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War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
Part of the Global War on Terrorism and the Afghanistan conflict (1978–present)

Clockwise from top-left:
American troops in a firefight with Taliban insurgents in Kunar Province; An American F-15S Strike Eagle dropping 2000 pound JDAMs on a cave in eastern Afghanistan; an Afghan soldier surveying atop a Humvee; Afghan and American soldiers move through snow in Logar Province; victorious Taliban fighters after securing Kabul; an Afghan soldier surveying a valley in Parwan Province; British troops preparing to board a Chinook during Operation Black Prince
Date7 October 2001 – 15 August 2021
(19 years, 10 months, 1 week and 1 day)
First phase: 7 October 2001 – 28 December 2014
Second phase: 1 January 2015 – 15 August 2021[36][37][38][39]
Location
Result Taliban victory[40]
First phase:
Second phase:
Territorial
changes
Taliban control over Afghanistan increases compared to pre-intervention territory
Belligerents
Invasion (2001):
 Northern Alliance
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Canada
 Germany[1]
 Australia
 Italy
 New Zealand[2]
Supported by:
Invasion (2001):
 Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan[3]
 Al-Qaeda
 055 Brigade[4][5]
ISAF/RS phase (2001–2021):
 Islamic State of Afghanistan (2001–2002)
 Afghan Transitional Authority (2002–2004)
 Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (2004–2021) Resolute Support (2015–2021; 36 countries)[9]
High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (allegedly; from 2015)[10][11]
Khost Protection Force and other pro-government paramilitaries[12]
ISAF/RS phase (2001–2021):
 Taliban Al-Qaeda
Supported by:
Taliban splinter groups

RS phase (2015–2021):

ISIL–KP (from 2015)[34]
  • Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (since 2015)[35]
Commanders and leaders
Strength

ISAF (2001-2014): 130,000 (2012)[46][47]
Afghan National Security Forces: 352,000 (2014)[48]
Resolute Support Mission (2015-2021): ~17,000 (2021)[49]Military contractors: 20,000+[50]
High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan: 3,000–3,500[51]

Khost Protection Force: 4,000 (2015)[52]

Taliban: 60,000
(tentative estimate, 2014)[53]

HIG: 1,500–2,000+ (2014)[57]
al-Qaeda: ~300 in 2016[58][59][60] (~ 3,000 in 2001)[58]


Fidai Mahaz: 8,000 (2013)[43]


ISIL–KP: 3,500–4,000 (2018, in Afghanistan)[61]
Casualties and losses

Afghan security forces:
66,000–69,095 killed[62][63]
Northern Alliance:
200 killed[64][65][66][67][68]

Coalition:
Dead: 3,579

Wounded: 23,536

  • United States: 20,713[70]
  • United Kingdom: 2,188[71]
  • Canada: 635[72]

Contractors
Dead: 3,917[63][73][74]
Wounded: 15,000+[73][74]

Total killed: 76,591

Taliban insurgents:
52,893 killed[63] (2,000+ al-Qaeda fighters)[58]


ISIL–KP:
2,400+ killed[34]

Civilians killed: 46,319[63]


Total killed: 176,206 (per Brown University)[75]
212,191+ (per UCDP)
[76]


a The continued list includes nations who have contributed fewer than 200 troops as of November 2014.[77]

b The continued list includes nations who have contributed fewer than 200 troops as of May 2017.[78]

The War in Afghanistan was an armed conflict from 2001 to 2021. It began when an international military coalition led by the United States launched an invasion of Afghanistan, toppling the Taliban-ruled Islamic Emirate and establishing the internationally recognized Islamic Republic three years later. The conflict ultimately ended with the 2021 Taliban offensive, which overthrew the Islamic Republic, and re-established the Islamic Emirate. It was the longest war in the military history of the United States, surpassing the length of the Vietnam War (1955–1975) by approximately 6 months.

Following the September 11 attacks, U.S. President George W. Bush demanded that the Taliban immediately extradite al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden to the United States; the Taliban refused to do so without evidence of bin Laden's involvement. The U.S. declared Operation Enduring Freedom, as part of the earlier-declared War on Terror. Afghanistan was invaded and the Taliban and its allies were soon expelled from major population centers by the U.S.-led forces, supporting the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance; however, bin Laden relocated to neighboring Pakistan. The U.S.-led coalition remained in Afghanistan, forming a security mission (ISAF)—sanctioned by the United Nations—with the goal of creating a new democratic authority in the country that would prevent the Taliban from returning to power.[79] A new Afghan Interim Administration was established, and international rebuilding efforts were launched.[80] By 2003, the Taliban had reorganized under their founder, Mullah Omar, and began a widespread insurgency against the new Afghan government and coalition forces. Insurgents from the Taliban and other Islamist groups waged asymmetric warfare, fighting with guerrilla warfare in the countryside, suicide attacks against urban targets, and reprisals against perceived Afghan collaborators. By 2007, large parts of Afghanistan had been retaken by the Taliban.[81][82] In response, the coalition sent a major influx of troops for counter-insurgency operations, with a "clear and hold" strategy for villages and towns; this influx peaked in 2011, when roughly 140,000 foreign troops were operating under ISAF command across Afghanistan.[83]

A U.S. covert operation using bases in Afghanistan led to the killing of Osama bin Laden in May 2011, and NATO leaders began planning an exit strategy.[84][85] On 28 December 2014, NATO formally ended ISAF combat operations in Afghanistan and officially transferred full security responsibility to the Afghan government. Unable to eliminate the Taliban through military means, coalition forces (and separately, the Afghan government led by Ashraf Ghani) turned to diplomacy to end the conflict.[86] These efforts culminated in the US–Taliban deal in February 2020, which stipulated the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Afghanistan by 2021.[87] In exchange, the Taliban pledged to prevent any militant group from staging attacks from Afghan territory against the U.S. and its allies.[88] However, the Afghan government was not a party to the deal and rejected its terms.[89] Coinciding with the withdrawal of troops, the Taliban launched a broad offensive throughout the summer of 2021, successfully reestablishing their control over Afghanistan, including the capital city of Kabul on 15 August. On the same day, the last president of the Islamic Republic, Ashraf Ghani, fled the country; the Taliban declared victory and the war was formally brought to a close.[90] By 30 August, the last American military aircraft departed from Afghanistan, ending the protracted U.S.-led military presence in the country.[91][92]

Overall, the war killed an estimated 176,000–212,000+ people, including 46,319 civilians.[93] While more than 5.7 million former refugees returned to Afghanistan after the 2001 invasion,[94] by the time the Taliban returned to power in 2021, 2.6 million Afghans remained refugees,[95] while another 4 million were internally displaced.[96][97]

Names

The war is named the War in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2021 to distinguish it from other wars, notably the ongoing Afghanistan conflict of which it was a part, and the Soviet–Afghan War. From a western perspective, the war is divided between 2001 and 2014 (the ISAF mission), when most combat operations were performed by coalition forces, and 2015 to 2021 (the Resolute Support Mission), when the Afghan Armed Forces did most of the fighting against the Tailban. The war was named Operation Enduring Freedom from 2001 to 2014 and as Operation Freedom's Sentinel from 2015 to 2021 by the US. Alternatively, it has been called the US War in Afghanistan in certain countries. In Afghanistan itself, the war is known as simply the "War in Afghanistan" (Dari: جنگ در افغانستان Jang dar Afghanestan, Pashto: د افغانستان جګړه Da Afganistan Jangra).

Prelude

 
The military situation of the Afghan Civil War in 1996 between the Taliban (red) and the Northern Alliance (blue)

Rise of the Taliban

The Taliban emerged from religious students known as the Talib who sought to end warlordism in Afghanistan through stricter adherence to Sharia.[98][99] On 27 September 1996, the Taliban, with military support by Pakistan and financial support from Saudi Arabia, seized Kabul and founded the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.[100] The Taliban imposed their fundamentalist Deobandi interpretation of Islam in areas under their control, issuing edicts forbidding women to work outside the home, attend school or to leave their homes unless accompanied by a male relative.[101] According to the United Nations (UN), the Taliban, while trying to consolidate control over northern and western Afghanistan, committed systematic massacres against civilians. UN officials stated that there had been "15 massacres" between 1996 and 2001, many of them targeting Shia Hazaras.[102][103]

By 2001, the Taliban controlled as much as 90% of Afghanistan, with the Northern Alliance confined to the country's northeast corner. Fighting alongside Taliban forces were some 28,000–30,000 Pakistanis (usually also Pashtun) and 2,000–3,000 Al-Qaeda militants.[104][105][106][107]

Al-Qaeda

The 9/11 Commission in the US found that under the Taliban, al-Qaeda was able to use Afghanistan as a place to train and indoctrinate fighters, import weapons, coordinate with other jihadists, and plot terrorist actions.[108] While al-Qaeda maintained its own camps in Afghanistan, it also supported training camps of other organizations. An estimated 10,000 to 20,000 men passed through these facilities before 9/11, most of whom were sent to fight for the Taliban against the United Front. A smaller number were inducted into al-Qaeda.[109]

After the August 1998 United States embassy bombings were linked to bin Laden, President Bill Clinton ordered missile strikes on militant training camps in Afghanistan. US officials pressed the Taliban to surrender bin Laden. In 1999, the international community imposed sanctions on the Taliban, calling for bin Laden to be surrendered. The Taliban repeatedly rebuffed these demands. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Special Activities Division paramilitary teams were active in Afghanistan in the 1990s in clandestine operations to locate and kill or capture Osama bin Laden. These teams planned several operations but did not receive the order to proceed from President Clinton. Their efforts built relationships with Afghan leaders that proved essential in the 2001 invasion.[110]

September 11 attacks

On the morning of 11 September 2001, a total of 19 Arab Muslim men—15 of whom were from Saudi Arabia—carried out four coordinated attacks in the United States. Four commercial passenger jet airliners were hijacked.[111][112] The hijackers intentionally crashed two of the airliners into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing everyone on board and more than 2,000 people in the buildings. Both buildings collapsed within two hours from damage related to the crashes, destroying nearby buildings and damaging others. The hijackers crashed a third airliner into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C. The fourth plane crashed into a field near Shanksville, in rural Pennsylvania, after some of its passengers and flight crew attempted to retake control of the plane, which the hijackers had redirected toward Washington, D.C., to target the White House, or the US Capitol. No one aboard the flights survived. The death toll among responders including firefighters and police was 836 as of 2009.[113] Total deaths were 2,996, including the 19 hijackers.[113]

 
Rescue operations underway at the Pentagon after the September 11th attacks

Osama Bin Laden planned and coordinated the attacks, and the US desire to hold him accountable became the casus belli for invasion. Historian Carter Malkasian writes that "seldom in history has one man so singlehandedly provoked a war." Bin Laden sought, successfully, to draw the US into an extended war similar to that fought against the Soviets.[114]: 62–64  The Taliban publicly condemned the 11 September attacks.[115] They also greatly underestimated the US's willingness to go to war. The US was mistaken in its belief that the Taliban and al-Qaeda were almost inseparable when, in fact, they had very different goals and leaders.[114]: 65–70 

US ultimatum to the Taliban

Immediately after the 9/11 attacks, the United States National Security Council agreed that military action would probably have to be taken against Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. However, Bush decided to issue an ultimatum to the Taliban first.[114]: 54  President Bush issued an ultimatum to the Taliban to hand over Osama bin Laden, "close immediately every terrorist training camp, hand over every terrorist and their supporters, and give the United States full access to terrorist training camps for inspection."[115] The same day, religious scholars met in Kabul, deciding that bin Laden should be surrendered, however, Mullah Omar decided that "turning over Osama would only be a disgrace for us and Islamic thought and belief would be a weakness", and that the US would continue making demands after surrendering bin Laden, who he claimed was innocent.[114]: 56  The Taliban refused the ultimatum, saying that Osama bin Laden was protected by the traditional Pashtun laws of hospitality.[116][117]

In the weeks ahead and at the beginning of the US and NATO invasion of Afghanistan, the Taliban demanded evidence of bin Laden's guilt but subsequently offered to hand over Osama bin Laden to a third country if the US stopped its bombing and provided evidence of bin Laden's guilt.[118][119] A Bush administration official later stated that their demands were "not subject to negotiation" and that it was "time for the Taliban to act now".[120] Covert US military action began soon after, and the War started officially on 7 October 2001.[114]: 58 

History

Tactical overview

The War contained two main factions: the Coalition, which included the US and its allies (eventually supporting the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan); fighting against the Taliban, its allies, and its militias. Complicating the fight was Taliban splinter groups and other more radical religious groups such as al-Qaeda and later the Islamic State. These radical groups sometimes fought for the Taliban, sometimes fought for their own goals, and sometimes fought against both the Taliban and the Government.

Afghanistan is a rural country. In 2020, some 80% of its 33 million people lived in the countryside.[114]: 12  This predisposes warfare to rural areas, and provides ample hiding spots for guerrilla fighters. The country also has harsh winters, which favors spring or summertime military offensives after winter lulls in fighting.[121][122] 99.7% of Afghanistan is Muslim,[123] which affected the ideology of both the Taliban and the Afghan government. Islam has historically allowed Afghan leaders to overcome tribal differences and conflict, and provided a sense of unity, especially against foreigners and non-believers. Centuries of foreign invasion by non-Muslims cemented the religious nature of resisting outsiders and the Afghan identity.[114]: 17–19  The impact of local religious leaders (mullahs) is important in Afghanistan, and they could influence the population as much as the government. Mullahs have traditionally been important in prescribing resistance to outsiders through calls for holy war or jihad.[114]: 23–24 

Afghanistan is a largely tribal society, and this significantly influences Afghan society and politics. Tribalism is largely a source of division, unlike Islam. Pashtuns are the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan, comprising between 38% and 50% of the population.[124] Pashtunwali, the traditional way of life for the Pashtuns, guided most tribal decision making. Tribal unity was often weak as well due to Pashtunwali's method of dealing with feuds. Traditionally, Afghan leaders have depended on tribes to keep order in rural areas because without their cooperation the state was often ineffective and weak. Afghans were more loyal to their own community and tribe, not the state, which meant that tribes would align with either the Taliban or the Government as was most beneficial.[114]: 19–22 

The significant difference in power between high-tech Coalition militaries and the guerrilla Taliban led to asymmetric warfare. Owing to their roots in the anti-Soviet Mujahideen, the Taliban carried on the guerrilla tactics developed in the 1980s. The Mujihdeen operated in small cadres of 10 to 50 men, armed with a combination of outdated and (usually looted) modern weapons.[114]: 31  The Taliban increasingly used guerrilla tactics such as suicide, car and roadside bombs (IEDs), and targeted assassinations.[125] By 2009, IEDs had become the Taliban's weapon of choice.[126] The Taliban also used insider attacks as the war drew on, by planting personnel in the Afghan military and police forces.[127]

2001–2002: Invasion and early operations

 
US Army Special Forces and US Air Force Combat Controllers with Northern Alliance troops on horseback, Samangan Province

Though the US officially invaded on 7 October 2001 by launching Operation Enduring Freedom, covert operations had begun several weeks earlier. Fifteen days after the 9/11 attack, the US covertly inserted members of the CIA's Special Activities Division into Afghanistan, forming the Northern Afghanistan Liaison Team.[128] They linked up with the Northern Alliance in the Panjshir Valley north of Kabul.[129] In October, 12-man Special Forces teams began arriving in Afghanistan to work with the CIA and Northern Alliance.[129] Within a few weeks the Northern Alliance, with assistance from the US ground and air forces, captured several key cities from the Taliban.[130][131] The Taliban retreated throughout the country, holding steady only in Kunduz Province, outmatched by US air support. By November, the Taliban had lost control of most of the country.[114]: 70–75 

The US did not invade alone: it began with assistance from the UK, and eventually over a dozen more countries.[132][133][134] The US and its allies drove the Taliban from power and built military bases near major cities across the country. Most al-Qaeda and Taliban were not captured, escaping to neighboring Pakistan or retreating to rural or remote mountainous regions.[135] On 20 December 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.[136] Its mandate did not extend beyond the Kabul area for the first few years.[137] Eighteen countries were contributing to the force in February 2002.

 
American and British special forces operators at Tora Bora, 2001

Who would lead the country became an acute political question. At the Bonn Conference in December 2001, Hamid Karzai was selected to head the Afghan Interim Administration, which after a 2002 loya jirga (grand assembly) in Kabul became the Afghan Transitional Administration. The agreement provided steps that would lead to democracy for the country.[138]

 
US Humvee crossing water in 2002

Shortly after the elevation of Karzai to the president on 5 December, the Taliban may have tried to seek a conditional surrender to Karzai. There are two conflicting accounts. The first is that an agreement, possibly signed by Mullah Omar, leader of the Taliban, was reached wherein the Taliban would surrender in exchange for immunity. The second is that the agreement was more narrowly focused on surrendering Kandahar. Taliban sources, on the other hand, say that Omar was not part of the deal and was not going to surrender Kandahar. Whatever the case, the US vetoed any sort of negotiation, in what historian Malkasian calls "one of the greatest mistakes" of the war. Omar disappeared, leaving either for another part of Afghanistan or Pakistan. The Taliban subsequently went into hiding, or fled to Pakistan, though many gave up arms as well. Most leaders and thousands of fighters went to Pakistan. Whether the Taliban had decided on an insurgency at this time is unknown.[114]: 74–84  Taliban fighters remained in hiding in the rural regions of four southern provinces: Kandahar, Zabul, Helmand and Uruzgan.[139]

By late November, bin Laden was at a fortified training camp in Tora Bora. The battle of Tora Bora began on 6 December. CIA teams working with tribal militias followed bin Laden there and began to call in airstrikes to clear out the mountainous camp, with special forces soon arriving in support. While the tribal militia numbered 1,000, it was not fighting eagerly during Ramadan. While the CIA requested that United States Army Rangers be sent and Marines were ready to deploy, they were declined. Bin Laden was eventually able to escape at some point in December to Pakistan.[114]: 84–87 

The invasion was a striking military success for the Coalition. Fewer than 12 US soldiers died between October and March, compared to some 15,000 Taliban killed or taken prisoner. Special forces teams and their Afghan allies had done most of the work and relatively few soldiers had been required. Karzai was a respected, legitimate, and charismatic leader. Still, according to Malkasian, the failure to capture bin Laden or negotiate with the Taliban, or include them in any way in the new government, set the course for the long war that bin Laden had dreamed of getting the US into.[114]: 86–88 

2003–2005: Taliban resurgence

 
Map detailing the spread of the Taliban insurgency, 2002–2006

Coalition mistakes, Taliban start to re-organize

After initial success, the US lacked an obvious goal in Afghanistan beyond the counter-terrorism objectives of finding senior Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders. Nation-building was initially opposed by the Bush administration, but as the US stayed, it slowly crept into the rationale for staying. In April 2002, Bush made a speech expressing a desire to rebuild Afghanistan. The US also sought to instill democracy and women's rights as a moral matter. The international community contributed to the development effort in Afghanistan, which focused on aid and creating institutions to run the country. US reconstruction efforts also focused on improving education, health care, and community development. The US also supported and funded the creation of an Afghan army in early 2002. However, the army was built slowly due to competing interests and a US belief that the Taliban were no longer a strong threat. Some in the Bush administration preferred to use the Northern Alliance and warlords as the military instead of creating a new military. The army became an afterthought and was poorly trained and equipped, which further enabled the Taliban.[114]: 89–105 

Some members of the Taliban reached out to Karzai to open negotiations several times between 2002 and 2004, but the US was adamantly against this and ensured that all top Taliban leaders were blacklisted, such that the Afghan Government could not negotiate with them. Historian Malkasian argues that negotiations with the Taliban would have been low cost but highly effective at this stage and chocks it up to US overconfidence and hubris, and notes that all the information that the Taliban could resurge was available but ignored.[114]: 106–111  Some Taliban leaders considered joining the political process, with meetings on the issue until 2004, though these did not result in a decision to do so.[140]: 19 

The first attempt at a larger organization of Taliban groups after the invasion occurred in April 2002 in the country's south. A shura was established by former mid-level Taliban officials in Gardi Jangal a refugee camp near the Helmand border. It operated in the core southern provinces of Kandahar, Helmand, Zabul, and Uruzgan. It was composed of 23 groups of about 50 individuals each, for a total of around 1,200. In the North Waziristan District of Pakistan, Jalaluddin Haqqani had started organizing the Haqqani network after exiling there in 2001. In early 2002 their manpower was estimated at 1,400 and had a presence in Paktia Province and Khost Province in the second half of 2002 with limited activity. They were joined by members of Al-Qaeda. Operation Jacana & Operation Condor, among others, tried to flush out the Taliban with varying results.[140]: 25–29 

From 2002 to 2005, the Taliban reorganized and planned a resurgence. Pressure on Coalition forces to hunt down terrorists led to excesses and generated some popular support for the Taliban. Coalition troops would go on missions with questionable intelligence, at one point falling prey to a false tip provided by a target's political opponents. Few high-level Taliban or al-Qaeda leaders were caught. Those captured were predominantly low-level Taliban operatives who had little information on al-Qaeda. Numerous civilians were killed in operations, including a wedding which was misinterpreted as a Taliban gathering. Repeated errors by Coalition forces drove Taliban recruitment. Many Taliban leaders who had given up arms to leave peacefully, especially after being promised amnesty by President Karzai, were increasingly harassed by the US and elements of the Afghan government. By 2004, most Taliban leaders in Afghanistan had fled back to Pakistan, where the remnants of the Taliban were hiding. Malkasian argues that the US provided significant momentum to the Taliban by its own missteps, especially by focusing on aggressive counter-terrorism and vengeance for 9/11. He further argues that these actions alone did not restart the conflict because the Taliban would have re-emerged regardless because of leaders like Mullah Omar and Jalaluddin Haqqani who had never put down arms.[114]: 119–123 

Fighting increases

The Taliban undertook relatively few actions until 2005. Pamphlets by Taliban and other groups turned up strewn in towns and the countryside in early 2003, urging Islamic faithful to rise up against US forces and other foreign soldiers in a holy war.[141] On 27 January 2003, during Operation Mongoose, US forces cleared out the Adi Ghar cave complex 25 km (15 mi) north of Spin Boldak.[citation needed] In May 2003, the Taliban Supreme Court's chief justice, Abdul Salam, proclaimed that the Taliban were back, regrouped, rearmed, and ready for guerrilla war to expel US forces from Afghanistan.[142] Meanwhile, American attention was diverted from Afghanistan when US forces invaded Iraq in March 2003.[143]

Privately, the Taliban were preparing a grand offensive against the Coalition. It was to be several years in the making so that enough strength could be gathered. Mullah Dadullah was put in charge of the offensive. Dadullah was effective but cruel. He was responsible for introducing suicide bombing into wide use around 2004, as previously the Taliban had not been enamored by suicide or taking civilian lives; that had been an al-Qaeda tactic. A network of madrassas in Pakistan catering to Afghan refugees provided a steady stream of extremist recruits willing to die.[114]: 125–127 

 
US troops board a helicopter in Zabul province, 2003
 
A US Navy Corpsman searches for Taliban fighters in Mihtarlam, spring of 2005

As the summer of 2003 continued, Taliban attacks gradually increased in frequency. Dozens of Afghan government soldiers, NGO humanitarian workers, and several US soldiers died in the raids, ambushes, and rocket attacks. Besides guerrilla attacks, Taliban fighters began building up forces in the district of Dey Chopan District in Zabul Province. The Taliban decided to make a stand there. Over the course of the summer, up to 1,000 guerrillas moved there. Over 220 people, including several dozen Afghan police, were killed in August 2003.[144] On 11 August 2003, NATO assumed control of ISAF.[145]

Taliban leader Mullah Omar reorganized the movement, and in 2003 launched an insurgency against the government and ISAF.[146][147] From the second half of 2003 and through 2004 operations started intensifying, with night letters followed by kidnappings and assassinations of government officials and collaborating village elders by 2005, with the former leaving villages in fear. Government schools and clinics were also burned down.[140]: 34 

Operation Asbury Park cleared out Taliban forces in the Dey Chopan District during the summer of 2004.[148] In late 2004, the then hidden Taliban leader Mohammed Omar announced an insurgency against "America and its puppets" (referring to transitional Afghan government forces) to "regain the sovereignty of our country".[149] The 2004 Afghan presidential election was a major target of Taliban, though only 20 districts and 200 villages elsewhere were claimed to have been successfully prevented from voting. Karzai was elected president of the country, now named the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.[140]: 40 

From late June through mid-July 2005, United States Navy Seals carried out Operation Red Wings as a joint military operation in Kunar Province. The mission intended to disrupt local Taliban led by Ahmad Shah, hopefully bringing stability and facilitating the Afghan Parliament elections scheduled for September 2005. The operation was a pyrrhic victory for the Coalition, with only one survivor (dramatized in the 2013 film Lone Survivor) and 19 dead.[150][151][152] Operation Whalers would finish the job several weeks later. Taliban activity dropped significantly and Shah was seriously wounded. Shah was not able to undertake any significant operations subsequent to Operation Whalers in Kunar or neighboring provinces.[151][153]

The Taliban regained control over several villages in the south by the end of 2005, mostly because the villages were fed up with the lack of help from the government and hoped life would be better under the Taliban. Years of planning were coming to fruition for the Taliban. By comparison, the Government was in a very weak position. The police were deeply underfunded, and the average district had only 50 officers. Some districts had no Government presence at all. Most of the country's militias (with a strength of ~100,000) had been demobilized due to international pressure to create an army. But the army was still woefully understrength. Combined with an increase in tribal feuding, the conditions were perfect for a Taliban comeback.[114]: 134–136 

 
An Apache helicopter provides protection from the air, Lwar Kowndalan in Kandahar, October 2005

2006–2009: Escalating war and NATO build-up

As insurgent attacks in the country reportedly grew fourfold between 2002 and 2006,[154] by late 2007 Afghanistan was said to be in "serious danger" of falling into Taliban control despite the presence of 40,000 ISAF troops.[155]

Coalition diversifies, Taliban offensive

From January 2006, a multinational ISAF contingent started to replace US troops in southern Afghanistan. The UK formed the core of the force, along with Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, and Estonia.[156][157][158][159][160] In January 2006, NATO's focus in southern Afghanistan was to form Provincial Reconstruction Teams. Local Taliban figures pledged to resist.[161] Since Canada wanted to deploy in Kandahar, the UK got Helmand province. Helmand was a center of poppy production, so it seemed a good region for the anti-narcotic focused UK. In hindsight, the UK were a poor choice. Pashtun Helmandis had never forgotten the 1880 Battle of Maiwand near Helmand province; a popular rumour was that the British sought to avenge their loss in that battle. The British had long since forgotten the war, but it proved a source of significant resistance from the Afghan population.[114]: 138–142 

Local intelligence suggested that the Taliban were going to wage a brutal campaign in the summer of 2006. Coalition generals sent this info up the chain of command, but decision-makers ignored warnings. The US was distracted in Iraq, and Secretary of State Rumsfeld was more interested in making the Afghan army affordable than effective. Of the 70,000 soldiers the Afghan army was supposed to have, only 26,000 had been trained and retained.[114]: 138–142 

Spring and summer action in 2006 by the Coalition included Operation Mountain Thrust, Operation Medusa, a Dutch/Australian offensive, the Battle of Panjwaii, Operation Mountain Fury and Operation Falcon Summit. The Coalition achieved tactical victories and area denial, but the Taliban were not completely defeated.

