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United States invasion of Afghanistan

In late 2001, the United States and its close allies invaded Afghanistan and toppled the Taliban government. The invasion's aims were to dismantle al-Qaeda, which had executed the September 11 attacks, and to deny it a safe base of operations in Afghanistan by removing the Taliban government from power. The United Kingdom was a key ally of the United States, offering support for military action from the start of invasion preparations. The invasion came after the Afghan Civil War's 1996–2001 phase between the Taliban and the Northern Alliance groups, resulting in the Taliban controlling 80% of the country by 2001. The invasion became the first phase of the 20-year-long War in Afghanistan and marked the beginning of the American-led War on Terror.

United States invasion of Afghanistan
Part of War in Afghanistan and the War on terror

Map of the main operations of the United States special forces from October 2001 to March 2002.
DateOctober 7 – December 17, 2001
2 months, 1 week and 3 days
Location
Result

Coalition victory

Belligerents
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Canada
 Australia
Northern Alliance

 Afghanistan
Al-Qaeda

Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
East Turkistan Islamic Party
Tanzeem-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi
Commanders and leaders
George W. Bush
Tony Blair
Jean Chrétien
John Howard
Burhanuddin Rabbani
Mohammed Omar
Osama bin Laden
Mohammed Atef 
Strength
Casualties and losses
1,537 to 2,375 Afghan civilians killed[8]

After the September 11 attacks, US President George W. Bush demanded that the Taliban hand over Osama bin Laden and expel al-Qaeda; bin Laden had already been wanted by the FBI since 1998. The Taliban declined to extradite him and ignored demands to shut down terrorist bases or extradite other suspected terrorists. The US launched Operation Enduring Freedom on October 7, 2001, with the United Kingdom. The two were later joined by other forces, including the Northern Alliance. The US and its allies rapidly drove the Taliban from power by December 17, 2001, and built military bases near major cities across the country. Most al-Qaeda and Taliban members were not captured, but escaped to neighboring Pakistan or retreated to rural or remote mountainous regions during the Battle of Tora Bora.

In December 2001, the United Nations Security Council established the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) to oversee military operations in the country and train the Afghan National Security Forces. At the Bonn Conference in December 2001, Hamid Karzai was selected to head the Afghan Interim Administration. Taliban leader Mullah Omar reorganized the movement, and in 2002 it launched an insurgency against the government and ISAF. In 2021, while international forces were withdrawing from the country after nearly 20 years of conflict, the Taliban succeeded in overthrowing the Afghan government and re-establishing their rule across much of Afghanistan.

Background

In 2001, Afghanistan had been at war for over 20 years.[9] The communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) seized power in 1978, and its policies sparked a popular uprising.[10] The Soviet Union, sensing PDPA weakness, intervened in 1979 to support the regime.[11] The entry of the Soviet Union into Afghanistan prompted its Cold War rivals, especially the United States and Saudi Arabia, to support rebels fighting against the Soviet-backed PDPA.[12] While the secular and socialist government controlled the cities, religiously motivated[13] mujahideen held sway in much of the countryside.[14] The most important mujahideen commander was Ahmad Shah Massoud, who led the well-organized Tajik forces.[15] The American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) worked closely with Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) to funnel foreign support for the mujahideen.[16] The war also attracted Arab volunteers, known as "Afghan Arabs",[17] including Osama bin Laden.[18]

 
Soviet troops in 1986 during the Soviet–Afghan War

After the withdrawal of the Soviet military from Afghanistan in February 1989, the PDPA regime collapsed in 1992.[11] In the resulting power vacuum, the mujahideen leaders vied for dominance in a civil war from 1992 to 1996. By then, bin Laden had left the country.[18] The United States' interest in Afghanistan also diminished.[19] In 1994, a Pashtun mujahid named Mullah Omar founded the Taliban movement in Kandahar.[20] His followers were religious students and sought to end warlord rule through strict adherence to Islamic law.[20] By the end of 1994, the Taliban had captured all of Kandahar Province.[21]

Taliban Emirate vs. Northern Alliance (1996–2001)

 
Taliban (red) and Northern Alliance (blue) control over Afghanistan in 2000

In 1996, with military support from Pakistan and financial support from Saudi Arabia, the Taliban seized Kabul and founded the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.[22] They imposed their fundamentalist interpretation of Islam in areas under their control, issuing edicts forbidding women to work outside the home or attend school and requiring them to abide by harsh rules on veiling and seclusion.[23]

After the Taliban takeover of Kabul, Massoud retreated north to his native Panjshir Valley and formed a resistance movement against the Taliban, called the United Front or the Northern Alliance.[24] In addition to Massoud's Tajik force, the United Front included Uzbeks under the former PDPA general Abdul Rashid Dostum and Hazara factions.[a] The Northern Alliance received varying degrees of support from Russia, Iran, and India.[25] Like the Taliban,[26] Massoud also raised money by trafficking drugs.[27] By 2001, the Taliban controlled 80% of the country, with the Northern Alliance confined to the country's northeast corner.[28]

Al-Qaeda

After nearly five years of shelter, bin Laden was expelled from Sudan in 1996 and arrived in Jalalabad, Afghanistan.[29] He had founded al-Qaeda in the late 1980s to continue jihad after the end of the Soviet–Afghan War.[30] He moved al-Qaeda's operations to eastern Afghanistan and developed a close relationship with the Taliban.[31] In 2000, however, Mullah Omar visited bin Laden and forbade him from attacking the United States while he was a guest of the Taliban.[32] During the 1990s the CIA and Delta Force[33] planned several operations to kill or capture bin Laden, but President Bill Clinton never ordered them to proceed.[34]

Change in US policy toward Afghanistan

During the early years of the Clinton administration, the US had no clear policy toward Afghanistan.[35] The 1998 US embassy bombings, however, masterminded by al-Qaeda, provoked President Clinton to order missile strikes on militant training camps in Afghanistan;[36] bin Laden was indicted for his involvement in the bombings. In 1999 both the US and the United Nations enacted sanctions against the Taliban in United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267, which demanded the Taliban surrender bin Laden for trial in the US and close all terrorist bases in Afghanistan.[37] At the time, the only collaboration between Massoud and the US was an effort with the CIA to trace bin Laden.[38] The US provided no support for Massoud's fight against the Taliban.[39]

A change in US policy was effected in early September 2001.[40] The Bush administration agreed on a plan to start supporting Massoud. A September 10 meeting of top national security officials agreed that the Taliban would be presented with an ultimatum to hand over bin Laden and other al-Qaeda operatives. If the Taliban refused, the US would provide covert military aid to anti-Taliban groups to attempt to overthrow the Taliban.[41]

Military situation on the eve of 9/11

On September 9, 2001, two al-Qaeda members posing as journalists killed Massoud by detonating a bomb hidden in their video camera during an interview.[42] The assassination was a gift from bin Laden to the Taliban and left them poised to achieve total control over Afghanistan.[43] Mohammed Fahim became the new leader of the Northern Alliance.[44] The Alliance had 15,000–20,000 fighters distributed across five locations.[4] On the Kabul front, Taliban and Northern Alliance forces faced each other from trenches across the Shomali Plain.[4] The Takhar front extended from the Tajikistan border in the north to Parwan in the south, near Kabul. Dostum's forces were located south of Mazar-i-Sharif, the Hazaras under Muhammad Mohaqiq were in the central Hazarajat region,[45] and Ismail Khan was near Herat.[46]

The Taliban's military commander in the north was Mohammad Fazl.[47] The Taliban military comprised approximately 45,000 Afghans and 2,700 foreign fighters,[4] which included al-Qaeda's 055 Brigade.[48] According to military analyst Ali Jalali, the 055 Brigade was only 400–600 strong, but its ties to bin Laden made it politically important.[48] The foreign fighters included Arabs as well as Kashmiris, Chechens, Uzbeks, and Uyghurs.[48] Several hundred officers from Pakistan's ISI were stationed in Afghanistan advising the Taliban.[47] By mid-October, approximately 10,000 Pakistani volunteers crossed the border to augment the Taliban's forces.[49] The volunteers were mostly madrasa students, some as young as 14.[48]

Both sides primarily used Russian military equipment. The Northern Alliance had 14.5mm heavy machine guns, Russian artillery, T-72 tanks,[50] and BMP-1 armored vehicles retrofitted with rocket pods from Soviet combat helicopters.[51] Dostum's Uzbeks used horses for transportation.[47] The Northern Alliance had 18 helicopters and three fixed-wing planes, used mostly for logistical purposes.[26] The Taliban's equipment was similar to that of the Northern Alliance, and they also had Stinger missiles donated by the United States to the mujahideen during the Soviet–Afghan War.[52] They relied on pickup trucks for mobility and operated as a "motorized light force."[53] They had about 40 combat aircraft, operated by ex-PDPA pilots.[54]

Both sides had a history of human rights abuses: Uzbeks and Hazaras had "massacred hundreds of Taliban prisoners and killed Pashtun villagers in the north and around Kabul",[55] and the Taliban killed 5,000–8,000 civilians after they captured Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998.[55] Afghanistan also faced a serious humanitarian crisis in 2001 due to drought; according to the United Nations, 5 million Afghans were in need of humanitarian aid that year and 3.8 million could not survive without UN food aid.[56]

Prelude to the invasion

On the morning of September 11, 2001, al-Qaeda carried out four coordinated attacks on the United States, employing four hijacked jet airliners.[57] The attacks killed almost 3,000 people and injured more than 6,000 others.[57] By the early afternoon of September 11, the CIA had confirmed that al-Qaeda was responsible for the attack.[58] The Taliban condemned the attacks,[59] but Mullah Omar issued a statement denying bin Laden's involvement.[60] Although bin Laden eventually took responsibility for the 9/11 attacks in 2004,[61] he initially denied having any involvement.[62] One of bin Laden's strategic goals was to draw the US into a costly war in Afghanistan, so it could be defeated just as the Soviet Union had been.[57]

Diplomatic and political activity

 
In an address to a joint session of the US Congress on September 20, 2001, US President George W. Bush demanded that the Taliban deliver Osama bin Laden and destroy bases of al-Qaeda.

On the evening of September 11, President Bush stated the US would respond to the attacks and would "make no distinction between those who planned these acts and those who harbor them."[63] On September 14, 2001, Congress passed legislation titled Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists, authorizing military force against al-Qaeda and its supporters.[64] President Bush addressed Congress on September 20 and demanded the Taliban deliver bin Laden and al-Qaeda or face war.[59]

 
In the days and weeks immediately following 9/11, Osama bin Laden repeatedly denied having any role.

On the same day, a grand council of 300 or 700[65] Muslim clerics across Afghanistan, who had convened to decide bin Laden's fate, issued a fatwa recommending that the Islamic Emirate ask bin Laden to leave their country.[59] The fatwa went on to warn that should the United States invade Afghanistan, jihad would become obligatory until the invaders were expelled.[59] On September 21, Mullah Omar rejected both Bush's demands and the advice of the council, again denying that bin Laden was responsible for 9/11.[59]

Simultaneously, Mullah Omar authorized his deputy Akhtar Mohammad Osmani to negotiate with Robert Grenier, the CIA's chief of station in Pakistan, to discuss giving up bin Laden.[66] The two met in Quetta on September 15 and October 2[62] but failed to reach an agreement.[67] On October 4 the British government released a document summarizing the evidence linking bin Laden to the attacks.[68] That same day, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) invoked Article V of the North Atlantic Treaty for the first time in its history;[69] Article V states that an attack on one member of the alliance is to be considered an attack on all members.[69] On October 7, as the US aerial bombing campaign began, President Bush stated, "Full warning has been given, and time is running out."[70]

Planning

In 2001, the Defense Department did not have a pre-existing plan for an invasion of Afghanistan.[71] Therefore, the plan approved by Bush was devised by the CIA, reusing elements of the agency's previous contingency plans for collaboration with the Northern Alliance against the Taliban.[72] Bush met with his cabinet at Camp David on September 15 for a war planning session.[73] The military presented three options for military action in Afghanistan: The first was a cruise missile strike, the second was a combined cruise missile and bombing campaign lasting 3–10 days, and the third called for cruise missile and bomber strikes as well as ground forces operating inside Afghanistan.[74] The CIA also presented its war plan, which involved inserting paramilitary teams to work with the Northern Alliance and, eventually, American Special Forces units.[75] The planners wanted to minimize the use of American ground forces, to avoid provoking the Afghan population as the British and Russians had done.[76] On September 17 Bush approved the CIA's plan and directed the military to develop a detailed war plan based on the third option from Camp David.[77] Planning efforts were hindered because the Taliban had little physical infrastructure for the military to target.[78] Early plans by the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) included poisoning the Afghan food supply and raiding a fertilizer factory that JSOC believed could be used to make chemical weapons.[79]

The military completed its war plan by September 21[80] and called it Operation Infinite Justice. This name was deemed culturally insensitive because Islamic theology only deems God's justice to be infinite, so Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld changed the name to Operation Enduring Freedom.[81]

The US aimed to destroy al-Qaeda and remove the Taliban regime from power,[82] but also sought to prevent the Northern Alliance from taking control of Afghanistan, believing the Alliance's rule would alienate the country's Pashtun majority.[83] CIA director George Tenet argued that the US should target al-Qaeda but "hold off on the Taliban," since the Taliban were popular in Pakistan and attacking them could jeopardize relations with Pakistan.[84]

Humanitarian situation in Afghanistan

At the time of the invasion, the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan was dire, and the attacks in the United States caused thousands of Afghans attempting to flee fearing potential U.S. military action - this on top of millions that were already refugees in regional countries due to the continuous conflict already in place for 22 years.[85] Food stock was running critically low and almost all aid workers had left the country after the attacks.[86] Barry Bearak in a New York Times article described Afghanistan as a "post-apocalyptic place of felled cities, parched land and downtrodden people."[85] Seventy percent of the population was undernourished in 2001, and the life expectancy was ranked two places from bottom in the world.[87]

Number of regional Afghan refugees by destination, as of September 2001[88]
  Pakistan 2,000,000
  Iran 1,400,000
  India,   Tajikistan and   Uzbekistan 30,000

Fox News suggested on September 27 that "millions" of Afghans would possibly starve, amid the paralyzed relief network, closed border crossings, and the cold winter approaching. The U.N. refugee agency feared that the scale of the crisis could reach the peaks of that in Bosnia and Rwanda.[89]

Overthrow of the Taliban

Command structure

 
US Army Special Forces and US Air Force Combat Controllers with Northern Alliance troops on horseback
 
US Air Force Combat Controllers in combat during the invasion of Afghanistan, October 2001

The invasion consisted of American, British, Canadian, and Australian forces, with other countries providing logistical support.[90] General Tommy Franks of US Central Command (CENTCOM) was the overall commander for Operation Enduring Freedom. He led four task forces: the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force (CJSOTF), Combined Joint Task Force Mountain (CJTF-Mountain), the Joint Interagency Task Force-Counterterrorism (JIATF-CT), and the Coalition Joint Civil-Military Operations Task Force (CJCMOTF).[91]

CJSOTF consisted of three subordinate task forces: Joint Special Operations Task Force-North (JSOTF-North or Task Force Dagger), Joint Special Operations Task Force-South (JSOTF-South or Task Force K-Bar) and Task Force Sword (later renamed Task Force 11).[91] Task Force Dagger was led by Colonel James Mulholland and was formed around his 5th Special Forces Group with helicopter support from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (160th SOAR). Dagger was assigned to the north of Afghanistan and Task Force K-Bar was assigned to southern Afghanistan. K-Bar was led by Navy SEAL Captain Robert Harward and formed around SEAL Teams 2, 3 and 8 and Green Berets from 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group. The task force principally conducted special reconnaissance and sensitive site exploitation missions.[92] Most coalition contributions were arrayed under K-Bar, including New Zealand's Special Air Service, Canada's Joint Task Force 2, and Germany's Kommando Spezialkräfte.[92] Task Force Sword was the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) component of the mission. Task Force Sword's primary objective was capturing or killing senior leadership within al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Sword was structured around a two-squadron component of operators from Delta Force and SEAL Team Six was supported by a Ranger force protection team, an Intelligence Support Activity (ISA) signals intercept and surveillance team, and the 160th SOAR. The British Special Boat Service was integrated directly into Sword's structure.[93]

