fundamentally
against the system called "the Emirate of Afghanistan"."[103]
"There should be an Afghanistan where every Afghan
finds himself or herself happy. And I think that can only be assured by
democracy based on consensus."[104]
Massoud wanted to convince the Taliban to join a
political process leading towards democratic elections in a foreseeable
future.[103] His proposals for peace can be seen here: Proposal for Peace,
promoted by Commander Massoud. Massoud also stated:
"The Taliban are not a force to be considered
invincible. They are distanced from the people now. They are weaker than in the
past. There is only the assistance given by Pakistan, Osama bin Laden and other
extremist groups that keep the Taliban on their feet. With a halt to that
assistance, it is extremely difficult to survive."[104] In early 2001
Massoud employed a new strategy of local military pressure and global political
appeals.[105] Resentment was increasingly gathering against Taliban rule from
the bottom of Afghan society including the Pashtun areas.[105] Massoud
publicized their cause "popular consensus, general elections and
democracy" worldwide. At the same time he was very wary not to revive the
failed Kabul government of the early 1990s.[105] Already in 1999 he started the
training of police forces which he trained specifically to keep order and
protect the civilian population in case the United Front would be
successful.[83]
In early 2001 Massoud addressed the European Parliament
in Brussels asking the international community to provide humanitarian help to
the people of Afghanistan.[106] He stated that the Taliban and Al Qaeda had
introduced "a very wrong perception of Islam" and that without the
support of Pakistan the Taliban would not be able to sustain their military
campaign for up to a year.[106] On this visit to Europe he also warned that his
intelligence had gathered information about a large-scale attack on U.S. soil
being imminent.[107]
NATO presence and the Karzai administration[edit]
Further information: Presidency of Hamid Karzai, Taliban
insurgency, Operation Enduring Freedom and War in Afghanistan (2001–present)
Afghan President Hamid Karzai speaking before U.S.
Congress in June 2004
On 9 September 2001, Ahmad Shah Massoud was assassinated
by two Arab suicide attackers inside Afghanistan, and two days later about
3,000 people became victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United
States, when allegedly-U.S.A. backed Taliban suicide bombers high-jacked planes
and flew them into New York City skyscrapers. Then US President George W. Bush
accused Osama bin Laden and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed as the faces behind the
attacks. When the Taliban refused to hand over bin Laden to US authorities and
to disband al-Qaeda bases in Afghanistan, Operation Enduring Freedom was
launched in which teams of American and British special forces worked with
commanders of the United Front (Northern Alliance) against the Taliban.[108] At
the same time the US-led forces were bombing Taliban and al-Qaeda targets
everywhere inside Afghanistan with cruise missiles. These actions led to the
fall of Mazar-i-Sharif in the north followed by all the other cities, as the
Taliban and al-Qaeda crossed over the porous Durand Line border into Pakistan.
In December 2001, after the Taliban government was toppled and the new Afghan
government under Hamid Karzai was formed, the International Security Assistance
Force (ISAF) was established by the UN Security Council to help assist the
Karzai administration and provide basic security to the Afghan
people.[109][110]
Soldiers of the Afghan National Army in 2010, including
the ANA Commando Battalion standing in the front.
While the Taliban began regrouping inside Pakistan, more
coalition troops entered the escalating US-led war. Meanwhile, the rebuilding
of war-torn Afghanistan kicked off in 2002.[111][112] The Afghan nation was
able to build democratic structures over the years, and some progress was made
in key areas such as governance, economy, health, education, transport, and
agriculture. NATO is training the Afghan armed forces as well its national
police. ISAF and Afghan troops led many offensives against the Taliban but
failed to fully defeat them. By 2009, a Taliban-led shadow government began to
form in many parts of the country complete with their own version of mediation
court.[113] After U.S. President Barack Obama announced the deployment of
another 30,000 soldiers in 2010 for a period of two years, Der Spiegel
published images of the US soldiers who killed unarmed Afghan civilians.[114]
In FY 2009, the United States resettled just 328 refugees
from Afghanistan.[115] By contrast, the U.S. admitted more than 100,000
Vietnamese refugees for resettlement during the Vietnam War.[116] On the other
hand, over five million Afghan refugees were repatriated in the last decade,
including many who were forcefully deported from NATO countries.[117][118] This
large return of Afghans may have helped the nation's economy but the country
still remains one of the poorest in the world due to the decades of war, lack
of foreign investment, ongoing government corruption and the Pakistani-backed
Taliban insurgency.[119][120] The United States also accuses neighboring Iran
of providing small level of support to the Taliban insurgents.[121][122][123]
According to a report by the United Nations, the Taliban and other militants
were responsible for 76% of civilian casualties in 2009,[124] 75% in 2010[125]
and 80% in 2011.[126]
NATO's military terminal at Kabul International Airport
In October 2008 U.S. Defense Secretary Gates had asserted
that a political settlement with the Taliban was the endgame for the Afghanistan
war. "There has to be ultimately – and I'll underscore ultimately –
reconciliation as part of a political outcome to this," Gates stated.[127]
By 2010 peace efforts began. In early January, Taliban commanders held secret
exploratory talks with a United Nations special envoy to discuss peace terms.