 
A US Army soldier from 10th Mountain Division, patrols Aranas

On 29 May 2006, a US military truck that was part of a convoy in Kabul lost control and plowed into civilian vehicles, killing one person and injuring six. The surrounding crowd got angry and a riot arose, lasting all day ending with 20 dead and 160 injured. When stone-throwing and gunfire had come from a crowd of some 400 men, the US troops had used their weapons "to defend themselves" while leaving the scene, a US military spokesman said. A correspondent for the Financial Times in Kabul suggested that this was the outbreak of "a ground swell of resentment" and "growing hostility to foreigners" that had been growing and building since 2004.[162][163]

 
Swedish Army medic in the Mazar-e Sharif region

UK actions in early 2007 included Operation Volcano, Operation Achilles, and Operation Lastay Kulang. The UK Ministry of Defence also announced its intention to bring British troop levels in the country up to 7,700.[164]

On 4 March 2007, US Marines killed at least 12 civilians and injured 33 in Shinwar district, Nangarhar,[165] in a response to a bomb ambush. The event became known as the "Shinwar massacre".[166] The 120 member Marine unit responsible for the attack were ordered to leave the country because the incident damaged the unit's relations with the local population.[167]

 
A US soldier conducts a mountain patrol in Nuristan Province

During the summer, NATO forces achieved tactical victories at the Battle of Chora in Orūzgān, where Dutch and Australian ISAF forces were deployed.

 
US and British troops during a patrol in Helmand Province
 
Chinooks transporting troops to Bagram

The Battle of Musa Qala took place in December. Afghan units were the principal fighting force, supported by British forces.[168] Taliban forces were forced out of the town.

On 13 June 2008, Taliban fighters demonstrated their ongoing strength, liberating all prisoners in Kandahar jail. The operation freed 1200 prisoners, 400 of whom were Taliban, causing a major embarrassment for NATO.[169] By the end of 2008, the Taliban apparently had severed remaining ties with al-Qaeda.[170] According to senior US military intelligence officials, perhaps fewer than 100 members of al-Qaeda remained in Afghanistan.[171]

June 2009 brought Operation Strike of the Sword in Helmand.[172] It followed a British-led operation named Operation Panther's Claw in the same region, which was aimed to secure various canal and river crossings to establish a long-term ISAF presence.[173]

On 4 September 2009, during the Kunduz Province Campaign a devastating NATO air raid was conducted 7 kilometers southwest of Kunduz where Taliban fighters had hijacked civilian supply trucks, killing up to 179 people, including over 100 civilians.[174]

In December 2009, an attack on Forward Operating Base Chapman, used by the CIA to gather information and to coordinate drone attacks against Taliban leaders, killed eight working for the CIA.[175]

Troop surge

 
Development of ISAF troop strength

In March 2007, the US deployed some 3,500 more troops, though the pace of deployment was slow due to American priorities in Iraq.[176][177] In the first five months of 2008, the number of US troops in Afghanistan increased by over 80% with a surge of 21,643 more troops, bringing the total from 26,607 in January to 48,250 in June.[178] In September 2008, President Bush announced the withdrawal of over 8,000 from Iraq and a further increase of up to 4,500 in Afghanistan.[179] The same month, the UK lost its 100th serviceperson.[180]

January 2009 brought a change in American leadership, with the election of President Barack Obama. That month US soldiers, alongside Afghan Federal Guards, moved into the provinces of Logar, Wardak, and Kunar. The troops were the first wave of an expected surge of reinforcements originally ordered by President Bush and increased by President Obama.[181] In mid-February 2009, it was announced that 17,000 additional troops would be deployed in two brigades and support troops; the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade of about 3,500 and the 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, a Stryker Brigade with about 4,000.[182] ISAF commander General David McKiernan had called for as many as 30,000 additional troops, effectively doubling the number of troops.[183] On 23 September, a classified assessment by General McChrystal included his conclusion that a successful counterinsurgency strategy would require 500,000 troops and five years.[184]

On 1 December 2009, Obama announced that the US would send 30,000 more troops.[185] Antiwar organizations in the US responded quickly, and cities throughout the US saw protests on 2 December.[186] Many protesters compared the decision to deploy more troops in Afghanistan to the expansion of the Vietnam War under the Johnson administration.[187]

 
A German Bundeswehr soldier, part of ISAF's Regional Command North at Camp Marmal
 
Burning hashish seized in Operation Albatross, a combined operation of Afghan officials, NATO, and the DEA

US action into Pakistan

 
Barack Obama with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari in 2009

In the early years of the war, Pakistan had been seen as a firm ally, and little concern had been given to its support of the Taliban. Pakistan had also helped capture numerous top al-Qaeda leaders, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. But internally, Pakistan was providing significant funding, access to safe houses, and political support to the Taliban. Public opinion in Pakistan heavily favored the Taliban, and the US invasion was viewed very negatively. The government was in no position to expel the Taliban, lest it starts a conflict within its already fragile country. Thus the Taliban continued to use Pakistan as a base of operations and a safe haven to rebuild their strength.[114]: 129–132 

The US had been using drone strikes in Pakistan since 2004, starting along the Federal Tribal Areas against Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants.[188][189]

In the summer of 2008, President Bush issued an order authorizing raids against militants in Pakistan. Pakistan said it would not allow foreign forces onto its territory and that it would vigorously protect its sovereignty.[190] In September, the Pakistan military stated that it had issued orders to "open fire" on US soldiers who crossed the border in pursuit of militant forces.[191]

On 3 September 2008, US commandos landed by helicopter and attacked three houses close to a known enemy stronghold in Pakistan. Pakistan condemned the attack, calling the incursion "a gross violation of Pakistan's territory".[192][193] On 6 September, in an apparent reaction, Pakistan announced an indefinite disconnection of supply lines to NATO forces.[194] A further split occurred when Pakistani soldiers fired on Nato aircraft which had crossed the border on 25 September.[195] However, despite tensions, the US increased the use of remotely piloted drone aircraft in Pakistan's border regions, in particular the Federal Tribal Areas and Balochistan; by 2009, drone attacks were up 183% since 2006.[196]

Pakistani drone strikes against Taliban and al-Qaeda militants increased substantially under President Obama.[197] Some in the media have referred to the attacks as a "drone war".[198][199] In August 2009, Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan was killed in a drone strike.[200]

 
A US soldier and an Afghan interpreter in Zabul, 2009

Re-election of Karzai

After Karzai's alleged win of 54 percent, which would prevent a runoff, over 400,000 Karzai votes had to be disallowed after accusations of fraud. Some nations criticized the elections as "free but not fair".[201][202]

The Taliban's claim that the over 135 violent incidents disrupted elections was largely disputed. However, the media was asked to not report any violent incidents.[203] In southern Afghanistan where the Taliban held the most power, voter turnout was low and sporadic violence was directed at voters and security personnel.[204] The Taliban released a video days after the elections, filming on the road between Kabul and Kandahar, stopping vehicles and asking to see their fingers (voters were marked by dipping their fingers in ink so they could not double vote). The video went showed ten men who had voted, listening to a Taliban militant. The Taliban pardoned the voters because of Ramadan.[205] The Taliban attacked towns with rockets and other indirect fire. Amid claims of widespread fraud, both top contenders, Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah, claimed victory. Reports suggested that turnout was lower than in the prior election.[202]

On 26 November 2009, Karzai made a public plea for direct negotiations with the Taliban leadership. Karzai said there is an "urgent need" for negotiations and made it clear that the Obama administration had opposed such talks. There was no formal US response.[206][207]

Taliban status and strategy

In 2007, after more than 5 years of war, Western officials and analysts estimated the strength of Taliban forces at about 10,000 fighters fielded at any given time. Of that number, only 2,000 to 3,000 were highly motivated, full-time insurgents.[208] The rest were volunteer units, made up of young Afghans, angered by deaths of Afghan civilians in military airstrikes and American detention of Muslim prisoners who had been held for years without being charged.[209] In 2007, more foreign fighters came into Afghanistan than ever before, according to officials. Approximately 100 to 300 full-time combatants were foreigners, many from Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Chechnya, various Arab countries and perhaps even Turkey and western China. They were reportedly more violent, uncontrollable and extreme, often bringing superior video-production or bomb making expertise.[210] By 2010 the Taliban had as many as 25,000 dedicated soldiers, almost as many as before 9/11.[211]

 
Former Taliban fighters turn in their weapons as part of a reintegration program in Ghor Province

General McChrystal, newly appointed as US commander in Afghanistan, said that the Taliban had gained the upper hand. In a continuation of the Taliban's usual strategy of summer offensives,[212] the militants aggressively spread their influence into north and west Afghanistan and stepped up their attack in an attempt to disrupt presidential polls.[213] Calling the Taliban a "very aggressive enemy", he added that the US strategy was to stop their momentum and focus on protecting and safeguarding Afghan civilians, calling it "hard work".[214]

2010–2013: Coalition offensives and strategic agreements

 
UK service members of the Royal Air Force Regiment stop on a road while conducting a combat mission near Kandahar Airfield
 
Australian and Afghan soldiers patrol the poppy fields in the Baluchi Valley Region, April 2010.

Deployment of additional US troops continued in early 2010, with 9,000 of the planned 30,000 in place before the end of March and another 18,000 expected by June.[215] The surge in troops supported a sixfold increase in Special Forces operations.[216] The surge of American personnel that began in late 2009 ended by September 2012.[217] 700 airstrikes occurred in September 2010 alone versus 257 in all of 2009.[218]

Due to increased use of IEDs by insurgents, the number of injured Coalition soldiers, mainly Americans, significantly increased.[219] Beginning in May 2010 NATO special forces began to concentrate on operations to capture or kill specific Taliban leaders. As of March 2011, the US military claimed that the effort had resulted in the capture or killing of more than 900 low- to mid-level Taliban commanders.[220][221] Overall, 2010 saw the most insurgent attacks of any year since the war began, peaking in September at more than 1,500.[222]

 
Coalition forces conducting an airdrop in Shahjoy District, Zabul

The CIA created Counter-terrorism Pursuit Teams staffed by Afghans at the war's beginning.[223][224] This force grew to over 3,000 by 2010 and was considered one of the "best Afghan fighting forces".[224] These units were not only effective in operations against the Taliban and al-Qaeda forces in Afghanistan,[225] but also expanded their operations into Pakistan.[226]

In February 2010, Coalition and Afghan forces began highly visible plans for an offensive, codenamed Operation Moshtarak, on the Taliban stronghold near the village of Marjah. It was the first operation where Afghan forces led the coalition. The offensive involved 15,000 Coalition and Afghan troops.[227]

The Battle of Kandahar (2011) was part of an offensive that followed a 30 April announcement that the Taliban would launch their spring offensive.[228] On 7 May the Taliban launched a major offensive on government buildings in Kandahar. The Taliban said their goal was to take control of the city. At least eight locations were attacked: the governor's compound, the mayor's office, the NDS headquarters, three police stations and two high schools.[229] The battle continued onto a second day. The BBC called it "the worst attack in Kandahar province since the fall of the Taliban government in 2001, and an embarrassment for the Western-backed Afghan government."[230]

Peace negotiations

By 2009 there was broad agreement in Afghanistan that the war should end, but how it should happen was a major issue for the candidates of the 2009 Afghan presidential election that re-elected Karzai.[231] In a televised speech after being elected, Karzai called on "our Taliban brothers to come home and embrace their land"[232] and laid plans to launch a loya jirga. Efforts were undermined by the Obama administration's increase of American troops in the country.[233] Karzai reiterated at a London conference in January 2010 that he wanted to reach out to the Taliban to lay down arms.[234] US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton cautiously supported the proposal.[235] The "Peace Jirga" was held in Kabul, attended by 1,600 delegates, in June 2010. However, the Taliban and the Hezb-i Islami Gulbuddin, who were both invited by Karzai as a gesture of goodwill did not attend the conference.[236]

 
Troops from the 31st and 33rd Kandak, Afghan National Army, execute a departure for Operation Valley Flood

The Taliban's co-founder and then-second-in-command, Abdul Ghani Baradar, was one of the leading Taliban members who favored talks with the US and Afghan governments. Karzai's administration reportedly held talks with Baradar in February 2010; however, later that month, Baradar was captured in a joint US-Pakistani raid in the city of Karachi in Pakistan. The arrest infuriated Karzai and invoked suspicions that he was seized because the Pakistani intelligence community was opposed to Afghan peace talks.[237][238] Karzai started peace talks with Haqqani network groups in March 2010.[239]

A mindset change and strategy occurred within the Obama administration in 2010 to allow possible political negotiations to solve the war.[240] The Taliban themselves had refused to speak to the Afghan government, portraying them as an American "puppet". Sporadic efforts for peace talks between the US and the Taliban occurred afterward, and it was reported in October 2010 that Taliban leadership commanders (the "Quetta Shura") had left their haven in Pakistan and been safely escorted to Kabul by NATO aircraft for talks, with the assurance that NATO staff would not apprehend them.[241] After the talks concluded, it emerged that the leader of this delegation, who claimed to be Akhtar Mansour, the second-in-command of the Taliban, was actually an imposter who had duped NATO officials.[242]

Karzai confirmed in June 2011 that secret talks were taking place between the US and the Taliban,[243] but these collapsed by August 2011.[244] Further attempts to resume talks were canceled in March 2012,[245] and June 2013 following a dispute between the Afghan government and the Taliban regarding the latter's opening of a political office in Qatar. President Karzai accused the Taliban of portraying themselves as a government in exile.[246] In July 2015, Pakistan hosted the first official peace talks between Taliban representatives and the Afghan government. U.S. and China attended the talks brokered by Pakistan in Murree as two observers.[247] In January 2016, Pakistan hosted a round of four-way talks with Afghan, Chinese and American officials, but the Taliban did not attend.[248] The Taliban did hold informal talks with the Afghan government in 2016.[249]

Wikileaks, discipline issues

 
US soldiers walk by local Afghan boys during a patrol in Gardez

On 25 July 2010, the release of 91,731 classified documents from the WikiLeaks organization was made public. The documents cover US military incident and intelligence reports from January 2004 to December 2009.[250] Some of these documents included sanitized, and "covered up", accounts of civilian casualties caused by Coalition Forces. The reports included many references to other incidents involving civilian casualties like the Kunduz airstrike and Nangar Khel incident.[251] The leaked documents also contain reports of Pakistan collusion with the Taliban. According to Der Spiegel, "the documents clearly show that the Pakistani intelligence agency Inter-Services Intelligence (usually known as the ISI) is the most important accomplice the Taliban has outside of Afghanistan."[252]

Beginning in January 2012, incidents involving US troops[253][254][255][256][257][258] occurred that were described by The Sydney Morning Herald as "a series of damaging incidents and disclosures involving US troops in Afghanistan."[253] These incidents created fractures in the partnership between Afghanistan and ISAF,[259] raised the question whether discipline within US troops was breaking down,[260] undermined "the image of foreign forces in a country where there is already deep resentment owing to civilian deaths and a perception among many Afghans that US troops lack respect for Afghan culture and people"[261] and strained the relations between Afghanistan and the United States.[254][255] Besides an incident involving US troops who posed with body parts of dead insurgents and a video apparently showing a US helicopter crew singing "bye-bye Miss American Pie" before blasting a group of Afghan men with a Hellfire missile[261][262] these "high-profile US military incidents in Afghanistan"[257] also included the 2012 Afghanistan Quran burning protests and the Panjwai shooting spree.

Pakistan-US tensions

 
US Army soldiers boarding a Black Hawk in Nari District, near the Pakistani border

Tensions between Pakistan and the US were heightened in late September after several Pakistan Frontier Corps soldiers were killed and wounded. The troops were attacked by a US piloted aircraft that was pursuing Taliban forces near the Afghan-Pakistan border, but for unknown reasons opened fire on two Pakistan border posts. In retaliation for the strike, Pakistan closed the Torkham ground border crossing to NATO supply convoys for an unspecified period. This incident followed the release of a video allegedly showing uniformed Pakistan soldiers executing unarmed civilians.[263] After the Torkham border closing, Pakistani Taliban attacked NATO convoys, killing several drivers and destroying around 100 tankers.[264]

ISAF forces skirmished Pakistan's armed forces on 26 November, killing 24 Pakistani soldiers. Each side claimed the other shot first. Pakistan blocked NATO supply lines and ordered Americans to leave Shamsi Airfield.[265][266]

Killing of Osama bin Laden

On 2 May 2011, US officials announced that al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden had been killed in Operation Neptune Spear, conducted by the US Navy SEALs, in Abbottabad, Pakistan.[267] Pakistan came under intense international scrutiny after the raid. The Pakistani government denied that it had sheltered bin Laden, and said it had shared information with the CIA and other intelligence agencies about the compound since 2009.[268]

International drawdown and strategic agreements

 
An Australian service light armored vehicle drives through Tangi Valley, 29 March 2011

On 22 June President Obama announced that 10,000 troops would be withdrawn by the end of 2011 and an additional 23,000 troops would return by the summer of 2012. After the withdrawal of 10,000 US troops, only 80,000 remained.[269] In July 2011 Canada withdrew its combat troops, transitioning to a training role. Following suit, other NATO countries announced troop reductions.

Taliban attacks continued at the same rate as they did in 2011, around 28,000 in 2013.[270]

In January 2012, the National Front of Afghanistan (NFA) raised concerns about the possibility of a secret deal between the US, Pakistan and the Taliban during a widely publicized meeting in Berlin.

 
Afghan Army units neutralizes an IED in Sangin, Helmand province

Karzai visited the US in January 2012. At the time the US Government stated its openness to withdrawing all of its troops by the end of 2014.[271] On 11 January 2012 Karzai and Obama agreed to transfer combat operations from NATO to Afghan forces by spring 2013 rather than summer 2013.[272][273] "What's going to happen this spring is that Afghans will be in the lead throughout the country", Obama said. "They [ISAF forces] will still be fighting alongside Afghan troops...we will be in a training, assisting, advising role."[273] He also stated the reason of the withdrawals that "We achieved our central goal, or have come very close...which is to de-capacitate al-Qaeda, to dismantle them, to make sure that they can't attack us again."[274] He added that any US mission beyond 2014 would focus solely on counterterrorism operations and training.[274][275]

On 2 May 2012, Presidents Karzai and Obama signed a strategic partnership agreement between the two countries, after the US president had arrived unannounced in Kabul.[276] On 7 July, as part of the agreement, the US designated Afghanistan a major non-NATO ally after Karzai and Clinton met in Kabul.[277] Both leaders agreed that the United States would transfer Afghan prisoners and prisons to the Afghan government[273][278] and withdraw troops from Afghan villages in spring 2013.[278][279]

 
Soldiers from the Michigan Army National Guard and the Latvian Army patrol through a village in Konar province.