Alongside the SOF task forces operated the largely conventional CJTF-Mountain. Mountain initially comprised three subordinate commands, but only one was a special operations force – Task Force 64, a special forces task group built around a sabre squadron from the Australian SAS. The US Marines contributed Task Force 58, consisting of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit. The JIATF-CT (also known as Task Force Bowie), led by Brigadier General Gary Harrell, was an intelligence integration and fusion activity composed of personnel from all participating units. Bowie numbered 36 military personnel and 57 from agencies such as the FBI, NSA, and CIA, as well as liaison officers from coalition SOF. Administratively embedded within Bowie was Advanced Force Operations (AFO). AFO was a 45-man reconnaissance unit made up of Delta Force reconnaissance specialists augmented by selected SEALs and supported by ISA's technical experts. AFO had been raised to support TF Sword and was tasked with intelligence preparation of the battlefield, working closely with the CIA and reporting directly to TF Sword. AFO conducted covert reconnaissance along the border with Pakistan. The AFO operators deployed observation posts to watch and report enemy movements and numbers and conduct environmental reconnaissance. The final task force supporting the invasion was CJCMOTF, which would manage civil affairs and humanitarian efforts.[94]

First move

On September 26, fifteen days after 9/11, the US covertly inserted (via CIA-piloted Mi-17 helicopter)[95] 10[b] members of the CIA into the Panjshir Valley, Massoud's stronghold.[98] The CIA mission was led by Gary Schroen and designated the Northern Afghanistan Liaison Team, known by the call-sign 'Jawbreaker'.[99] In addition to specialized human assets, the team brought a metal case containing $3 million in $100 bills to buy support.[95] Jawbreaker linked up with General Mohammed Fahim, commander of the Northern Alliance forces in the Panjshir Valley, and prepared the way for introduction of Army Special Forces.[100] The Jawbreaker team brought satellite communications equipment, enabling its intelligence reports to be instantly available to CIA headquarters. The team also assessed potential targets for Operation Crescent Wind, provided in-extremis combat search and rescue (CSAR), and could provide bomb damage assessment for the air campaign.[101] To allow fixed-wing aircraft to land in the area, the team refurbished an airstrip at Gulbahar built by the British in 1919.[102]

On September 28, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw approved the deployment of MI6 officers to Afghanistan, utilizing people involved with the mujahideen in the 1980s, who had language skills and regional expertise. At month's end, a handful of MI6 officers landed in northeast Afghanistan and met with Fahim. They began working with other contacts in the north and south to build alliances, secure support, and bribe as many Taliban commanders as possible to change sides or leave the fight.[103] Two more CIA teams soon arrived, operating near Herat and Mazar-i-Sharif.[98]

Initial air strikes

 
A Tomahawk cruise missile is launched from the USS Philippine Sea in a strike against al-Qaeda training camps and Taliban military installations in Afghanistan on October 7, 2001
 
AH-1W "Super Cobra" helicopters take off from USS Peleliu in the North Arabian Sea on October 13, 2001

On October 7, the US began military operations in Afghanistan with air strikes on 31 targets across the country.[104] Most of the Taliban's outdated SA-2 and SA-3 surface-to-air missiles, small fleet of MIG-21s and Su-22s, and radar and command units were destroyed on the first night.[105] On the same night the CIA conducted the first-ever air strike with a Predator drone.[106] The Predator was loitering over Mullah Omar's house and followed several men who left the house.[107] CIA analysts believed that Omar was in the group, which drove first to the house of Omar's mother and then to a school west of Kandahar.[108] The men stayed in the school for several hours and the CIA requested that the Air Force strike the school with a conventional bomb, but Franks denied the request, citing the risk of collateral damage and uncertainty over whether Omar was really there.[109] The CIA fired the Predator's Hellfire missile at a truck outside to draw the men out; the men left the school, and Omar escaped.[110] Predator drones had been in development since the early 1990s, had been used to search for bin Laden since 2000, and had even been proposed as a means of assassinating bin Laden before 9/11.[111] The employment of armed Predators in Afghanistan marked the start of a new era of drone warfare.[112]

US aircraft bombed Taliban training camps and air defenses over the next several days, employing Apache helicopter gunships from the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade. US Navy cruisers, destroyers and Royal Navy submarines launched several Tomahawk cruise missiles. Within a few days, most Taliban training sites were severely damaged and air defenses destroyed. The campaign focused on command, control, and communications targets. The front facing the Northern Alliance held, and no battlefield successes were achieved there. The United States dropped 1500 munitions in the first week of bombing.[113] They also began airdropping food and medical supplies to civilians in Northern Alliance-controlled territory.[113] By the second week of the campaign most of the preplanned targets had been destroyed.[113]

On October 19,[98] Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA) teams 555 and 595, both 12-man Green Beret teams from the 5th Special Forces Group, plus Air Force Combat Controllers, were airlifted by helicopter from the Karshi-Khanabad Air Base in Uzbekistan more than 300 kilometers (190 mi) across the 16,000 feet (4,900 m) Hindu Kush mountains in zero-visibility conditions by MH-47E Chinook helicopters from 2nd Battalion 160th SOAR. ODA 555 went to the Panjshir Valley to link up with the NALT and Fahim, and ODA 595 went to the Darya Suf Valley, just south of Mazar-i-Sharif, to work with Dostum.[114]

In mid-October, A and G squadron of the British 22nd SAS Regiment, reinforced by members of the Territorial SAS regiments, deployed to northwest Afghanistan in support of Enduring Freedom. They conducted largely uneventful reconnaissance under the code-name Operation Determine, none of which resulted in enemy contact. They traveled in Land Rover Desert Patrol Vehicles and modified all-terrain vehicles (ATVs). Both squadrons returned to their barracks in the UK after two weeks.[115]

Objective Rhino and Gecko

On the night of October 19, simultaneous with the Special Forces entering the country, 200 Rangers from the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, parachuted onto Objective Rhino—a landing strip south of Kandahar.[116] The landing strip had been built as part of an Emirati hunting camp.[117] Before the Rangers dropped, B-2 Spirit stealth bombers and AC-130 gunships bombed and strafed the site,[116] meeting the resistance of only one Taliban fighter.[116] The Rangers provided security while a forward arming and refuelling point (FARP) was established using fuel bladders from MC-130s, to refuel aircraft flying to the next objective.[116] The mission was filmed by combat cameramen and a P-3C Orion observation plane flying overhead.[118] No US casualties were suffered in the operation itself (two Rangers received minor injuries in the jump),[118] but two Rangers assigned to a CSAR element supporting the mission were killed when their MH-60L helicopter crashed at a temporary staging site in Dalbandin, Pakistan, due to a brownout.[119]

Simultaneously, a squadron of Delta Force operatives supported by Rangers from Task Force Sword conducted an operation—designated Objective Gecko—outside Kandahar at Mullah Omar's residential compound.[120] Four MH-47E helicopters took off from the USS Kitty Hawk (which was serving as a SOF base) in the Indian Ocean carrying 91 soldiers. The assault teams were drawn from Delta, while teams from the Rangers secured the perimeter and occupied blocking positions. Before the soldiers were inserted, the target area was softened by preparatory fire from AC-130s and MH-60L Direct Action Penetrators.[121] The assaulters met no resistance and there was no sign of the Taliban leader, so they searched the target location for intelligence, while their helicopters refueled at the newly established FARP in Rhino.[122] The next day, the Pentagon showed the video footage from Objective Rhino at a press conference and distributed it to news organizations.[123] Intelligence prior to the missions had indicated that neither objective had any Taliban forces on it.[121] According to former Delta Force officer Peter Blaber, the JSOC commander Dell Dailey "believed that if we raided empty targets in Afghanistan and filmed the raids for the world to see ... we would have some kind of morale-breaking effect on the enemy."[124]

Continued air strikes

The Green Berets of ODA 595 split into two elements, Alpha and Bravo. Alpha rode on horseback with General Dostum to his headquarters to plan an assault on Mazar-i-Sharif. Bravo was tasked with clearing the Darya Suf Valley of Taliban and to travel into the Alma Tak Mountains to conduct reconnaissance.[125] Dostum and General Mohammad Atta had been fighting the Taliban in the Darya Suf Valley throughout the summer and had gradually lost ground.[126] The valley ran north to south and Dostum had established his headquarters near the village of Dehi—60 miles south of Mazar-i-Sharif—because the rugged terrain prevented Taliban tanks from moving that far into the valley.[127]

On October 21, the Alpha element of ODA 595 guided in the first Joint Direct Attack Munition bomb from a B-52, impressing Dostum.[128] As part of its operations, the Americans beamed in radio broadcasts in both Pashto and Dari calling al-Qaeda and the Taliban criminals and promising US$25 million to anyone who would provide information leading to bin Laden's whereabouts.[129]

On October 23, the anti-Taliban Pashtun leader Abdul Haq entered Afghanistan with about 20 supporters and tried to raise a revolt against the Taliban in Nangarhar.[130] Haq was among the most famous commanders of the anti-Soviet jihad, during which he had been wounded sixteen times and lost a foot.[131] The Taliban captured and executed him.[130]

On October 25, ODA 585 infiltrated an area near Kunduz to work alongside warlord Burillah Khan.[114] The same night, three Delta Force operators flew into the Panjshir and began working with the CIA Jawbreaker team to plan an important hostage rescue mission.[132] In early August 2001 the Taliban had imprisoned eight employees of a Christian aid organization named Shelter Now, on charges of proselytizing.[133] Held in Kabul, the prisoners included two Americans, Heather Mercer and Dayna Curry.[133] They faced the death penalty if convicted.[132] Since their arrival in Afghanistan, the CIA team had been using Northern Alliance intermediaries to contact Taliban officials and attempted to bribe them to release the prisoners, without success.[132] Delta Force specialized in hostage rescue and began planning to infiltrate Kabul with 50–60 operators, disguised as an al-Qaeda convoy, to extract the prisoners.[134] Planning and rehearsal for the mission, which also included an element from Seal Team Six, continued for the next three weeks, but execution was delayed because the Taliban frequently moved the Shelter Now employees between two prisons in Kabul.[135]

At the beginning of November, US aircraft shifted from attacking strategic targets to striking the Taliban front lines. On November 2, ODA 553 inserted into Bamyan and linked up with General Karim Khalili's forces; ODA 534 was also inserted into the Balkh River Valley after being delayed by weather for several nights, near Dostum and ODA 595. Its role was to support General Atta in a drive on Mazar-i-Sharif, coordinated with Dostum.[136] Bravo team of ODA 595 conducted airstrikes in the Darya Suf Valley, cutting off and destroying Taliban reinforcements and frustrating Taliban attempts to relieve their embattled forces in the north. Cumulatively, the near constant airstrikes had begun to have a decisive effect and the Taliban began to withdraw toward Mazar-i-Sharif.[129] Dostum's forces and Alpha team of ODA 595 followed, working their way north through the valley. On November 5, Dostum and Atta began a coordinated assault on the village of Baluch.[137] Dostum prepared his men to follow a bombing run from a B-52 with a cavalry charge, but one of Dostum's lieutenants misunderstood an order and sent 400 Uzbek horsemen charging toward the Taliban lines as the bomber made its final approach. The bomb landed just in time on the Taliban positions and the cavalry charge succeeded in breaking the Taliban defenses.[138] Dostum and Atta then entered the Balkh Valley and continued towards Mazar-i-Sharif.[139]

 
US Special Forces soldiers alongside Northern Alliance fighters west of Kunduz, November 2001

On the Shomali Plain, ODA 555 and the CIA Jawbreaker team attached to Fahim Khan's forces began calling airstrikes on entrenched Taliban positions at the southeastern end of the former Soviet air base at Bagram Airfield. The Green Berets set up an observation post in a disused air traffic control tower and guided in two BLU-82 Daisy Cutter bombs, which caused heavy Taliban casualties.[136] On November 8, ODAs 586 and 594 infiltrated into Afghanistan in MH-47s and picked up on the Afghan–Tajik border by CIA-flown MI-17s. ODA 586 deployed to Kunduz with the forces of General Daoud Khan and ODA 594 deployed into the Panjshir to assist the men of ODA 555.[140]

Fall of Mazar-i-Sharif

 
US Army Special Forces soldiers upon arriving in Mazar-i-Sharif with Northern Alliance fighters on November 10

Mazar-i-Sharif was important as the home of the sacred Muslim site of the Shrine of Ali, and as a transportation hub, with two major airports and a bridge into Uzbekistan.[141] Taking the city would enable humanitarian aid to alleviate a looming food crisis, which threatened more than six million people with starvation. Many of those in most urgent need lived in rural areas to the south and west of Mazar-i-Sharif. Dostum and Atta fought their way up the Balkh Valley and on November 8 reached the Tanghi Pass, the gateway between the valley and Mazar-i-Sharif.[142][143] The pass was heavily defended, but the Northern Alliance seized it on November 9,[143] triggering a Taliban retreat from Mazar-i-Sharif.[144] The Northern Alliance entered the city on November 10.[145]

The fall of the city was a "major shock";[146] the US Central Command originally believed it would remain in Taliban hands well into the following year.[147] US Army Civil Affairs Teams from the 96th Civil Affairs Battalion, and Tactical Psychological Operations Teams from the 4th Psychological Operations Group, were immediately deployed to begin reconstruction in Mazar-i-Sharif.[148]

On November 10, operators from C squadron Special Boat Service, inserted via two C-130s into the recently captured Bagram Airfield, caused a political quandary with the Northern Alliance leadership, who claimed the British had failed to consult them on the deployment.[115][149] The Northern Alliance foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah considered the uninvited arrival to be a violation of sovereignty, and complained to the head of the CIA field office, threatening to resign if the British did not withdraw. The British government had alerted the deputy head of the United Nations mission in Afghanistan that they were deploying troops to Bagram, albeit on short notice. Arriving on the first flight, Brigadier Graeme Lamb—the Director Special Forces at that time—simply ignored Abdullah and drove to the Panjshir Valley, where he paid his respects to Ahmad Shah Massoud's grave and held talks with Northern Alliance leaders. The British Foreign Secretary tried to reassure the Northern Alliance that the deployment was not a vanguard of a British peacekeeping army, but Northern Alliance leaders did not believe them; with the threat of the Northern Alliance opening fire on incoming troop transports, the deployment was put on hold.[149]

On November 11, in the central north of Afghanistan, ODA 586 was advising General Daoud Khan outside the city of Taloqan and coordinating a batch of preparatory airstrikes, when the General surprised the Americans by launching an impromptu mass infantry assault on the Taliban holding the city. The city fell before the first bomb could be dropped.[148]

Fall of Kabul

On November 12, the US tracked and killed al-Qaeda's number three, Mohammed Atef, with an air strike in Kabul.[150] That day the Taliban abandoned Kabul and decided to regroup in Jalalabad and Kandahar.[151] Taliban forces evacuated by the end of November 13,[151] and Northern Alliance forces (supported by ODA 555)[152] arrived took control of the city the following afternoon.[153] During their retreat, the Taliban took the Shelter Now prisoners with them, but abandoned them in a prison in Ghazni on November 13.[154] Anti-Taliban Afghans freed the prisoners, who had found a satellite phone and used it to call the American embassy in Pakistan.[154] SEAL Team Six used Chinook helicopters to extract the prisoners from Ghazni on the night of November 14 and take them to Pakistan.[155]

The fall of Kabul started a cascading collapse of Taliban positions. Within 24 hours, all Afghan provinces along the Iranian border had fallen, including Herat. Local Pashtun commanders and warlords had took over throughout northeastern Afghanistan, including Jalalabad; Taliban holdouts in the north fell back to the city of Kunduz, while others retreated to their heartland in southeastern Afghanistan, around Kandahar.[151]

In the midst of the retreat, Delta Force conducted a high-altitude, low-opening (HALO) jump northeast of Kandahar to call in airstrikes on targets retreating from Kabul,[156] the first combat HALO jump conducted at night by the United States since the Vietnam War.[156] By November 13, al-Qaeda and Taliban forces—possibly including bin Laden—were concentrating in Tora Bora, 50 kilometres (31 mi) southwest of Jalalabad. Nearly 2,000 al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters fortified themselves within bunkers and caves. On November 16 the US began bombing the mountain redoubt. Around the same time, CIA and Special Forces operatives worked in the area, enlisting local warlords and planning an attack.[157]