Regional commanders on the Taliban's leadership council, the Quetta Shura,
sought a meeting with the UN special representative in Afghanistan, Kai Eide,
and it took place in Dubai on January 8. It was the first such meeting between
the UN and senior members of the Taliban.[128] On 26 January 2010, at a major
conference in London which brought together some 70 countries and
organizations,[129] Afghan President Hamid Karzai said he intends to reach out
to the Taliban leadership (including Mullah Omar, Sirajuddin Haqqani and
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar). Supported by NATO, Karzai called on the group's
leadership to take part in a loya jirga meeting to initiate peace talks. These
steps have resulted in an intensification of bombings, assassinations and
ambushes.[130] Some Afghan groups (including the former intelligence chief
Amrullah Saleh and opposition leader Dr. Abdullah Abdullah) believe that Karzai
plans to appease the insurgents' senior leadership at the cost of the
democratic constitution, the democratic process and progress in the field of
human rights especially women's rights.[131] Dr. Abdullah stated:
"I should say that Taliban are not fighting in order
to be accommodated. They are fighting in order to bring the state down. So it's
a futile exercise, and it's just misleading. ... There are groups that will
fight to the death. Whether we like to talk to them or we don't like to talk to
them, they will continue to fight. So, for them, I don't think that we have a
way forward with talks or negotiations or contacts or anything as such. Then we
have to be prepared to tackle and deal with them militarily. In terms of the
Taliban on the ground, there are lots of possibilities and opportunities that
with the help of the people in different parts of the country, we can attract
them to the peace process; provided, we create a favorable environment on this
side of the line. At the moment, the people are leaving support for the
government because of corruption. So that expectation is also not realistic at
this stage."[132]
From left to right: Abdullah Abdullah, John Kerry and
Ashraf Ghani during the 2014 Afghan presidential election
Afghan President Hamid Karzai told world leaders during
the London conference that he intends to reach out to the top echelons of the
Taliban within a few weeks with a peace initiative.[133] Karzai set the
framework for dialogue with Taliban leaders when he called on the group's
leadership to take part in a "loya jirga" – or large assembly of elders
– to initiate peace talks.[134] Karzai also asked for creation of a new
peacemaking organization, to be called the National Council for Peace,
Reconciliation and Reintegration.[133] Karzai's top adviser on the
reconciliation process with the insurgents said that the country must learn to
forgive the Taliban.[135] In March 2010, the Karzai government held preliminary
talks with Hezb-i-Islami, who presented a plan which included the withdrawal of
all foreign troops by the end of 2010. The Taliban declined to participate,
saying "The Islamic Emirate has a clear position. We have said this many,
many times. There will be no talks when there are foreign troops on
Afghanistan's soil killing innocent Afghans on daily basis."[136] In June
2010 the Afghan Peace Jirga 2010 took place. In September 2010 General David
Petraeus commented on the progress of peace talks to date, stating, "The
prospect for reconciliation with senior Taliban leaders certainly looms out
there...and there have been approaches at (a) very senior level that hold some
promise."[137]
After the May 2011 death of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan,
many prominent Afghan figures began being assassinated, including Mohammed Daud
Daud, Ahmad Wali Karzai, Jan Mohammad Khan, Ghulam Haider Hamidi, Burhanuddin
Rabbani and others.[138] Also in the same year, the Pakistani-Afghan border
skirmishes intensified and many large scale attacks by the Pakistani-based
Haqqani network took place across Afghanistan. This led to the United States
warning Pakistan of a possible military action against the Haqqanis in the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas.[139] The U.S. blamed Pakistan's
government, mainly Pakistani Army and its ISI spy network as the masterminds
behind all of this.[140]
"In choosing to use violent extremism as an
instrument of policy, the government of Pakistan, and most especially the
Pakistani army and ISI, jeopardizes not only the prospect of our strategic
partnership but Pakistan's opportunity to be a respected nation with legitimate
regional influence. They may believe that by using these proxies, they are
hedging their bets or redressing what they feel is an imbalance in regional
power. But in reality, they have already lost that bet."[141]
—Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff
U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Cameron Munter, told Radio
Pakistan that "The attack that took place in Kabul a few days ago, that
was the work of the Haqqani network. There is evidence linking the Haqqani
Network to the Pakistan government. This is something that must
stop."[142] Other top U.S. officials such as Hillary Clinton and Leon
Panetta made similar statements.[140][143] On October 16, 2011, "Operation
Knife Edge" was launched by NATO and Afghan forces against the Haqqani
network in south-eastern Afghanistan. Afghan Defense Minister, Abdul Rahim
Wardak, explained that the operation will "help eliminate the insurgents
before they struck in areas along the troubled frontier".[144] In November
2011, NATO forces killed 24 Pakistani Army soldiers around the border region
with Pakistan.