Security transfer

In 2012 the leaders of NATO-member countries endorsed an exit strategy during the NATO Summit.[138] ISAF Forces would transfer command of all combat missions to Afghan forces by the middle of 2013,[280] while shifting from combat to advising, training and assisting Afghan security forces.[281][282] Most of the 130,000 ISAF troops would depart by the end of December 2014.[280] A new NATO mission would then assume the support role.[281][283]

On 18 June 2013 the transfer of security responsibilities from NATO to Afghan forces was completed.[284] ISAF remained slated to end its mission by the end of 2014.[285] Some 100,000 ISAF forces remained in the country.[286]

2014–2017: Withdrawal and increase of insurgency

 
Resolute Support Colors presented at Kabul on 28 December 2014, after the ISAF colors are encased
 
Russian made Mil Mi-8 chopper landing at Forward Operating Base Airborne to deliver mail and supplies
 
Green Berets of the 10th SFG memorialize two comrades who were killed in action during the Battle of Boz Qandahari on 2–3 November 2016

After 13 years Britain and the United States officially ended their combat operation in Afghanistan on 26 October 2014. On that day Britain handed over its last base in Afghanistan, Camp Bastion, while the United States handed over its last base, Camp Leatherneck, to Afghan forces.[287] Around 500 UK troops remained in "non-combat" roles.[288][289] On 28 December 2014 NATO officially ended combat operations in a ceremony held in Kabul.[290] Continued operations by United States forces within Afghanistan were under Operation Freedom's Sentinel;[291] this was joined by a new NATO mission under the name of Operation Resolute Support.[292]

The withdrawal of troops did not mean the withdrawal of military presence. As US troops withdrew from Afghanistan, they were replaced by private security companies hired by the United States government and the United Nations. Many of these private security companies (also termed military contractors) consisted of ex-Coalition military personnel. This allowed the US and British to continue to be involved in ground actions without the requirement to station their own forces.[293]

The Taliban began a resurgence due to several factors. At the end of 2014, the US and NATO combat mission ended and the withdrawal of most foreign forces from Afghanistan reduced the risk the Taliban faced of being bombed and raided. In June 2014, the Pakistani military's Operation Zarb-e-Azb, launched in the North Waziristan tribal area in June 2014, dislodged thousands of mainly Uzbek, Arab and Pakistani militants, who flooded into Afghanistan and swelled the Taliban's ranks. The group was further emboldened by the comparative lack of interest from the international community and the diversion of its attention to crisis in other parts of the world, such as Syria, Iraq or Ukraine. Afghan security forces also lack certain capabilities and equipment, especially air power and reconnaissance. The political infighting in the central government in Kabul and the apparent weakness in governance at different levels are also exploited by the Taliban.[294]

On 22 June 2015, the Taliban detonated a car bomb outside the National Assembly in Kabul, and Taliban fighters attacked the building with assault rifles and RPGs.[295][296]

On 12 April 2016, the Taliban announced that they would launch an offensive called Operation Omari.[297][298]

As of July 2016, Time magazine estimated that at least 20% of Afghanistan was under Taliban control with southernmost Helmand Province as major stronghold,[299] while General Nicholson stated that Afghan official armed forces' casualties had risen 20 percent compared to 2015.[300]

On 22 September 2016, the Afghan government signed a draft peace deal with Hezb-i-Islami. According to the draft agreement, Hezb-i-Islami agreed to cease hostilities, cut ties to extremist groups and respect the Afghan Constitution, in exchange for government recognition of the group and support for the removal of United Nations and American sanctions against its leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who was also promised an honorary post in the government.[301][302] It was the first peace treaty since the war in Afghanistan started in 2001. Government officials praised the deal as a step towards peace and potentially a deal with the Taliban too.[303] However others shared concern due to controversial leader Hekmatyar's alleged war crimes; some parts of Afghan society protested the peace treaty due to his past actions.[304]

In early January 2017, the Marine Corps Times reported that Afghan forces seek to rebuild, following an exhausting 2016 fighting season; 33 districts, spread across 16 Afghan provinces, were under insurgent control whilst 258 are under government control and nearly 120 districts remained "contested".[305] According to an inspector general, the Afghan army comprises about 169,000 soldiers, but in 2016 they suffered a 33 percent attrition rate—a 7 percent increase from 2015.[305] On 9 February 2017, General John Nicholson told Congress that NATO and allied forces in Afghanistan are facing a "stalemate" and that he needed a few thousand additional troops to more effectively train and advise Afghan soldiers. He also asserted that Russia was trying to "legitimize" the Taliban by creating the "false narrative" that the militant organization has been fighting the Islamic State and that Afghan forces have not, he asserted Russia's goal, was "to undermine the United States and NATO" in Afghanistan. However, he said that the area in which Islamic State fighters operate in Afghanistan had been greatly reduced.[306]

On 21 April 2017, the Taliban attacked Camp Shaheen near Mazar-e-Sharif, killing over 140–256 Afghan soldiers.[307][308][309]

The bloody 2017 Taliban spring offensive was named Operation Mansouri.[310]

 
Actress Scarlett Johansson meets with US service members during a troop engagement at Forward Operation Base Gamberi, Afghanistan, December 2016

The Washington Post reported that on 20 November 2017, General John Nicholson announced that US aircraft were targeting drug production facilities in Afghanistan under a new strategy aimed at cutting off Taliban funding, saying that the Taliban was "becoming a criminal organization" that was earning about $200 million a year from drug-related activities. President Ashraf Ghani strongly endorsed the new campaign of US and Afghan airstrikes against the Taliban-run narcotic centers.[311]

Battle of Kunduz

Heavy fighting occurred in the Kunduz province,[312][313] which was the site of clashes from 2009 onwards. In May 2015, flights into the Northern city of Kunduz were suspended due to weeks of clashes between the Afghan security forces and the Taliban outside the city.[314] The intensifying conflict in the Northern Char Dara District within the Kunduz province led the Afghan government to enlist local militia fighters to bolster opposition to the Taliban insurgency.[315] In June, the Taliban intensified attacks around the Northern city of Kunduz as part of a major offensive in an attempt to capture the city.[316][317][318] Tens of thousands of inhabitants were displaced internally by the fighting. The government recaptured the Char Dara district after roughly a month of fighting.[319]

In late September, Taliban forces launched an attack on Kunduz, seizing several outlying villages and entering the city. The Taliban stormed the regional hospital and clashed with security forces at the nearby university. The fighting saw the Taliban attack from four different districts: Char Dara to the West, Aliabad to the Southwest, Khanabad to the East and Imam Saheb to the North.[320][321] The Taliban took the Zakhel and Ali Khel villages on the highway leading south, which connects the city to Kabul and Mazar-e Sharif through Aliabad district, and reportedly made their largest gains in the Southwest of Kunduz, where some local communities had picked up weapons and supported the Taliban.[320] Taliban fighters had allegedly blocked the route to the Airport to prevent civilians fleeing the city.[322] One witness reported that the headquarters of the National Directorate of Security was set on fire.[323] Kunduz was recaptured by Afghan and American forces on 14 October 2015.

Taliban negotiations and in-fighting

China attempted to negotiate with the Taliban in 2016, as the Afghan security situation affects its own separatist groups, and economic activity with Pakistan. The Taliban declined.[324][325]

The bombing of the Kabul parliament has highlighted differences within the Taliban in their approach to peace talks.[326][327] In April 2016, President Ashraf Ghani "pulled the plug" on the Afghan governments failing effort to start peace talks with the Taliban.[328] Additionally, due to the integration of Haqqani Networks into the Taliban leadership, it would become harder for peace talks to take place.[329][330] Although leader of the Taliban, Haibatullah Akhundzada, said a peace agreement was possible if the government in Kabul renounced its foreign allies.[331]

On 11 November 2015, it was reported that infighting had broken out between different Taliban factions in Zabul Province. Fighters loyal to the new Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor fought a pro-ISIL splinter faction led by Mullah Mansoor Dadullah. Even though Dadullah's faction enjoyed the support of foreign ISIL fighters, including Uzbeks and Chechens, it was reported that Mansoor's Taliban loyalists had the upper hand. According to Ghulam Jilani Farahi, provincial director of security in Zabul, more than 100 militants from both sides were killed since the fighting broke out.[332] The infighting has continued into 2016; on 10 March 2016, officials said that the Taliban clashed with the Taliban splinter group (led by Muhammad Rasul) in the Shindand district of Herat with up to 100 militants killed; the infighting has also stifled peace talks.[333][334]

As a result of the infighting, which has resulted in Mansour being consumed with a campaign to quell dissent against his leadership; Sirajuddin Haqqani, chief of the Haqqani Network was selected to become the deputy leader of the Taliban in the summer of 2015, during a leadership struggle within the Taliban. Sirajuddin and other Haqqani leaders increasingly ran the day-to-day military operations for the Taliban, in particular; refining urban terrorist attacks and cultivating a sophisticated international fund-raising network, they also appointed Taliban governors and began uniting the Taliban. As a result, the Haqqani Network is now closely integrated with the Taliban at a leadership level, and is growing in influence within the insurgency, whereas the network was largely autonomous before, and there are concerns that the fighting is going to be deadlier. Tensions with the Pakistani military have also been raised because American and Afghan officials accuse them of sheltering the Haqqanis as a proxy group.[329][330]

Clashes in Helmand

In 2015 the Taliban began an offensive in Helmand Province, taking over parts of the Province. By June 2015, they had seized control of Dishu and Baghran killing 5,588 Afghan government security forces (3,720 of them were police officers).[335] By the end of July, the Taliban had overrun Nawzad District[336] and on 26 August, the Taliban took control of Musa Qala.[337] In October 2015, Taliban forces had attempted to take Lashkar Gah; the capital of Helmand province, the Afghan's 215th Corps and special operations forces launched a counteroffensive against the Taliban in November,[338] Whilst the assault was repelled, Taliban forces remained dug into the city's suburbs as of December 2015.[339] December 2015 saw a renewed Taliban offensive in Helmand focused on the town of Sangin. The Sangin district fell to the Taliban on 21 December after fierce clashes that killed more than 90 soldiers in two days.[340] It was reported that 30 members of the SAS alongside 60 US special forces operators joined the Afghan Army in the Battle to retake parts of Sangin from Taliban insurgents,[341] in addition, about 300 US troops and a small number of British remained in Helmand to advise Afghan commanders at the corps level.[342][343] Senior American commanders said that the Afghan troops in the province have lacked effective leaders as well as the necessary weapons and ammunition to hold off persistent Taliban attacks. Some Afghan soldiers in Helmand have been fighting in tough conditions for years without a break to see their family, leading to poor morale and high desertion rates.[342]

 
US Army soldier in Nangarhar Province, 6 January 2015

In early February 2016, Taliban insurgents renewed their assault on Sangin, after previously being repulsed in December 2015, launching a string of ferocious attacks on Afghan government forces earlier in the month. As a result, the United States decided to send troops from the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, 10th Mountain Division, in order to prop up the Afghan 215th Corps in Helmand province, particularly around Sangin, joining US special operations forces already in the area.[344][345][346][347][348] On 14 March 2016, Khanneshin District in Helmand Province fell to the Taliban; and district by district, Afghan troops were retreating back to urban centers in Helmand.[325][348] In early April 2016, 600 Afghan troops launched a major offensive to retake Taliban-occupied areas of Sangin and the area around it,[349] an Afghan army offensive to retake the town of Khanisheen was repelled by the Taliban, desertions from the army in the area are rife.[350]

 
TAAC-E advisers in February 2015

Despite US airstrikes, militants besieged Lashkar Gah, reportedly controlling all roads leading to the city and areas a few kilometres away. The US stepped up airstrikes in support of Afghan ground forces. Afghan forces in Lashkar Gah were reported as "exhausted" whilst police checkpoints around the capital were falling one by one; whilst the Taliban sent a new elite commando force into Helmand called "Sara Khitta" in Pashto.[351][352][353] Afghan security forces beat back attacks by Taliban fighters encroaching on Chah-e-Anjir, just 10 km from Lashkar Gah; Afghan special forces backed by US airstrikes battled increasingly well-armed and disciplined Taliban militants. An Afghan special forces commander said "The Taliban have heavily armed, uniformed units that are equipped with night vision and modern weapons."[354] On 22 August 2016, the US announced that 100 US troops were sent to Lashkar Gah to help prevent the Taliban from overrunning it, in what Brigadier General Charles Cleveland called a "temporary effort" to advise the Afghan police.[355]

 
A USAF F-16 Fighting Falcon takes off at Bagram Airfield for a combat sortie, 14 March 2016

On 31 December 2016, the Taliban continued their assault on the province with attacks on Sangin and Marjah districts.[356] Some estimated suggest the Taliban had retaken more than 80% of Helmand province.[305] During the early hours of 23 March 2017 Sangin district was captured by the Taliban as they had overrun the district center, the town of Sangin. During the earlier phase of the war, almost a quarter of British casualties were caused by fighting for the town, while more recently hundreds of Afghan troops died defending it.[357][358] On 29 April 2017, the US deployed an additional 5,000 Marines to the Southern Helmand Province.[359]

Emergence of Islamic State

In mid-January 2015, the Islamic State caliphate established a branch in Afghanistan called Khorasan (ISKP, or ISIS-K) and began recruiting fighters[360] and clashing with the Taliban.[361][362] It was created after pledging allegiance to the self-assumed worldwide caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.[363] On 18 March, Hafiz Wahidi, ISIL's replacement deputy Emir in Afghanistan, was killed by the Afghan Armed Forces, along with 9 other ISIL militants accompanying him.[364] In January 2016, the US government sent a directive to the Pentagon which granted new legal authority for the US military to go on the offensive against Militants affiliated with the ISIL-KP, after the State Department announced the designation of ISIS in Afghanistan and Pakistan as a foreign terrorist organization. The number of militants started with around 60 or 70, with most of them coming over the border with Pakistan but eventually[when?] ranged between 1,000 and 3,000 militants,[365] mainly defectors from the Afghan and the Pakistani Taliban, and is generally confined to Nangarhar Province but also has/had a presence in Kunar province.[365][366]

 
USAF pilots fly a CH-47 Chinook in Nangarhar, April 2017

On 23 July 2016, Afghan and US forces began an offensive to clear Nangarhar province of Islamic State militants hours after the Kabul bombing, the operation was dubbed "Wrath of the Storm" involving both Afghan regular army and special forces and is the Afghan army's first major strategic offensive of the summer. The estimated size of the ISIL-KP in January 2016 was around 3,000, but by July 2016 the number had been reduced to closely 1,000 to 1,500, with 70% of its fighters come from the TTP.[300][367][368]

The Army Times reported that in early March 2017, American and Afghan forces launched Operation Hamza to "flush" ISIS-K from its stronghold in eastern Afghanistan, engaging in regular ground battles.[369] In April 2017, the Washington Post reported that Captain Bill Salvin, a spokesman for NATO's mission to Afghanistan, said that Afghan and international forces had reduced ISIS-K controlled territory in Afghanistan by two-thirds and had killed around half their fighters in the previous two years. Since the beginning of 2017, 460 airstrikes against terrorists (with drone strikes alone killing more than 200 IS militants); he added that the affiliate has an estimated 600–800 fighters in two eastern Afghan provinces.[370]

On 15 September 2017, the New York Times reported that the CIA was seeking authority to conduct its own drone strikes in Afghanistan and other war zones, according to current and former intelligence and military officials, and that the change in authority was being considered by the White House as part of the new strategy despite concerns by the Pentagon.[371] On 19 September 2017, the Trump Administration deployed another 3,000 US troops to Afghanistan. They would add to the approximately 11,000 US troops already serving in Afghanistan, bringing the total to at least 14,000 US troops stationed in Afghanistan.[372] On 4 October 2017, Fox News reported that Defense Secretary Jim Mattis approved a change in rules of engagement as part of the new strategy so that there is no longer a requirement for US troops to be in contact with enemy forces in Afghanistan before opening fire.[373]

2018–2020: Peace overtures

 
Map showing insurgent (white) and government-controlled (red) areas of Afghanistan in January 2019.

In January 2018, the Taliban were openly active in 70% of the country (being in full control of 14 districts and have an active and open physical presence in a further 263) and the Islamic State was more active in the country than ever before. Following attacks by the Taliban (including the Kabul ambulance bombing on 27 January which killed over 100 people) and Islamic State that killed scores of civilians, President Trump and Afghan officials decided to rule out any talks with the Taliban.[374] However, on 27 February 2018, following an increase in violence, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani proposed unconditional peace talks with the Taliban, offering them recognition as a legal political party and the release of the Taliban prisoners. The offer was the most favorable to the Taliban since the war started. It was preceded by months of national consensus building, which found that Afghans overwhelmingly supported a negotiated end to the war.[375][376] Two days earlier, the Taliban had called for talks with the US, saying "It must now be established by America and her allies that the Afghan issue cannot be solved militarily. America must henceforth focus on a peaceful strategy for Afghanistan instead of war."[377] On 27 March 2018, a conference of 20 countries in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, backed the Afghan government's peace offer.[378] The Taliban did not publicly respond to Ghani's offer.[citation needed]

In July 2018 the Taliban carried out the Darzab offensive and captured Darzab District following the surrender of ISIL-K to the Afghan Government. In August the Taliban launched a series of offensives, the largest being the Ghazni offensive. During the Ghazni offensive, the Taliban seized Ghazni, Afghanistan's sixth-largest city for several days but eventually retreated.[379][380]

On 25 January 2019, Afghanistan's president Ashraf Ghani said that more than 45,000 members of the Afghan security forces had been killed since he became president in 2014. He also said that there had been fewer than 72 international casualties during the same period.[381] A January 2019 report by the US government estimated that 53.8% of Afghanistan's districts were controlled or influenced by the government, with 33.9% contested and 12.3% under insurgent control or influence.[382]

On 30 April 2019, Afghan government forces undertook clearing operations directed against both ISIS-K and the Taliban in eastern Nangarhar Province, after the two groups fought for over a week over a group of villages in an area of illegal talc mining. The National Directorate of Security claimed 22 ISIS-K fighters were killed and two weapons caches destroyed, while the Taliban claimed US-backed Afghan forces killed seven civilians; a provincial official said over 9,000 families had been displaced by the fighting.[383] On 28 July 2019, President Ashraf Ghani's running mate Amrullah Saleh's office was attacked by a suicide bomber and a few militants. At least 20 people were killed and 50 injured, with Saleh also amongst the injured ones. During the six-hour-long operation, more than 150 civilians were rescued and three militants were killed.[384]

By August, the Taliban controlled more territory than at any point since 2001.[385] The Washington Post reported that the US was close to reaching a peace deal with the Taliban and was preparing to withdraw 5,000 troops from Afghanistan.[386] In September, the US canceled the negotiations.[387]

National peace movements and first ceasefire

 
US, British and Afghan security forces train together in an aerial reaction force exercise at Camp Qargha in Kabul, 16 January 2018.

Following Ghani's offer of unconditional peace talks with the Taliban, a growing peace movement arose in Afghanistan during 2018, particularly following a peace march by the People's Peace Movement,[388] which the Afghan media dubbed the "Helmand Peace Convoy".[389][390] The marchers walked several hundred kilometers from Lashkar Gah in Helmand Province, through Taliban-held territory,[391] to Kabul. There they met Ghani and held sit-in protests outside the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and nearby embassies.[392] Their efforts inspired further movements in other parts of Afghanistan.[393]

Following the march, Ghani and the Taliban agreed a mutual, unprecedented, ceasefire during the Eid al-Fitr celebrations in June 2018. During the Eid ceasefire, Taliban members flocked into Kabul where they met and communicated with locals and state security forces. Creating a mood of hope and fear, many civilians welcomed the Taliban and spoke about peace, including some women.[394] Although civilians called for the ceasefire to be made permanent, the Taliban rejected an extension and resumed fighting after the ceasefire ended on 18 June, while the Afghan government's ceasefire ended a week later.[395][396][397]

United States Institute of Peace researchers argue that there are nonviolent resistance movements in Afghanistan. They argued that in the mid-2010s, Afghan peace groups started pressuring both the Afghan government and the Taliban for ceasefires and to implement other steps in the peace process. The Tabassum movement arose in 2015, the Enlightenment Movement during 2016–2017, Uprising for Change in 2017, and the People's Peace Movement started in March 2018.[citation needed]

Between 29 April and 3 May 2019, the Afghan government hosted a four-day loya jirga (grand assembly) at Kabul's Bagh-e Bala Palace attended by 3,200 representatives to discuss peace talks.[398] The Taliban were invited but did not attend.[399] The event called for an immediate ceasefire with the Taliban and said that human rights must be protected.[400] President Ghani also announced the release of a number of Taliban prisoners as a goodwill gesture.[401]

Let us prove that only Western countries cannot solve this conflict. There is also human civilisation here.

— President Ashraf Ghani at the 2019 loya jirga[401]

2020: US-Taliban talks and agreement

 
US representative Zalmay Khalilzad (left) and Taliban representative Abdul Ghani Baradar (right) sign the Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan in Doha, Qatar on 29 February 2020

American officials secretly met members of the Taliban's political commission in Qatar in July 2018.[402] In September 2018, Trump appointed Zalmay Khalilzad as special adviser on Afghanistan in the US State Department, with the stated goal of facilitating an intra-Afghan political peace process.[403] Khalilzad led further talks between the US and the Taliban in Qatar in October 2018.[404] Russia hosted a separate peace talk in November 2018 between the Taliban and officials from Afghanistan's High Peace Council.[405] The talks in Qatar resumed in December 2018,[406] though the Taliban refused to allow the Afghan government to be invited,[407] considering them a puppet government of the US.[408] The Taliban spoke with Afghans including former President Hamid Karzai at a hotel in Moscow in February 2019, but again these talks did not include the Afghan government.[409]

On 25 February 2019, peace talks began between the Taliban and the United States in Qatar, with the Taliban co-founder Abdul Ghani Baradar notably present.[408] Peace negotiations had resumed in December 2019.[410] This round of talks resulted in a seven-day partial ceasefire which began on 22 February 2020.[411] On 29 February, the United States and the Taliban signed a conditional peace deal in Doha, Qatar[412] that called for a prisoner exchange within ten days and was supposed to lead to US troops withdrawal from Afghanistan within 14 months.[88][413] However, the Afghan government was not a party to the deal, and, in a press conference the next day, President Ghani criticized the deal for being "signed behind closed doors". He said the Afghan government had "made no commitment to free 5,000 Taliban prisoners" and that such an action "is not the United States' authority, but it is the authority of the government of Afghanistan."[414][415][89][416] Ghani also stated that any prisoner exchange "cannot be a prerequisite for talks" but rather must be negotiated within the talks."[417]

Insurgents belonging to al-Qaeda in the Indian subcontinent and ISIL-K, not part of the deal, continued to operate in parts of the country and hoped to attract the most intransigent sector of the Taliban to their cause.[418]

Spike in violence and prisoners dispute

 
NATO's Resolute Support Mission commander Austin S. Miller alongside US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin in Afghanistan, March 2021

After signing the agreement with the United States, the Taliban resumed offensive operations against the Afghan army and police on 3 March, conducting attacks in Kunduz and Helmand provinces.[419] On 4 March, the United States retaliated by launching an air strike against Taliban fighters in Helmand.[420] Despite the peace agreement between the US and the Taliban, insurgent attacks against Afghan security forces were reported to have surged in the country. In the 45 days after the agreement (between 1 March and 15 April 2020), the Taliban conducted more than 4,500 attacks in Afghanistan, which showed an increase of more than 70% as compared to the same period in the previous year.[421] More than 900 Afghan security forces were killed in the period, up from about 520 in the same period a year earlier. Because of a significant reduction in the number of offensives and airstrikes by Afghan and US forces against the Taliban due to the agreement, Taliban casualties dropped to 610 in the period down from about 1,660 in the same period a year earlier.[421] Meanwhile ISIS-K continued to be a threat on its own, killing 32 people in a mass shooting in Kabul on 6 March,[422] killing 25 Sikh worshippers at a Kabul temple on 25 March,[423] and a series of attacks in May most notably killing 16 mothers and newborn babies at a Kabul hospital maternity ward.[424] Since the US withdrawal, the number of casualties of women in the Afghanistan conflict rose by almost 40% in the first quarter of 2021 alone.[425]

On 22 June 2020, Afghanistan reported its "bloodiest week in 19 years", during which 291 members of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) were killed and 550 others wounded in 422 attacks carried out by the Taliban. At least 42 civilians, including women and children, were also killed and 105 others wounded by the Taliban across 18 provinces.[426] During the week, the Taliban kidnapped 60 civilians in the central province of Daykundi.[427]

2020–2021: US withdrawal

The Taliban insurgency intensified considerably in 2021 coinciding with the withdrawal of United States and allied troops from Afghanistan.[428]

On the diplomatic front, on 31 March 2020 a three-person Taliban delegation arrived in Kabul to discuss the release of prisoners.[429][430] They are the first Taliban representatives to visit Kabul since 2001.[429] On 7 April 2020, the Taliban departed from the prisoner swap talks, which Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen described as "fruitless".[431][432] Shaheen also stated in a tweet that hours after walking out of the talks, the Taliban's negotiating team was recalled from Kabul.[432] The Taliban also failed to secure the release of any of the 15 commanders they sought to be released.[431] Arguments over which prisoners to swap also resulted in a delay of the planned prisoner swap.[431] After a long delay due to disputes regarding prisoners' releases, the Afghan government had by August 2020 released 5,100 prisoners,[433] and the Taliban had released 1,000.[434] However, the Afghan government refused to release 400 prisoners from the list of those the Taliban wanted to be released, because those 400 were accused of serious crimes.[435] President Ghani stated that he did not have the constitutional authority to release these prisoners, so he convened a loya jirga from 7 to 9 August to discuss the issue.[436] The jirga agreed to free the 400 remaining prisoners.[435] Talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban began in Doha on 12 September 2020.[437]

Taliban's summer offensive, capture of Kabul and Taliban's victory

 
A map of Afghanistan showing the Taliban offensive
 
Taliban fighters in Kabul, 17 August 2021

The Taliban began its last major offensive on 1 May 2021, culminating in the fall of Kabul, a Taliban victory, and the end of war.[438][439][440] In the first three months of the offensive, the Taliban made significant territorial gains in the countryside, increasing the number of districts it controlled from 73 to 223.[441]

On March 6, Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani expressed that his government would be taking forward peace talks with the Taliban, discussing with the insurgent group about holding fresh elections and forming a government in a democratic manner.[442] On April 13, the Biden administration announced that it would withdraw its remaining 2,500 troops from Afghanistan by September 11, 2021, on the twentieth anniversary of the September 11 attacks.[443] The US government also reiterated support for the Afghan government regarding a possible Taliban military victory.[444] On July 5, the Taliban announced their intention to present a written peace plan to the Afghan Government in August but as of August 13, this had not been done.[445][446] Sources claimed that on August 12, Abdullah Abdullah, the Chairman of the High Council for National Reconciliation, handed in a plan titled “exiting the crisis” which was shared with the Taliban. The sources say that the plan calls for the creation of a "joint government".[447] On August 15, following the Taliban offensive and the fall of the capital Kabul, the Taliban occupied the Presidential Palace after the incumbent President Ashraf Ghani fled the country to Tajikistan.[448][449] NATO forces maintain a presence in Kabul.[449][450]