Objectives Wolverine, Raptor and Operation Relentless Strike

On November 13, the 75th Ranger Regiment carried out its second combat parachute drop into Afghanistan.[158] A platoon-sized Ranger security element, including a team from the Ranger Reconnaissance Detachment and accompanied by eight Air Force Special Tactical operators, parachuted into a dry lake bed southwest of Kandahar and secured the area.[159] A pair of MC-130 cargo planes then landed in the lake bed and deposited four AH-6J Little Bird helicopters from the 160th SOAR.[160] The Little Birds flew to a Taliban compound near Kandahar codenamed Objective Wolverine and destroyed it.[161] They returned to the lake bed to rearm and refuel, then launched another strike against a second site called Objective Raptor.[162] After the second strike they went back to the lake bed, loaded onto the MC-130s and flew back to Oman.[162] Several nights later, beginning on November 16, a series of missions codenamed Operation Relentless Strike took place. On the first night, the Rangers drove modified HMMWVs and Land Rovers to secure a remote desert airstrip.[163] The Little Birds then flew in on MC-130s and conducted a search and destroy mission along Highway 1.[164] The Little Birds conducted similar search and destroy missions over the next several nights.[165]

Battle of Tarinkot

 
US Army Special Forces (ODA 574) with Hamid Karzai in Kandahar province

On November 14, ODA 574 and Hamid Karzai inserted into Uruzgan Province via 4 MH-60K helicopters[152] with a small force of guerrillas.[166] Karzai was the leader of the Pashtun Popalzai tribe and had been an enemy of the Taliban since they assassinated his father in 1999.[130] He had entered Afghanistan with three other men on October 9, but was almost killed by the Taliban, and was extracted by the CIA on November 4.[166] Once he returned he began to move towards the town of Tarinkot. Responding to the approach of Karzai's forces, the inhabitants of the town of Tarinkot revolted and expelled their Taliban administrators.[167] Karzai traveled to Tarinkot to meet with the town elders.[167] While he was there, the Taliban marshaled a force of 300–500 men to retake the town.[166] Karzai's small force, plus the American contingent, deployed in the town's front to block the Taliban's advance. Relying heavily on close air support, the American and Afghan force managed to drive the Taliban away from the town.[168]

The defeat of the Taliban at Tarinkot was an important victory for Karzai,[169] who used it to recruit more men to his fledgling guerrilla band. His force would grow in size to a peak of around 800 men.[170] Soon afterwards, they left Tarinkot and began advancing on Kandahar.[171]

Fall of Kunduz

Task Force Dagger's attention focused on the last northern Taliban stronghold, Kunduz.[152] As the bombardment at Tora Bora grew, the Siege of Kunduz continued. General Daoud and ODA 586 had initiated massive coalition airstrikes to demoralize the Taliban defenders.[152] After 11 days of fighting and bombardment, Taliban fighters surrendered to Northern Alliance forces on November 23. Shortly before the surrender, Pakistani aircraft arrived to evacuate intelligence and military personnel who had been aiding the Taliban's fight against the Northern Alliance, including Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders.[172] The details of the airlift are disputed. Investigative reporter Seymour Hersh alleged that up to five thousand people were evacuated,[173] while Karzai stated that, "even the Americans did not know who got away."[174] The United States government denied that the airlift occurred, with Secretary Rumsfeld saying, "neither Pakistan nor any other country flew any planes into Afghanistan to evacuate anybody."[174]

Operation Trent

The SAS played a small role in the early stages of the war because American SOF commanders guarded targets for their own units. It took political intercession from Prime Minister Tony Blair for the SAS to be given a direct-action task – the destruction of an al-Qaeda-linked opium production facility. The facility was located 400 km (250 mi) southwest of Kandahar and defended by between 80–100 foreign fighters, with a defense of trench lines and several makeshift bunkers. The SAS were ordered to assault the facility in full daylight because CENTCOM would not provide air support for a night raid. The timing meant that the squadrons could not carry out a detailed reconnaissance prior to the assault. Despite these factors, the commanding officer of 22 SAS accepted the mission. The target was a low priority for the US and probably would have been destroyed from the air if the British had not argued for a larger role in Afghanistan.[175]

The mission began in November 2001, with an 8-man patrol from G Squadron's Air Troop performing the regiments first wartime HALO parachute jump. The patrol landed at a desert location in Registan to assess its suitability as an improvised airstrip for the landing of the main assault force in C-130 Hercules cargo aircraft. The Air Troop advance team confirmed the site was suitable and later that day the C-130s landed and disembarked the SAS in their vehicles. The assault force was composed of operators from A and G Squadrons driving 38 Land Rover Desert Patrol Vehicles, two logistics vehicles, and eight Kawasaki dirt bikes. The assault force drove to a release point and split into two elements. A squadron was the assault force and G Squadron provided fire support.[176]

The assault began with a preparatory airstrike, after which A Squadron dismounted from their vehicles and closed in on the target on foot. G Squadron provided covering fire with heavy weapons, and air support flew sorties until running out of munitions. On a final pass, a US Navy F-18 Hornet strafed a bunker with its 20mm cannon, which narrowly missed several members of G Squadron.[177] When the A Squadron assault force reached the objective, they cleared the HQ building and gathered all intelligence materials they could find. The mission lasted four hours and four SAS operators were wounded; the operation was the largest British SAS operation in history.[178]

Battle of Qala-i-Jangi

On November 25, as Taliban prisoners were moved into Qala-i-Jangi fortress near Mazar-i-Sharif, a few Taliban attacked their Northern Alliance guards. This incident triggered a revolt by 600 prisoners, who soon seized the southern half of the fortress, including an armory stocked with AK-47s, RPGs and crew-served weapons. Johnny Micheal Spann, one of two CIA SAD operatives at the fortress who had been interrogating prisoners, was killed, marking America's first combat death.[179]

The other CIA operator, Dave Olson,[180] managed to make contact with CENTCOM, which relayed his request for assistance to SOF troops at a TF Dagger safe house in Mazar-i-Sharif. The safe house housed members of Delta Force, some Green Berets and a small team from M squadron SBS. A quick reaction force was immediately formed from whoever was in the safe house at the time: a headquarters element from 3rd Battalion, 5th SFG, a pair of USAF liaison officers, a handful of CIA SAD operators and the SBS team. The 8-man SBS team arrived in Land Rovers and the Green Berets and CIA operatives arrived in minivans and began engaging the prisoners, fighting a pitched battle to suppress the uprising, letting Olson escape. The operators then turned their attention to recovering Spann's body. Over the course of four days the battle continued, with Green Berets calling in multiple airstrikes on the Taliban prisoners. During one CAS mission a Joint Direct Attack Munition was misdirected and hit the ground close to the Coalition and Northern Alliance positions, wounding five Green Berets and four SBS operators.[181]

AC-130 gunships kept up aerial bombardments throughout the night. The following day (November 27) the siege was broken when Northern Alliance T-55 tanks were brought into the central courtyard to fire shells into several block houses containing Taliban fighters. Fighting continued sporadically throughout the week, and the Taliban were finished by Dostrum's Northern Alliance forces.[182] The combined Green Beret–SBS team recovered Spann's body on November 26.[183]

The revolt ended on December 1 after seven days of fighting.[183] 86 Taliban survived out of 1,000 that had been in the prison,[184] and around 50 Northern Alliance soldiers were killed.

Consolidation: the taking of Kandahar

ODA 574 and Hamid Karzai began moving on Kandahar, gathering fighters from friendly local Pashtun tribes. At the strategic Sayd-Aum-Kalay Bridge they fought for two days with the Taliban, eventually seizing it with the help of US airpower, opening the road to Kandahar.[170]

ODA 583 had infiltrated the Shin-Narai Valley southeast of Kandahar to support Gul Agha Sherzai, the former governor of Kandahar. The ODA established covert observation posts by November 24, allowing them to call in fire on Taliban positions.[185] By the end of November, Kandahar was the Taliban's last stronghold, and was coming under increasing pressure.[130] Nearly 3,000 tribal fighters under Karzai[130] and 350 under Sherzai[186] pressured Taliban forces from the east and cut off northern supply lines to Kandahar.

 
Marines of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit march to a security position after seizing Camp Rhino from the Taliban, November 25, 2001

Meanwhile, nearly 1,000 US Marines ferried in by CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters and C-130s set up a Forward Operating Base known as Camp Rhino in the desert south of Kandahar on November 25 (Camp Rhino was located at Objective Rhino, the same airstrip seized by the Rangers on October 19).[187] On November 26, 15 Taliban armored vehicles approached the base and were attacked by helicopter gunships, destroying many of them.[188]

On December 5, a 2,000-pound (910 kg) GPS-guided bomb landed among the Green Berets from ODA 574, killing 3 members and wounding the rest of the team. Over 20 of Karzai's militia were also killed and Karzai himself was slightly wounded. A Delta Force unit that had been operating nearby on a classified reconnaissance mission arrived in their Pinzgauers and secured the site, while Delta medics treated the wounded Green Berets.[170]

On December 6, Karzai was informed that he would be the next president of Afghanistan. He also negotiated the successful surrender of both the remaining Taliban forces and the city of Kandahar.[189] Karzai's militia began their final push to clear the city.[185] The US government rejected amnesty for Omar or any Taliban leaders.[190] On December 7, Sherzai's forces seized Kandahar airport and moved into the city.[185] Omar departed Kandahar and disappeared; he may have gone to Zabul, Helmand, or Pakistan.[191] Other Taliban leaders fled to Pakistan through the remote passes of Paktia and Paktika.[191]

In early December, as the US invasion was almost over, 7,500 Taliban prisoners were transported from Kunduz to Sheberghan prison by Junbish-i Milli, a group led by Dostum. Hundreds to 3,000 of the Taliban prisoners suffocated in the overcrowded metal shipping containers on trucks or were shot dead in an incident known as the Dasht-i-Leili massacre. Some were shot dead when guards shot air holes into the containers. The dead were buried in graves in the Dasht-i-Leili desert just west of Sheberghan, in the Jowzjan Province. Physicians for Human Rights discovered the mass grave in 2002, but the Bush administration discouraged attempts to investigate the incident.[192]

Battle of Tora Bora

 
US Army Special Forces headquarters in Nangarhar Province, November 2001
 
Air strikes on Tora Bora

After the fall of Kabul and Kandahar, suspected al-Qaeda members, including bin Laden and other key leaders, withdrew to Jalalabad, Nangarhar Province. From there they moved into the Tora Bora region of the Spin Ghar (White Mountains), 20 km away from the Pakistan border, which had a network of caves and prepared defenses used by the mujahideen during the Soviet–Afghan War.[193] Signal intercepts and interrogation of captured Taliban fighters and al-Qaeda terrorists pointed towards the presence of significant numbers of foreign fighters and possible senior leaders in the area.[194] Instead of committing conventional forces, both the White House and the Pentagon decided to isolate and destroy al-Qaeda elements in the area with the US SOF supporting locally recruited Afghan militias, due to a fear of repeating the Soviet's experience in the area.[195]

ODA 572 and a CIA team were dispatched to Tora Bora to advise eastern anti-Taliban militias under the command of two warlords: Hazrat Ali and Mohammed Zaman.[196] Hazrat Ali and Zaman distrusted each other, and during the battle their militias sometimes shot at each other.[196] Using CIA funds, some 1,000 Afghan fighters were recruited for the coming battle.[197] The leader of the CIA team was Gary Berntsen, who in November had replaced Gary Schroen as the senior CIA officer in Afghanistan.[198] On December 2 Berntsen requested a battalion of Rangers be dropped into the mountains to establish blocking positions along potential escape routes out of Tora Bora into Pakistan.[199] In addition to the Rangers, other available forces included 1,000 Marines under Brigadier General Jim Mattis in Kandahar and soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division in Uzbekistan. Franks denied Berntsen's request.[200]

From the outset of the battle, ODA 572 with its attached Combat Controller called in precision airstrikes, whilst the Afghans launched a number of poorly executed attacks on established al-Qaeda positions, with limited success.[201] The militias would typically gain ground in the morning following US airstrikes, but relinquish control of those gains the same day.[202] They would also retreat to their base areas to sleep and break their fast each night, since the battle occurred during Ramadan, the month when Muslims do not eat or drink during the day.[203] With the Afghan offensive stalled and the CIA and ODA teams overstretched, Franks decided to deploy special operations soldiers from JSOC into the battle on December 9.[201]

Forty operators from A Squadron Delta Force deployed forward to Tora Bora and assumed tactical command of the battle from the CIA. With the Delta squadron were a dozen of so members of the British SBS.[204] The Delta operators were deployed in small teams embedded within the militias and sent their own operators out to search for bin Laden. Eventually, with the assistance of Green Berets and CIA operators, the militias made progress.[202] The Delta squadron commander agreed with the Jawbreaker assessment of the situation and requested blocking forces or the scattering of aerial landmines to deny mountain passes to the enemy. Since the deployment of the Ranger battalion had been denied, he requested that his operators carryout the proposed role but all his requests were denied by General Franks. On December 12, two weeks into the battle, Zaman opened negotiations with the trapped al-Qaeda and Taliban in Tora Bora. Against the wishes of the Americans and British, Zaman called a temporary truce to allow al-Qaeda to surrender.[205] This truce was a ruse to allow as many as several hundred al-Qaeda and members of the 055 Brigade to escape over night toward Pakistan.[206][207] According to journalist Peter Bergen, bin Laden left Tora Bora on the night of December 12 and went to Kunar Province.[208]

The following day, a handheld radio recovered from the body of a dead al-Qaeda fighter allowed members of the Delta squadron, SBS, CIA, and MI6 to hear bin Laden's voice – apparently apologizing to his followers for leading them to Tora Bora and giving his blessing for their surrender – thought to be a recording addressed to the terrorists that stayed to fight a rearguard action to allow bin Laden to escape. The leader of the CIA Jawbreaker team at Tora Bora believed that two large al-Qaeda groups escaped: the smaller group of 130 jihadis escaped east into Pakistan, while the second group including bin Laden and 200 Saudi and Yemeni jihadis took the route across the mountains to the town of Parachinar, Pakistan. The Delta squadron commander believed that bin Laden crossed the border into Pakistan sometime around December 16. A Delta reconnaissance team, call-sign 'Jackal', spotted a tall man wearing a camouflage jacket with a large number of fighters entering a cave. The team called in multiple airstrikes on the presumption that it was bin Laden, but later DNA analysis from the remains did not match bin Laden's.[209] With the majority of the enemy gone, the battle came to an end on December 17.[197]

On December 20, ODA 561 was inserted into the White Mountains to support ODA 572 in gathering intelligence in the caves and to assist with recovering DNA samples from terrorist bodies.[205] US and UK forces continued searching into January, but no sign of al-Qaeda leadership emerged. An estimated 220 al-Qaeda fighters were killed during the battle and 52 prisoners were taken.[3] No American or British personnel were killed.[210]

In subsequent years, the military was heavily criticized for not deploying ground forces into Tora Bora to capture bin Laden.[211] According to journalist Sean Naylor, Franks opposed the idea because he was "obsessed with not repeating the Soviets' mistake of deploying large conventional formations into Afghanistan," believing it would provoke popular resistance.[212] Another possible explanation is that his attention was elsewhere – Franks spent December 12, the day bin Laden may have escaped, briefing Secretary Rumsfeld on his plan for invading Iraq.[213] There were also logistical obstacles: airlift assets in Afghanistan were limited, so transporting a large ground force to the Spin Ghar and resupplying it was "essentially impossible," according to an official Army history.[196] Mattis, however, developed a plan that he thought logistically feasible – to drop artillery observers on the mountain passes with five days of sustainment to reduce resupply requirements.[214]

Political settlement

In late November 2001 the United Nations hosted the Bonn Conference;[215] the Taliban were excluded,[216] while three Afghan opposition groups participated.[217] Observers included representatives of neighboring and other involved major countries.[215] The resulting Bonn Agreement created the Afghan Interim Authority and outlined the Bonn Process that would lead towards a new constitution and a new Afghan government.[216] Following the Bonn Conference, tribal leaders and former exiles established an interim government in Kabul under Hamid Karzai.[218]

Casualties and atrocities

The Costs of War Project at Brown University estimated that between 1,537 and 2,375 civilians were killed during the invasion.[8] Northern Alliance casualties are unknown.[6] United States casualties were 12 military personnel and one CIA officer (Mike Spann),[5] while the Taliban suffered 8,000 to 12,000 killed.[7] According to Human Rights Watch, during the invasion the Northern Alliance "carried out systematic attacks on Pashtun villages, raping women, summarily executing civilians, and stealing livestock and land."[219]

