History of Afghanistan
Main events in Afghanistan since the Soviet exit
AFP, Feb.12, 1999
On February 15, 1989: The Soviet Union pulled its last troops out of Afghanistan, ending a 10-year occupation and signalling that an end to the Cold War was in sight.
Feb 15, 1989: The last Red Army soldier leaves Afghanistan. Officially some 15,000 Soviet soldiers died. Unofficial estimates say many more died.
Spring 1989: The pro-Moscow government of Mohammad Najibullah continues to battle United States and Pakistan-sponsored Mujahedeen forces. Mujahedeen repulsed after staging coordinated attacks in Jalalabad.
March 1990: Najibullah, who many predicted would fall within days after the Soviet withdrawal, foils coup attempt.
Feb 1992: Moscow backing for Najibullah ends as the Soviet Union breaks up.
April 28, 1992: Najibullah resigns and takes refuge in a UN compound. Sibghatullah Mujaddedi forms government with his interim term fixed at two months under the Peshawar agreement. Factional in-fighting claims some 60,000 civilian lives over the next two years.
May 1992: Burhanuddin Rabbani succeeds Mujaddedi as president for six months. However, factionalism sees him remain as president amid cries of foul play.
Jan 1, 1994: General Abdul Rashid Dostam ends alliance with defence minister Ahmad Shah Masood and stages bloody coup in league with Masood's rival Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. Coup fails.
Oct 12, 1994: The hardline Islamic Taliban militia emerge and seize the southern city of Kandahar vowing to oust the Mujahedeen and introduce pure Islamic rule.
Sept 5, 1995: Taliban take the strategic western Herat province, on the Iranian border.
June 1996: Taliban capture Hekmatyar bases in the south forcing the ethnic Pashtun to join the government of Rabbani, who he once opposed, as prime minister.
Sept 11, 1996: Taliban take the eastern city of Jalalabad. Laghman province soon falls to the militia.
Sept 25, 1996: Taliban overrun Sarobi district outside Kabul. They close in on disunited government soldiers in Kabul.
Sept 26, 1996: Masood pulls out of Kabul.
Sept 27, 1996: Taliban take Kabul. Najibullah is dragged from UN compound and hanged alongside his brother. Islamic Sharia law imposed. Girls' schools are closed, women's access to health restricted.
May 23, 1997: Combined Taliban and Malik forces overrun Jauzjan, Sari Pul, Mazar-i-Sharif and surrounding provinces. Dostam flees to Turkey.
May 24, 1997: Pakistan recognizes the Taliban. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates follow suit.
Feb 1998: A massive earthquake hits northeastern province of Takhar, killing at least 4,000 people.
June 1998: Another earthquake hits northeast provinces of Badakhshan and Takhar, this time killing at least 4,500 villagers.
July 12, 1998: Taliban capture Faryab.
July 22, 1998: Non-governmental aid organisations begin leaving Kabul after defying a Taliban order to relocate their offices to a dilapidated polytechnic compound on the outskirts of town.
Aug 2, 1998: Taliban capture Sheberghan. Close in on Mazar-i-Sharif as the UN Secuity Council calls for a ceasefire.
Aug 8, 1998: Taliban take Mazar-i-Sharif. Eleven Iranian diplomats and a correspondent are killed, pushing both countries to the verge of war. International human rights groups say the Taliban soldiers massacred between 4,000 and 8,000 ethnic Hazaras in Mazar-i-Sharif.
Aug 20, 1998: The US launches a Tomahawk missile strike on suspected terrorist bases in the southern province of Khost, allegedly run by Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden. Italian UN observer Colonel Carmine Calo is shot dead in Kabul by protestors. UN evacuates most expatriates.
Sept 1998: Reacting to the murder of its diplomats, Iran starts military manoevres close to the Afghan border.
Sept 13, 1998: Taliban seize central Bamyan province, stronghold of the Shia and ethnic Hazaras from the pro-Iranian Hezb-i-Wahdat party.
Feb 4, 1999: UN makes first official visit to Kabul since evacuation amid speculation the world body could return by March.
Timeline: Afghanistan
BBC, Jan.17, 2002
A chronology of key events:
1919 - Afghanistan regains independence after third war against British forces trying to bring country under their sphere of influence.
1926 - Amanullah proclaims himself king and attempts to introduce social reforms leading to opposition from conservative forces.
1929 - Amanullah flees after civil unrest over his reforms.