The Taliban gained control of various towns throughout June and July. On 6 August, they captured the first provincial capital of Zaranj. Over the next ten days, they swept across the country, capturing capital after capital. On 14 August, Mazar-i-Sharif was captured as commanders Rashid Dostum and Atta Nur fled across the border to Uzbekistan, cutting Kabul's vital northern supply route. In the early hours of 15 August, Jalalabad fell, cutting the only remaining international route through the Khyber Pass.[451] By noon of that day, Taliban forces advanced from the Paghman district reaching the gates of Kabul; President Ashraf Ghani discussed the city's protection with security ministers, while sources claimed a unity peace agreement with the Taliban was imminent. However, Ghani was unable to reach top officials in the interior and defense ministries, and several high-profile politicians had already hurried to the airport. By 1400 hours, the Taliban had entered the city facing no resistance; the president soon fled by helicopter from the Presidential Palace, and within hours Taliban fighters were pictured sitting at Ghani's desk in the palace.[452] With the virtual collapse of the republic, the war was declared over by the Taliban on the same day.[453]

Airlifts and final US exit

As the Taliban seized control on 15 August 2021, the need to evacuate populations vulnerable to the Taliban, including the interpreters and assistants who had worked with the coalition forces, ethnic minorities, and women, became urgent. For more than two weeks, international diplomatic, military and civilian staff, as well as Afghan civilians, were airlifted out the country from Hamid Karzai International Airport. On 16 August Major General Hank Taylor confirmed that US air strikes had ended at least 24 hours earlier and that the focus of the US military at that point was maintaining security at the airport as evacuations continued.[454] The final flight, a US Air Force C-17, departed at 3:29 pm ET, 11:59 p.m. in Kabul time, on 30 August 2021, marking the end of the American campaign in Afghanistan and followed by celebratory gunfire by Taliban.[455] Many observers have noted this as the end of America's longest war in history.[92][456][457][458]

Impact

Casualties

 
Victims of the Narang night raid that killed at least 10 Afghan civilians, December 2009

According to the Costs of War Project at Brown University, the war killed 46,319 Afghan civilians in Afghanistan. However, the death toll is possibly higher due to unaccounted deaths by "disease, loss of access to food, water, infrastructure, and/or other indirect consequences of the war".[93] A report titled Body Count put together by Physicians for Social Responsibility, Physicians for Global Survival and International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) concluded that 106,000–170,000 civilians have been killed as a result of the fighting in Afghanistan at the hands of all parties to the conflict.[459]

The majority of civilian casualties were attributed to anti-government elements each year, though the figure varied from 61% to 80%, with the average hovering around 75% due to the Taliban and other anti-government elements.[460][461][462][463][464] The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) started publishing civilian casualty figures in 2008. These figures attribute approximately 41% of civilian casualties to government aligned forces in 2008; this percentage lowers to approximately 18% in 2015.[465]

Civilian deaths caused by non-Afghan Coalition forces were low later in the war after most foreign troops were withdrawn and the coalition shifted to airstrikes. For example, in 2015 pro-government forces caused 17% of civilian deaths and injuries – including United States and NATO troops, which were responsible for only 2% of the casualties.[466] 2016 had a similar 2% figure. Civilian deaths were higher as well in the latter part of the war, with 2015 and 2016 both consecutively breaking the record of annual civilian deaths according to the UN.[467]

Refugees

 
Foreign donated clothing being handed out by an Afghan civil officer to children at a refugee camp, 2011

Since 2001, more than 5.7 million former refugees have returned to Afghanistan,[468][469][470] but 2.6 million others remained refugees in 2021 when the Taliban took over,[95][471] while another 4 million were internally displaced.[95]

Following the Taliban takeover, over 122,000 people were airlifted abroad from Kabul airport, during the evacuation from Afghanistan, including Afghans, American citizens, and other foreign citizens.[472] A year after, the United States had accepted over 85,000 Afghan refugees, many of whom had been processed in Europe and the Middle East. The United Arab Emirates agreed to temporarily host Afghan refugees in Abu Dhabi on behalf of other nations. Over 10,000 have been resettled to the United States from Abu Dhabi, but 12,000 remained there as of August 2022, leading to protests by refugees over the resettlement process and living conditions.[473]

War crimes

 
Afghan boy murdered on 15 January 2010 by a group of US Army soldiers called the Kill Team

War crimes (a serious violation of the laws and customs of war giving rise to individual criminal responsibility)[474] have been committed by both sides including civilian massacres, bombings of civilian targets, terrorism, use of torture and the murder of prisoners of war. Additional common crimes include theft, arson, and destruction of property not warranted by military necessity.

The Taliban committed war crimes during the war including massacres, suicide bombing, terrorism, and targeting civilians (such as using human shields).[475][476] In 2011, The New York Times reported that the Taliban was responsible for 34 of all civilian deaths in the war in Afghanistan.[477][478] United Nations reports have consistently blamed the Taliban and other anti-government forces for the majority of civilian deaths in the conflict.[467][460][479] Other crimes include mass rape and executing surrendered soldiers.[480][481]

War crimes committed by the Coalition, Afghan security forces, and Northern Alliance included massacres, prisoner mistreatment, and killings of civilians. Amnesty International accused the Pentagon of covering up evidence related to war crimes, torture and unlawful killings in Afghanistan.[482] Notable incidents include the Dasht-i-Leili massacre,[483] Bagram torture and prisoner abuse,[484] Kandahar massacre,[485] among others.

In 2020, the International Criminal Court investigation in Afghanistan formally commenced, investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by all parties in Afghanistan since 1 May 2013.[486]

Health and education

Between 2001 and 2021, Afghanistan experienced improvements in health, education and women's rights.[487][488] Life expectancy increased from 56 to 64 years and the maternal mortality rate was reduced by half. 89% of residents living in cities have access to clean water, up from 16% in 2001. The rate of child marriage has been reduced by 17%.[487][489] The population of Afghanistan increased by more than 50% between 2001 and 2014, while its GDP grew eightfold.[490]

 
A young Afghan girl in Qalat pictured by the 116th Infantry Battalion before receiving school supplies in 2011

As of 2013, 8.2 million Afghans attended school, up from 1.2 million in 2001.[491] 3.2 million girls attended school in 2013, up from fewer than 50,000 in 2001.[492] 39% of girls were attending school in 2017 compared to 6% in 2003. In 2021, a third of students at university were women and 27% of members of parliament were women.[95] The literacy rate in 2021 has risen from 8% to 43% since 2001.[487] In 2018, UNICEF reported that 3.7 million children between the ages of 7 and 17, or 44 percent, were not attending school.[493]

Drug trade

In 2000, Afghanistan accounted for an estimated 75% of the world's opium supply,[494] which was the Taliban's largest source of revenue though taxes on opium exports.[495] Mullah Omar banned opium cultivation in 2001,[496] which observers said was an attempt to gain international recognition, raise opium prices and increase profit from the sale of large existing stockpiles.[495] Opium production increased in the years following the October 2001 invasion, with Afghanistan producing 90% of the world's opium by 2005.[497] According to a 2018 SIGAR report, the U.S. had spent $8.6 billion since 2002 to stop Afghanistan's drug trade. A May 2021 SIGAR report estimated that the Taliban earned 60% of their revenue from the trade, while UN officials estimated more than $400 million was earned by the Taliban between 2018 and 2019, however other experts estimated that the Taliban earned at most $40 million annually.[498]

NATO's inability to stabilize Afghanistan

Observers have argued that the mission in Afghanistan was hampered by a lack of agreement on objectives, a lack of resources, lack of coordination, too much focus on the central government at the expense of local and provincial governments, and too much focus on the country instead of the region.[499]

Environment and drug trade

According to Cara Korte, climate change played a significant role in increasing instability in Afghanistan and strengthening the Taliban. More than 60% of the Afghan population depend on agriculture and Afghanistan is the sixth most vulnerable country to climate change in the world according to the United Nations Environment Program and Afghanistan's National Environmental Protection Agency. The Taliban used resentment over government inaction to climate change-induced drought and flooding to strengthen its support and Afghans were able to earn more money supporting the Taliban than from farming.[500]

Despite efforts to eradicate poppy, Afghanistan remained the world's largest producer of illicate opiate by the end of the war. The Taliban profited at least tens of millions of dollars from opium and heroin annually as of 2018.[501]

Early mistakes and the US's other war

Journalist Jason Burke notes "strategic mistakes by the US and allies in the immediate aftermath of the 2001 invasion" as being a reason why the war went on for so long. He also noted "missed early opportunities" to "construct a stable political settlement".[502]

Steve Coll believes that "No small part of N.A.T.O.'s ultimate failure to stabilize Afghanistan flowed from the disastrous decision by George W. Bush to invade Iraq in 2003. ... The Taliban's comeback, America's initial inattention to it, and the attraction for some Afghans and Pakistanis of the Taliban's ideology of national resistance under Islamic principles—all these sources of failure cannot be understood in isolation from the Iraq war." Coll further notes that neither the Bush nor the Obama administrations achieved consensus on key questions such as the relative importance of nation-building versus counterterrorism, whether the stability of Afghanistan took priority over that of Pakistan, or the role of the drug trade, although "the failure to solve the riddle of I.S.I. and to stop its covert interference in Afghanistan became ... the greatest strategic failure of the American war."[503]

Domestic corruption and politics
 

In 2009, Afghanistan was ranked as the world's second most-corrupt country.[504] A lengthy report by SIGAR, and other findings, found that spiraling corruption in Afghanistan during the 2000s was not halted by the United States. During this time, many elite figures in the country had effectively become kleptocrats, while ordinary Afghans were struggling.[505]

It has been argued that the restoration of monarchy in Afghanistan should not have been vetoed, as this may have provided stability to the country.[506][507][508][509]

Influence of non-NATO actors

Pakistan played a central role in the conflict. A 2010 report published by the London School of Economics says that Pakistan's ISI has an "official policy" of support to the Taliban.[510] "Pakistan appears to be playing a double-game of astonishing magnitude," the report states.[510] Regarding the Afghan War documents leak published by WikiLeaks, Der Spiegel wrote that "the documents clearly show that the Pakistani intelligence agency Inter-Services Intelligence (usually known as the ISI) is the most important accomplice the Taliban has outside of Afghanistan".[511] Amrullah Saleh, former director of Afghanistan's intelligence service, stated, "We talk about all these proxies [Taliban, Haqqanis] but not the master of proxies, which is the Pakistan army. The question is what does Pakistan's army want to achieve ...? They want to gain influence in the region."[512] Pakistan's role can be traced back to the Soviet war in which they funded the Mujahideen against the Soviets. Pakistan's objective then as it is now is to ensure that Afghanistan has a regime friendly to their interests and will provide "geopolitical depth in any future conflict with India".[513]

Iran also sought to influence the war. During the course of the war, the US took out two of Iran's regional enemies: Saddam Hussein through the Iraq War as well as the Taliban. Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are other 'dominant players' that influenced the war. Iran and the Taliban formed ties, with Russian assistance[citation needed] as well, to 'bleed' the American force. Iran and Russia,[citation needed] emboldened by their alliance in the Syrian Civil War, initiated a 'proxy war' in Afghanistan against the US. The Taliban received economic support from Dubai, UAE and Bahrain. Pakistan has given economic support and encouraged increased Iran-Taliban ties.[514]

China has been quietly expanding its influence. Since 2010 China has signed mining contracts with Kabul[515] and is building a military base in Badakshan to counter regional terrorism (from the ETIM).[516] China has donated billions of dollars in aid over the years to Afghanistan, which plays a strategic role in the Belt and Road Initiative.[516] Additionally, after 2011 Pakistan expanded its economic and military ties to China as a hedge against dependency on the US. Coll observes that "Overall, the war left China with considerable latitude in Central Asia, without having made any expenditure of blood, treasure, or reputation."[517]

American public misleading

In December 2019 The Washington Post published 2,000 pages of government documents, mostly transcripts of interviews with more than 400 key figures involved in prosecuting the Afghanistan war. According to the Post and The Guardian, the documents (dubbed the Afghanistan Papers) showed that US officials consistently and deliberately misled the American public about the unwinnable nature of the conflict,[518] and some commentators and foreign policy experts subsequently drew comparisons to the release of the Pentagon Papers.[518] The Post obtained the documents from the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, via Freedom of Information Act requests, after a three-year legal battle.[519][518]

Foreign support for the Taliban

Pakistan

The Taliban's victory was facilitated in support from Pakistan. Although Pakistan was a major US ally before and after the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, elements of the Pakistan government (including the military and intelligence services) have for decades maintained strong logistical and tactical ties with Taliban militants, and this support helped support the insurgency in Afghanistan.[520][521] For example, the Haqqani Network, a Taliban affiliate based on Pakistan, had strong support from Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), the Pakistan intelligence agency.[520] Taliban leaders found a safe haven in Pakistan, lived in the country, transacted business and earned funds there, and receiving medical treatment there.[520][521] Some elements of the Pakistani establishment sympathized with Taliban ideology, and many Pakistan officials considered the Taliban as an asset against India.[520][521] Bruce Riedel noted that "The Pakistan Army believes Afghanistan provides strategic depth against India, which is their obsession."[521]

Russia and Iran

In the initial aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Iranian forces, led by Revolutionary Guard Commander Qassem Suleimani initially cooperated, secretly, with American officials against Al-Qaeda operatives and the Taliban, but that cooperation ended after the Axis of Evil Speech on January 29, 2002, which included calling Iran a major state sponsor of terror and threat to peace in the region. Afterwards, Iranian forces became increasingly hostile to American forces in the region.[134]

Dr. Antonio Giustozzi, a senior research fellow at Royal United Services Institute on terrorism and conflict, wrote, "Both the Russians and the Iranians helped the Taliban advance at a breakneck pace in May–August 2021. They contributed to funding and equipping them, but perhaps even more importantly they helped them by brokering deals with parties, groups, and personalities close to either country, or even both. […] The Revolutionary Guards helped the Taliban's advance in western Afghanistan, including by lobbying various strongmen and militia commanders linked to Iran not to resist the Taliban."[522]

Reactions

Domestic reactions

In November 2001, the 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.[523] Later that month the BBC's longtime Kabul correspondent Kate Clark reported that "almost all women in Kabul are still choosing to veil" but that many felt hopeful that the ousting of the Taliban would improve their safety and access to food.[524]

 
A US marine interacting with Afghan children in Helmand Province

A 2006 WPO opinion poll found that the majority of Afghans endorsed America's military presence, with 83% of Afghans stating that they had a favorable view of the US military forces in their country. Only 17% gave an unfavorable view. 82% of Afghans, among all ethnic groups including Pashtuns, stated that the overthrowing of the Taliban was a good thing. However, the majority of Afghans held negative views on Pakistan and most Afghans also stated that they believe that the Pakistani government was allowing the Taliban to operate from its soil.[525]

A 2015 survey by Langer Research Associates found that 80% of Afghans held the view that it was a good thing for the United States to overthrow the Taliban in 2001. More Afghans blamed the Taliban or al-Qaeda for the country's violence (53%) than those who blame the US (12%).[526] A 2019 survey by The Asia Foundation found that 13.4% of Afghans had sympathy for the Taliban while 85.1% of respondents had no sympathy for the group. 88.6% of urban residents had no sympathy compared to 83.9% of rural residents.[527]

International public opinion

In October 2001 when the invasion began, polls indicated that about 88% of Americans and about 65% of Britons backed military action.[528] 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.[529]

 
22 June 2007 demonstration in Québec City against the Canadian military involvement in Afghanistan

In 2008 there was a strong opposition to war in Afghanistan in 21 of 24 countries surveyed. Only in the US and Great Britain did half the people support the war, with a larger percentage (60%) in Australia.[530] Of the seven NATO countries in the survey, not one showed a majority in favor of keeping NATO troops in Afghanistan – one, the US, came close to a majority (50%). Of the other six NATO countries, five had majorities of their population wanting NATO troops removed from Afghanistan as soon as possible.[530] An April 2011 Pew Research Center poll showed little change in American views, with about 50% saying that the effort was going very well or fairly well and only 44% supporting NATO troop presence in Afghanistan.[531]

Protests, demonstrations and rallies

The war has been the subject of large protests around the world starting with the large-scale demonstrations in the days leading up to the invasion and every year since. Many protesters consider the bombing and invasion of Afghanistan to be unjustified aggression.[532] Dozens of organizations held a national march for peace in Washington, D.C. on 20 March 2010.[533]

Aftermath

Formation of the Taliban government and international recognition

 
Taliban fighters at a market in Kabul, September 2021. A vendor selling Islamic Emirate flags can be seen.

On 7 September 2021, an interim government headed by Mohammad Hassan Akhund as Prime Minister was declared by the Taliban.[534] According to a Human Rights Watch's report released in November 2021, the Taliban killed or forcibly disappeared more than 100 former members of the Afghan security forces in the three months since the takeover in just the four provinces of Ghazni, Helmand, Kandahar, and Kunduz. According to the report, the Taliban identified targets for arrest and execution through intelligence operations and access to employment records that were left behind. Former members of the security forces were also killed by the Taliban within days of registering with them to receive a letter guaranteeing their safety.[535]

In December 2021, the US Congress established the Afghanistan War Commission as an independent task force set up to study the entirety of US military operations in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2021.[536] This commission was formally authorized as part of the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act.[537] The commission has been given four years to undertake an investigation and produce a comprehensive report.[536]

Republican insurgency

On 17 August 2021, Vice President Amrullah Saleh, citing provisions of the Constitution of Afghanistan, declared himself President of Afghanistan from a base of operations in the Panjshir Valley, which had not been taken by Taliban forces, and vowed to continue military operations against the Taliban from there.[538] His claim to the presidency was endorsed by Ahmad Massoud and Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Minister of Defence Bismillah Khan Mohammadi.[538] By 6 September the Taliban had regained control over most of the valley, but armed resistance continued in the upper valleys. Clashes in the valley mostly ceased by mid-September.[539] The leaders of the resistance, Saleh and Massoud reportedly fled to neighboring Tajikistan in late September.[540] However, fighting between Taliban and pro-republican forces continued in other provinces. Several regions had become the site of a guerrilla campaign by early 2022.[541] The NRF launched an offensive in May 2022, reportedly retaking territory in Panjshir.[542] Other pro-republican rebel groups also emerged, including the "Ahmad Khan Samangani Front",[543] "Afghan Freedom Front",[544] "Afghanistan Islamic National & Liberation Movement", and several smaller factions.[545]

Islamic State activity

Following the 2021 Kabul airport attack conducted by the terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant – Khorasan Province (a branch of the ISIL), the US said it could work with the Taliban to fight against the ISIS terrorists as part of the International military intervention against ISIL.[546]

Humanitarian crisis

Following the Taliban takeover, western nations suspended humanitarian aid and the World Bank and International Monetary Fund also halted payments to Afghanistan.[547][548] The Biden administration froze about $9 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central banks, blocking the Taliban from accessing billions of dollars held in US bank accounts.[549] In October 2021, the UN stated that more than half of Afghanistan's 39 million people faced an acute food shortage.[550] On 11 November 2021, the Human Rights Watch reported that Afghanistan is facing widespread famine due to collapsed economy and broken banking system.[548] World leaders pledged $1.2 billion in humanitarian aid to Afghanistan.[549] On 22 December 2021, The United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted a US-proposed resolution to help humanitarian aid reach desperate Afghans, while seeking to keep funds out of Taliban hands.”[551]

On 29 August 2022, U.N. humanitarian chief, Martin Griffiths, warned about Afghanistan’s deepening poverty with 6 million people at risk of famine. He stated that conflict, poverty, climate shocks and food insecurity “have long been a sad reality” in Afghanistan, but almost a year after the Taliban takeover, halt to large-scale development aid have made the situation critical.[552]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bordering areas of Pakistan were also affected (War in North-West Pakistan), and was considered for some time to be a single theater of operations by the United States (AfPak)