Logistics

A landlocked country with forbidding terrain and a harsh climate, Afghanistan presents major difficulties for military operations. Prior to the war, the United States had no military bases in Central or South Asia. The initial CIA Jawbreaker team entered Afghanistan by helicopter from Tashkent, Uzbekistan, stopping to refuel in Dushanbe, Tajikistan.[220] The US established its main base at Karshi-Khanabad Air Base (known as K2) in Uzbekistan.[221] Personnel and equipment were flown from the large American bases in Germany to K2 and then onward to Afghanistan.[222] Pakistan granted the use of Shahbaz Air Base in Jacobabad as an auxiliary base,[223] and the CIA flew Predator drones from both Jacobabad and Shamsi Airfield.[224] Masirah Island off the coast of Oman served as the headquarters of Joint Special Operations Command,[225] while the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk in the Indian Ocean was used as a platform for helicopters of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment to fly special operations personnel into southern Afghanistan.[226] Some B-52 bombers flew into Afghanistan from the island of Diego Garcia, and B-2 bombers flew nonstop from Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri to Afghanistan.[226]

Analysis

According to historian Carter Malkasian, the campaign was a "striking military success".[3] The United States achieved its war aims while committing a force of only 110 CIA officers, 350 special operators, and 5,000 Rangers and Marines.[3] The model of special forces working with local fighters and calling in precision air strikes was heavily used by the United States during later operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria.[3] One explanation for the rapid victory is that in Afghan culture, fighters tend to defect to the winning side once its victory is seen as inevitable;[227] as anthropologist Thomas Barfield puts it, "Just as the Taliban had come to power by persuading people that they were winners without fighting and buying the defection of wavering commanders with suitcases full of hundred-dollar bills, they lost the war in a reverse process."[228] The pattern recurred during the 2021 Taliban offensive, when the US-backed government collapsed and a resurgent Taliban captured a dozen provincial capitals in a week before it entered Kabul unopposed.[229]

Legality

Scholars have disputed the legality of the invasion under international law. The United States and its allies argued that the invasion was an act of self defense, which is legal according to Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations.[230] The US sent a letter to the Security Council on October 7 stating that, "Afghanistan was harboring terrorists who attacked the United States, that further attacks might be anticipated, and that military action was needed to deter them."[231] Legal scholar John Quigley has argued that the invasion was illegal because al-Qaeda, not Afghanistan, was the perpetrator of the 9/11 attacks, and because there was no evidence that further terrorist attacks were imminent.[232] Sean Murphy made the opposite case, that Afghanistan was responsible for the actions of al-Qaeda because it allowed al-Qaeda to operate from its territory and refused to extradite al-Qaeda operatives.[233] The debate continued with the 2009 publication of Myra Williamson’s Terrorism, War and International Law: The Legality of the Use of Force Against Afghanistan in 2001.[234] Williamson analyzed the legal questions raised by state responses to terrorism and the implications of the Afghanistan precedent for later conflicts such as the 2003 United States invasion of Iraq and the 2006 Israeli invasion of Lebanon.[235]

Reactions and aftermath

 
US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld with troops at Bagram Air Base, December 2001
 
US Navy SEALs of Task Force K-Bar conducting sensitive site exploitation in the Jaji Mountains, January 12, 2002

In October 2001 when the invasion began, polls indicated that about 88% of Americans and about 65% of Britons backed military action.[236] An Ipsos-Reid poll conducted between November and December 2001 showed that majorities in Canada (66%), France (60%), Germany (60%), Italy (58%), and the UK (65%) approved of US airstrikes while majorities in Argentina (77%), China (52%), South Korea (50%), Spain (52%), and Turkey (70%) opposed them.[237] There were a number of protests against the invasion, including 20,000 people in Washington, D.C. on September 29[238] and 20,000 people in London on October 7.[239] In Afghanistan, according to anthropologist Thomas Barfield, there was "a surprising level of popular support...for the US intervention, especially among non-Pashtuns."[240] In November 2001, CNN reported widespread relief amongst Kabul's residents after the Taliban fled the city, with young men shaving off their beards and women taking off their burqas.[241]

On December 20, 2001, the United Nations authorized an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), with a mandate to help the Afghans maintain security in Kabul and surrounding areas.[242] For its first years ISAF consisted of 8,000 American and 5,000 coalition soldiers[243] and its mandate did not extend beyond the Kabul area.[242] In February 2002, the US detected a large concentration of Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters in the eastern Shah-i-Kot Valley.[244] Coalition forces cleared the valley during Operation Anaconda in March 2002, which resulted in 8 US soldiers killed and 80 wounded.[245]

US forces established their main base at Bagram airbase just north of Kabul.[246] Kandahar airport also became an important US base, and outposts were established in eastern provinces to hunt for Taliban and al-Qaeda fugitives.[247] Following Operation Anaconda, al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters established sanctuaries on the Pakistani border, where they launched cross-border raids beginning in April 2002.[248]

US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld aimed to carry out operations in Afghanistan rapidly and leave as fast as possible.[249] He thus wished to focus on kinetic counter-terrorism operations and building up a new Afghan Army.[250] Rumsfeld announced in mid-2002 that "The war is over in Afghanistan," to the disbelief of State Department, CIA, and military officials in the country. As a result, Rumsfeld downplayed the need for an Afghan army of even 70,000 troops, far fewer than the 250,000 envisaged by Karzai.[251]

In February 2002, the National Security Council met to decide whether to expand ISAF beyond Kabul. In a dispute between Secretary of State Colin Powell and Rumsfeld, Rumsfeld's view—that the force should not be expanded—prevailed.[252] Historians later wrote that the failure of ISAF to be deployed beyond Kabul drove Karzai to offer positions within the state to potential spoilers whose activities did great harm to the state's reputation.[253] Because the rise of the Taliban insurgency was linked to grievances over governance,[254] this became a serious problem.

Several events in early 2002, taken together, can be seen as the conclusion of the first phase of the US-led war in Afghanistan. The first was the dispersal of the major groups of the Taliban and al-Qaeda after the end of Anaconda. In February 2002 the United States decided to not expand international security forces beyond Kabul.[252] President Bush made his speech at the Virginia Military Institute on April 17, 2002, invoking General George Marshall while talking about Afghan reconstruction, resulting in discussion of a 'Marshall Plan' for Afghanistan.[255] The decision against a significant expansion of international presence and development assistance was later seen by historians as a major error.[256] The US's growing commitment to Iraq, however, was absorbing more and more resources, which in hindsight would have made committing such resources to Afghanistan impossible.[257]

Notes

  1. ^ The Hazaras are a minority ethnic group adhering to Shia Islam who live in the mountains of central Afghanistan.
  2. ^ The team was made up of seven field agents, two pilots, and a helicopter mechanic.[96] Phil Reilly was the deputy team leader. Chris Wood was also on the team.[97]

References

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  3. ^ a b c d e f Malkasian 2021, p. 78.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Malkasian 2021, p. 63.
  5. ^ a b Coll 2019, p. 110.
  6. ^ a b Crawford 2011, p. 27.
  7. ^ a b Giustozzi 2019, pp. 17–18.
  8. ^ a b Crawford 2011, p. 26.
  9. ^ Crawford 2011, p. 1. "It is fair to say that Afghanistan, a country of about 28 million people, most of whom make their living in agriculture, has been almost continually at war since 1979."
  10. ^ Barfield 2012, pp. 170–171.
  11. ^ a b Barfield 2012, p. 171.
  12. ^ Barfield 2012, p. 236.
  13. ^ Barfield 2012, p. 235.
  14. ^ Malkasian 2021, p. 31.
  15. ^ Malkasian 2021, p. 30.
  16. ^ Malkasian 2021, pp. 30–31.
  17. ^ Wright et al. 2010, p. 17.
  18. ^ a b Malkasian 2021, p. 47.
  19. ^ Malkasian 2021, pp. 32–33.
  20. ^ a b Barfield 2012, p. 257.
  21. ^ Barfield 2012, p. 258.
  22. ^ Coll 2004, p. 14.
  23. ^ Barfield 2012, p. 262.
  24. ^ Coll 2004, p. 344–345.
  25. ^ Malkasian 2021, p. 49.
  26. ^ a b Jalali 2001, p. 91.
  27. ^ Coll 2004, p. 345.
  28. ^ Wright et al. 2010, pp. 71–72.
  29. ^ Coll 2004, p. 325.
  30. ^ Wright 2007, pp. 150–153.
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  32. ^ Malkasian 2021, p. 48.
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Bibliography

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Books

  • AEI (July 24, 2008). . AEI Public Opinion Study. Archived from the original on April 4, 2015.
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  • Coll, Steve (2004). Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-1-59420-007-6.
  • Coll, Steve (2019). Directorate S: The C.I.A. and America's Secret Wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Penguin Group. ISBN 9780143132509.
  • Corera, Gordon (2012). MI6: Life and Death in the British Secret Service. W&N. ISBN 978-0753828335.
  • Farrell, Theo (2017). Unwinnable: Britain's War in Afghanistan, 2001–2014. Bodley Head. ISBN 978-1847923462.
  • Giustozzi, Antonio (2019). The Taliban at War: 2001 - 2018. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-009239-9.
  • Jones, Seth (2009). In the Graveyard of Empires. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393068986.
  • Lowrey, Nathan (2011). U.S. Marines in Afghanistan, 2001-2002: From the Sea (PDF). Washington, D.C.: History Division, United States Marine Corps. ISBN 978-0-16-089557-9.
  • Maley, William (2012). "PRT activity in Afghanistan: the Australian experience". In Hynek, Nik; Marton, Péter (eds.). Statebuilding in Afghanistan: Multinational Contributions to Reconstruction. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-66101-3.
  • Malkasian, Carter (2021). The American War in Afghanistan: A History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0197550779.
  • Mazzetti, Mark (2013). The way of the knife: the CIA, a secret army, and a war at the ends of the Earth. Internet Archive. Penguin. ISBN 9781594204807.
  • Naylor, Sean (2015). Relentless strike : the secret history of Joint Special Operations Command. Internet Archive. New York : St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-250-01454-2.
  • Neville, Leigh (2015). Special Forces in the War on Terror. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1472807908.
  • Rashid, Ahmed (2008). Descent into Chaos : the US and the Failure of Nation Building in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Central Asia. Internet Archive. New York : Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-01970-0.
  • Risen, James (2008). State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration. Simon & Schuster UK. ISBN 978-1-84737-511-7.
  • Schroen, Gary (2005). First In: An Insider's Account of How the CIA Spearheaded the War on Terror in Afghanistan. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-345-48459-8.
  • Stanton, Doug (2009). Horse Soldiers: The Extraordinary Story of a Band of U.S. soldiers Who Rode to Victory in Afghanistan. Scribner. ISBN 9781416580515.
  • Williamson, Myra (2013). Terrorism, War and International Law: The Legality of the Use of Force Against Afghanistan in 2001. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4094-9656-4.
  • Whitlock, Craig (2021). The Afghanistan Papers: A Secret History of the War. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-9821-5902-3.
  • Woodward, Bob (2002). Bush at War. Internet Archive. New York : Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-0473-6.
  • Wright, Donald P.; Bird, James; Clay, Steven; et al. (2010). A Different Kind of War: The United States Army in Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) October 2001-September 2005 (PDF). Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press.
  • Wright, Lawrence (2007). The Looming Tower : Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11. Internet Archive. New York : Vintage Books. ISBN 978-1-4000-3084-2.