Invasions of Afghanistan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2009)
See also: History of Afghanistan
Afghanistan is a mountainous country landlocked country
in Central Asia and South Asia.[1][2] The Afghanistan area has been invaded
many times in recorded history. Some of these invaders in the history of
Afghanistan include Indians, Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Timur, the
Mughal Empire, various Persian Empires, the British Empire, Sikh Empire, the
Soviet Union, and currently a coalition force of NATO troops, the majority of
which are from the United States, following the US-led invasion which began on
October 7, 2001, Operation Enduring Freedom.
From a geopolitical sense, controlling Afghanistan is
vital in controlling the rest of Southern Asia, or getting a passage through
Central Asia, reflecting its geographic position in the region. Afghanistan
played an important part in the Great Game power struggles. Historically, the
conquest of Afghanistan has also played an important role in the invasion of
India from the west through the Khyber Pass.
History[edit]
Early invasions[edit]
The Medes and the Persians subsequently invaded much of
Afghanistan. With the Medes conquering parts of what is now Afghanistan, their
successors, the Persians managed to put their rule over all of Afghanistan and
beyond, as part of the easternmost territories of their vast empire. The first
historically documented invasion of the Afghanistan region was by Alexander the
Great in 330 BC as part of his string of conquests following his wars against
Persia. Among the cities conquered were nowadays Herat and Kandahar. Soon after
his death, the area was conquered by and incorporated into the expanding Indian
Mauryan Empire. Later conquests and rulers of Afghanistan included the
Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, and Indo-Greek Kingdom. In the next few centuries the
territory of Afghanistan was ruled as the easternmost territories of a new
Persian Empire, the Sassanid Empire, or by their vassals, the Indo-Sassanids.
In the seventh to ninth centuries, following the
disintegration of the Sassanid Persian and Roman Empire, leaders in the world
theatre for the last four centuries and arch rivals, the area was again invaded
from the west in the Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, resulting in the
conversion of most of its inhabitants to Islam. This was one of many Muslim
conquests following the establishment of a unified state in the Arabian
Peninsula by the prophet Muhammad. At its height, Muslim control - during the
period of the Arab Caliphate - extended from the borders of China to the
Iberian Peninsula (modern day Spain and Portugal), the Middle East, North
Africa, parts of southern Europe, parts of south East Europe, parts of central
Asia, and parts of South Asia (South Asia is: Afghanistan, Pakistan &
India).
In the Mongol invasion of Khwarezmia (1219—1221), Genghis
Khan invaded the region from the northeast in one of his many conquests to
create the huge Mongol Empire. Unlike earlier campaigns in Mongolia and China,
Genghis Khan's armies completely destroyed Khwarazmia and brutally killed vast
numbers of its civilians.
From 1383 to 1385, the Afghanistan area was conquered
from the north by Timur, leader of neighboring Transoxiana (roughly modern-day
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and adjacent areas), and became a part of the Timurid
Empire. Timur was from a Turko-Mongol tribe and although a Muslim, saw himself
more as an heir of Genghis Khan. Timur's armies caused great devastation and
are estimated to have caused the deaths of 17 million people. In the next
period, many of the Eastern and Southern parts of Afghanistan came under rule
of various dynasties based in other parts of South Asia, such as by the Delhi
Sultanate. After the slow disintegration of the Timurid Empire in 1506, the
Mughal Empire was later established in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India by
Babur in 1526, who was a descendant of Timur through his father and possibly a
descendant of Genghis Khan through his mother. By the 17th century, the Mughal
Empire ruled most of India, but later declined during the 18th century.