References

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afghanistan, 2001, 2021, this, article, about, american, afghanistan, soviet, afghanistan, soviet, afghan, other, uses, afghanistan, this, article, long, read, navigate, comfortably, please, consider, splitting, content, into, articles, condensing, adding, sub. This article is about the American war in Afghanistan For the Soviet war in Afghanistan see Soviet Afghan War For other uses see War in Afghanistan This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page April 2022 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Part of the Global War on Terrorism and the Afghanistan conflict 1978 present Clockwise from top left American troops in a firefight with Taliban insurgents in Kunar Province An American F 15S Strike Eagle dropping 2000 pound JDAMs on a cave in eastern Afghanistan an Afghan soldier surveying atop a Humvee Afghan and American soldiers move through snow in Logar Province victorious Taliban fighters after securing Kabul an Afghan soldier surveying a valley in Parwan Province British troops preparing to board a Chinook during Operation Black PrinceDate7 October 2001 15 August 2021 19 years 10 months 1 week and 1 day First phase 7 October 2001 28 December 2014 Second phase 1 January 2015 15 August 2021 36 37 38 39 LocationAfghanistan a ResultTaliban victory 40 Islamic State Taliban conflict continuesAnti Taliban Republican insurgency begins First phase Invasion and overthrow of the Taliban governed Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan in December 2001 Beginning of Taliban insurgency Establishment of the coalition backed Islamic Republic of Afghanistan in January 2004 Killing of Osama bin Laden on 2 May 2011 in Pakistan Gradual Afghanization of combat operations during ISAF drawdown Second phase Doha Agreement between U S and Taliban begins withdrawal of U S led forces full withdrawal completes on 30 August 2021 2021 Taliban offensive culminates in overthrow of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Formal end of fighting on 15 August 2021 with the fall of Kabul National interim Taliban government announced on 7 September 2021TerritorialchangesTaliban control over Afghanistan increases compared to pre intervention territoryBelligerentsInvasion 2001 Northern Alliance United States United Kingdom Canada Germany 1 Australia Italy New Zealand 2 Supported by India Iran RussiaInvasion 2001 Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan 3 Al Qaeda 055 Brigade 4 5 Supported by Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan 6 Tehreek e Nafaz e Shariat e Mohammadi 7 East Turkestan Islamic Movement 8 ISAF RS phase 2001 2021 Islamic State of Afghanistan 2001 2002 Afghan Transitional Authority 2002 2004 Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 2004 2021 ISAF 2001 2015 United States United Kingdom Canada Germany Australia Italy New Zealand France Turkey Georgia Jordan Bulgaria Poland Romania Spain Czech Republic Macedonia Denmark Armenia Azerbaijan Finland Croatia Hungary Norway Lithuania Mongolia United Arab Emirates Belgium Portugal Slovakia Netherlands Montenegro Latvia Sweden Albania Ukraine Bosnia Herzegovina Greece Ireland Iceland Estonia Austria Malaysia Slovenia Colombia Switzerland Bahrain El Salvador Luxembourg South Korea Tonga Singapore Resolute Support 2015 2021 36 countries 9 High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan allegedly from 2015 10 11 Khost Protection Force and other pro government paramilitaries 12 ISAF RS phase 2001 2021 TalibanHaqqani network 13 from 2002 Al QaedaAl Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent 14 Supported by Hezb e Islami Gulbuddin on and off until 2016 Islamic Jihad Union 15 16 from 2002 Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan until 2015 Turkistan Islamic PartyLashkar e Jhangvi 17 Pakistani Taliban 18 Lashkar e Islam Iran alleged but denied by Iran 19 20 21 Pakistan alleged but denied by Pakistan 22 23 Russia alleged but denied by Russia 24 25 26 Saudi Arabia alleged but denied by Saudi Arabia 27 28 Qatar alleged by Saudi Arabia but denied by Qatar 29 30 China alleged by the US but denied by China 31 32 Taliban splinter groupsMullah Dadullah Front from 2012 33 Fidai Mahaz from 2013 RS phase 2015 2021 ISIL KP from 2015 34 Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan since 2015 35 Commanders and leadersList Hamid KarzaiAshraf GhaniGeorge W BushBarack ObamaDonald TrumpJoe BidenTony BlairGordon BrownDavid CameronTheresa MayBoris JohnsonJean ChretienPaul MartinStephen HarperJustin TrudeauGerhard SchroderAngela MerkelJohn HowardKevin RuddJulia GillardTony AbbottMalcolm TurnbullScott MorrisonSilvio BerlusconiRomano ProdiMario MontiEnrico LettaMatteo RenziPaolo GentiloniGiuseppe ConteMario DraghiHelen ClarkJohn KeyBill EnglishJacinda ArdernKenneth F McKenzie Jr John F CampbellList of former ISAF CommandersList of former RS CommandersNangialai 11 Abdul Manan Niazi 41 List Mullah Omar Akhtar Mansour Hibatullah AkhundzadaObaidullah Akhund 42 Jalaluddin Haqqani Sirajuddin HaqqaniMullah YaqoobAbdul Ghani BaradarGulbuddin HekmatyarOsama bin Laden Ayman al ZawahiriAsim Umar Muhammad RasulHaji Najibullah 43 Shahab al Muhajir 44 Hafiz Saeed Khan Mawlavi Habib Ur Rahman 45 Abdul Haseeb Logari Abdul Rahman Ghaleb Abu Saad Erhabi Abdullah Orokzai POW Qari Hekmat Mufti Nemat Dawood Ahmad Sofi Mohamed Zahran Ishfaq Ahmed Sofi StrengthISAF 2001 2014 130 000 2012 46 47 Afghan National Security Forces 352 000 2014 48 Resolute Support Mission 2015 2021 17 000 2021 49 Military contractors 20 000 50 High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan 3 000 3 500 51 Khost Protection Force 4 000 2015 52 Taliban 60 000 tentative estimate 2014 53 Haqqani network 4 000 15 000 2009 54 55 56 HIG 1 500 2 000 2014 57 al Qaeda 300 in 2016 58 59 60 3 000 in 2001 58 Fidai Mahaz 8 000 2013 43 ISIL KP 3 500 4 000 2018 in Afghanistan 61 Casualties and lossesAfghan security forces 66 000 69 095 killed 62 63 Northern Alliance 200 killed 64 65 66 67 68 Coalition Dead 3 579 United States 2 420 United Kingdom 457 69 Canada 159 France 90 Germany 62 Italy 53 Others 338 Wounded 23 536 United States 20 713 70 United Kingdom 2 188 71 Canada 635 72 ContractorsDead 3 917 63 73 74 Wounded 15 000 73 74 Total killed 76 591Taliban insurgents 52 893 killed 63 2 000 al Qaeda fighters 58 ISIL KP 2 400 killed 34 Civilians killed 46 319 63 Total killed 176 206 per Brown University 75 212 191 per UCDP 76 a The continued list includes nations who have contributed fewer than 200 troops as of November 2014 77 b The continued list includes nations who have contributed fewer than 200 troops as of May 2017 78 The War in Afghanistan was an armed conflict from 2001 to 2021 It began when an international military coalition led by the United States launched an invasion of Afghanistan toppling the Taliban ruled Islamic Emirate and establishing the internationally recognized Islamic Republic three years later The conflict ultimately ended with the 2021 Taliban offensive which overthrew the Islamic Republic and re established the Islamic Emirate It was the longest war in the military history of the United States surpassing the length of the Vietnam War 1955 1975 by approximately 6 months Following the September 11 attacks U S President George W Bush demanded that the Taliban immediately extradite al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden to the United States the Taliban refused to do so without evidence of bin Laden s involvement The U S declared Operation Enduring Freedom as part of the earlier declared War on Terror Afghanistan was invaded and the Taliban and its allies were soon expelled from major population centers by the U S led forces supporting the anti Taliban Northern Alliance however bin Laden relocated to neighboring Pakistan The U S led coalition remained in Afghanistan forming a security mission ISAF sanctioned by the United Nations with the goal of creating a new democratic authority in the country that would prevent the Taliban from returning to power 79 A new Afghan Interim Administration was established and international rebuilding efforts were launched 80 By 2003 the Taliban had reorganized under their founder Mullah Omar and began a widespread insurgency against the new Afghan government and coalition forces Insurgents from the Taliban and other Islamist groups waged asymmetric warfare fighting with guerrilla warfare in the countryside suicide attacks against urban targets and reprisals against perceived Afghan collaborators By 2007 large parts of Afghanistan had been retaken by the Taliban 81 82 In response the coalition sent a major influx of troops for counter insurgency operations with a clear and hold strategy for villages and towns this influx peaked in 2011 when roughly 140 000 foreign troops were operating under ISAF command across Afghanistan 83 A U S covert operation using bases in Afghanistan led to the killing of Osama bin Laden in May 2011 and NATO leaders began planning an exit strategy 84 85 On 28 December 2014 NATO formally ended ISAF combat operations in Afghanistan and officially transferred full security responsibility to the Afghan government Unable to eliminate the Taliban through military means coalition forces and separately the Afghan government led by Ashraf Ghani turned to diplomacy to end the conflict 86 These efforts culminated in the US Taliban deal in February 2020 which stipulated the withdrawal of all U S troops from Afghanistan by 2021 87 In exchange the Taliban pledged to prevent any militant group from staging attacks from Afghan territory against the U S and its allies 88 However the Afghan government was not a party to the deal and rejected its terms 89 Coinciding with the withdrawal of troops the Taliban launched a broad offensive throughout the summer of 2021 successfully reestablishing their control over Afghanistan including the capital city of Kabul on 15 August On the same day the last president of the Islamic Republic Ashraf Ghani fled the country the Taliban declared victory and the war was formally brought to a close 90 By 30 August the last American military aircraft departed from Afghanistan ending the protracted U S led military presence in the country 91 92 Overall the war killed an estimated 176 000 212 000 people including 46 319 civilians 93 While more than 5 7 million former refugees returned to Afghanistan after the 2001 invasion 94 by the time the Taliban returned to power in 2021 2 6 million Afghans remained refugees 95 while another 4 million were internally displaced 96 97 Contents 1 Names 2 Prelude 2 1 Rise of the Taliban 2 2 Al Qaeda 2 3 September 11 attacks 2 4 US ultimatum to the Taliban 3 History 3 1 Tactical overview 3 2 2001 2002 Invasion and early operations 3 3 2003 2005 Taliban resurgence 3 3 1 Coalition mistakes Taliban start to re organize 3 3 2 Fighting increases 3 4 2006 2009 Escalating war and NATO build up 3 4 1 Coalition diversifies Taliban offensive 3 4 2 Troop surge 3 4 3 US action into Pakistan 3 4 4 Re election of Karzai 3 4 5 Taliban status and strategy 3 5 2010 2013 Coalition offensives and strategic agreements 3 5 1 Peace negotiations 3 5 2 Wikileaks discipline issues 3 5 3 Pakistan US tensions 3 5 4 Killing of Osama bin Laden 3 5 5 International drawdown and strategic agreements 3 5 6 Security transfer 3 6 2014 2017 Withdrawal and increase of insurgency 3 6 1 Battle of Kunduz 3 6 2 Taliban negotiations and in fighting 3 6 3 Clashes in Helmand 3 6 4 Emergence of Islamic State 3 7 2018 2020 Peace overtures 3 7 1 National peace movements and first ceasefire 3 8 2020 US Taliban talks and agreement 3 8 1 Spike in violence and prisoners dispute 3 9 2020 2021 US withdrawal 3 9 1 Taliban s summer offensive capture of Kabul and Taliban s victory 3 9 2 Airlifts and final US exit 4 Impact 4 1 Casualties 4 2 Refugees 4 3 War crimes 4 4 Health and education 4 5 Drug trade 5 NATO s inability to stabilize Afghanistan 6 Foreign support for the Taliban 6 1 Pakistan 6 2 Russia and Iran 7 Reactions 7 1 Domestic reactions 7 2 International public opinion 7 3 Protests demonstrations and rallies 8 Aftermath 8 1 Formation of the Taliban government and international recognition 8 2 Republican insurgency 8 3 Islamic State activity 8 4 Humanitarian crisis 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksNamesThe war is named the War in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2021 to distinguish it from other wars notably the ongoing Afghanistan conflict of which it was a part and the Soviet Afghan War From a western perspective the war is divided between 2001 and 2014 the ISAF mission when most combat operations were performed by coalition forces and 2015 to 2021 the Resolute Support Mission when the Afghan Armed Forces did most of the fighting against the Tailban The war was named Operation Enduring Freedom from 2001 to 2014 and as Operation Freedom s Sentinel from 2015 to 2021 by the US Alternatively it has been called the US War in Afghanistan in certain countries In Afghanistan itself the war is known as simply the War in Afghanistan Dari جنگ در افغانستان Jang dar Afghanestan Pashto د افغانستان جګړه Da Afganistan Jangra PreludeMain article Prelude to the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 The military situation of the Afghan Civil War in 1996 between the Taliban red and the Northern Alliance blue Rise of the Taliban The Taliban emerged from religious students known as the Talib who sought to end warlordism in Afghanistan through stricter adherence to Sharia 98 99 On 27 September 1996 the Taliban with military support by Pakistan and financial support from Saudi Arabia seized Kabul and founded the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan 100 The Taliban imposed their fundamentalist Deobandi interpretation of Islam in areas under their control issuing edicts forbidding women to work outside the home attend school or to leave their homes unless accompanied by a male relative 101 According to the United Nations UN the Taliban while trying to consolidate control over northern and western Afghanistan committed systematic massacres against civilians UN officials stated that there had been 15 massacres between 1996 and 2001 many of them targeting Shia Hazaras 102 103 By 2001 the Taliban controlled as much as 90 of Afghanistan with the Northern Alliance confined to the country s northeast corner Fighting alongside Taliban forces were some 28 000 30 000 Pakistanis usually also Pashtun and 2 000 3 000 Al Qaeda militants 104 105 106 107 Al Qaeda The 9 11 Commission in the US found that under the Taliban al Qaeda was able to use Afghanistan as a place to train and indoctrinate fighters import weapons coordinate with other jihadists and plot terrorist actions 108 While al Qaeda maintained its own camps in Afghanistan it also supported training camps of other organizations An estimated 10 000 to 20 000 men passed through these facilities before 9 11 most of whom were sent to fight for the Taliban against the United Front A smaller number were inducted into al Qaeda 109 After the August 1998 United States embassy bombings were linked to bin Laden President Bill Clinton ordered missile strikes on militant training camps in Afghanistan US officials pressed the Taliban to surrender bin Laden In 1999 the international community imposed sanctions on the Taliban calling for bin Laden to be surrendered The Taliban repeatedly rebuffed these demands Central Intelligence Agency CIA Special Activities Division paramilitary teams were active in Afghanistan in the 1990s in clandestine operations to locate and kill or capture Osama bin Laden These teams planned several operations but did not receive the order to proceed from President Clinton Their efforts built relationships with Afghan leaders that proved essential in the 2001 invasion 110 September 11 attacks Main article September 11 attacks On the morning of 11 September 2001 a total of 19 Arab Muslim men 15 of whom were from Saudi Arabia carried out four coordinated attacks in the United States Four commercial passenger jet airliners were hijacked 111 112 The hijackers intentionally crashed two of the airliners into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City killing everyone on board and more than 2 000 people in the buildings Both buildings collapsed within two hours from damage related to the crashes destroying nearby buildings and damaging others The hijackers crashed a third airliner into the Pentagon in Arlington Virginia just outside Washington D C The fourth plane crashed into a field near Shanksville in rural Pennsylvania after some of its passengers and flight crew attempted to retake control of the plane which the hijackers had redirected toward Washington D C to target the White House or the US Capitol No one aboard the flights survived The death toll among responders including firefighters and police was 836 as of 2009 113 Total deaths were 2 996 including the 19 hijackers 113 Rescue operations underway at the Pentagon after the September 11th attacks Osama Bin Laden planned and coordinated the attacks and the US desire to hold him accountable became the casus belli for invasion Historian Carter Malkasian writes that seldom in history has one man so singlehandedly provoked a war Bin Laden sought successfully to draw the US into an extended war similar to that fought against the Soviets 114 62 64 The Taliban publicly condemned the 11 September attacks 115 They also greatly underestimated the US s willingness to go to war The US was mistaken in its belief that the Taliban and al Qaeda were almost inseparable when in fact they had very different goals and leaders 114 65 70 US ultimatum to the Taliban Immediately after the 9 11 attacks the United States National Security Council agreed that military action would probably have to be taken against Al Qaeda and the Taliban However Bush decided to issue an ultimatum to the Taliban first 114 54 President Bush issued an ultimatum to the Taliban to hand over Osama bin Laden close immediately every terrorist training camp hand over every terrorist and their supporters and give the United States full access to terrorist training camps for inspection 115 The same day religious scholars met in Kabul deciding that bin Laden should be surrendered however Mullah Omar decided that turning over Osama would only be a disgrace for us and Islamic thought and belief would be a weakness and that the US would continue making demands after surrendering bin Laden who he claimed was innocent 114 56 The Taliban refused the ultimatum saying that Osama bin Laden was protected by the traditional Pashtun laws of hospitality 116 117 In the weeks ahead and at the beginning of the US and NATO invasion of Afghanistan the Taliban demanded evidence of bin Laden s guilt but subsequently offered to hand over Osama bin Laden to a third country if the US stopped its bombing and provided evidence of bin Laden s guilt 118 119 A Bush administration official later stated that their demands were not subject to negotiation and that it was time for the Taliban to act now 120 Covert US military action began soon after and the War started officially on 7 October 2001 114 58 HistoryMain article History of the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 It has been suggested that portions of this article be split out into articles titled History of the War in Afghanistan 2001 2009 and History of the War in Afghanistan 2010 2021 Discuss April 2022 This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page September 2021 This section may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Tactical overview The War contained two main factions the Coalition which included the US and its allies eventually supporting the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan fighting against the Taliban its allies and its militias Complicating the fight was Taliban splinter groups and other more radical religious groups such as al Qaeda and later the Islamic State These radical groups sometimes fought for the Taliban sometimes fought for their own goals and sometimes fought against both the Taliban and the Government Afghanistan is a rural country In 2020 some 80 of its 33 million people lived in the countryside 114 12 This predisposes warfare to rural areas and provides ample hiding spots for guerrilla fighters The country also has harsh winters which favors spring or summertime military offensives after winter lulls in fighting 121 122 99 7 of Afghanistan is Muslim 123 which affected the ideology of both the Taliban and the Afghan government Islam has historically allowed Afghan leaders to overcome tribal differences and conflict and provided a sense of unity especially against foreigners and non believers Centuries of foreign invasion by non Muslims cemented the religious nature of resisting outsiders and the Afghan identity 114 17 19 The impact of local religious leaders mullahs is important in Afghanistan and they could influence the population as much as the government Mullahs have traditionally been important in prescribing resistance to outsiders through calls for holy war or jihad 114 23 24 Afghanistan is a largely tribal society and this significantly influences Afghan society and politics Tribalism is largely a source of division unlike Islam Pashtuns are the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan comprising between 38 and 50 of the population 124 Pashtunwali the traditional way of life for the Pashtuns guided most tribal decision making Tribal unity was often weak as well due to Pashtunwali s method of dealing with feuds Traditionally Afghan leaders have depended on tribes to keep order in rural areas because without their cooperation the state was often ineffective and weak Afghans were more loyal to their own community and tribe not the state which meant that tribes would align with either the Taliban or the Government as was most beneficial 114 19 22 The significant difference in power between high tech Coalition militaries and the guerrilla Taliban led to asymmetric warfare Owing to their roots in the anti Soviet Mujahideen the Taliban carried on the guerrilla tactics developed in the 1980s The Mujihdeen operated in small cadres of 10 to 50 men armed with a combination of outdated and usually looted modern weapons 114 31 The Taliban increasingly used guerrilla tactics such as suicide car and roadside bombs IEDs and targeted assassinations 125 By 2009 IEDs had become the Taliban s weapon of choice 126 The Taliban also used insider attacks as the war drew on by planting personnel in the Afghan military and police forces 127 2001 2002 Invasion and early operations Main article United States invasion of Afghanistan See also Battle of Tora Bora and Operation Anaconda US Army Special Forces and US Air Force Combat Controllers with Northern Alliance troops on horseback Samangan Province Though the US officially invaded on 7 October 2001 by launching Operation Enduring Freedom covert operations had begun several weeks earlier Fifteen days after the 9 11 attack the US covertly inserted members of the CIA s Special Activities Division into Afghanistan forming the Northern Afghanistan Liaison Team 128 They linked up with the Northern Alliance in the Panjshir Valley north of Kabul 129 In October 12 man Special Forces teams began arriving in Afghanistan to work with the CIA and Northern Alliance 129 Within a few weeks the Northern Alliance with assistance from the US ground and air forces captured several key cities from the Taliban 130 131 The Taliban retreated throughout the country holding steady only in Kunduz Province outmatched by US air support By November the Taliban had lost control of most of the country 114 70 75 The US did not invade alone it began with assistance from the UK and eventually over a dozen more countries 132 133 134 The US and its allies drove the Taliban from power and built military bases near major cities across the country Most al Qaeda and Taliban were not captured escaping to neighboring Pakistan or retreating to rural or remote mountainous regions 135 On 20 December 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 136 Its mandate did not extend beyond the Kabul area for the first few years 137 Eighteen countries were contributing to the force in February 2002 American and British special forces operators at Tora Bora 2001 Who would lead the country became an acute political question At the Bonn Conference in December 2001 Hamid Karzai was selected to head the Afghan Interim Administration which after a 2002 loya jirga grand assembly in Kabul became the Afghan Transitional Administration The agreement provided steps that would lead to democracy for the country 138 US Humvee crossing water in 2002 Shortly after the elevation of Karzai to the president on 5 December the Taliban may have tried to seek a conditional surrender to Karzai There are two conflicting accounts The first is that an agreement possibly signed by Mullah Omar leader of the Taliban was reached wherein the Taliban would surrender in exchange for immunity The second is that the agreement was more narrowly focused on surrendering Kandahar Taliban sources on the other hand say that Omar was not part of the deal and was not going to surrender Kandahar Whatever the case the US vetoed any sort of negotiation in what historian Malkasian calls one of the greatest mistakes of the war Omar disappeared leaving either for another part of Afghanistan or Pakistan The Taliban subsequently went into hiding or fled to Pakistan though many gave up arms as well Most leaders and thousands of fighters went to Pakistan Whether the Taliban had decided on an insurgency at this time is unknown 114 74 84 Taliban fighters remained in hiding in the rural regions of four southern provinces Kandahar Zabul Helmand and Uruzgan 139 By late November bin Laden was at a fortified training camp in Tora Bora The battle of Tora Bora began on 6 December CIA teams working with tribal militias followed bin Laden there and began to call in airstrikes to clear out the mountainous camp with special forces soon arriving in support While the tribal militia numbered 1 000 it was not fighting eagerly during Ramadan While the CIA requested that United States Army Rangers be sent and Marines were ready to deploy they were declined Bin Laden was eventually able to escape at some point in December to Pakistan 114 84 87 The invasion was a striking military success for the Coalition Fewer than 12 US soldiers died between October and March compared to some 15 000 Taliban killed or taken prisoner Special forces teams and their Afghan allies had done most of the work and relatively few soldiers had been required Karzai was a respected legitimate and charismatic leader Still according to Malkasian the failure to capture bin Laden or negotiate with the Taliban or include them in any way in the new government set the course for the long war that bin Laden had dreamed of getting the US into 114 86 88 2003 2005 Taliban resurgence Further information Taliban insurgency Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 2003 in Afghanistan 2004 in Afghanistan and 2005 in Afghanistan Map detailing the spread of the Taliban insurgency 2002 2006 Coalition mistakes Taliban start to re organize After initial success the US lacked an obvious goal in Afghanistan beyond the counter terrorism objectives of finding senior Taliban and al Qaeda leaders Nation building was initially opposed by the Bush administration but as the US stayed it slowly crept into the rationale for staying In April 2002 Bush made a speech expressing a desire to rebuild Afghanistan The US also sought to instill democracy and women s rights as a moral matter The international community contributed to the development effort in Afghanistan which focused on aid and creating institutions to run the country US reconstruction efforts also focused on improving education health care and community development The US also supported and funded the creation of an Afghan army in early 2002 However the army was built slowly due to competing interests and a US belief that the Taliban were no longer a strong threat Some in the Bush administration preferred to use the Northern Alliance and warlords as the military instead of creating a new military The army became an afterthought and was poorly trained and equipped which further enabled the Taliban 114 89 105 Some members of the Taliban reached out to Karzai to open negotiations several times between 2002 and 2004 but the US was adamantly against this and ensured that all top Taliban leaders were blacklisted such that the Afghan Government could not negotiate with them Historian Malkasian argues that negotiations with the Taliban would have been low cost but highly effective at this stage and chocks it up to US overconfidence and hubris and notes that all the information that the Taliban could resurge was available but ignored 114 106 111 Some Taliban leaders considered joining the political process with meetings on the issue until 2004 though these did not result in a decision to do so 140 19 The first attempt at a larger organization of Taliban groups after the invasion occurred in April 2002 in the country s south A shura was established by former mid level Taliban officials in Gardi Jangal a refugee camp near the Helmand border It operated in the core southern provinces of Kandahar Helmand Zabul and Uruzgan It was composed of 23 groups of about 50 individuals each for a total of around 1 200 In the North Waziristan District of Pakistan Jalaluddin Haqqani had started organizing the Haqqani network after exiling there in 2001 In early 2002 their manpower was estimated at 1 400 and had a presence in Paktia Province and Khost Province in the second half of 2002 with limited activity They were joined by members of Al Qaeda Operation Jacana amp Operation Condor among others tried to flush out the Taliban with varying results 140 25 29 From 2002 to 2005 the Taliban reorganized and planned a resurgence Pressure on Coalition forces to hunt down terrorists led to excesses and generated some popular support for the Taliban Coalition troops would go on missions with questionable intelligence at one point falling prey to a false tip provided by a target s political opponents Few high level Taliban or al Qaeda leaders were caught Those captured were predominantly low level Taliban operatives who had little information on al Qaeda Numerous civilians were killed in operations including a wedding which was misinterpreted as a Taliban gathering Repeated errors by Coalition forces drove Taliban recruitment Many Taliban leaders who had given up arms to leave peacefully especially after being promised amnesty by President Karzai were increasingly harassed by the US and elements of the Afghan government By 2004 most Taliban leaders in Afghanistan had fled back to Pakistan where the remnants of the Taliban were hiding Malkasian argues that the US provided significant momentum to the Taliban by its own missteps especially by focusing on aggressive counter terrorism and vengeance for 9 11 He further argues that these actions alone did not restart the conflict because the Taliban would have re emerged regardless because of leaders like Mullah Omar and Jalaluddin