1933 - Zahir Shah becomes king and Afghanistan remains a monarchy for next four decades.
1953 - General Mohammed Daud becomes prime minister. Turns to Soviet Union for economic and military assistance. Introduces a number of social reforms, such as abolition of purdah (practice of secluding women from public view).
1963 - Mohammed Daud forced to resign as prime minister.
1964 - Constitutional monarchy introduced - but leads to political polarisation and power struggles.
1973 - Mohammed Daud seizes power in a coup and declares a republic. Tries to play off USSR against Western powers. His style alienates left-wing factions who join forces against him.
1978 - General Daud is overthrown and killed in a coup by leftist People's Democratic Party. But party's Khalq and Parcham factions fall out, leading to purging or exile of most Parcham leaders. At the same time, conservative Islamic and ethnic leaders who objected to social changes begin armed revolt in countryside.
1979 - Power struggle between leftist leaders Hafizullah Amin and Nur Mohammed Taraki in Kabul won by Amin. Revolts in countryside continue and Afghan army faces collapse. Soviet Union finally sends in troops to help remove Amin, who is executed.
Soviet intervention
1980 - Babrak Karmal, leader of the People's Democratic Party Parcham faction, is installed as ruler, backed by Soviet troops. But anti-regime resistance intensifies with various mujahedin groups fighting Soviet forces. US, Pakistan, China, Iran and Saudi Arabia supply money and arms.
1985 - Mujahedin come together in Pakistan to form alliance against Soviet forces. Half of Afghan population now estimated to be displaced by war, with many fleeing to neighbouring Iran or Pakistan. New Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev says he will withdraw troops from Afghanistan.
1986 - US begins supplying mujahedin with Stinger missiles, enabling them to shoot down Soviet helicopter gunships. Babrak Karmal replaced by Najibullah as head of Soviet-backed regime.
1988 - Afghanistan, USSR, the US and Pakistan sign peace accords and Soviet Union begins pulling out troops.
1989 - Last Soviet troops leave, but civil war continues as mujahedin push to overthrow Najibullah.
1991 - US and USSR agree to end military aid to both sides.
Mujahedin triumph
1992 - Resistance closes in on Kabul and Najibullah falls from power. Rival militias vie for influence.
Factional contests continued for some years
1993 - Mujahedin factions agree on formation of a government with ethnic Tajik, Burhanuddin Rabbani, proclaimed president.
1994 - Factional contests continue and the Pashtun-dominated Taleban emerge as major challenge to the Rabbani government.
1996 - Taleban seize control of Kabul and introduce hardline version of Islam, banning women from work, and introducing Islamic punishments, which include stoning to death and amputations. Rabbani flees to join anti-Taleban northern alliance.
Taleban under pressure
1997 - Taleban recognised as legitimate rulers by Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Most other countries continue to regard Rabbani as head of state. Taleban now control about two-thirds of country.
1998 - Earthquakes kill thousands of people. US launches missile strikes at suspected bases of militant Osama bin Laden, accused of bombing US embassies in Africa.
1999 - UN imposes an air embargo and financial sanctions to force Afghanistan to hand over Osama bin Laden for trial.
2001 January - UN imposes further sanctions on Taleban to force them to hand over Osama bin Laden.
2001 March - Taleban blow up giant Buddha statues in defiance of international efforts to save them.
2001 April - Mullah Mohammad Rabbani, the second most powerful Taleban leader after the supreme commander, Mullah Mohammad Omar, dies of liver cancer.
2001 May - Taleban order religious minorities to wear tags identifying themselves as non-Muslims, and Hindu women to veil themselves like other Afghan women.
2001 September - Eight foreign aid workers on trial in the Supreme Court for promoting Christianity. This follows months of tension between Taleban and aid agencies.
2001 - Ahmad Shah Masood, legendary guerrilla and leader of the main opposition to the Taleban, is killed, apparently by assassins posing as journalists.
2001 October - USA, Britain launch air strikes against Afghanistan after Taleban refuse to hand over Osama bin Laden, held responsible for the September 11 attacks on America.
2001 November - Opposition forces seize Mazar-e Sharif and within days march into Kabul and other key cities.
2001 5 December - Afghan groups agree deal in Bonn for interim government.
2001 7 December - Taleban finally give up last stronghold of Kandahar, but Mullah Omar remains at large.
2001 22 December - Pashtun royalist Hamid Karzai is sworn in as head of a 30-member interim power-sharing government.
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