united, states, invasion, afghanistan, invasion, afghanistan, redirects, here, other, invasions, afghanistan, invasions, afghanistan, late, 2001, united, states, close, allies, invaded, afghanistan, toppled, taliban, government, invasion, aims, were, dismantle. Invasion of Afghanistan redirects here For other invasions of Afghanistan see Invasions of Afghanistan In late 2001 the United States and its close allies invaded Afghanistan and toppled the Taliban government The invasion s aims were to dismantle al Qaeda which had executed the September 11 attacks and to deny it a safe base of operations in Afghanistan by removing the Taliban government from power The United Kingdom was a key ally of the United States offering support for military action from the start of invasion preparations The invasion came after the Afghan Civil War s 1996 2001 phase between the Taliban and the Northern Alliance groups resulting in the Taliban controlling 80 of the country by 2001 The invasion became the first phase of the 20 year long War in Afghanistan and marked the beginning of the American led War on Terror United States invasion of AfghanistanPart of War in Afghanistan and the War on terrorMap of the main operations of the United States special forces from October 2001 to March 2002 DateOctober 7 December 17 2001 2 months 1 week and 3 daysLocationAfghanistanResultCoalition victory Fall of the Taliban government Formation of the Afghan Interim Administration Formation of the International Security Assistance Force ISAF End of the 1996 2001 phase of the Afghan Civil War Start of the Taliban insurgency US military presence until 2021 Start of the War in AfghanistanBelligerents United States United Kingdom Canada Australia Northern AllianceSupported by India Iran Pakistan 1 Russia 2 Tajikistan Turkey Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Afghanistan Al Qaeda 055 Brigade Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan East Turkistan Islamic Party Tanzeem e Nifaz e Shariat e MohammadiCommanders and leadersGeorge W Bush Tony Blair Jean Chretien John Howard Burhanuddin RabbaniMohammed Omar Osama bin Laden Mohammed Atef Strength United States 5 500 3 Northern Alliance 15 000 20 000 4 Taliban 45 000 4 Foreign fighters 2 700 4 Casualties and losses United States 13 killed including 1 CIA officer and 4 non combat deaths 5 Northern Alliance Unknown 6 Taliban 8 000 to 12 000 killed 7 15 000 killed or captured 3 1 537 to 2 375 Afghan civilians killed 8 After the September 11 attacks US President George W Bush demanded that the Taliban hand over Osama bin Laden and expel al Qaeda bin Laden had already been wanted by the FBI since 1998 The Taliban declined to extradite him and ignored demands to shut down terrorist bases or extradite other suspected terrorists The US launched Operation Enduring Freedom on October 7 2001 with the United Kingdom The two were later joined by other forces including the Northern Alliance The US and its allies rapidly drove the Taliban from power by December 17 2001 and built military bases near major cities across the country Most al Qaeda and Taliban members were not captured but escaped to neighboring Pakistan or retreated to rural or remote mountainous regions during the Battle of Tora Bora In December 2001 the United Nations Security Council established the International Security Assistance Force ISAF to oversee military operations in the country and train the Afghan National Security Forces At the Bonn Conference in December 2001 Hamid Karzai was selected to head the Afghan Interim Administration Taliban leader Mullah Omar reorganized the movement and in 2002 it launched an insurgency against the government and ISAF In 2021 while international forces were withdrawing from the country after nearly 20 years of conflict the Taliban succeeded in overthrowing the Afghan government and re establishing their rule across much of Afghanistan Contents 1 Background 1 1 Taliban Emirate vs Northern Alliance 1996 2001 1 1 1 Al Qaeda 1 1 2 Change in US policy toward Afghanistan 1 1 3 Military situation on the eve of 9 11 2 Prelude to the invasion 2 1 Diplomatic and political activity 2 2 Planning 2 3 Humanitarian situation in Afghanistan 3 Overthrow of the Taliban 3 1 Command structure 3 2 First move 3 3 Initial air strikes 3 4 Objective Rhino and Gecko 3 5 Continued air strikes 3 6 Fall of Mazar i Sharif 3 7 Fall of Kabul 3 8 Objectives Wolverine Raptor and Operation Relentless Strike 3 9 Battle of Tarinkot 3 10 Fall of Kunduz 3 11 Operation Trent 3 12 Battle of Qala i Jangi 3 13 Consolidation the taking of Kandahar 3 14 Battle of Tora Bora 3 15 Political settlement 4 Casualties and atrocities 5 Logistics 6 Analysis 7 Legality 8 Reactions and aftermath 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 11 1 Articles 11 2 BooksBackground EditMain article Afghanistan conflict 1978 present In 2001 Afghanistan had been at war for over 20 years 9 The communist People s Democratic Party of Afghanistan PDPA seized power in 1978 and its policies sparked a popular uprising 10 The Soviet Union sensing PDPA weakness intervened in 1979 to support the regime 11 The entry of the Soviet Union into Afghanistan prompted its Cold War rivals especially the United States and Saudi Arabia to support rebels fighting against the Soviet backed PDPA 12 While the secular and socialist government controlled the cities religiously motivated 13 mujahideen held sway in much of the countryside 14 The most important mujahideen commander was Ahmad Shah Massoud who led the well organized Tajik forces 15 The American Central Intelligence Agency CIA worked closely with Pakistan s Inter Service Intelligence ISI to funnel foreign support for the mujahideen 16 The war also attracted Arab volunteers known as Afghan Arabs 17 including Osama bin Laden 18 Soviet troops in 1986 during the Soviet Afghan War After the withdrawal of the Soviet military from Afghanistan in February 1989 the PDPA regime collapsed in 1992 11 In the resulting power vacuum the mujahideen leaders vied for dominance in a civil war from 1992 to 1996 By then bin Laden had left the country 18 The United States interest in Afghanistan also diminished 19 In 1994 a Pashtun mujahid named Mullah Omar founded the Taliban movement in Kandahar 20 His followers were religious students and sought to end warlord rule through strict adherence to Islamic law 20 By the end of 1994 the Taliban had captured all of Kandahar Province 21 Taliban Emirate vs Northern Alliance 1996 2001 Edit Main article Afghan Civil War 1996 2001 Taliban red and Northern Alliance blue control over Afghanistan in 2000 In 1996 with military support from Pakistan and financial support from Saudi Arabia the Taliban seized Kabul and founded the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan 22 They imposed their fundamentalist interpretation of Islam in areas under their control issuing edicts forbidding women to work outside the home or attend school and requiring them to abide by harsh rules on veiling and seclusion 23 After the Taliban takeover of Kabul Massoud retreated north to his native Panjshir Valley and formed a resistance movement against the Taliban called the United Front or the Northern Alliance 24 In addition to Massoud s Tajik force the United Front included Uzbeks under the former PDPA general Abdul Rashid Dostum and Hazara factions a The Northern Alliance received varying degrees of support from Russia Iran and India 25 Like the Taliban 26 Massoud also raised money by trafficking drugs 27 By 2001 the Taliban controlled 80 of the country with the Northern Alliance confined to the country s northeast corner 28 Al Qaeda Edit After nearly five years of shelter bin Laden was expelled from Sudan in 1996 and arrived in Jalalabad Afghanistan 29 He had founded al Qaeda in the late 1980s to continue jihad after the end of the Soviet Afghan War 30 He moved al Qaeda s operations to eastern Afghanistan and developed a close relationship with the Taliban 31 In 2000 however Mullah Omar visited bin Laden and forbade him from attacking the United States while he was a guest of the Taliban 32 During the 1990s the CIA and Delta Force 33 planned several operations to kill or capture bin Laden but President Bill Clinton never ordered them to proceed 34 Change in US policy toward Afghanistan Edit During the early years of the Clinton administration the US had no clear policy toward Afghanistan 35 The 1998 US embassy bombings however masterminded by al Qaeda provoked President Clinton to order missile strikes on militant training camps in Afghanistan 36 bin Laden was indicted for his involvement in the bombings In 1999 both the US and the United Nations enacted sanctions against the Taliban in United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267 which demanded the Taliban surrender bin Laden for trial in the US and close all terrorist bases in Afghanistan 37 At the time the only collaboration between Massoud and the US was an effort with the CIA to trace bin Laden 38 The US provided no support for Massoud s fight against the Taliban 39 A change in US policy was effected in early September 2001 40 The Bush administration agreed on a plan to start supporting Massoud A September 10 meeting of top national security officials agreed that the Taliban would be presented with an ultimatum to hand over bin Laden and other al Qaeda operatives If the Taliban refused the US would provide covert military aid to anti Taliban groups to attempt to overthrow the Taliban 41 Military situation on the eve of 9 11 Edit On September 9 2001 two al Qaeda members posing as journalists killed Massoud by detonating a bomb hidden in their video camera during an interview 42 The assassination was a gift from bin Laden to the Taliban and left them poised to achieve total control over Afghanistan 43 Mohammed Fahim became the new leader of the Northern Alliance 44 The Alliance had 15 000 20 000 fighters distributed across five locations 4 On the Kabul front Taliban and Northern Alliance forces faced each other from trenches across the Shomali Plain 4 The Takhar front extended from the Tajikistan border in the north to Parwan in the south near Kabul Dostum s forces were located south of Mazar i Sharif the Hazaras under Muhammad Mohaqiq were in the central Hazarajat region 45 and Ismail Khan was near Herat 46 The Taliban s military commander in the north was Mohammad Fazl 47 The Taliban military comprised approximately 45 000 Afghans and 2 700 foreign fighters 4 which included al Qaeda s 055 Brigade 48 According to military analyst Ali Jalali the 055 Brigade was only 400 600 strong but its ties to bin Laden made it politically important 48 The foreign fighters included Arabs as well as Kashmiris Chechens Uzbeks and Uyghurs 48 Several hundred officers from Pakistan s ISI were stationed in Afghanistan advising the Taliban 47 By mid October approximately 10 000 Pakistani volunteers crossed the border to augment the Taliban s forces 49 The volunteers were mostly madrasa students some as young as 14 48 Both sides primarily used Russian military equipment The Northern Alliance had 14 5mm heavy machine guns Russian artillery T 72 tanks 50 and BMP 1 armored vehicles retrofitted with rocket pods from Soviet combat helicopters 51 Dostum s Uzbeks used horses for transportation 47 The Northern Alliance had 18 helicopters and three fixed wing planes used mostly for logistical purposes 26 The Taliban s equipment was similar to that of the Northern Alliance and they also had Stinger missiles donated by the United States to the mujahideen during the Soviet Afghan War 52 They relied on pickup trucks for mobility and operated as a motorized light force 53 They had about 40 combat aircraft operated by ex PDPA pilots 54 Both sides had a history of human rights abuses Uzbeks and Hazaras had massacred hundreds of Taliban prisoners and killed Pashtun villagers in the north and around Kabul 55 and the Taliban killed 5 000 8 000 civilians after they captured Mazar i Sharif in 1998 55 Afghanistan also faced a serious humanitarian crisis in 2001 due to drought according to the United Nations 5 million Afghans were in need of humanitarian aid that year and 3 8 million could not survive without UN food aid 56 Prelude to the invasion EditMain article September 11 attacks On the morning of September 11 2001 al Qaeda carried out four coordinated attacks on the United States employing four hijacked jet airliners 57 The attacks killed almost 3 000 people and injured more than 6 000 others 57 By the early afternoon of September 11 the CIA had confirmed that al Qaeda was responsible for the attack 58 The Taliban condemned the attacks 59 but Mullah Omar issued a statement denying bin Laden s involvement 60 Although bin Laden eventually took responsibility for the 9 11 attacks in 2004 61 he initially denied having any involvement 62 One of bin Laden s strategic goals was to draw the US into a costly war in Afghanistan so it could be defeated just as the Soviet Union had been 57 Diplomatic and political activity Edit In an address to a joint session of the US Congress on September 20 2001 US President George W Bush demanded that the Taliban deliver Osama bin Laden and destroy bases of al Qaeda On the evening of September 11 President Bush stated the US would respond to the attacks and would make no distinction between those who planned these acts and those who harbor them 63 On September 14 2001 Congress passed legislation titled Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists authorizing military force against al Qaeda and its supporters 64 President Bush addressed Congress on September 20 and demanded the Taliban deliver bin Laden and al Qaeda or face war 59 In the days and weeks immediately following 9 11 Osama bin Laden repeatedly denied having any role On the same day a grand council of 300 or 700 65 Muslim clerics across Afghanistan who had convened to decide bin Laden s fate issued a fatwa recommending that the Islamic Emirate ask bin Laden to leave their country 59 The fatwa went on to warn that should the United States invade Afghanistan jihad would become obligatory until the invaders were expelled 59 On September 21 Mullah Omar rejected both Bush s demands and the advice of the council again denying that bin Laden was responsible for 9 11 59 Simultaneously Mullah Omar authorized his deputy Akhtar Mohammad Osmani to negotiate with Robert Grenier the CIA s chief of station in Pakistan to discuss giving up bin Laden 66 The two met in Quetta on September 15 and October 2 62 but failed to reach an agreement 67 On October 4 the British government released a document summarizing the evidence linking bin Laden to the attacks 68 That same day the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO invoked Article V of the North Atlantic Treaty for the first time in its history 69 Article V states that an attack on one member of the alliance is to be considered an attack on all members 69 On October 7 as the US aerial bombing campaign began President Bush stated Full warning has been given and time is running out 70 Planning Edit US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld In 2001 the Defense Department did not have a pre existing plan for an invasion of Afghanistan 71 Therefore the plan approved by Bush was devised by the CIA reusing elements of the agency s previous contingency plans for collaboration with the Northern Alliance against the Taliban 72 Bush met with his cabinet at Camp David on September 15 for a war planning session 73 The military presented three options for military action in Afghanistan The first was a cruise missile strike the second was a combined cruise missile and bombing campaign lasting 3 10 days and the third called for cruise missile and bomber strikes as well as ground forces operating inside Afghanistan 74 The CIA also presented its war plan which involved inserting paramilitary teams to work with the Northern Alliance and eventually American Special Forces units 75 The planners wanted to minimize the use of American ground forces to avoid provoking the Afghan population as the British and Russians had done 76 On September 17 Bush approved the CIA s plan and directed the military to develop a detailed war plan based on the third option from Camp David 77 Planning efforts were hindered because the Taliban had little physical infrastructure for the military to target 78 Early plans by the Joint Special Operations Command JSOC included poisoning the Afghan food supply and raiding a fertilizer factory that JSOC believed could be used to make chemical weapons 79 The military completed its war plan by September 21 80 and called it Operation Infinite Justice This name was deemed culturally insensitive because Islamic theology only deems God s justice to be infinite so Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld changed the name to Operation Enduring Freedom 81 The US aimed to destroy al Qaeda and remove the Taliban regime from power 82 but also sought to prevent the Northern Alliance from taking control of Afghanistan believing the Alliance s rule would alienate the country s Pashtun majority 83 CIA director George Tenet argued that the US should target al Qaeda but hold off on the Taliban since the Taliban were popular in Pakistan and attacking them could jeopardize relations with Pakistan 84 Humanitarian situation in Afghanistan Edit At the time of the invasion the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan was dire and the attacks in the United States caused thousands of Afghans attempting to flee fearing potential U S military action this on top of millions that were already refugees in regional countries due to the continuous conflict already in place for 22 years 85 Food stock was running critically low and almost all aid workers had left the country after the attacks 86 Barry Bearak in a New York Times article described Afghanistan as a post apocalyptic place of felled cities parched land and downtrodden people 85 Seventy percent of the population was undernourished in 2001 and the life expectancy was ranked two places from bottom in the world 87 Number of regional Afghan refugees by destination as of September 2001 88 Pakistan 2 000 000 Iran 1 400 000 India Tajikistan and Uzbekistan 30 000Fox News suggested on September 27 that millions of Afghans would possibly starve amid the paralyzed relief network closed border crossings and the cold winter approaching The U N refugee agency feared that the scale of the crisis could reach the peaks of that in Bosnia and Rwanda 89 Overthrow of the Taliban EditFurther information 2001 in Afghanistan Command structure Edit US Army Special Forces and US Air Force Combat Controllers with Northern Alliance troops on horseback US Air Force Combat Controllers in combat during the invasion of Afghanistan October 2001 The invasion consisted of American British Canadian and Australian forces with other countries providing logistical support 90 General Tommy Franks of US Central Command CENTCOM was the overall commander for Operation Enduring Freedom He led four task forces the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force CJSOTF Combined Joint Task Force Mountain CJTF Mountain the Joint Interagency Task Force Counterterrorism JIATF CT and the Coalition Joint Civil Military Operations Task Force CJCMOTF 91 CJSOTF consisted of three subordinate task forces Joint Special Operations Task Force North JSOTF North or Task Force Dagger Joint Special Operations Task Force South JSOTF South or Task Force K Bar and Task Force Sword later renamed Task Force 11 91 Task Force Dagger was led by Colonel James Mulholland and was formed around his 5th Special Forces Group with helicopter support from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment 160th SOAR Dagger was assigned to the north of Afghanistan and Task Force K Bar was assigned to southern Afghanistan K Bar was led by Navy SEAL Captain Robert Harward and formed around SEAL Teams 2 3 and 8 and Green