Haqqani who had never put down arms 114 119 123 Fighting increases The Taliban undertook relatively few actions until 2005 Pamphlets by Taliban and other groups turned up strewn in towns and the countryside in early 2003 urging Islamic faithful to rise up against US forces and other foreign soldiers in a holy war 141 On 27 January 2003 during Operation Mongoose US forces cleared out the Adi Ghar cave complex 25 km 15 mi north of Spin Boldak citation needed In May 2003 the Taliban Supreme Court s chief justice Abdul Salam proclaimed that the Taliban were back regrouped rearmed and ready for guerrilla war to expel US forces from Afghanistan 142 Meanwhile American attention was diverted from Afghanistan when US forces invaded Iraq in March 2003 143 Privately the Taliban were preparing a grand offensive against the Coalition It was to be several years in the making so that enough strength could be gathered Mullah Dadullah was put in charge of the offensive Dadullah was effective but cruel He was responsible for introducing suicide bombing into wide use around 2004 as previously the Taliban had not been enamored by suicide or taking civilian lives that had been an al Qaeda tactic A network of madrassas in Pakistan catering to Afghan refugees provided a steady stream of extremist recruits willing to die 114 125 127 US troops board a helicopter in Zabul province 2003 A US Navy Corpsman searches for Taliban fighters in Mihtarlam spring of 2005 As the summer of 2003 continued Taliban attacks gradually increased in frequency Dozens of Afghan government soldiers NGO humanitarian workers and several US soldiers died in the raids ambushes and rocket attacks Besides guerrilla attacks Taliban fighters began building up forces in the district of Dey Chopan District in Zabul Province The Taliban decided to make a stand there Over the course of the summer up to 1 000 guerrillas moved there Over 220 people including several dozen Afghan police were killed in August 2003 144 On 11 August 2003 NATO assumed control of ISAF 145 Taliban leader Mullah Omar reorganized the movement and in 2003 launched an insurgency against the government and ISAF 146 147 From the second half of 2003 and through 2004 operations started intensifying with night letters followed by kidnappings and assassinations of government officials and collaborating village elders by 2005 with the former leaving villages in fear Government schools and clinics were also burned down 140 34 3rd Battalion 3rd Marine Regiment at the Khost Gardez Pass 2004 Operation Asbury Park cleared out Taliban forces in the Dey Chopan District during the summer of 2004 148 In late 2004 the then hidden Taliban leader Mohammed Omar announced an insurgency against America and its puppets referring to transitional Afghan government forces to regain the sovereignty of our country 149 The 2004 Afghan presidential election was a major target of Taliban though only 20 districts and 200 villages elsewhere were claimed to have been successfully prevented from voting Karzai was elected president of the country now named the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 140 40 From late June through mid July 2005 United States Navy Seals carried out Operation Red Wings as a joint military operation in Kunar Province The mission intended to disrupt local Taliban led by Ahmad Shah hopefully bringing stability and facilitating the Afghan Parliament elections scheduled for September 2005 The operation was a pyrrhic victory for the Coalition with only one survivor dramatized in the 2013 film Lone Survivor and 19 dead 150 151 152 Operation Whalers would finish the job several weeks later Taliban activity dropped significantly and Shah was seriously wounded Shah was not able to undertake any significant operations subsequent to Operation Whalers in Kunar or neighboring provinces 151 153 The Taliban regained control over several villages in the south by the end of 2005 mostly because the villages were fed up with the lack of help from the government and hoped life would be better under the Taliban Years of planning were coming to fruition for the Taliban By comparison the Government was in a very weak position The police were deeply underfunded and the average district had only 50 officers Some districts had no Government presence at all Most of the country s militias with a strength of 100 000 had been demobilized due to international pressure to create an army But the army was still woefully understrength Combined with an increase in tribal feuding the conditions were perfect for a Taliban comeback 114 134 136 An Apache helicopter provides protection from the air Lwar Kowndalan in Kandahar October 2005 2006 2009 Escalating war and NATO build up This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions September 2021 Further information Taliban insurgency Coalition combat operations in Afghanistan in 2006 Coalition combat operations in Afghanistan in 2007 Coalition combat operations in Afghanistan in 2008 and Coalition combat operations in Afghanistan in 2009 As insurgent attacks in the country reportedly grew fourfold between 2002 and 2006 154 by late 2007 Afghanistan was said to be in serious danger of falling into Taliban control despite the presence of 40 000 ISAF troops 155 Coalition diversifies Taliban offensive From January 2006 a multinational ISAF contingent started to replace US troops in southern Afghanistan The UK formed the core of the force along with Australia Canada the Netherlands and Estonia 156 157 158 159 160 In January 2006 NATO s focus in southern Afghanistan was to form Provincial Reconstruction Teams Local Taliban figures pledged to resist 161 Since Canada wanted to deploy in Kandahar the UK got Helmand province Helmand was a center of poppy production so it seemed a good region for the anti narcotic focused UK In hindsight the UK were a poor choice Pashtun Helmandis had never forgotten the 1880 Battle of Maiwand near Helmand province a popular rumour was that the British sought to avenge their loss in that battle The British had long since forgotten the war but it proved a source of significant resistance from the Afghan population 114 138 142 Local intelligence suggested that the Taliban were going to wage a brutal campaign in the summer of 2006 Coalition generals sent this info up the chain of command but decision makers ignored warnings The US was distracted in Iraq and Secretary of State Rumsfeld was more interested in making the Afghan army affordable than effective Of the 70 000 soldiers the Afghan army was supposed to have only 26 000 had been trained and retained 114 138 142 Spring and summer action in 2006 by the Coalition included Operation Mountain Thrust Operation Medusa a Dutch Australian offensive the Battle of Panjwaii Operation Mountain Fury and Operation Falcon Summit The Coalition achieved tactical victories and area denial but the Taliban were not completely defeated A US Army soldier from 10th Mountain Division patrols Aranas On 29 May 2006 a US military truck that was part of a convoy in Kabul lost control and plowed into civilian vehicles killing one person and injuring six The surrounding crowd got angry and a riot arose lasting all day ending with 20 dead and 160 injured When stone throwing and gunfire had come from a crowd of some 400 men the US troops had used their weapons to defend themselves while leaving the scene a US military spokesman said A correspondent for the Financial Times in Kabul suggested that this was the outbreak of a ground swell of resentment and growing hostility to foreigners that had been growing and building since 2004 162 163 Swedish Army medic in the Mazar e Sharif region UK actions in early 2007 included Operation Volcano Operation Achilles and Operation Lastay Kulang The UK Ministry of Defence also announced its intention to bring British troop levels in the country up to 7 700 164 On 4 March 2007 US Marines killed at least 12 civilians and injured 33 in Shinwar district Nangarhar 165 in a response to a bomb ambush The event became known as the Shinwar massacre 166 The 120 member Marine unit responsible for the attack were ordered to leave the country because the incident damaged the unit s relations with the local population 167 A US soldier conducts a mountain patrol in Nuristan Province During the summer NATO forces achieved tactical victories at the Battle of Chora in Oruzgan where Dutch and Australian ISAF forces were deployed US and British troops during a patrol in Helmand Province Chinooks transporting troops to Bagram The Battle of Musa Qala took place in December Afghan units were the principal fighting force supported by British forces 168 Taliban forces were forced out of the town On 13 June 2008 Taliban fighters demonstrated their ongoing strength liberating all prisoners in Kandahar jail The operation freed 1200 prisoners 400 of whom were Taliban causing a major embarrassment for NATO 169 By the end of 2008 the Taliban apparently had severed remaining ties with al Qaeda 170 According to senior US military intelligence officials perhaps fewer than 100 members of al Qaeda remained in Afghanistan 171 June 2009 brought Operation Strike of the Sword in Helmand 172 It followed a British led operation named Operation Panther s Claw in the same region which was aimed to secure various canal and river crossings to establish a long term ISAF presence 173 On 4 September 2009 during the Kunduz Province Campaign a devastating NATO air raid was conducted 7 kilometers southwest of Kunduz where Taliban fighters had hijacked civilian supply trucks killing up to 179 people including over 100 civilians 174 In December 2009 an attack on Forward Operating Base Chapman used by the CIA to gather information and to coordinate drone attacks against Taliban leaders killed eight working for the CIA 175 Troop surge Development of ISAF troop strength In March 2007 the US deployed some 3 500 more troops though the pace of deployment was slow due to American priorities in Iraq 176 177 In the first five months of 2008 the number of US troops in Afghanistan increased by over 80 with a surge of 21 643 more troops bringing the total from 26 607 in January to 48 250 in June 178 In September 2008 President Bush announced the withdrawal of over 8 000 from Iraq and a further increase of up to 4 500 in Afghanistan 179 The same month the UK lost its 100th serviceperson 180 January 2009 brought a change in American leadership with the election of President Barack Obama That month US soldiers alongside Afghan Federal Guards moved into the provinces of Logar Wardak and Kunar The troops were the first wave of an expected surge of reinforcements originally ordered by President Bush and increased by President Obama 181 In mid February 2009 it was announced that 17 000 additional troops would be deployed in two brigades and support troops the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade of about 3 500 and the 5th Brigade 2nd Infantry Division a Stryker Brigade with about 4 000 182 ISAF commander General David McKiernan had called for as many as 30 000 additional troops effectively doubling the number of troops 183 On 23 September a classified assessment by General McChrystal included his conclusion that a successful counterinsurgency strategy would require 500 000 troops and five years 184 On 1 December 2009 Obama announced that the US would send 30 000 more troops 185 Antiwar organizations in the US responded quickly and cities throughout the US saw protests on 2 December 186 Many protesters compared the decision to deploy more troops in Afghanistan to the expansion of the Vietnam War under the Johnson administration 187 A German Bundeswehr soldier part of ISAF s Regional Command North at Camp Marmal Burning hashish seized in Operation Albatross a combined operation of Afghan officials NATO and the DEA US action into Pakistan Main articles Pakistan s role in the War on Terror and Pakistan United States skirmishes See also Khyber Border Coordination Center Barack Obama with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari in 2009 In the early years of the war Pakistan had been seen as a firm ally and little concern had been given to its support of the Taliban Pakistan had also helped capture numerous top al Qaeda leaders including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed But internally Pakistan was providing significant funding access to safe houses and political support to the Taliban Public opinion in Pakistan heavily favored the Taliban and the US invasion was viewed very negatively The government was in no position to expel the Taliban lest it starts a conflict within its already fragile country Thus the Taliban continued to use Pakistan as a base of operations and a safe haven to rebuild their strength 114 129 132 The US had been using drone strikes in Pakistan since 2004 starting along the Federal Tribal Areas against Taliban and Al Qaeda militants 188 189 In the summer of 2008 President Bush issued an order authorizing raids against militants in Pakistan Pakistan said it would not allow foreign forces onto its territory and that it would vigorously protect its sovereignty 190 In September the Pakistan military stated that it had issued orders to open fire on US soldiers who crossed the border in pursuit of militant forces 191 On 3 September 2008 US commandos landed by helicopter and attacked three houses close to a known enemy stronghold in Pakistan Pakistan condemned the attack calling the incursion a gross violation of Pakistan s territory 192 193 On 6 September in an apparent reaction Pakistan announced an indefinite disconnection of supply lines to NATO forces 194 A further split occurred when Pakistani soldiers fired on Nato aircraft which had crossed the border on 25 September 195 However despite tensions the US increased the use of remotely piloted drone aircraft in Pakistan s border regions in particular the Federal Tribal Areas and Balochistan by 2009 drone attacks were up 183 since 2006 196 Pakistani drone strikes against Taliban and al Qaeda militants increased substantially under President Obama 197 Some in the media have referred to the attacks as a drone war 198 199 In August 2009 Baitullah Mehsud the leader of the Tehrik i Taliban Pakistan was killed in a drone strike 200 A US soldier and an Afghan interpreter in Zabul 2009 Re election of Karzai See also 2009 Afghan presidential election After Karzai s alleged win of 54 percent which would prevent a runoff over 400 000 Karzai votes had to be disallowed after accusations of fraud Some nations criticized the elections as free but not fair 201 202 The Taliban s claim that the over 135 violent incidents disrupted elections was largely disputed However the media was asked to not report any violent incidents 203 In southern Afghanistan where the Taliban held the most power voter turnout was low and sporadic violence was directed at voters and security personnel 204 The Taliban released a video days after the elections filming on the road between Kabul and Kandahar stopping vehicles and asking to see their fingers voters were marked by dipping their fingers in ink so they could not double vote The video went showed ten men who had voted listening to a Taliban militant The Taliban pardoned the voters because of Ramadan 205 The Taliban attacked towns with rockets and other indirect fire Amid claims of widespread fraud both top contenders Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah claimed victory Reports suggested that turnout was lower than in the prior election 202 On 26 November 2009 Karzai made a public plea for direct negotiations with the Taliban leadership Karzai said there is an urgent need for negotiations and made it clear that the Obama administration had opposed such talks There was no formal US response 206 207 Taliban status and strategy In 2007 after more than 5 years of war Western officials and analysts estimated the strength of Taliban forces at about 10 000 fighters fielded at any given time Of that number only 2 000 to 3 000 were highly motivated full time insurgents 208 The rest were volunteer units made up of young Afghans angered by deaths of Afghan civilians in military airstrikes and American detention of Muslim prisoners who had been held for years without being charged 209 In 2007 more foreign fighters came into Afghanistan than ever before according to officials Approximately 100 to 300 full time combatants were foreigners many from Pakistan Uzbekistan Chechnya various Arab countries and perhaps even Turkey and western China They were reportedly more violent uncontrollable and extreme often bringing superior video production or bomb making expertise 210 By 2010 the Taliban had as many as 25 000 dedicated soldiers almost as many as before 9 11 211 Former Taliban fighters turn in their weapons as part of a reintegration program in Ghor Province General McChrystal newly appointed as US commander in Afghanistan said that the Taliban had gained the upper hand In a continuation of the Taliban s usual strategy of summer offensives 212 the militants aggressively spread their influence into north and west Afghanistan and stepped up their attack in an attempt to disrupt presidential polls 213 Calling the Taliban a very aggressive enemy he added that the US strategy was to stop their momentum and focus on protecting and safeguarding Afghan civilians calling it hard work 214 2010 2013 Coalition offensives and strategic agreements This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions September 2021 UK service members of the Royal Air Force Regiment stop on a road while conducting a combat mission near Kandahar Airfield Australian and Afghan soldiers patrol the poppy fields in the Baluchi Valley Region April 2010 Deployment of additional US troops continued in early 2010 with 9 000 of the planned 30 000 in place before the end of March and another 18 000 expected by June 215 The surge in troops supported a sixfold increase in Special Forces operations 216 The surge of American personnel that began in late 2009 ended by September 2012 217 700 airstrikes occurred in September 2010 alone versus 257 in all of 2009 218 Due to increased use of IEDs by insurgents the number of injured Coalition soldiers mainly Americans significantly increased 219 Beginning in May 2010 NATO special forces began to concentrate on operations to capture or kill specific Taliban leaders As of March 2011 the US military claimed that the effort had resulted in the capture or killing of more than 900 low to mid level Taliban commanders 220 221 Overall 2010 saw the most insurgent attacks of any year since the war began peaking in September at more than 1 500 222 Coalition forces conducting an airdrop in Shahjoy District Zabul The CIA created Counter terrorism Pursuit Teams staffed by Afghans at the war s beginning 223 224 This force grew to over 3 000 by 2010 and was considered one of the best Afghan fighting forces 224 These units were not only effective in operations against the Taliban and al Qaeda forces in Afghanistan 225 but also expanded their operations into Pakistan 226 In February 2010 Coalition and Afghan forces began highly visible plans for an offensive codenamed Operation Moshtarak on the Taliban stronghold near the village of Marjah It was the first operation where Afghan forces led the coalition The offensive involved 15 000 Coalition and Afghan troops 227 The Battle of Kandahar 2011 was part of an offensive that followed a 30 April announcement that the Taliban would launch their spring offensive 228 On 7 May the Taliban launched a major offensive on government buildings in Kandahar The Taliban said their goal was to take control of the city At least eight locations were attacked the governor s compound the mayor s office the NDS headquarters three police stations and two high schools 229 The battle continued onto a second day The BBC called it the worst attack in Kandahar province since the fall of the Taliban government in 2001 and an embarrassment for the Western backed Afghan government 230 Peace negotiations See also Afghan Peace Jirga 2010 By 2009 there was broad agreement in Afghanistan that the war should end but how it should happen was a major issue for the candidates of the 2009 Afghan presidential election that re elected Karzai 231 In a televised speech after being elected Karzai called on our Taliban brothers to come home and embrace their land 232 and laid plans to launch a loya jirga Efforts were undermined by the Obama administration s increase of American troops in the country 233 Karzai reiterated at a London conference in January 2010 that he wanted to reach out to the Taliban to lay down arms 234 US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton cautiously supported the proposal 235 The Peace Jirga was held in Kabul attended by 1 600 delegates in June 2010 However the Taliban and the Hezb i Islami Gulbuddin who were both invited by Karzai as a gesture of goodwill did not attend the conference 236 Troops from the 31st and 33rd Kandak Afghan National Army execute a departure for Operation Valley Flood The Taliban s co founder and then second in command Abdul Ghani Baradar was one of the leading Taliban members who favored talks with the US and Afghan governments Karzai s administration reportedly held talks with Baradar in February 2010 however later that month Baradar was captured in a joint US Pakistani raid in the city of Karachi in Pakistan The arrest infuriated Karzai and invoked suspicions that he was seized because the Pakistani intelligence community was opposed to Afghan peace talks 237 238 Karzai started peace talks with Haqqani network groups in March 2010 239 A mindset change and strategy occurred within the Obama administration in 2010 to allow possible political negotiations to solve the war 240 The Taliban themselves had refused to speak to the Afghan government portraying them as an American puppet Sporadic efforts for peace talks between the US and the Taliban occurred afterward and it was reported in October 2010 that Taliban leadership commanders the Quetta Shura had left their haven in Pakistan and been safely escorted to Kabul by NATO aircraft for talks with the assurance that NATO staff would not apprehend them 241 After the talks concluded it emerged that the leader of this delegation who claimed to be Akhtar Mansour the second in command of the Taliban was actually an imposter who had duped NATO officials 242 Karzai confirmed in June 2011 that secret talks were taking place between the US and the Taliban 243 but these collapsed by August 2011 244 Further attempts to resume talks were canceled in March 2012 245 and June 2013 following a dispute between the Afghan government and the Taliban regarding the latter s opening of a political office in Qatar President Karzai accused the Taliban of portraying themselves as a government in exile 246 In July 2015 Pakistan hosted the first official peace talks between Taliban representatives and the Afghan government U S and China attended the talks brokered by Pakistan in Murree as two observers 247 In January 2016 Pakistan hosted a round of four way talks with Afghan Chinese and American officials but the Taliban did not attend 248 The Taliban did hold informal talks with the Afghan government in 2016 249 Wikileaks discipline issues See also United States and state sponsored terrorism and Pakistan and state sponsored terrorism US soldiers walk by local Afghan boys during a patrol in Gardez On 25 July 2010 the release of 91 731 classified documents from the WikiLeaks organization was made public The documents cover US military incident and intelligence reports from January 2004 to December 2009 250 Some of these documents included sanitized and covered up accounts of civilian casualties caused by Coalition Forces The reports included many references to other incidents involving civilian casualties like the Kunduz airstrike and Nangar Khel incident 251 The leaked documents also contain reports of Pakistan collusion with the Taliban According to Der Spiegel the documents clearly show that the Pakistani intelligence agency Inter Services Intelligence usually known as the ISI is the most important accomplice the Taliban has outside of Afghanistan 252 Beginning in January 2012 incidents involving US troops 253 254 255 256 257 258 occurred that were described by The Sydney Morning Herald as a series of damaging incidents and disclosures involving US troops in Afghanistan 253 These incidents created fractures in the partnership between Afghanistan and ISAF 259 raised the question whether discipline within US troops was breaking down 260 undermined the image of foreign forces in a country where there is already deep resentment owing to civilian deaths and a perception among many Afghans that US troops lack respect for Afghan culture and people 261 and strained the relations between Afghanistan and the United States 254 255 Besides an incident involving US troops who posed with body parts of dead insurgents and a video apparently showing a US helicopter crew singing bye bye Miss American Pie before blasting a group of Afghan men with a Hellfire missile 261 262 these high profile US military incidents in Afghanistan 257 also included the 2012 Afghanistan Quran burning protests and the Panjwai shooting spree Pakistan US tensions US Army soldiers boarding a Black Hawk in Nari District near the Pakistani border Main articles Pakistan United States skirmishes and Pakistan United States relations See also 2011 NATO attack in Pakistan Tensions between Pakistan and the US were heightened in late September after several Pakistan Frontier Corps soldiers were killed and wounded The troops were attacked by a US piloted aircraft that was pursuing Taliban forces near the Afghan Pakistan border but for unknown reasons opened fire on two Pakistan border posts In retaliation for the strike Pakistan closed the Torkham ground border crossing to NATO supply convoys for an unspecified period This incident followed the release of a video allegedly showing uniformed Pakistan soldiers executing unarmed civilians 263 After the Torkham border closing Pakistani Taliban attacked NATO convoys killing several drivers and destroying around 100 tankers 264 ISAF forces skirmished Pakistan s armed forces on 26 November killing 24 Pakistani soldiers Each side claimed the other shot first Pakistan blocked NATO supply lines and ordered Americans to leave Shamsi Airfield 265 266 Killing of Osama bin Laden On 2 May 2011 US officials announced that al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden had been killed in Operation Neptune Spear conducted by the US Navy SEALs in Abbottabad Pakistan 267 Pakistan came under intense international scrutiny after the raid The Pakistani government denied that it had sheltered bin Laden and said it had shared information with the CIA and other intelligence agencies about the compound since 2009 268 International drawdown and strategic agreements Further information Withdrawal of United States troops from Afghanistan 2011 2016 US Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement and 2012 Chicago summit An Australian service light armored vehicle drives through Tangi Valley 29 March 2011 On 22 June President Obama announced that 10 000 troops would be withdrawn by the end of 2011 and an additional 23 000 troops would return by the summer of 2012 After the withdrawal of 10 000 US troops only 80 000 remained 269 In July 2011 Canada withdrew its combat troops transitioning to a training role Following suit other NATO countries announced troop reductions Taliban attacks continued at the same rate as they did in 2011 around 28 000 in 2013 270 In January 2012 the National Front of Afghanistan NFA raised concerns about the possibility of a secret deal between the US Pakistan and the Taliban during a widely publicized meeting in Berlin Afghan Army units neutralizes an IED in Sangin Helmand province Karzai visited the US in January 2012 At the time the US Government stated its openness to withdrawing all of its troops by the end of 2014 271 On 11 January 2012 Karzai and Obama agreed to transfer combat operations from NATO to Afghan forces by spring 2013 rather than summer 2013 272 273 What s going to happen this spring is that Afghans will be in the lead throughout the country Obama said They ISAF forces will still be fighting alongside Afghan troops we will be in a training assisting advising role 273 He also stated the reason of the withdrawals that We achieved our central goal or have come very close which is to de capacitate al Qaeda to dismantle them to make sure that they can t attack us again 274 He added that any US mission beyond 2014 would focus solely on counterterrorism operations and training 274 275 On 2 May 2012 Presidents Karzai and Obama signed a strategic partnership agreement between the two countries after the US president had arrived unannounced in Kabul 276 On 7 July as part of the agreement the US designated Afghanistan a major non NATO ally after Karzai and Clinton met in Kabul 277 Both leaders agreed that the United States would transfer Afghan prisoners and prisons to the Afghan government 273 278 and withdraw troops from Afghan villages in spring 2013 278 279 Soldiers from the Michigan Army National Guard and the Latvian Army patrol through a village in Konar province Security transfer In 2012 the leaders of NATO member countries endorsed an exit strategy during the NATO Summit 138 ISAF Forces would transfer command of all combat missions to Afghan forces by the middle of 2013 280 while shifting from combat to advising training and assisting Afghan security forces 281 282 Most of the 130 000 ISAF troops would depart by the end of December 2014 280 A new NATO mission would then assume the support role 281 283 On 18 June 2013 the transfer of security responsibilities from NATO to Afghan forces was completed 284 ISAF remained slated to end its mission by the end of 2014 285 Some 100 000 ISAF forces remained in the country 286 2014 2017 Withdrawal and increase of insurgency This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions September 2021 This section may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Resolute Support Colors presented at Kabul on 28 December 2014 after the ISAF colors are encased Russian made Mil Mi 8 chopper landing at Forward Operating Base Airborne to deliver mail and supplies Green Berets of the 10th SFG memorialize two comrades who were killed in action during the Battle of Boz Qandahari on 2 3 November 2016 After 13 years Britain and the United States officially ended their combat operation in Afghanistan on 26 October 2014 On that day Britain handed over its last base in Afghanistan Camp Bastion while the United States handed over its last base Camp Leatherneck to Afghan forces 287 Around 500 UK troops remained in non combat roles 288 289 On 28 December 2014 NATO officially ended combat operations in a ceremony held in Kabul 290 Continued operations by United States forces within Afghanistan were under Operation Freedom s Sentinel 291 this was joined by a new NATO mission under the name of Operation Resolute Support 292 The withdrawal of troops did not mean the withdrawal of military presence As US troops withdrew from Afghanistan they were