British invasions[edit]
During the nineteenth century, Afghanistan was invaded
twice from British India, during the First Anglo-Afghan War of 1838–1842 and
again in the Second Anglo-Afghan War of 1878–1880, both times with the
intention of limiting Russian influence in the country and quelling local
tribal leaders. For the entire period, tribal cross-border warfare was
constant, and parts of the Pashtun homeland were annexed to British India and
referred to as the North-West Frontier Province. The country was also invaded
by the United Kingdom in 1919, in the Third Anglo-Afghan War.
Soviet intervention[edit]
Soviet troops withdrawing from Afghanistan in 1988.
Main article: Soviet war in Afghanistan
The Soviet Union, along with other countries, was a
direct supporter of the new Afghan government after the Saur Revolution in
1978. However, Soviet-style reforms introduced by the government such as
changes in marriage customs and land reform were not received well by a
population deeply immersed in tradition and Islam. By 1979, fighting between
the Afghan government and various other factions within the country, some of
which were supported by the United States and other countries, led to a virtual
civil war. The Afghan government requested increasing Soviet military support
and eventually direct military involvement. Soviet General Secretary Leonid
Brezhnev sent the 40th Army into Afghanistan on December 24, 1979. This event
led to the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow by the United States
and other countries, and kick-started U.S. funding for Islamic Mujahideen
groups who opposed the Afghan government and the Soviet military presence. The
local Mujahideen, along with fighters from several different Arab nations
(Pathan tribes from Pakistan also participated in the war; they were supported
by ISI), eventually succeeded in forcing the Soviet Union out. This was a
factor in the dissolution of Soviet communism, because it led to protests
(similar to American Vietnam War protests) in the Soviet Union.[3] Eventually,
in-fighting within the Mujahideen led to the rise of warlords in Afghanistan,
and from them emerged the Taliban.[4]
Invasion by the United States and allies[edit]
U.S. Army soldiers prepare a Humvee to be sling-loaded by
a CH-47 Chinook helicopter in Bagram on July 24, 2004.
Main articles: Operation Enduring Freedom and War in
Afghanistan (2001–present)
On October 7, 2001 the United States, supported by some
NATO countries including the United Kingdom and Australia, as well as other
allies, began an invasion of Afghanistan under Operation Enduring Freedom. The
invasion was launched to capture Osama bin Laden, who was accused of the
September 11, 2001 attacks. The US military forces did not capture him, though
they toppled the Taliban government and disrupted bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network.
The Taliban government had given shelter to Bin Laden. On May 2, 2011, bin
Laden was shot and killed by United States Armed Forces in Pakistan. The
Taliban leadership survives in hiding throughout Afghanistan, largely in the
southeast, and continues to launch guerrilla attacks against forces of the
United States, its allies, and the current government of President Hamid
Karzai.
In 2006, the US forces turned over security of the
country to NATO-deployed forces in the region, integrating 12,000 of their
20,000 soldiers with NATO's 20,000. The remainder of the US forces continued to
search for Al-Qaeda militants. The Canadian military assumed leadership and
almost immediately began an offensive against areas where the Taliban
guerrillas had encroached. At the cost of a few dozen of their own soldiers,
the British, American, and Canadian Forces managed to kill over 1,000 alleged
Taliban insurgents and sent thousands more into retreat. Many of the surviving
insurgents, however, began to regroup and further clashes are expected by both
NATO and Afghan National Army commanders. (Continoe)nt government of President Hamid
Karzai.
In 2006, the US forces turned over security of the
country to NATO-deployed forces in the region, integrating 12,000 of their
20,000 soldiers with NATO's 20,000. The remainder of the US forces continued to
search for Al-Qaeda militants. The Canadian military assumed leadership and
almost immediately began an offensive against areas where the Taliban
guerrillas had encroached. At the cost of a few dozen of their own soldiers,
the British, American, and Canadian Forces managed to kill over 1,000 alleged
Taliban insurgents and sent thousands more into retreat. Many of the surviving
insurgents, however, began to regroup and further clashes are expected by both
NATO and Afghan National Army commanders. (Continoe)
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