Berets from 1st Battalion 3rd Special Forces Group The task force principally conducted special reconnaissance and sensitive site exploitation missions 92 Most coalition contributions were arrayed under K Bar including New Zealand s Special Air Service Canada s Joint Task Force 2 and Germany s Kommando Spezialkrafte 92 Task Force Sword was the Joint Special Operations Command JSOC component of the mission Task Force Sword s primary objective was capturing or killing senior leadership within al Qaeda and the Taliban Sword was structured around a two squadron component of operators from Delta Force and SEAL Team Six was supported by a Ranger force protection team an Intelligence Support Activity ISA signals intercept and surveillance team and the 160th SOAR The British Special Boat Service was integrated directly into Sword s structure 93 Alongside the SOF task forces operated the largely conventional CJTF Mountain Mountain initially comprised three subordinate commands but only one was a special operations force Task Force 64 a special forces task group built around a sabre squadron from the Australian SAS The US Marines contributed Task Force 58 consisting of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit The JIATF CT also known as Task Force Bowie led by Brigadier General Gary Harrell was an intelligence integration and fusion activity composed of personnel from all participating units Bowie numbered 36 military personnel and 57 from agencies such as the FBI NSA and CIA as well as liaison officers from coalition SOF Administratively embedded within Bowie was Advanced Force Operations AFO AFO was a 45 man reconnaissance unit made up of Delta Force reconnaissance specialists augmented by selected SEALs and supported by ISA s technical experts AFO had been raised to support TF Sword and was tasked with intelligence preparation of the battlefield working closely with the CIA and reporting directly to TF Sword AFO conducted covert reconnaissance along the border with Pakistan The AFO operators deployed observation posts to watch and report enemy movements and numbers and conduct environmental reconnaissance The final task force supporting the invasion was CJCMOTF which would manage civil affairs and humanitarian efforts 94 First move Edit See also CIA activities in Afghanistan Afghanistan 2001 September 11 attacks U S invasion and 5th Special Forces Group United States War in Afghanistan On September 26 fifteen days after 9 11 the US covertly inserted via CIA piloted Mi 17 helicopter 95 10 b members of the CIA into the Panjshir Valley Massoud s stronghold 98 The CIA mission was led by Gary Schroen and designated the Northern Afghanistan Liaison Team known by the call sign Jawbreaker 99 In addition to specialized human assets the team brought a metal case containing 3 million in 100 bills to buy support 95 Jawbreaker linked up with General Mohammed Fahim commander of the Northern Alliance forces in the Panjshir Valley and prepared the way for introduction of Army Special Forces 100 The Jawbreaker team brought satellite communications equipment enabling its intelligence reports to be instantly available to CIA headquarters The team also assessed potential targets for Operation Crescent Wind provided in extremis combat search and rescue CSAR and could provide bomb damage assessment for the air campaign 101 To allow fixed wing aircraft to land in the area the team refurbished an airstrip at Gulbahar built by the British in 1919 102 On September 28 British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw approved the deployment of MI6 officers to Afghanistan utilizing people involved with the mujahideen in the 1980s who had language skills and regional expertise At month s end a handful of MI6 officers landed in northeast Afghanistan and met with Fahim They began working with other contacts in the north and south to build alliances secure support and bribe as many Taliban commanders as possible to change sides or leave the fight 103 Two more CIA teams soon arrived operating near Herat and Mazar i Sharif 98 Initial air strikes Edit Main article Operation Crescent Wind A Tomahawk cruise missile is launched from the USS Philippine Sea in a strike against al Qaeda training camps and Taliban military installations in Afghanistan on October 7 2001 AH 1W Super Cobra helicopters take off from USS Peleliu in the North Arabian Sea on October 13 2001 On October 7 the US began military operations in Afghanistan with air strikes on 31 targets across the country 104 Most of the Taliban s outdated SA 2 and SA 3 surface to air missiles small fleet of MIG 21s and Su 22s and radar and command units were destroyed on the first night 105 On the same night the CIA conducted the first ever air strike with a Predator drone 106 The Predator was loitering over Mullah Omar s house and followed several men who left the house 107 CIA analysts believed that Omar was in the group which drove first to the house of Omar s mother and then to a school west of Kandahar 108 The men stayed in the school for several hours and the CIA requested that the Air Force strike the school with a conventional bomb but Franks denied the request citing the risk of collateral damage and uncertainty over whether Omar was really there 109 The CIA fired the Predator s Hellfire missile at a truck outside to draw the men out the men left the school and Omar escaped 110 Predator drones had been in development since the early 1990s had been used to search for bin Laden since 2000 and had even been proposed as a means of assassinating bin Laden before 9 11 111 The employment of armed Predators in Afghanistan marked the start of a new era of drone warfare 112 US aircraft bombed Taliban training camps and air defenses over the next several days employing Apache helicopter gunships from the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade US Navy cruisers destroyers and Royal Navy submarines launched several Tomahawk cruise missiles Within a few days most Taliban training sites were severely damaged and air defenses destroyed The campaign focused on command control and communications targets The front facing the Northern Alliance held and no battlefield successes were achieved there The United States dropped 1500 munitions in the first week of bombing 113 They also began airdropping food and medical supplies to civilians in Northern Alliance controlled territory 113 By the second week of the campaign most of the preplanned targets had been destroyed 113 On October 19 98 Operational Detachment Alpha ODA teams 555 and 595 both 12 man Green Beret teams from the 5th Special Forces Group plus Air Force Combat Controllers were airlifted by helicopter from the Karshi Khanabad Air Base in Uzbekistan more than 300 kilometers 190 mi across the 16 000 feet 4 900 m Hindu Kush mountains in zero visibility conditions by MH 47E Chinook helicopters from 2nd Battalion 160th SOAR ODA 555 went to the Panjshir Valley to link up with the NALT and Fahim and ODA 595 went to the Darya Suf Valley just south of Mazar i Sharif to work with Dostum 114 In mid October A and G squadron of the British 22nd SAS Regiment reinforced by members of the Territorial SAS regiments deployed to northwest Afghanistan in support of Enduring Freedom They conducted largely uneventful reconnaissance under the code name Operation Determine none of which resulted in enemy contact They traveled in Land Rover Desert Patrol Vehicles and modified all terrain vehicles ATVs Both squadrons returned to their barracks in the UK after two weeks 115 Objective Rhino and Gecko Edit Main article Operation Rhino On the night of October 19 simultaneous with the Special Forces entering the country 200 Rangers from the 3rd Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment parachuted onto Objective Rhino a landing strip south of Kandahar 116 The landing strip had been built as part of an Emirati hunting camp 117 Before the Rangers dropped B 2 Spirit stealth bombers and AC 130 gunships bombed and strafed the site 116 meeting the resistance of only one Taliban fighter 116 The Rangers provided security while a forward arming and refuelling point FARP was established using fuel bladders from MC 130s to refuel aircraft flying to the next objective 116 The mission was filmed by combat cameramen and a P 3C Orion observation plane flying overhead 118 No US casualties were suffered in the operation itself two Rangers received minor injuries in the jump 118 but two Rangers assigned to a CSAR element supporting the mission were killed when their MH 60L helicopter crashed at a temporary staging site in Dalbandin Pakistan due to a brownout 119 Simultaneously a squadron of Delta Force operatives supported by Rangers from Task Force Sword conducted an operation designated Objective Gecko outside Kandahar at Mullah Omar s residential compound 120 Four MH 47E helicopters took off from the USS Kitty Hawk which was serving as a SOF base in the Indian Ocean carrying 91 soldiers The assault teams were drawn from Delta while teams from the Rangers secured the perimeter and occupied blocking positions Before the soldiers were inserted the target area was softened by preparatory fire from AC 130s and MH 60L Direct Action Penetrators 121 The assaulters met no resistance and there was no sign of the Taliban leader so they searched the target location for intelligence while their helicopters refueled at the newly established FARP in Rhino 122 The next day the Pentagon showed the video footage from Objective Rhino at a press conference and distributed it to news organizations 123 Intelligence prior to the missions had indicated that neither objective had any Taliban forces on it 121 According to former Delta Force officer Peter Blaber the JSOC commander Dell Dailey believed that if we raided empty targets in Afghanistan and filmed the raids for the world to see we would have some kind of morale breaking effect on the enemy 124 Continued air strikes Edit The Green Berets of ODA 595 split into two elements Alpha and Bravo Alpha rode on horseback with General Dostum to his headquarters to plan an assault on Mazar i Sharif Bravo was tasked with clearing the Darya Suf Valley of Taliban and to travel into the Alma Tak Mountains to conduct reconnaissance 125 Dostum and General Mohammad Atta had been fighting the Taliban in the Darya Suf Valley throughout the summer and had gradually lost ground 126 The valley ran north to south and Dostum had established his headquarters near the village of Dehi 60 miles south of Mazar i Sharif because the rugged terrain prevented Taliban tanks from moving that far into the valley 127 On October 21 the Alpha element of ODA 595 guided in the first Joint Direct Attack Munition bomb from a B 52 impressing Dostum 128 As part of its operations the Americans beamed in radio broadcasts in both Pashto and Dari calling al Qaeda and the Taliban criminals and promising US 25 million to anyone who would provide information leading to bin Laden s whereabouts 129 On October 23 the anti Taliban Pashtun leader Abdul Haq entered Afghanistan with about 20 supporters and tried to raise a revolt against the Taliban in Nangarhar 130 Haq was among the most famous commanders of the anti Soviet jihad during which he had been wounded sixteen times and lost a foot 131 The Taliban captured and executed him 130 On October 25 ODA 585 infiltrated an area near Kunduz to work alongside warlord Burillah Khan 114 The same night three Delta Force operators flew into the Panjshir and began working with the CIA Jawbreaker team to plan an important hostage rescue mission 132 In early August 2001 the Taliban had imprisoned eight employees of a Christian aid organization named Shelter Now on charges of proselytizing 133 Held in Kabul the prisoners included two Americans Heather Mercer and Dayna Curry 133 They faced the death penalty if convicted 132 Since their arrival in Afghanistan the CIA team had been using Northern Alliance intermediaries to contact Taliban officials and attempted to bribe them to release the prisoners without success 132 Delta Force specialized in hostage rescue and began planning to infiltrate Kabul with 50 60 operators disguised as an al Qaeda convoy to extract the prisoners 134 Planning and rehearsal for the mission which also included an element from Seal Team Six continued for the next three weeks but execution was delayed because the Taliban frequently moved the Shelter Now employees between two prisons in Kabul 135 At the beginning of November US aircraft shifted from attacking strategic targets to striking the Taliban front lines On November 2 ODA 553 inserted into Bamyan and linked up with General Karim Khalili s forces ODA 534 was also inserted into the Balkh River Valley after being delayed by weather for several nights near Dostum and ODA 595 Its role was to support General Atta in a drive on Mazar i Sharif coordinated with Dostum 136 Bravo team of ODA 595 conducted airstrikes in the Darya Suf Valley cutting off and destroying Taliban reinforcements and frustrating Taliban attempts to relieve their embattled forces in the north Cumulatively the near constant airstrikes had begun to have a decisive effect and the Taliban began to withdraw toward Mazar i Sharif 129 Dostum s forces and Alpha team of ODA 595 followed working their way north through the valley On November 5 Dostum and Atta began a coordinated assault on the village of Baluch 137 Dostum prepared his men to follow a bombing run from a B 52 with a cavalry charge but one of Dostum s lieutenants misunderstood an order and sent 400 Uzbek horsemen charging toward the Taliban lines as the bomber made its final approach The bomb landed just in time on the Taliban positions and the cavalry charge succeeded in breaking the Taliban defenses 138 Dostum and Atta then entered the Balkh Valley and continued towards Mazar i Sharif 139 US Special Forces soldiers alongside Northern Alliance fighters west of Kunduz November 2001 On the Shomali Plain ODA 555 and the CIA Jawbreaker team attached to Fahim Khan s forces began calling airstrikes on entrenched Taliban positions at the southeastern end of the former Soviet air base at Bagram Airfield The Green Berets set up an observation post in a disused air traffic control tower and guided in two BLU 82 Daisy Cutter bombs which caused heavy Taliban casualties 136 On November 8 ODAs 586 and 594 infiltrated into Afghanistan in MH 47s and picked up on the Afghan Tajik border by CIA flown MI 17s ODA 586 deployed to Kunduz with the forces of General Daoud Khan and ODA 594 deployed into the Panjshir to assist the men of ODA 555 140 Fall of Mazar i Sharif Edit Main article Fall of Mazar i Sharif US Army Special Forces soldiers upon arriving in Mazar i Sharif with Northern Alliance fighters on November 10 Mazar i Sharif was important as the home of the sacred Muslim site of the Shrine of Ali and as a transportation hub with two major airports and a bridge into Uzbekistan 141 Taking the city would enable humanitarian aid to alleviate a looming food crisis which threatened more than six million people with starvation Many of those in most urgent need lived in rural areas to the south and west of Mazar i Sharif Dostum and Atta fought their way up the Balkh Valley and on November 8 reached the Tanghi Pass the gateway between the valley and Mazar i Sharif 142 143 The pass was heavily defended but the Northern Alliance seized it on November 9 143 triggering a Taliban retreat from Mazar i Sharif 144 The Northern Alliance entered the city on November 10 145 The fall of the city was a major shock 146 the US Central Command originally believed it would remain in Taliban hands well into the following year 147 US Army Civil Affairs Teams from the 96th Civil Affairs Battalion and Tactical Psychological Operations Teams from the 4th Psychological Operations Group were immediately deployed to begin reconstruction in Mazar i Sharif 148 On November 10 operators from C squadron Special Boat Service inserted via two C 130s into the recently captured Bagram Airfield caused a political quandary with the Northern Alliance leadership who claimed the British had failed to consult them on the deployment 115 149 The Northern Alliance foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah considered the uninvited arrival to be a violation of sovereignty and complained to the head of the CIA field office threatening to resign if the British did not withdraw The British government had alerted the deputy head of the United Nations mission in Afghanistan that they were deploying troops to Bagram albeit on short notice Arriving on the first flight Brigadier Graeme Lamb the Director Special Forces at that time simply ignored Abdullah and drove to the Panjshir Valley where he paid his respects to Ahmad Shah Massoud s grave and held talks with Northern Alliance leaders The British Foreign Secretary tried to reassure the Northern Alliance that the deployment was not a vanguard of a British peacekeeping army but Northern Alliance leaders did not believe them with the threat of the Northern Alliance opening fire on incoming troop transports the deployment was put on hold 149 On November 11 in the central north of Afghanistan ODA 586 was advising General Daoud Khan outside the city of Taloqan and coordinating a batch of preparatory airstrikes when the General surprised the Americans by launching an impromptu mass infantry assault on the Taliban holding the city The city fell before the first bomb could be dropped 148 Fall of Kabul Edit Main article Fall of Kabul 2001 On November 12 the US tracked and killed al Qaeda s number three Mohammed Atef with an air strike in Kabul 150 That day the Taliban abandoned Kabul and decided to regroup in Jalalabad and Kandahar 151 Taliban forces evacuated by the end of November 13 151 and Northern Alliance forces supported by ODA 555 152 arrived took control of the city the following afternoon 153 During their retreat the Taliban took the Shelter Now prisoners with them but abandoned them in a prison in Ghazni on November 13 154 Anti Taliban Afghans freed the prisoners who had found a satellite phone and used it to call the American embassy in Pakistan 154 SEAL Team Six used Chinook helicopters to extract the prisoners from Ghazni on the night of November 14 and take them to Pakistan 155 The fall of Kabul started a cascading collapse of Taliban positions Within 24 hours all Afghan provinces along the Iranian border had fallen including Herat Local Pashtun commanders and warlords had took over throughout northeastern Afghanistan including Jalalabad Taliban holdouts in the north fell back to the city of Kunduz while others retreated to their heartland in southeastern Afghanistan around Kandahar 151 In the midst of the retreat Delta Force conducted a high altitude low opening HALO jump northeast of Kandahar to call in airstrikes on targets retreating from Kabul 156 the first combat HALO jump conducted at night by the United States since the Vietnam War 156 By November 13 al Qaeda and Taliban forces possibly including bin Laden were concentrating in Tora Bora 50 kilometres 31 mi southwest of Jalalabad Nearly 2 000 al Qaeda and Taliban fighters fortified themselves within bunkers and caves On November 16 the US began bombing the mountain redoubt Around the same time CIA and Special Forces operatives worked in the area enlisting local warlords and planning an attack 157 Objectives Wolverine Raptor and Operation Relentless Strike Edit On November 13 the 75th Ranger Regiment carried out its second combat parachute drop into Afghanistan 158 A platoon sized Ranger security element including a team from the Ranger Reconnaissance Detachment and accompanied by eight Air Force Special Tactical operators parachuted into a dry lake bed southwest of Kandahar and secured the area 159 A pair of MC 130 cargo planes then landed in the lake bed and deposited four AH 6J Little Bird helicopters from the 160th SOAR 160 The Little Birds flew to a Taliban compound near