replaced by private security companies hired by the United States government and the United Nations Many of these private security companies also termed military contractors consisted of ex Coalition military personnel This allowed the US and British to continue to be involved in ground actions without the requirement to station their own forces 293 The Taliban began a resurgence due to several factors At the end of 2014 the US and NATO combat mission ended and the withdrawal of most foreign forces from Afghanistan reduced the risk the Taliban faced of being bombed and raided In June 2014 the Pakistani military s Operation Zarb e Azb launched in the North Waziristan tribal area in June 2014 dislodged thousands of mainly Uzbek Arab and Pakistani militants who flooded into Afghanistan and swelled the Taliban s ranks The group was further emboldened by the comparative lack of interest from the international community and the diversion of its attention to crisis in other parts of the world such as Syria Iraq or Ukraine Afghan security forces also lack certain capabilities and equipment especially air power and reconnaissance The political infighting in the central government in Kabul and the apparent weakness in governance at different levels are also exploited by the Taliban 294 On 22 June 2015 the Taliban detonated a car bomb outside the National Assembly in Kabul and Taliban fighters attacked the building with assault rifles and RPGs 295 296 On 12 April 2016 the Taliban announced that they would launch an offensive called Operation Omari 297 298 As of July 2016 Time magazine estimated that at least 20 of Afghanistan was under Taliban control with southernmost Helmand Province as major stronghold 299 while General Nicholson stated that Afghan official armed forces casualties had risen 20 percent compared to 2015 300 On 22 September 2016 the Afghan government signed a draft peace deal with Hezb i Islami According to the draft agreement Hezb i Islami agreed to cease hostilities cut ties to extremist groups and respect the Afghan Constitution in exchange for government recognition of the group and support for the removal of United Nations and American sanctions against its leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar who was also promised an honorary post in the government 301 302 It was the first peace treaty since the war in Afghanistan started in 2001 Government officials praised the deal as a step towards peace and potentially a deal with the Taliban too 303 However others shared concern due to controversial leader Hekmatyar s alleged war crimes some parts of Afghan society protested the peace treaty due to his past actions 304 In early January 2017 the Marine Corps Times reported that Afghan forces seek to rebuild following an exhausting 2016 fighting season 33 districts spread across 16 Afghan provinces were under insurgent control whilst 258 are under government control and nearly 120 districts remained contested 305 According to an inspector general the Afghan army comprises about 169 000 soldiers but in 2016 they suffered a 33 percent attrition rate a 7 percent increase from 2015 305 On 9 February 2017 General John Nicholson told Congress that NATO and allied forces in Afghanistan are facing a stalemate and that he needed a few thousand additional troops to more effectively train and advise Afghan soldiers He also asserted that Russia was trying to legitimize the Taliban by creating the false narrative that the militant organization has been fighting the Islamic State and that Afghan forces have not he asserted Russia s goal was to undermine the United States and NATO in Afghanistan However he said that the area in which Islamic State fighters operate in Afghanistan had been greatly reduced 306 On 21 April 2017 the Taliban attacked Camp Shaheen near Mazar e Sharif killing over 140 256 Afghan soldiers 307 308 309 The bloody 2017 Taliban spring offensive was named Operation Mansouri 310 Actress Scarlett Johansson meets with US service members during a troop engagement at Forward Operation Base Gamberi Afghanistan December 2016 The Washington Post reported that on 20 November 2017 General John Nicholson announced that US aircraft were targeting drug production facilities in Afghanistan under a new strategy aimed at cutting off Taliban funding saying that the Taliban was becoming a criminal organization that was earning about 200 million a year from drug related activities President Ashraf Ghani strongly endorsed the new campaign of US and Afghan airstrikes against the Taliban run narcotic centers 311 Battle of Kunduz Main articles Battle of Kunduz 2015 and Battle of Kunduz 2016 Further information Kunduz hospital airstrike Heavy fighting occurred in the Kunduz province 312 313 which was the site of clashes from 2009 onwards In May 2015 flights into the Northern city of Kunduz were suspended due to weeks of clashes between the Afghan security forces and the Taliban outside the city 314 The intensifying conflict in the Northern Char Dara District within the Kunduz province led the Afghan government to enlist local militia fighters to bolster opposition to the Taliban insurgency 315 In June the Taliban intensified attacks around the Northern city of Kunduz as part of a major offensive in an attempt to capture the city 316 317 318 Tens of thousands of inhabitants were displaced internally by the fighting The government recaptured the Char Dara district after roughly a month of fighting 319 In late September Taliban forces launched an attack on Kunduz seizing several outlying villages and entering the city The Taliban stormed the regional hospital and clashed with security forces at the nearby university The fighting saw the Taliban attack from four different districts Char Dara to the West Aliabad to the Southwest Khanabad to the East and Imam Saheb to the North 320 321 The Taliban took the Zakhel and Ali Khel villages on the highway leading south which connects the city to Kabul and Mazar e Sharif through Aliabad district and reportedly made their largest gains in the Southwest of Kunduz where some local communities had picked up weapons and supported the Taliban 320 Taliban fighters had allegedly blocked the route to the Airport to prevent civilians fleeing the city 322 One witness reported that the headquarters of the National Directorate of Security was set on fire 323 Kunduz was recaptured by Afghan and American forces on 14 October 2015 Taliban negotiations and in fighting China attempted to negotiate with the Taliban in 2016 as the Afghan security situation affects its own separatist groups and economic activity with Pakistan The Taliban declined 324 325 The bombing of the Kabul parliament has highlighted differences within the Taliban in their approach to peace talks 326 327 In April 2016 President Ashraf Ghani pulled the plug on the Afghan governments failing effort to start peace talks with the Taliban 328 Additionally due to the integration of Haqqani Networks into the Taliban leadership it would become harder for peace talks to take place 329 330 Although leader of the Taliban Haibatullah Akhundzada said a peace agreement was possible if the government in Kabul renounced its foreign allies 331 On 11 November 2015 it was reported that infighting had broken out between different Taliban factions in Zabul Province Fighters loyal to the new Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor fought a pro ISIL splinter faction led by Mullah Mansoor Dadullah Even though Dadullah s faction enjoyed the support of foreign ISIL fighters including Uzbeks and Chechens it was reported that Mansoor s Taliban loyalists had the upper hand According to Ghulam Jilani Farahi provincial director of security in Zabul more than 100 militants from both sides were killed since the fighting broke out 332 The infighting has continued into 2016 on 10 March 2016 officials said that the Taliban clashed with the Taliban splinter group led by Muhammad Rasul in the Shindand district of Herat with up to 100 militants killed the infighting has also stifled peace talks 333 334 As a result of the infighting which has resulted in Mansour being consumed with a campaign to quell dissent against his leadership Sirajuddin Haqqani chief of the Haqqani Network was selected to become the deputy leader of the Taliban in the summer of 2015 during a leadership struggle within the Taliban Sirajuddin and other Haqqani leaders increasingly ran the day to day military operations for the Taliban in particular refining urban terrorist attacks and cultivating a sophisticated international fund raising network they also appointed Taliban governors and began uniting the Taliban As a result the Haqqani Network is now closely integrated with the Taliban at a leadership level and is growing in influence within the insurgency whereas the network was largely autonomous before and there are concerns that the fighting is going to be deadlier Tensions with the Pakistani military have also been raised because American and Afghan officials accuse them of sheltering the Haqqanis as a proxy group 329 330 Clashes in Helmand In 2015 the Taliban began an offensive in Helmand Province taking over parts of the Province By June 2015 they had seized control of Dishu and Baghran killing 5 588 Afghan government security forces 3 720 of them were police officers 335 By the end of July the Taliban had overrun Nawzad District 336 and on 26 August the Taliban took control of Musa Qala 337 In October 2015 Taliban forces had attempted to take Lashkar Gah the capital of Helmand province the Afghan s 215th Corps and special operations forces launched a counteroffensive against the Taliban in November 338 Whilst the assault was repelled Taliban forces remained dug into the city s suburbs as of December 2015 339 December 2015 saw a renewed Taliban offensive in Helmand focused on the town of Sangin The Sangin district fell to the Taliban on 21 December after fierce clashes that killed more than 90 soldiers in two days 340 It was reported that 30 members of the SAS alongside 60 US special forces operators joined the Afghan Army in the Battle to retake parts of Sangin from Taliban insurgents 341 in addition about 300 US troops and a small number of British remained in Helmand to advise Afghan commanders at the corps level 342 343 Senior American commanders said that the Afghan troops in the province have lacked effective leaders as well as the necessary weapons and ammunition to hold off persistent Taliban attacks Some Afghan soldiers in Helmand have been fighting in tough conditions for years without a break to see their family leading to poor morale and high desertion rates 342 US Army soldier in Nangarhar Province 6 January 2015 In early February 2016 Taliban insurgents renewed their assault on Sangin after previously being repulsed in December 2015 launching a string of ferocious attacks on Afghan government forces earlier in the month As a result the United States decided to send troops from the 2nd Battalion 87th Infantry Regiment 10th Mountain Division in order to prop up the Afghan 215th Corps in Helmand province particularly around Sangin joining US special operations forces already in the area 344 345 346 347 348 On 14 March 2016 Khanneshin District in Helmand Province fell to the Taliban and district by district Afghan troops were retreating back to urban centers in Helmand 325 348 In early April 2016 600 Afghan troops launched a major offensive to retake Taliban occupied areas of Sangin and the area around it 349 an Afghan army offensive to retake the town of Khanisheen was repelled by the Taliban desertions from the army in the area are rife 350 TAAC E advisers in February 2015 Despite US airstrikes militants besieged Lashkar Gah reportedly controlling all roads leading to the city and areas a few kilometres away The US stepped up airstrikes in support of Afghan ground forces Afghan forces in Lashkar Gah were reported as exhausted whilst police checkpoints around the capital were falling one by one whilst the Taliban sent a new elite commando force into Helmand called Sara Khitta in Pashto 351 352 353 Afghan security forces beat back attacks by Taliban fighters encroaching on Chah e Anjir just 10 km from Lashkar Gah Afghan special forces backed by US airstrikes battled increasingly well armed and disciplined Taliban militants An Afghan special forces commander said The Taliban have heavily armed uniformed units that are equipped with night vision and modern weapons 354 On 22 August 2016 the US announced that 100 US troops were sent to Lashkar Gah to help prevent the Taliban from overrunning it in what Brigadier General Charles Cleveland called a temporary effort to advise the Afghan police 355 A USAF F 16 Fighting Falcon takes off at Bagram Airfield for a combat sortie 14 March 2016 On 31 December 2016 the Taliban continued their assault on the province with attacks on Sangin and Marjah districts 356 Some estimated suggest the Taliban had retaken more than 80 of Helmand province 305 During the early hours of 23 March 2017 Sangin district was captured by the Taliban as they had overrun the district center the town of Sangin During the earlier phase of the war almost a quarter of British casualties were caused by fighting for the town while more recently hundreds of Afghan troops died defending it 357 358 On 29 April 2017 the US deployed an additional 5 000 Marines to the Southern Helmand Province 359 Emergence of Islamic State Further information Islamic State Taliban conflict In mid January 2015 the Islamic State caliphate established a branch in Afghanistan called Khorasan ISKP or ISIS K and began recruiting fighters 360 and clashing with the Taliban 361 362 It was created after pledging allegiance to the self assumed worldwide caliph Abu Bakr al Baghdadi 363 On 18 March Hafiz Wahidi ISIL s replacement deputy Emir in Afghanistan was killed by the Afghan Armed Forces along with 9 other ISIL militants accompanying him 364 In January 2016 the US government sent a directive to the Pentagon which granted new legal authority for the US military to go on the offensive against Militants affiliated with the ISIL KP after the State Department announced the designation of ISIS in Afghanistan and Pakistan as a foreign terrorist organization The number of militants started with around 60 or 70 with most of them coming over the border with Pakistan but eventually when ranged between 1 000 and 3 000 militants 365 mainly defectors from the Afghan and the Pakistani Taliban and is generally confined to Nangarhar Province but also has had a presence in Kunar province 365 366 USAF pilots fly a CH 47 Chinook in Nangarhar April 2017 On 23 July 2016 Afghan and US forces began an offensive to clear Nangarhar province of Islamic State militants hours after the Kabul bombing the operation was dubbed Wrath of the Storm involving both Afghan regular army and special forces and is the Afghan army s first major strategic offensive of the summer The estimated size of the ISIL KP in January 2016 was around 3 000 but by July 2016 the number had been reduced to closely 1 000 to 1 500 with 70 of its fighters come from the TTP 300 367 368 The Army Times reported that in early March 2017 American and Afghan forces launched Operation Hamza to flush ISIS K from its stronghold in eastern Afghanistan engaging in regular ground battles 369 In April 2017 the Washington Post reported that Captain Bill Salvin a spokesman for NATO s mission to Afghanistan said that Afghan and international forces had reduced ISIS K controlled territory in Afghanistan by two thirds and had killed around half their fighters in the previous two years Since the beginning of 2017 460 airstrikes against terrorists with drone strikes alone killing more than 200 IS militants he added that the affiliate has an estimated 600 800 fighters in two eastern Afghan provinces 370 On 15 September 2017 the New York Times reported that the CIA was seeking authority to conduct its own drone strikes in Afghanistan and other war zones according to current and former intelligence and military officials and that the change in authority was being considered by the White House as part of the new strategy despite concerns by the Pentagon 371 On 19 September 2017 the Trump Administration deployed another 3 000 US troops to Afghanistan They would add to the approximately 11 000 US troops already serving in Afghanistan bringing the total to at least 14 000 US troops stationed in Afghanistan 372 On 4 October 2017 Fox News reported that Defense Secretary Jim Mattis approved a change in rules of engagement as part of the new strategy so that there is no longer a requirement for US troops to be in contact with enemy forces in Afghanistan before opening fire 373 2018 2020 Peace overtures This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions September 2021 Further information Afghan peace process Battle of Darzab 2018 Ghazni offensive and 2019 Afghan presidential election Map showing insurgent white and government controlled red areas of Afghanistan in January 2019 In January 2018 the Taliban were openly active in 70 of the country being in full control of 14 districts and have an active and open physical presence in a further 263 and the Islamic State was more active in the country than ever before Following attacks by the Taliban including the Kabul ambulance bombing on 27 January which killed over 100 people and Islamic State that killed scores of civilians President Trump and Afghan officials decided to rule out any talks with the Taliban 374 However on 27 February 2018 following an increase in violence Afghan President Ashraf Ghani proposed unconditional peace talks with the Taliban offering them recognition as a legal political party and the release of the Taliban prisoners The offer was the most favorable to the Taliban since the war started It was preceded by months of national consensus building which found that Afghans overwhelmingly supported a negotiated end to the war 375 376 Two days earlier the Taliban had called for talks with the US saying It must now be established by America and her allies that the Afghan issue cannot be solved militarily America must henceforth focus on a peaceful strategy for Afghanistan instead of war 377 On 27 March 2018 a conference of 20 countries in Tashkent Uzbekistan backed the Afghan government s peace offer 378 The Taliban did not publicly respond to Ghani s offer citation needed In July 2018 the Taliban carried out the Darzab offensive and captured Darzab District following the surrender of ISIL K to the Afghan Government In August the Taliban launched a series of offensives the largest being the Ghazni offensive During the Ghazni offensive the Taliban seized Ghazni Afghanistan s sixth largest city for several days but eventually retreated 379 380 On 25 January 2019 Afghanistan s president Ashraf Ghani said that more than 45 000 members of the Afghan security forces had been killed since he became president in 2014 He also said that there had been fewer than 72 international casualties during the same period 381 A January 2019 report by the US government estimated that 53 8 of Afghanistan s districts were controlled or influenced by the government with 33 9 contested and 12 3 under insurgent control or influence 382 On 30 April 2019 Afghan government forces undertook clearing operations directed against both ISIS K and the Taliban in eastern Nangarhar Province after the two groups fought for over a week over a group of villages in an area of illegal talc mining The National Directorate of Security claimed 22 ISIS K fighters were killed and two weapons caches destroyed while the Taliban claimed US backed Afghan forces killed seven civilians a provincial official said over 9 000 families had been displaced by the fighting 383 On 28 July 2019 President Ashraf Ghani s running mate Amrullah Saleh s office was attacked by a suicide bomber and a few militants At least 20 people were killed and 50 injured with Saleh also amongst the injured ones During the six hour long operation more than 150 civilians were rescued and three militants were killed 384 By August the Taliban controlled more territory than at any point since 2001 385 The Washington Post reported that the US was close to reaching a peace deal with the Taliban and was preparing to withdraw 5 000 troops from Afghanistan 386 In September the US canceled the negotiations 387 National peace movements and first ceasefire US British and Afghan security forces train together in an aerial reaction force exercise at Camp Qargha in Kabul 16 January 2018 Following Ghani s offer of unconditional peace talks with the Taliban a growing peace movement arose in Afghanistan during 2018 particularly following a peace march by the People s Peace Movement 388 which the Afghan media dubbed the Helmand Peace Convoy 389 390 The marchers walked several hundred kilometers from Lashkar Gah in Helmand Province through Taliban held territory 391 to Kabul There they met Ghani and held sit in protests outside the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and nearby embassies 392 Their efforts inspired further movements in other parts of Afghanistan 393 Following the march Ghani and the Taliban agreed a mutual unprecedented ceasefire during the Eid al Fitr celebrations in June 2018 During the Eid ceasefire Taliban members flocked into Kabul where they met and communicated with locals and state security forces Creating a mood of hope and fear many civilians welcomed the Taliban and spoke about peace including some women 394 Although civilians called for the ceasefire to be made permanent the Taliban rejected an extension and resumed fighting after the ceasefire ended on 18 June while the Afghan government s ceasefire ended a week later 395 396 397 United States Institute of Peace researchers argue that there are nonviolent resistance movements in Afghanistan They argued that in the mid 2010s Afghan peace groups started pressuring both the Afghan government and the Taliban for ceasefires and to implement other steps in the peace process The Tabassum movement arose in 2015 the Enlightenment Movement during 2016 2017 Uprising for Change in 2017 and the People s Peace Movement started in March 2018 citation needed Between 29 April and 3 May 2019 the Afghan government hosted a four day loya jirga grand assembly at Kabul s Bagh e Bala Palace attended by 3 200 representatives to discuss peace talks 398 The Taliban were invited but did not attend 399 The event called for an immediate ceasefire with the Taliban and said that human rights must be protected 400 President Ghani also announced the release of a number of Taliban prisoners as a goodwill gesture 401 Let us prove that only Western countries cannot solve this conflict There is also human civilisation here President Ashraf Ghani at the 2019 loya jirga 401 2020 US Taliban talks and agreement Further information US Taliban deal US representative Zalmay Khalilzad left and Taliban representative Abdul Ghani Baradar right sign the Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan in Doha Qatar on 29 February 2020 American officials secretly met members of the Taliban s political commission in Qatar in July 2018 402 In September 2018 Trump appointed Zalmay Khalilzad as special adviser on Afghanistan in the US State Department with the stated goal of facilitating an intra Afghan political peace process 403 Khalilzad led further talks between the US and the Taliban in Qatar in October 2018 404 Russia hosted a separate peace talk in November 2018 between the Taliban and officials from Afghanistan s High Peace Council 405 The talks in Qatar resumed in December 2018 406 though the Taliban refused to allow the Afghan government to be invited 407 considering them a puppet government of the US 408 The Taliban spoke with Afghans including former President Hamid Karzai at a hotel in Moscow in February 2019 but again these talks did not include the Afghan government 409 On 25 February 2019 peace talks began between the Taliban and the United States in Qatar with the Taliban co founder Abdul Ghani Baradar notably present 408 Peace negotiations had resumed in December 2019 410 This round of talks resulted in a seven day partial ceasefire which began on 22 February 2020 411 On 29 February the United States and the Taliban signed a conditional peace deal in Doha Qatar 412 that called for a prisoner exchange within ten days and was supposed to lead to US troops withdrawal from Afghanistan within 14 months 88 413 However the Afghan government was not a party to the deal and in a press conference the next day President Ghani criticized the deal for being signed behind closed doors He said the Afghan government had made no commitment to free 5 000 Taliban prisoners and that such an action is not the United States authority but it is the authority of the government of Afghanistan 414 415 89 416 Ghani also stated that any prisoner exchange cannot be a prerequisite for talks but rather must be negotiated within the talks 417 Insurgents belonging to al Qaeda in the Indian subcontinent and ISIL K not part of the deal continued to operate in parts of the country and hoped to attract the most intransigent sector of the Taliban to their cause 418 Spike in violence and prisoners dispute NATO s Resolute Support Mission commander Austin S Miller alongside US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin in Afghanistan March 2021 After signing the agreement with the United States the Taliban resumed offensive operations against the Afghan army and police on 3 March conducting attacks in Kunduz and Helmand provinces 419 On 4 March the United States retaliated by launching an air strike against Taliban fighters in Helmand 420 Despite the peace agreement between the US and the Taliban insurgent attacks against Afghan security forces were reported to have surged in the country In the 45 days after the agreement between 1 March and 15 April 2020 the Taliban conducted more than 4 500 attacks in Afghanistan which showed an increase of more than 70 as compared to the same period in the previous year 421 More than 900 Afghan security forces were killed in the period up from about 520 in the same period a year earlier Because of a significant reduction in the number of offensives and airstrikes by Afghan and US forces against the Taliban due to the agreement Taliban casualties dropped to 610 in the period down from about 1 660 in the same period a year earlier 421 Meanwhile ISIS K continued to be a threat on its own killing 32 people in a mass shooting in Kabul on 6 March 422 killing 25 Sikh worshippers at a Kabul temple on 25 March 423 and a series of attacks in May most notably killing 16 mothers and newborn babies at a Kabul hospital maternity ward 424 Since the US withdrawal the number of casualties of women in the Afghanistan conflict rose by almost 40 in the first quarter of 2021 alone 425 On 22 June 2020 Afghanistan reported its bloodiest week in 19 years during which 291 members of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces ANDSF were killed and 550 others wounded in 422 attacks carried out by the Taliban At least 42 civilians including women and children were also killed and 105 others wounded by the Taliban across 18 provinces 426 During the week the Taliban kidnapped 60 civilians in the central province of Daykundi 427 2020 2021 US withdrawal The Taliban insurgency intensified considerably in 2021 coinciding with the withdrawal of United States and allied troops from Afghanistan 428 On the diplomatic front on 31 March 2020 a three person Taliban delegation arrived in Kabul to discuss the release of prisoners 429 430 They are the first Taliban representatives to visit Kabul since 2001 429 On 7 April 2020 the Taliban departed from the prisoner swap talks which Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen described as fruitless 431 432 Shaheen also stated in a tweet that hours after walking out of the talks the Taliban s negotiating team was recalled from Kabul 432 The Taliban also failed to secure the release of any of the 15 commanders they sought to be released 431 Arguments over which prisoners to swap also resulted in a delay of the planned prisoner swap 431 After a long delay due to disputes regarding prisoners releases the Afghan government had by August 2020 released 5 100 prisoners 433 and the Taliban had released 1 000 434 However the Afghan government refused to release 400 prisoners from the list of those the Taliban wanted to be released because those 400 were accused of serious crimes 435 President Ghani stated that he did not have the constitutional authority to release these prisoners so he convened a loya jirga from 7 to 9 August to discuss the issue 436 The jirga agreed to free the 400 remaining prisoners 435 Talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban began in Doha on 12 September 2020 437 Taliban s summer offensive capture of Kabul and Taliban s victory A map of Afghanistan showing the Taliban offensive Taliban fighters in Kabul 17 August 2021 The Taliban began its last major offensive on 1 May 2021 culminating in the fall of Kabul a Taliban victory and the end of war 438 439 440 In the first three months of the offensive the Taliban made significant territorial gains in the countryside increasing the number of districts it controlled from 73 to 223 441 On March 6 Afghanistan s President Ashraf Ghani expressed that his government would be taking forward peace talks with the Taliban discussing with the insurgent group about holding fresh elections and forming a government in a democratic manner 442 On April 13 the Biden administration announced that it would withdraw its remaining 2 500 troops from Afghanistan by September 11 2021 on the twentieth anniversary of the September 11 attacks 443 The US government also reiterated support for the Afghan government regarding a possible Taliban military victory 444 On July 5 the Taliban announced their intention to present a written peace plan to the Afghan Government in August but as of August 13 this had not been done 445 446 Sources claimed that on August 12 Abdullah Abdullah the Chairman of the High Council for National Reconciliation handed in a plan titled exiting the crisis which was shared with the Taliban The sources say that the plan calls for the creation of a joint government 447 On August 15 following the Taliban offensive and the fall of the capital Kabul the Taliban occupied the Presidential Palace after the incumbent President Ashraf Ghani fled the country to Tajikistan 448 449 NATO forces maintain a presence in Kabul 449 450 The Taliban gained control of various towns throughout June and July On 6 August they captured the first provincial capital of Zaranj Over the next ten days they swept across the country capturing capital after capital On 14 August Mazar i Sharif was captured as commanders Rashid Dostum and Atta Nur fled across the border to Uzbekistan cutting Kabul s vital northern supply route In the early hours of 15 August Jalalabad fell cutting the only remaining international route through the Khyber Pass 451 By noon of that day Taliban forces advanced from the Paghman district reaching the gates of Kabul President Ashraf Ghani discussed the city s protection with security