Kandahar codenamed Objective Wolverine and destroyed it 161 They returned to the lake bed to rearm and refuel then launched another strike against a second site called Objective Raptor 162 After the second strike they went back to the lake bed loaded onto the MC 130s and flew back to Oman 162 Several nights later beginning on November 16 a series of missions codenamed Operation Relentless Strike took place On the first night the Rangers drove modified HMMWVs and Land Rovers to secure a remote desert airstrip 163 The Little Birds then flew in on MC 130s and conducted a search and destroy mission along Highway 1 164 The Little Birds conducted similar search and destroy missions over the next several nights 165 Battle of Tarinkot Edit Main article Battle of Tarinkot US Army Special Forces ODA 574 with Hamid Karzai in Kandahar province On November 14 ODA 574 and Hamid Karzai inserted into Uruzgan Province via 4 MH 60K helicopters 152 with a small force of guerrillas 166 Karzai was the leader of the Pashtun Popalzai tribe and had been an enemy of the Taliban since they assassinated his father in 1999 130 He had entered Afghanistan with three other men on October 9 but was almost killed by the Taliban and was extracted by the CIA on November 4 166 Once he returned he began to move towards the town of Tarinkot Responding to the approach of Karzai s forces the inhabitants of the town of Tarinkot revolted and expelled their Taliban administrators 167 Karzai traveled to Tarinkot to meet with the town elders 167 While he was there the Taliban marshaled a force of 300 500 men to retake the town 166 Karzai s small force plus the American contingent deployed in the town s front to block the Taliban s advance Relying heavily on close air support the American and Afghan force managed to drive the Taliban away from the town 168 The defeat of the Taliban at Tarinkot was an important victory for Karzai 169 who used it to recruit more men to his fledgling guerrilla band His force would grow in size to a peak of around 800 men 170 Soon afterwards they left Tarinkot and began advancing on Kandahar 171 Fall of Kunduz Edit Main articles Siege of Kunduz and Kunduz airlift Task Force Dagger s attention focused on the last northern Taliban stronghold Kunduz 152 As the bombardment at Tora Bora grew the Siege of Kunduz continued General Daoud and ODA 586 had initiated massive coalition airstrikes to demoralize the Taliban defenders 152 After 11 days of fighting and bombardment Taliban fighters surrendered to Northern Alliance forces on November 23 Shortly before the surrender Pakistani aircraft arrived to evacuate intelligence and military personnel who had been aiding the Taliban s fight against the Northern Alliance including Taliban and al Qaeda leaders 172 The details of the airlift are disputed Investigative reporter Seymour Hersh alleged that up to five thousand people were evacuated 173 while Karzai stated that even the Americans did not know who got away 174 The United States government denied that the airlift occurred with Secretary Rumsfeld saying neither Pakistan nor any other country flew any planes into Afghanistan to evacuate anybody 174 Operation Trent Edit Main article Operation Trent The SAS played a small role in the early stages of the war because American SOF commanders guarded targets for their own units It took political intercession from Prime Minister Tony Blair for the SAS to be given a direct action task the destruction of an al Qaeda linked opium production facility The facility was located 400 km 250 mi southwest of Kandahar and defended by between 80 100 foreign fighters with a defense of trench lines and several makeshift bunkers The SAS were ordered to assault the facility in full daylight because CENTCOM would not provide air support for a night raid The timing meant that the squadrons could not carry out a detailed reconnaissance prior to the assault Despite these factors the commanding officer of 22 SAS accepted the mission The target was a low priority for the US and probably would have been destroyed from the air if the British had not argued for a larger role in Afghanistan 175 The mission began in November 2001 with an 8 man patrol from G Squadron s Air Troop performing the regiments first wartime HALO parachute jump The patrol landed at a desert location in Registan to assess its suitability as an improvised airstrip for the landing of the main assault force in C 130 Hercules cargo aircraft The Air Troop advance team confirmed the site was suitable and later that day the C 130s landed and disembarked the SAS in their vehicles The assault force was composed of operators from A and G Squadrons driving 38 Land Rover Desert Patrol Vehicles two logistics vehicles and eight Kawasaki dirt bikes The assault force drove to a release point and split into two elements A squadron was the assault force and G Squadron provided fire support 176 The assault began with a preparatory airstrike after which A Squadron dismounted from their vehicles and closed in on the target on foot G Squadron provided covering fire with heavy weapons and air support flew sorties until running out of munitions On a final pass a US Navy F 18 Hornet strafed a bunker with its 20mm cannon which narrowly missed several members of G Squadron 177 When the A Squadron assault force reached the objective they cleared the HQ building and gathered all intelligence materials they could find The mission lasted four hours and four SAS operators were wounded the operation was the largest British SAS operation in history 178 Battle of Qala i Jangi Edit Main article Battle of Qala i Jangi On November 25 as Taliban prisoners were moved into Qala i Jangi fortress near Mazar i Sharif a few Taliban attacked their Northern Alliance guards This incident triggered a revolt by 600 prisoners who soon seized the southern half of the fortress including an armory stocked with AK 47s RPGs and crew served weapons Johnny Micheal Spann one of two CIA SAD operatives at the fortress who had been interrogating prisoners was killed marking America s first combat death 179 The other CIA operator Dave Olson 180 managed to make contact with CENTCOM which relayed his request for assistance to SOF troops at a TF Dagger safe house in Mazar i Sharif The safe house housed members of Delta Force some Green Berets and a small team from M squadron SBS A quick reaction force was immediately formed from whoever was in the safe house at the time a headquarters element from 3rd Battalion 5th SFG a pair of USAF liaison officers a handful of CIA SAD operators and the SBS team The 8 man SBS team arrived in Land Rovers and the Green Berets and CIA operatives arrived in minivans and began engaging the prisoners fighting a pitched battle to suppress the uprising letting Olson escape The operators then turned their attention to recovering Spann s body Over the course of four days the battle continued with Green Berets calling in multiple airstrikes on the Taliban prisoners During one CAS mission a Joint Direct Attack Munition was misdirected and hit the ground close to the Coalition and Northern Alliance positions wounding five Green Berets and four SBS operators 181 AC 130 gunships kept up aerial bombardments throughout the night The following day November 27 the siege was broken when Northern Alliance T 55 tanks were brought into the central courtyard to fire shells into several block houses containing Taliban fighters Fighting continued sporadically throughout the week and the Taliban were finished by Dostrum s Northern Alliance forces 182 The combined Green Beret SBS team recovered Spann s body on November 26 183 The revolt ended on December 1 after seven days of fighting 183 86 Taliban survived out of 1 000 that had been in the prison 184 and around 50 Northern Alliance soldiers were killed Consolidation the taking of Kandahar Edit Main article Fall of Kandahar ODA 574 and Hamid Karzai began moving on Kandahar gathering fighters from friendly local Pashtun tribes At the strategic Sayd Aum Kalay Bridge they fought for two days with the Taliban eventually seizing it with the help of US airpower opening the road to Kandahar 170 ODA 583 had infiltrated the Shin Narai Valley southeast of Kandahar to support Gul Agha Sherzai the former governor of Kandahar The ODA established covert observation posts by November 24 allowing them to call in fire on Taliban positions 185 By the end of November Kandahar was the Taliban s last stronghold and was coming under increasing pressure 130 Nearly 3 000 tribal fighters under Karzai 130 and 350 under Sherzai 186 pressured Taliban forces from the east and cut off northern supply lines to Kandahar Marines of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit march to a security position after seizing Camp Rhino from the Taliban November 25 2001 Meanwhile nearly 1 000 US Marines ferried in by CH 53E Super Stallion helicopters and C 130s set up a Forward Operating Base known as Camp Rhino in the desert south of Kandahar on November 25 Camp Rhino was located at Objective Rhino the same airstrip seized by the Rangers on October 19 187 On November 26 15 Taliban armored vehicles approached the base and were attacked by helicopter gunships destroying many of them 188 On December 5 a 2 000 pound 910 kg GPS guided bomb landed among the Green Berets from ODA 574 killing 3 members and wounding the rest of the team Over 20 of Karzai s militia were also killed and Karzai himself was slightly wounded A Delta Force unit that had been operating nearby on a classified reconnaissance mission arrived in their Pinzgauers and secured the site while Delta medics treated the wounded Green Berets 170 On December 6 Karzai was informed that he would be the next president of Afghanistan He also negotiated the successful surrender of both the remaining Taliban forces and the city of Kandahar 189 Karzai s militia began their final push to clear the city 185 The US government rejected amnesty for Omar or any Taliban leaders 190 On December 7 Sherzai s forces seized Kandahar airport and moved into the city 185 Omar departed Kandahar and disappeared he may have gone to Zabul Helmand or Pakistan 191 Other Taliban leaders fled to Pakistan through the remote passes of Paktia and Paktika 191 In early December as the US invasion was almost over 7 500 Taliban prisoners were transported from Kunduz to Sheberghan prison by Junbish i Milli a group led by Dostum Hundreds to 3 000 of the Taliban prisoners suffocated in the overcrowded metal shipping containers on trucks or were shot dead in an incident known as the Dasht i Leili massacre Some were shot dead when guards shot air holes into the containers The dead were buried in graves in the Dasht i Leili desert just west of Sheberghan in the Jowzjan Province Physicians for Human Rights discovered the mass grave in 2002 but the Bush administration discouraged attempts to investigate the incident 192 Battle of Tora Bora Edit Main article Battle of Tora Bora US Army Special Forces headquarters in Nangarhar Province November 2001 Air strikes on Tora Bora After the fall of Kabul and Kandahar suspected al Qaeda members including bin Laden and other key leaders withdrew to Jalalabad Nangarhar Province From there they moved into the Tora Bora region of the Spin Ghar White Mountains 20 km away from the Pakistan border which had a network of caves and prepared defenses used by the mujahideen during the Soviet Afghan War 193 Signal intercepts and interrogation of captured Taliban fighters and al Qaeda terrorists pointed towards the presence of significant numbers of foreign fighters and possible senior leaders in the area 194 Instead of committing conventional forces both the White House and the Pentagon decided to isolate and destroy al Qaeda elements in the area with the US SOF supporting locally recruited Afghan militias due to a fear of repeating the Soviet s experience in the area 195 ODA 572 and a CIA team were dispatched to Tora Bora to advise eastern anti Taliban militias under the command of two warlords Hazrat Ali and Mohammed Zaman 196 Hazrat Ali and Zaman distrusted each other and during the battle their militias sometimes shot at each other 196 Using CIA funds some 1 000 Afghan fighters were recruited for the coming battle 197 The leader of the CIA team was Gary Berntsen who in November had replaced Gary Schroen as the senior CIA officer in Afghanistan 198 On December 2 Berntsen requested a battalion of Rangers be dropped into the mountains to establish blocking positions along potential escape routes out of Tora Bora into Pakistan 199 In addition to the Rangers other available forces included 1 000 Marines under Brigadier General Jim Mattis in Kandahar and soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division in Uzbekistan Franks denied Berntsen s request 200 From the outset of the battle ODA 572 with its attached Combat Controller called in precision airstrikes whilst the Afghans launched a number of poorly executed attacks on established al Qaeda positions with limited success 201 The militias would typically gain ground in the morning following US airstrikes but relinquish control of those gains the same day 202 They would also retreat to their base areas to sleep and break their fast each night since the battle occurred during Ramadan the month when Muslims do not eat or drink during the day 203 With the Afghan offensive stalled and the CIA and ODA teams overstretched Franks decided to deploy special operations soldiers from JSOC into the battle on December 9 201 Forty operators from A Squadron Delta Force deployed forward to Tora Bora and assumed tactical command of the battle from the CIA With the Delta squadron were a dozen of so members of the British SBS 204 The Delta operators were deployed in small teams embedded within the militias and sent their own operators out to search for bin Laden Eventually with the assistance of Green Berets and CIA operators the militias made progress 202 The Delta squadron commander agreed with the Jawbreaker assessment of the situation and requested blocking forces or the scattering of aerial landmines to deny mountain passes to the enemy Since the deployment of the Ranger battalion had been denied he requested that his operators carryout the proposed role but all his requests were denied by General Franks On December 12 two weeks into the battle Zaman opened negotiations with the trapped al Qaeda and Taliban in Tora Bora Against the wishes of the Americans and British Zaman called a temporary truce to allow al Qaeda to surrender 205 This truce was a ruse to allow as many as several hundred al Qaeda and members of the 055 Brigade to escape over night toward Pakistan 206 207 According to journalist Peter Bergen bin Laden left Tora Bora on the night of December 12 and went to Kunar Province 208 The following day a handheld radio recovered from the body of a dead al Qaeda fighter allowed members of the Delta squadron SBS CIA and MI6 to hear bin Laden s voice apparently apologizing to his followers for leading them to Tora Bora and giving his blessing for their surrender thought to be a recording addressed to the terrorists that stayed to fight a rearguard action to allow bin Laden to escape The leader of the CIA Jawbreaker team at Tora Bora believed that two large al Qaeda groups escaped the smaller group of 130 jihadis escaped east into Pakistan while the second group including bin Laden and 200 Saudi and Yemeni jihadis took the route across the mountains to the town of Parachinar Pakistan The Delta squadron commander believed that bin Laden crossed the border into Pakistan sometime around December 16 A Delta reconnaissance team call sign Jackal spotted a tall man wearing a camouflage jacket with a large number of fighters entering a cave The team called in multiple airstrikes on the presumption that it was bin Laden but later DNA analysis from the remains did not match bin Laden s 209 With the majority of the enemy gone the battle came to an end on December 17 197 On December 20 ODA 561 was inserted into the White Mountains to support ODA 572 in gathering intelligence in the caves and to assist with recovering DNA samples from terrorist bodies 205 US and UK forces continued searching into January but no sign of al Qaeda leadership emerged An estimated 220 al Qaeda fighters were killed during the battle and 52 prisoners were taken 3 No American or British personnel were killed 210 In subsequent years the military was heavily criticized for not deploying ground forces into Tora Bora to capture bin Laden 211 According to journalist Sean Naylor Franks opposed the idea because he was obsessed with not repeating the Soviets mistake of deploying large conventional formations into Afghanistan believing it would provoke popular resistance 212 Another possible explanation is that his attention was elsewhere Franks spent December 12 the day bin Laden may have escaped briefing Secretary Rumsfeld on his plan for invading Iraq 213 There were also logistical obstacles airlift assets in Afghanistan were limited so transporting a large ground force to the Spin Ghar and resupplying it was essentially impossible according to an official Army history 196 Mattis however developed a plan that he thought logistically feasible to drop artillery observers on the mountain passes with five days of sustainment to reduce resupply requirements 214 Political settlement Edit In late November 2001 the United Nations hosted the Bonn Conference 215 the Taliban were excluded 216 while three Afghan opposition groups participated 217 Observers included representatives of neighboring and other involved major countries 215 The resulting Bonn Agreement created the Afghan Interim Authority and outlined the Bonn Process that would lead towards a new constitution and a new Afghan government 216 Following the Bonn Conference tribal leaders and former exiles established an interim government in Kabul under Hamid Karzai 218 Casualties and atrocities EditSee also List of civilian casualties in the war in Afghanistan 2001 2006 and War crimes in Afghanistan The Costs of War Project at Brown University estimated that between 1 537 and 2 375 civilians were killed during the invasion 8 Northern Alliance casualties are unknown 6 United States casualties were 12 military personnel and one CIA officer Mike Spann 5 while the Taliban suffered 8 000 to 12 000 killed 7 According to Human Rights Watch during the invasion the Northern Alliance carried out systematic attacks on Pashtun villages raping women summarily executing civilians and stealing livestock and land 219 Logistics EditMain article NATO logistics in the Afghan War A landlocked country with forbidding terrain and a harsh climate Afghanistan presents major difficulties for military operations Prior to the war the United States had no military bases in Central or South Asia The initial CIA Jawbreaker team entered Afghanistan by helicopter from Tashkent Uzbekistan stopping to refuel in Dushanbe Tajikistan 220 The US established its main base at Karshi Khanabad Air Base known as K2 in Uzbekistan 221 Personnel and equipment were flown from the large American bases in Germany to K2 and then onward to Afghanistan 222 Pakistan granted the use of Shahbaz Air Base in Jacobabad as an auxiliary base 223 and the CIA flew Predator drones from both Jacobabad and Shamsi Airfield 224 Masirah Island off the coast of Oman served as the headquarters of Joint Special Operations Command 225 while the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk in the Indian Ocean was used as a platform for helicopters of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment to fly special operations personnel into southern Afghanistan 226 Some B 52 bombers flew into Afghanistan from the island of Diego Garcia and B 2 bombers flew nonstop from Whiteman Air Force Base Missouri to Afghanistan 226 Analysis EditAccording to historian Carter Malkasian the campaign was a striking military success 3 The United States achieved its war aims while committing a force of only 110 CIA officers 350 special operators and 5 000 Rangers and Marines 3 The model of special forces working with local fighters and calling in precision air strikes was heavily used by the United States during later operations in Afghanistan Iraq and Syria 3 One explanation for the rapid victory is that in Afghan culture fighters tend to defect to the winning side once its victory is seen as inevitable 227 as anthropologist Thomas Barfield puts it Just as the Taliban had come to power by persuading people that they were winners without fighting and buying the defection of wavering commanders with suitcases full of hundred dollar bills they lost the war in a reverse process 228 The pattern recurred during the 2021 Taliban offensive when the US backed government collapsed and a resurgent Taliban captured a dozen provincial capitals in a week before it entered Kabul unopposed 229 Legality EditSee also Opposition to the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Scholars have disputed the legality of the invasion under international law The United States and its allies argued that the invasion was an act of self defense which is legal according to Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations 230 The US sent a letter to the Security Council on October 7 stating that Afghanistan was harboring terrorists who attacked the United States that further attacks might be anticipated and that military action was needed to deter them 231 Legal scholar John Quigley has argued that the invasion was illegal because al Qaeda not Afghanistan was the perpetrator of the 9 11 attacks and because there was no evidence that further terrorist attacks were imminent 232 Sean Murphy made the opposite case that Afghanistan was responsible for the actions of al Qaeda because it allowed al Qaeda to operate from its territory and refused to extradite al Qaeda operatives 233 The debate continued with the 2009 publication of Myra Williamson s Terrorism War and International Law The Legality of the Use of Force Against Afghanistan in 2001 234 Williamson analyzed the legal questions raised by state responses to terrorism and the implications of the Afghanistan precedent for later conflicts such as the 2003 United States invasion of Iraq and the 2006 Israeli invasion of Lebanon 235 Reactions and aftermath EditMain article Reactions and aftermath to the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld with troops at Bagram Air Base December 2001 US Navy SEALs of Task Force K Bar conducting sensitive site exploitation in the Jaji Mountains January 12 2002 In October 2001 when the invasion began polls indicated that about 88 of Americans and about 65 of Britons backed military action 236 An Ipsos Reid poll conducted between November and December 2001 showed that majorities in Canada 66 France 60 Germany 60 Italy 58 and the UK 65 approved of US airstrikes while majorities in Argentina 77 China 52 South Korea 50 Spain 52 and Turkey 70 opposed them 237 There were a number of protests against the invasion including 20 000 people in Washington D C on September 29 238 and 20 000 people in London on October 7 239 In Afghanistan according to anthropologist Thomas Barfield there was a surprising level of popular support for the US intervention especially among non Pashtuns 240 In November 2001 CNN reported widespread relief amongst Kabul s residents after the Taliban fled the city with young men shaving off their beards and women taking off their burqas 241 Further information 2002 in Afghanistan On December 20 2001 the United Nations authorized an International Security Assistance Force ISAF with a mandate to help the Afghans maintain security in Kabul and surrounding areas 242 For its first years ISAF consisted of 8 000 American and 5 000 coalition soldiers 243 and its mandate did not extend beyond the Kabul area 242 In February 2002 the US detected a large concentration of Taliban and al Qaeda fighters in the eastern Shah i Kot Valley 244 Coalition forces cleared the valley during Operation Anaconda in March 2002 which resulted in 8 US soldiers killed and 80 wounded 245 US forces established their main base at Bagram airbase just north of Kabul 246 Kandahar airport also became an important US base and outposts were established in eastern provinces to hunt for Taliban and al Qaeda fugitives 247 Following Operation Anaconda al Qaeda and Taliban fighters established sanctuaries on the Pakistani border where they launched cross border raids beginning in April 2002 248 US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld aimed to carry out operations in Afghanistan rapidly and leave as fast as possible 249 He thus wished to focus on kinetic counter terrorism operations and building up a new Afghan Army 250 Rumsfeld announced in mid 2002 that The war is over in Afghanistan to the disbelief of State Department CIA and military officials in the country As a result Rumsfeld downplayed the need for an Afghan army of even 70 000 troops far fewer than the 250 000 envisaged by Karzai 251 In February 2002 the National Security Council met to decide whether to expand ISAF beyond Kabul In a dispute between Secretary of State Colin Powell and Rumsfeld Rumsfeld s view that the force should not be expanded prevailed 252 Historians later wrote that the failure of ISAF to be deployed beyond Kabul drove Karzai to offer positions within the state to potential spoilers whose activities did great harm to the state s reputation 253 Because the rise of the Taliban insurgency was linked to grievances over governance 254 this became a serious problem Several events in early 2002 taken together can be seen as the conclusion of the first phase of the US led war in Afghanistan The first was the dispersal of the major groups of the Taliban and al Qaeda after the end of Anaconda In February 2002 the United States decided to not expand international security forces beyond Kabul 252 President Bush made his speech at the Virginia Military Institute on April 17 2002 invoking General George Marshall while talking about Afghan reconstruction resulting in discussion of a Marshall Plan for Afghanistan 255 The decision against a significant expansion of international presence and development assistance was later seen by historians as a major error 256 The US s growing commitment to Iraq however was absorbing more and more resources which in hindsight would have made committing such resources to Afghanistan impossible 257 Notes Edit The Hazaras are a minority ethnic group adhering to Shia Islam who live in the mountains of central Afghanistan The team was made up of seven field agents two pilots and a helicopter mechanic 96 Phil Reilly was the deputy team leader Chris Wood was also on the team 97 References Edit Pakistan s Musharraf defends supporting US s Afghan war Anadolu Agency Sept 11 2016 Stent 2021 a b c d e f Malkasian 2021 p 78 a b c d e f Malkasian 2021 p 63 a b Coll 2019 p 110 a b Crawford 2011 p 27 a b Giustozzi 2019 pp 17 18 a b Crawford 2011 p 26 Crawford 2011 p 1 It is fair to say that Afghanistan a country of about 28 million people most of whom make their living in agriculture has been almost continually at war since 1979 Barfield 2012 pp 170 171 a b Barfield 2012 p 171 Barfield 2012 p 236 Barfield 2012 p 235 Malkasian 2021 p 31 Malkasian 2021 p 30 Malkasian 2021 pp 30 31 Wright et al 2010 p 17 a b Malkasian 2021 p 47 Malkasian 2021 pp 32 33 a b Barfield 2012 p 257 Barfield 2012 p 258 Coll 2004 p 14 Barfield 2012 p 262 Coll 2004 p 344 345 Malkasian 2021 p 49 a b Jalali 2001 p 91 Coll 2004 p 345 Wright et al 2010 pp 71 72 Coll 2004 p 325 Wright 2007 pp 150 153 Bergen 2021 pp 76 79 Malkasian 2021 p 48 Naylor 2015 pp 80 81 Coll 2004 pp 372 379 391 396 495 505 Coll 2004 pp 263 264 Coll 2004 pp 409 411 Rashid 2008 p 18 Risen 2008 Coll 2004 p 4 Coll 2004 p 580 Coll 2004 pp 583 4 Wright 2007 pp 400 401 Wright 2007 p 401 They boasted that Bin Laden had given the order to kill Massoud Now the Northern Alliance was leaderless the last obstacle to the Taliban s total control of the country removed by this significant favor Stanton 2009 p 53 Stanton 2009 p 51 Malkasian 2021 p 63 64 a b c Malkasian 2021 p 64 a b c d Jalali 2001 p 88 Coll 2019 p 87 Schroen 2005 pp 121 138 Jalali 2001 p 90 Stanton 2009 p 61 Jalali 2001 p 89 Jalali 2001 pp 88 91 a b Wright et al 2010 p 22 Wright et al 2010 p 33 a b c Malkasian 2021 p 53 Coll 2019 p 35 a b c d e Malkasian 2021 p 56 Bearak 2001a Bergen 2021 p 185 a b Bergen 2021 p 164 Woodward 2002 p 30 Whitlock 2021 p 6 Bergen 2021 p 163 Bergen 2021 p 163 164 Malkasian 2021 p 57 Woodward 2002 p 196 a b Wright et al 2010 p 32 Wright et al 2010 p 30 Woodward 2002 p 80 Coll 2019 pp 78 80 Woodward 2002 pp 74 75 Woodward 2002 pp 79 80 Woodward 2002 p 75 Wright et al 2010 p 43 Woodward 2002 pp 97 98 101 Naylor 2015 p 87 Naylor 2015 pp 90 91 Wright et al 2010 p 45 Woodward 2002 pp 134 135 Wright et al 2010 p 41 Woodward 2002 p 122 The U S action would not succeed if the Northern Alliance took over or even seemed to take over the country The Pashtun majority would not accept that Woodward 2002 p 123 We want to hold off on the Taliban Tenet continued So as not to destabilize Pakistan and our relationship with Pakistan There was still sufficient support for the Taliban in Pakistan that a military campaign conspicuously against the Taliban could undermine Musharraf a b Bearak 2001b Afghan refugee crisis spreads CNN September 20 2001 Retrieved August 7 2022 Afghanistan Life barely worth living UN Afghanistan ReliefWeb Margaret Emery Hiram Ruiz September 24 2001 Afghanistan s Refugee Crisis Millions of Afghans About to Starve Fox News March 25 2015 Wright et al 2010 pp 34 35 a b Neville 2015 p 25 a b Neville 2015 p 27 Neville 2015 p 29 Neville 2015 pp 30 31 a b Woodward 2002 p 139 Woodward 2002 p 142 Coll 2019 p 81 a b c Malkasian 2021 p 61 Woodward 2002 p 141 Woodward 2002 pp 155 249 Neville 2015 pp 22 24 Woodward 2002 pp 190 191 Corera 2012 p 335 Wright et al 2010 pp 63 64 Neville 2015 p 24 Coll 2019 pp 70 71 Coll 2019 pp 71 72 Coll 2019 p 72 Coll 2019 p 72 74 Coll 2019 p 74 75 Coll 2004 pp 528 531 33 Mazzetti 2013 p 99 a b c Wright et al 2010 pp 64 a b Wright et al 2010 p 73 a b Neville 2015 p 69 a b c d Wright et al 2010 p 95 Lowrey 2011 p 59 a b Naylor 2015 p 114 Naylor 2015 p 118 Naylor 2015 p 107 a b Wright et al 2010 p 96 Naylor 2015 p 116 117 Naylor 2015 p 119 Naylor 2015 p 110 Neville 2015 p 37 Stanton 2009 pp 53 54 Stanton 2009 pp 52 56 Wright et al 2010 p 76 a b Neville 2015 p 38 a b c d e Malkasian 2021 p 67 Barfield 2012 p 288 a b c Naylor 2015 p 142 a b Naylor 2015 pp 141 142 Naylor 2015 p 142 143 Naylor 2015 pp 142 145 a b Neville 2015 p 40 Stanton 2009 p 216 Stanton 2009 pp 222 224 Stanton 2009 p 128 Neville 2015 p 41 Wright et al 2010 p 75 Stanton 2009 pp 128 235 a b Malkasian 2021 p 65 Stanton 2009 p 242 Wright et al 2010 p 79 Call 2010 pp 24 25 Maloney 2004 a b Neville 2015 p 42 a b Farrell 2017 pp 81 82 Bergen 2021 pp 169 170 a b c Malkasian 2021 p 66 a b c d Neville 2015 p 43 Wright et al 2010 p 97 a b Naylor 2015 p 145 Naylor 2015 pp 145 149 a b Naylor 2015 p 123 Tyrangiel 2001 Naylor 2015 p 121 Naylor 2015 pp 121 124 127 Naylor 2015 p 127 Naylor 2015 pp 128 131 a b Naylor 2015 p 131 Naylor 2015 pp 131 132 Naylor 2015 pp 132 134 Naylor 2015 pp 135 136 a b c Malkasian 2021 p 68 a b Wright et al 2010 p 101 Wright et al 2010 pp 101 104 Wright et al 2010 pp 104 105 a b c Neville 2015 p 44 Wright et al 2010 p 108 Rashid 2008 pp 91 92 Hersh 2002 a b Rashid 2008 p 92 Neville 2015 pp 70 71 Neville 2015 p 71 Neville 2015 p 72 Neville 2015 pp 69 72 Neville 2015 Stanton 2009 p 7 Neville 2015 p 72 74 Neville 2015 p 75 a b Wright et al 2010 p 84 Wright et al 2010 pp 83 84 a b c Neville 2015 p 45 Malkasian 2021 p 72 Lowrey 2011 pp 112 116 Lowrey 2011 pp 120 121 Malkasian 2021 p 73 Malkasian 2021 p 74 a b Malkasian 2021 p 75 Risen 2009 Wright et al 2010 p 114 115 Neville 2015 pp 45 46 Naylor 2015 p 179 a b c Wright et al 2010 p 115 a b Malkasian 2021 p 77 Naylor 2015 pp 144 179 Bergen 2021 pp 173 174 Bergen 2021 pp 174 175 a b Wright et al 2010 p 116 a b Wright et al 2010 p 117 Naylor 2015 p 183 Naylor 2015 p 180 a b Wright et al 2010 p 118 Neville 2015 pp 48 49 69 70 Corera 2012 p 338 Bergen 2021 pp 175 177 Neville 2015 pp 48 49 Naylor 2015 p 185 Lowrey 2011 p 207 Naylor 2015 p 181 Bergen 2021 p 176 Lowrey 2011 p 209 a b Malkasian 2021 p 69 a b Malkasian 2021 p 70 Barfield 2012 p 283 Barfield 2012 p 284 How US Funded Abuses Led to Failure in Afghanistan Human Rights Watch July 6 2021 Retrieved May 15 2022 Schroen 2005 p 71 Wright et al 2010 p 59 Wright et al 2010 p 60 Wright et al 2010 p 58 Malkasian 2021 p 60 Naylor 2015 p 97 a b Wright et al 2010 p 63 Biddle 2002 p 17 Barfield 2012 p 270 George 2021 Williamson 2013 p 161 Quigley 2003 p 542 Quigley 2003 pp 546 Quigley 2003 pp 545 46 Sanger 2009 p 316 Sanger 2009 p 318 AEI 2008 AEI 2008 p 157 New York City protest opposes war in Afghanistan Wsws org Retrieved July 16 2009 20 000 join anti war protest London Guardian October 13 2001 Retrieved July 16 2009 Barfield 2012 p 275 Kabul residents relish new freedoms CNN November 14 2001 Archived from the original on January 23 2015 Retrieved January 2 2017 Barbers too were doing brisk business as young men with trimmed beards and bare faces walked the streets listening to music from roadside stalls no longer fearing imprisonment Yet relief at the fall of the Taliban in Kabul does not mean residents are now completely relaxed Scenes of joy mask concerns that the alliance s capture of the city will again result in the ethnic infighting that ravaged Kabul before the Taliban capture in 1996 a b Wright et al 2010 p 182 Malkasian 2021 p 82 Jones 2009 p 94 Jones 2009 p 95 Malkasian 2021 p 109 Malkasian 2021 pp 109 110 Jones 2009 pp 100 148 Jones 2009 p 12 Auerswald amp Saideman 2014 pp 87 88 Coll 2019 pp 134 135 a b Jones 2009 pp 114 115 Maley 2012 p 130 Jones 2008 p 8 Jones 2009 pp 116 117 Jones 2009 pp 132 133 Jones 2009 pp 124 129 Bibliography EditArticles Edit Bearak Barry September 12 2001a Condemning Attacks Taliban Says bin Laden Not Involved The New York Times Archived from the original on November 18 2013 Bearak Barry September 13 2001b AFTER THE ATTACKS THE AFGHANS Taliban Plead for Mercy to the Miserable in a Land of Nothing The New York Times Biddle Stephen November 2002 Aghanistan and the Future of Warfare Implications for Army and Defense Policy PDF Strategic Studies Institute Crawford Neta September 2011 Civilian Death and Injury in Afghanistan 2001 2011 PDF Costs of War Project Retrieved March 28 2022 George Susannah August 15 2021 Afghanistan s military collapse Illicit deals and mass desertions Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved March 30 2022 Hersh Seymour January 28 2002 The Getaway The New Yorker Jalali Ali 2001 Afghanistan The Anatomy of an Ongoing Conflict Parameters 31 1 85 98 doi 10 55540 0031 1723 2024 S2CID 150407995 Jones Seth 2008 The Rise of Afghanistan s Insurgency State Failure and Jihad International Security 32 4 7 40 doi 10 1162 isec 2008 32 4 7 ISSN 0162 2889 JSTOR 30129790 S2CID 57568287 Maloney Sean 2004 Afghanistan From here to eternity Parameters Archived from the original on January 15 2009 Quigley John 2003 The Afghanistan War and Self Defense Valparaiso University Law Review 37 2 541 562 Risen James July 10 2009 U S Inaction Seen After Taliban P O W s Died The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 3 2022 Sanger Andrew 2009 Review of Terrorism War and International Law The Legality of the Use of Force Against Afghanistan in 2001 Democracy and Security 5 3 316 319 doi 10 1080 17419160903181676 ISSN 1741 9166 JSTOR 48602655 S2CID 142766937 Stent Angela September 8 2021 The impact of September 11 on US Russian relations Brookings Retrieved March 15 2022 Tyrangiel Josh December 16 2001 Inside Tora Bora The Final Hours Time Archived from the original on February 3 2002 Books Edit AEI July 24 2008 America and the War on Terror AEI Public Opinion Study Archived from the original on April 4 2015 Auerswald David P Saideman Stephen M 2014 NATO in Afghanistan Fighting Together Fighting Alone Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 4867 6 Barfield Thomas 2012 Afghanistan A Cultural and Political History Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15441 1 Bergen Peter L 2021 The Rise and Fall of Osama Bin Laden Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 9821 7052 3 Call Steve 2010 Danger Close Tactical Air Controllers in Afghanistan and Iraq Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1603441421 Coll Steve 2004 Ghost Wars The Secret History of the CIA Afghanistan and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10 2001 New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 59420 007 6 Coll Steve 2019 Directorate S The C I A and America s Secret Wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan Penguin Group ISBN 9780143132509 Corera Gordon 2012 MI6 Life and Death in the British Secret Service W amp N ISBN 978 0753828335 Farrell Theo 2017 Unwinnable Britain s War in Afghanistan 2001 2014 Bodley Head ISBN 978 1847923462 Giustozzi Antonio 2019 The Taliban at War 2001 2018 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 009239 9 Jones Seth 2009 In the Graveyard of Empires Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393068986 Lowrey Nathan 2011 U S Marines in Afghanistan 2001 2002 From the Sea PDF Washington D C History Division United States Marine Corps ISBN 978 0 16 089557 9 Maley William 2012 PRT activity in Afghanistan the Australian experience In Hynek Nik Marton Peter eds Statebuilding in Afghanistan Multinational Contributions to Reconstruction Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 66101 3 Malkasian Carter 2021 The American War in Afghanistan A History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0197550779 Mazzetti Mark 2013 The way of the knife the CIA a secret army and a war at the ends of the Earth Internet Archive Penguin ISBN 9781594204807 Naylor Sean 2015 Relentless strike the secret history of Joint Special Operations Command Internet Archive New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 250 01454 2 Neville Leigh 2015 Special Forces in the War on Terror Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472807908 Rashid Ahmed 2008 Descent into Chaos the US and the Failure of Nation Building in Pakistan Afghanistan and Central Asia Internet Archive New York Viking ISBN 978 0 670 01970 0 Risen James 2008 State of War The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration Simon amp Schuster UK ISBN 978 1 84737 511 7 Schroen Gary 2005 First In An Insider s Account of How the CIA Spearheaded the War on Terror in Afghanistan Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 345 48459 8 Stanton Doug 2009 Horse Soldiers The Extraordinary Story of a Band of U S soldiers Who Rode to Victory in Afghanistan Scribner ISBN 9781416580515 Williamson Myra 2013 Terrorism War and International Law The Legality of the Use of Force Against Afghanistan in 2001 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 4094 9656 4 Whitlock Craig 2021 The Afghanistan Papers A Secret History of the War Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 9821 5902 3 Woodward Bob 2002 Bush at War Internet Archive New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 0473 6 Wright Donald P Bird James Clay Steven et al 2010 A Different Kind of War The United States Army in Operation Enduring Freedom OEF October 2001 September 2005 PDF Fort Leavenworth Kansas Combat Studies Institute Press Wright Lawrence 2007 The Looming Tower Al Qaeda and the Road to 9 11 Internet Archive New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 1 4000 3084 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States invasion of Afghanistan amp oldid 1132159927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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