ministers while sources claimed a unity peace agreement with the Taliban was imminent However Ghani was unable to reach top officials in the interior and defense ministries and several high profile politicians had already hurried to the airport By 1400 hours the Taliban had entered the city facing no resistance the president soon fled by helicopter from the Presidential Palace and within hours Taliban fighters were pictured sitting at Ghani s desk in the palace 452 With the virtual collapse of the republic the war was declared over by the Taliban on the same day 453 Airlifts and final US exit Main article 2021 Kabul airlift As the Taliban seized control on 15 August 2021 the need to evacuate populations vulnerable to the Taliban including the interpreters and assistants who had worked with the coalition forces ethnic minorities and women became urgent For more than two weeks international diplomatic military and civilian staff as well as Afghan civilians were airlifted out the country from Hamid Karzai International Airport On 16 August Major General Hank Taylor confirmed that US air strikes had ended at least 24 hours earlier and that the focus of the US military at that point was maintaining security at the airport as evacuations continued 454 The final flight a US Air Force C 17 departed at 3 29 pm ET 11 59 p m in Kabul time on 30 August 2021 marking the end of the American campaign in Afghanistan and followed by celebratory gunfire by Taliban 455 Many observers have noted this as the end of America s longest war in history 92 456 457 458 ImpactMain article Impact of the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Casualties Main article Civilian casualties in the war in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Victims of the Narang night raid that killed at least 10 Afghan civilians December 2009According to the Costs of War Project at Brown University the war killed 46 319 Afghan civilians in Afghanistan However the death toll is possibly higher due to unaccounted deaths by disease loss of access to food water infrastructure and or other indirect consequences of the war 93 A report titled Body Count put together by Physicians for Social Responsibility Physicians for Global Survival and International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War IPPNW concluded that 106 000 170 000 civilians have been killed as a result of the fighting in Afghanistan at the hands of all parties to the conflict 459 The majority of civilian casualties were attributed to anti government elements each year though the figure varied from 61 to 80 with the average hovering around 75 due to the Taliban and other anti government elements 460 461 462 463 464 The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan UNAMA started publishing civilian casualty figures in 2008 These figures attribute approximately 41 of civilian casualties to government aligned forces in 2008 this percentage lowers to approximately 18 in 2015 465 Civilian deaths caused by non Afghan Coalition forces were low later in the war after most foreign troops were withdrawn and the coalition shifted to airstrikes For example in 2015 pro government forces caused 17 of civilian deaths and injuries including United States and NATO troops which were responsible for only 2 of the casualties 466 2016 had a similar 2 figure Civilian deaths were higher as well in the latter part of the war with 2015 and 2016 both consecutively breaking the record of annual civilian deaths according to the UN 467 Refugees Main article Afghan refugees Foreign donated clothing being handed out by an Afghan civil officer to children at a refugee camp 2011 Since 2001 more than 5 7 million former refugees have returned to Afghanistan 468 469 470 but 2 6 million others remained refugees in 2021 when the Taliban took over 95 471 while another 4 million were internally displaced 95 Following the Taliban takeover over 122 000 people were airlifted abroad from Kabul airport during the evacuation from Afghanistan including Afghans American citizens and other foreign citizens 472 A year after the United States had accepted over 85 000 Afghan refugees many of whom had been processed in Europe and the Middle East The United Arab Emirates agreed to temporarily host Afghan refugees in Abu Dhabi on behalf of other nations Over 10 000 have been resettled to the United States from Abu Dhabi but 12 000 remained there as of August 2022 leading to protests by refugees over the resettlement process and living conditions 473 War crimes Main articles War crimes in Afghanistan and International Criminal Court investigation in Afghanistan Afghan boy murdered on 15 January 2010 by a group of US Army soldiers called the Kill Team War crimes a serious violation of the laws and customs of war giving rise to individual criminal responsibility 474 have been committed by both sides including civilian massacres bombings of civilian targets terrorism use of torture and the murder of prisoners of war Additional common crimes include theft arson and destruction of property not warranted by military necessity The Taliban committed war crimes during the war including massacres suicide bombing terrorism and targeting civilians such as using human shields 475 476 In 2011 The New York Times reported that the Taliban was responsible for 3 4 of all civilian deaths in the war in Afghanistan 477 478 United Nations reports have consistently blamed the Taliban and other anti government forces for the majority of civilian deaths in the conflict 467 460 479 Other crimes include mass rape and executing surrendered soldiers 480 481 War crimes committed by the Coalition Afghan security forces and Northern Alliance included massacres prisoner mistreatment and killings of civilians Amnesty International accused the Pentagon of covering up evidence related to war crimes torture and unlawful killings in Afghanistan 482 Notable incidents include the Dasht i Leili massacre 483 Bagram torture and prisoner abuse 484 Kandahar massacre 485 among others In 2020 the International Criminal Court investigation in Afghanistan formally commenced investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by all parties in Afghanistan since 1 May 2013 486 Health and education Main articles Education in Afghanistan and Women s rights in Afghanistan Between 2001 and 2021 Afghanistan experienced improvements in health education and women s rights 487 488 Life expectancy increased from 56 to 64 years and the maternal mortality rate was reduced by half 89 of residents living in cities have access to clean water up from 16 in 2001 The rate of child marriage has been reduced by 17 487 489 The population of Afghanistan increased by more than 50 between 2001 and 2014 while its GDP grew eightfold 490 A young Afghan girl in Qalat pictured by the 116th Infantry Battalion before receiving school supplies in 2011 As of 2013 8 2 million Afghans attended school up from 1 2 million in 2001 491 3 2 million girls attended school in 2013 up from fewer than 50 000 in 2001 492 39 of girls were attending school in 2017 compared to 6 in 2003 In 2021 a third of students at university were women and 27 of members of parliament were women 95 The literacy rate in 2021 has risen from 8 to 43 since 2001 487 In 2018 UNICEF reported that 3 7 million children between the ages of 7 and 17 or 44 percent were not attending school 493 Drug trade Main article Opium production in Afghanistan In 2000 Afghanistan accounted for an estimated 75 of the world s opium supply 494 which was the Taliban s largest source of revenue though taxes on opium exports 495 Mullah Omar banned opium cultivation in 2001 496 which observers said was an attempt to gain international recognition raise opium prices and increase profit from the sale of large existing stockpiles 495 Opium production increased in the years following the October 2001 invasion with Afghanistan producing 90 of the world s opium by 2005 497 According to a 2018 SIGAR report the U S had spent 8 6 billion since 2002 to stop Afghanistan s drug trade A May 2021 SIGAR report estimated that the Taliban earned 60 of their revenue from the trade while UN officials estimated more than 400 million was earned by the Taliban between 2018 and 2019 however other experts estimated that the Taliban earned at most 40 million annually 498 NATO s inability to stabilize AfghanistanFurther information History of the Afghan Armed Forces 2002 2021 Observers have argued that the mission in Afghanistan was hampered by a lack of agreement on objectives a lack of resources lack of coordination too much focus on the central government at the expense of local and provincial governments and too much focus on the country instead of the region 499 Environment and drug tradeAccording to Cara Korte climate change played a significant role in increasing instability in Afghanistan and strengthening the Taliban More than 60 of the Afghan population depend on agriculture and Afghanistan is the sixth most vulnerable country to climate change in the world according to the United Nations Environment Program and Afghanistan s National Environmental Protection Agency The Taliban used resentment over government inaction to climate change induced drought and flooding to strengthen its support and Afghans were able to earn more money supporting the Taliban than from farming 500 Despite efforts to eradicate poppy Afghanistan remained the world s largest producer of illicate opiate by the end of the war The Taliban profited at least tens of millions of dollars from opium and heroin annually as of 2018 501 Early mistakes and the US s other warJournalist Jason Burke notes strategic mistakes by the US and allies in the immediate aftermath of the 2001 invasion as being a reason why the war went on for so long He also noted missed early opportunities to construct a stable political settlement 502 Steve Coll believes that No small part of N A T O s ultimate failure to stabilize Afghanistan flowed from the disastrous decision by George W Bush to invade Iraq in 2003 The Taliban s comeback America s initial inattention to it and the attraction for some Afghans and Pakistanis of the Taliban s ideology of national resistance under Islamic principles all these sources of failure cannot be understood in isolation from the Iraq war Coll further notes that neither the Bush nor the Obama administrations achieved consensus on key questions such as the relative importance of nation building versus counterterrorism whether the stability of Afghanistan took priority over that of Pakistan or the role of the drug trade although the failure to solve the riddle of I S I and to stop its covert interference in Afghanistan became the greatest strategic failure of the American war 503 Domestic corruption and politics Hamid Karzai and Barack Obama in 2009 In 2009 Afghanistan was ranked as the world s second most corrupt country 504 A lengthy report by SIGAR and other findings found that spiraling corruption in Afghanistan during the 2000s was not halted by the United States During this time many elite figures in the country had effectively become kleptocrats while ordinary Afghans were struggling 505 It has been argued that the restoration of monarchy in Afghanistan should not have been vetoed as this may have provided stability to the country 506 507 508 509 Influence of non NATO actorsPakistan played a central role in the conflict A 2010 report published by the London School of Economics says that Pakistan s ISI has an official policy of support to the Taliban 510 Pakistan appears to be playing a double game of astonishing magnitude the report states 510 Regarding the Afghan War documents leak published by WikiLeaks Der Spiegel wrote that the documents clearly show that the Pakistani intelligence agency Inter Services Intelligence usually known as the ISI is the most important accomplice the Taliban has outside of Afghanistan 511 Amrullah Saleh former director of Afghanistan s intelligence service stated We talk about all these proxies Taliban Haqqanis but not the master of proxies which is the Pakistan army The question is what does Pakistan s army want to achieve They want to gain influence in the region 512 Pakistan s role can be traced back to the Soviet war in which they funded the Mujahideen against the Soviets Pakistan s objective then as it is now is to ensure that Afghanistan has a regime friendly to their interests and will provide geopolitical depth in any future conflict with India 513 Iran also sought to influence the war During the course of the war the US took out two of Iran s regional enemies Saddam Hussein through the Iraq War as well as the Taliban Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are other dominant players that influenced the war Iran and the Taliban formed ties with Russian assistance citation needed as well to bleed the American force Iran and Russia citation needed emboldened by their alliance in the Syrian Civil War initiated a proxy war in Afghanistan against the US The Taliban received economic support from Dubai UAE and Bahrain Pakistan has given economic support and encouraged increased Iran Taliban ties 514 China has been quietly expanding its influence Since 2010 China has signed mining contracts with Kabul 515 and is building a military base in Badakshan to counter regional terrorism from the ETIM 516 China has donated billions of dollars in aid over the years to Afghanistan which plays a strategic role in the Belt and Road Initiative 516 Additionally after 2011 Pakistan expanded its economic and military ties to China as a hedge against dependency on the US Coll observes that Overall the war left China with considerable latitude in Central Asia without having made any expenditure of blood treasure or reputation 517 American public misleadingIn December 2019 The Washington Post published 2 000 pages of government documents mostly transcripts of interviews with more than 400 key figures involved in prosecuting the Afghanistan war According to the Post and The Guardian the documents dubbed the Afghanistan Papers showed that US officials consistently and deliberately misled the American public about the unwinnable nature of the conflict 518 and some commentators and foreign policy experts subsequently drew comparisons to the release of the Pentagon Papers 518 The Post obtained the documents from the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction via Freedom of Information Act requests after a three year legal battle 519 518 Foreign support for the TalibanPakistan The Taliban s victory was facilitated in support from Pakistan Although Pakistan was a major US ally before and after the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan elements of the Pakistan government including the military and intelligence services have for decades maintained strong logistical and tactical ties with Taliban militants and this support helped support the insurgency in Afghanistan 520 521 For example the Haqqani Network a Taliban affiliate based on Pakistan had strong support from Inter Services Intelligence ISI the Pakistan intelligence agency 520 Taliban leaders found a safe haven in Pakistan lived in the country transacted business and earned funds there and receiving medical treatment there 520 521 Some elements of the Pakistani establishment sympathized with Taliban ideology and many Pakistan officials considered the Taliban as an asset against India 520 521 Bruce Riedel noted that The Pakistan Army believes Afghanistan provides strategic depth against India which is their obsession 521 Russia and Iran In the initial aftermath of the September 11 2001 attacks Iranian forces led by Revolutionary Guard Commander Qassem Suleimani initially cooperated secretly with American officials against Al Qaeda operatives and the Taliban but that cooperation ended after the Axis of Evil Speech on January 29 2002 which included calling Iran a major state sponsor of terror and threat to peace in the region Afterwards Iranian forces became increasingly hostile to American forces in the region 134 Dr Antonio Giustozzi a senior research fellow at Royal United Services Institute on terrorism and conflict wrote Both the Russians and the Iranians helped the Taliban advance at a breakneck pace in May August 2021 They contributed to funding and equipping them but perhaps even more importantly they helped them by brokering deals with parties groups and personalities close to either country or even both The Revolutionary Guards helped the Taliban s advance in western Afghanistan including by lobbying various strongmen and militia commanders linked to Iran not to resist the Taliban 522 ReactionsMain article Reactions to the Afghanistan War 2001 2021 Domestic reactions In November 2001 the 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 523 Later that month the BBC s longtime Kabul correspondent Kate Clark reported that almost all women in Kabul are still choosing to veil but that many felt hopeful that the ousting of the Taliban would improve their safety and access to food 524 A US marine interacting with Afghan children in Helmand Province A 2006 WPO opinion poll found that the majority of Afghans endorsed America s military presence with 83 of Afghans stating that they had a favorable view of the US military forces in their country Only 17 gave an unfavorable view 82 of Afghans among all ethnic groups including Pashtuns stated that the overthrowing of the Taliban was a good thing However the majority of Afghans held negative views on Pakistan and most Afghans also stated that they believe that the Pakistani government was allowing the Taliban to operate from its soil 525 A 2015 survey by Langer Research Associates found that 80 of Afghans held the view that it was a good thing for the United States to overthrow the Taliban in 2001 More Afghans blamed the Taliban or al Qaeda for the country s violence 53 than those who blame the US 12 526 A 2019 survey by The Asia Foundation found that 13 4 of Afghans had sympathy for the Taliban while 85 1 of respondents had no sympathy for the group 88 6 of urban residents had no sympathy compared to 83 9 of rural residents 527 International public opinion Main article International public opinion on the war in Afghanistan In October 2001 when the invasion began polls indicated that about 88 of Americans and about 65 of Britons backed military action 528 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 529 22 June 2007 demonstration in Quebec City against the Canadian military involvement in Afghanistan In 2008 there was a strong opposition to war in Afghanistan in 21 of 24 countries surveyed Only in the US and Great Britain did half the people support the war with a larger percentage 60 in Australia 530 Of the seven NATO countries in the survey not one showed a majority in favor of keeping NATO troops in Afghanistan one the US came close to a majority 50 Of the other six NATO countries five had majorities of their population wanting NATO troops removed from Afghanistan as soon as possible 530 An April 2011 Pew Research Center poll showed little change in American views with about 50 saying that the effort was going very well or fairly well and only 44 supporting NATO troop presence in Afghanistan 531 Protests demonstrations and rallies Further information Protests against the war in Afghanistan The war has been the subject of large protests around the world starting with the large scale demonstrations in the days leading up to the invasion and every year since Many protesters consider the bombing and invasion of Afghanistan to be unjustified aggression 532 Dozens of organizations held a national march for peace in Washington D C on 20 March 2010 533 AftermathMain article Aftermath of the Afghanistan War 2001 2021 Formation of the Taliban government and international recognition Main article Recognition of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan Taliban fighters at a market in Kabul September 2021 A vendor selling Islamic Emirate flags can be seen On 7 September 2021 an interim government headed by Mohammad Hassan Akhund as Prime Minister was declared by the Taliban 534 According to a Human Rights Watch s report released in November 2021 the Taliban killed or forcibly disappeared more than 100 former members of the Afghan security forces in the three months since the takeover in just the four provinces of Ghazni Helmand Kandahar and Kunduz According to the report the Taliban identified targets for arrest and execution through intelligence operations and access to employment records that were left behind Former members of the security forces were also killed by the Taliban within days of registering with them to receive a letter guaranteeing their safety 535 In December 2021 the US Congress established the Afghanistan War Commission as an independent task force set up to study the entirety of US military operations in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2021 536 This commission was formally authorized as part of the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act 537 The commission has been given four years to undertake an investigation and produce a comprehensive report 536 Republican insurgency Main article Republican insurgency in Afghanistan On 17 August 2021 Vice President Amrullah Saleh citing provisions of the Constitution of Afghanistan declared himself President of Afghanistan from a base of operations in the Panjshir Valley which had not been taken by Taliban forces and vowed to continue military operations against the Taliban from there 538 His claim to the presidency was endorsed by Ahmad Massoud and Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Minister of Defence Bismillah Khan Mohammadi 538 By 6 September the Taliban had regained control over most of the valley but armed resistance continued in the upper valleys Clashes in the valley mostly ceased by mid September 539 The leaders of the resistance Saleh and Massoud reportedly fled to neighboring Tajikistan in late September 540 However fighting between Taliban and pro republican forces continued in other provinces Several regions had become the site of a guerrilla campaign by early 2022 541 The NRF launched an offensive in May 2022 reportedly retaking territory in Panjshir 542 Other pro republican rebel groups also emerged including the Ahmad Khan Samangani Front 543 Afghan Freedom Front 544 Afghanistan Islamic National amp Liberation Movement and several smaller factions 545 Islamic State activity Main article Islamic State Taliban conflict Following the 2021 Kabul airport attack conducted by the terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Khorasan Province a branch of the ISIL the US said it could work with the Taliban to fight against the ISIS terrorists as part of the International military intervention against ISIL 546 Humanitarian crisis Following the Taliban takeover western nations suspended humanitarian aid and the World Bank and International Monetary Fund also halted payments to Afghanistan 547 548 The Biden administration froze about 9 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central banks blocking the Taliban from accessing billions of dollars held in US bank accounts 549 In October 2021 the UN stated that more than half of Afghanistan s 39 million people faced an acute food shortage 550 On 11 November 2021 the Human Rights Watch reported that Afghanistan is facing widespread famine due to collapsed economy and broken banking system 548 World leaders pledged 1 2 billion in humanitarian aid to Afghanistan 549 On 22 December 2021 The United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted a US proposed resolution to help humanitarian aid reach desperate Afghans while seeking to keep funds out of Taliban hands 551 On 29 August 2022 U N humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths warned about Afghanistan s deepening poverty with 6 million people at risk of famine He stated that conflict poverty climate shocks and food insecurity have long been a sad reality in Afghanistan but almost a year after the Taliban takeover halt to large scale development aid have made the situation critical 552 See also Afghanistan portal War portalList of military operations in the war in Afghanistan 2001 2021 List of aviation accidents and incidents in the war in Afghanistan US government response to the September 11 attacks Criticism of the war on terror Opposition to the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Afghanistan United States relations Afghanistan Papers Afghan War documents leak NATO logistics in the Afghan War US Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement Provincial Reconstruction Team Withdrawal of United States troops from Afghanistan 2011 2016 Withdrawal of United States troops from Afghanistan 2020 2021 Soviet Afghan War Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa National Resistance Front of Afghanistan List of conflicts in Asia List of Afghanistan War 2001 2021 documentaries The American War in Afghanistan A History nonfiction book by Carter Malkasian 2021 Environmental impacts of war in AfghanistanNotes Bordering areas of Pakistan were also affected War in North West Pakistan and was considered for some time to be a single theater of operations by the United States AfPak References Operation Enduring Freedom Fast Facts CNN Retrieved 11 July 2017 Crosby Ron 2009 NZSAS The First Fifty Years Viking ISBN 978 0 67 007424 2 News Resolute Support Mission Retrieved 4 October 2015 The elite force who are ready to die The Guardian 27 October 2001 Neville Leigh Special Forces in the War on Terror General Military Osprey Publishing 2015 ISBN 978 1472807908 p 48 Pakistan s fanatical Uzbek militants BBC 11 June 2014 Pakistan s militant Islamic groups BBC 13 January 2002 Evaluating the Uighur Threat the long war journal 9 October 2008 Resolute Support Mission RSM Key Facts and Figures PDF Multiple Sources Rod Nordland Jawad Sukhanyar Taimoor Shah 19 June 2017 Afghan Government Quietly Aids Breakaway Taliban Faction The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2017 Donati Jessica Totakhil Habib Khan 23 May 2016 Afghan Government Secretly Fosters Taliban Splinter Groups Wall Street Journal Taliban splinter group declares open ended truce with Kabul Stars and Stripes 10 June 2018 Prayer ceremony for Taliban faction s deputy held at Herat Grand Mosque Ariana News ariananews af 17 May 2021 The group had recently aligned itself with the government and fighters were sent to Niazi as part of an uprising force to secure a number of Herat districts a b Local Officials Criticized for Silence on Shindand Strike TOLOnews 11 January 2020 https www washingtonpost com world cia backed afghan militias fight a shadow war 2015 12 02 fe5a0526 913f 11e5 befa 99ceebcbb272 story html The Taliban s new leadership is allied with al Qaeda The Long War Journal 31 July 2015 Hardaha Rashi 24 July 2021 Al Qaeda operates under Taliban protection UN report www indiatvnews com Retrieved 14 September 2021 Taliban storm Kunduz city The Long War Journal Retrieved 30 September 2015 Central Asian groups split over leadership of global jihad The Long War Journal 24 August 2015 Retrieved 27 August 2015 Who is Lashkar e Jhangvi Voanews com 25 October 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2017 ISIS OUTSOURCES TERROR ATTACKS TO THE PAKISTANI TALIBAN IN AFGHANISTAN U N REPORT Newsweek 15 August 2017 Multiple Sources Report Iran pays 1 000 for each U S soldier killed by the Taliban NBC News 9 May 2010 Tabatabai Ariane M 9 August 2019 Iran s cooperation with the Taliban could affect talks on U S withdrawal from Afghanistan The Washington Post Iran denies Taliban were paid bounties to target US troops AP NEWS 18 August 2020 Patrikarakos David 25 August 2021 Iran is an immediate winner of the Taliban takeover The Spectator www spectator co uk Multiple Sources Salahuddin Syed 27 May 2018 Iran funding Taliban to affect US military presence in Afghanistan say police and lawmakers Arab News Siddique Abubakar Shayan Noorullah 31 July 2017 Mounting Afghan Ire Over Iran s Support For Taliban RFE RL Jamal Umair 23 May 2020 Understanding Pakistan s Take on India Taliban Talks The Diplomat Farmer Ben 26 August 2020 Pakistan urges Taliban to get on with Afghan government talks The National Multiple Sources Martinez Luis 10 July 2020 Top Pentagon officials say Russian bounty program not corroborated ABC News Loyd Anthony 16 October 2017 Russia funds Taliban in war against Nato forces The Times Retrieved 18 September 2021 Noorzai Roshan Sahinkaya Ezel Gul Sarwan Rahim 3 July 2020 Afghan Lawmakers Russian Support to Taliban No Secret VOA Russian ambassador denies Moscow supporting Taliban Reuters 25 April 2016 Saudis Bankroll Taliban Even as King Officially Supports Afghan Government The New York Times 12 June 2016 Ramani Samuel 7 September 2017 What s Behind Saudi Arabia s Turn Away From the Taliban thediplomat com Qatar s Dirty Hands National Review 3 August 2017 Saudi has evidence Qatar supports Taliban Envoy Pajhwok Afghan News 7 August 2017 China offered Afghan militants bounties to attack US soldiers reports Deutsche Welle 31 December 2020 Gittleson Ben 1 January 2021 US investigating unconfirmed intel that China offered bounties on American troops ABC7 San Francisco A spokesperson for China s foreign ministry Wang Wenbin on Thursday denied the accusation calling it a smear and slander against China that was completely nonsense and fake news Rod Nordland 19 May 2012 In Afghanistan New Group Begins Campaign of Terror The New York Times Retrieved 25 June 2021 a b Seldin Jeff 18 November 2017 Afghan Officials Islamic State Fighters Finding Sanctuary in Afghanistan VOA News ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 18 November 2017 A look at the Islamic State affiliate s rise in Afghanistan AP NEWS 19 August 2019 Zucchino David 17 August 2021 Kabul s Sudden Fall to Taliban Ends U S Era in Afghanistan The New York Times Retrieved 15 February 2023 Afghanistan conflict Kabul falls to Taliban as president flees BBC News 16 August 2021 Retrieved 15 February 2023 Neuman Scott 15 August 2021 Afghanistan Falls To The Taliban Again As The U S Backed Government Collapses NPR Retrieved 15 February 2023 Seligman Lara Ward Alexander Desiderio Andrew 26 August 2021 U S officials provided Taliban with names of Americans Afghan allies to evacuate Politico Retrieved 15 February 2023 Multiple sources Effie Pedaliu 16 August 2021 The Taliban s victory proves the West has failed to learn the lessons of the past LSE EUROPP London School of Economics Retrieved 23 August 2021 Barry Ben 19 August 2021 Understanding the Taliban s military victory International Institute for Strategic Studies Retrieved 23 August 2021 Saeed Saim Olivier Christian 18 August 2021 Taliban victory in Afghanistan spells trouble for the neighbors Politico Europe Politico and Axel Springer AG Retrieved 23 August 2021 Willis Halley Triebert Christiaan Hill Evan Smith Brenna Khavin Dmitrity 16 August 2021 What Scenes From the Taliban s Victory in Afghanistan Reveal The New York Times A G Sulzberger Retrieved 23 August 2021 Holleis Jennifer Hussein Mehyeddin 18 August 2021 Taliban victory A likely boost for Islamist extremists in the Middle East Deutsche Welle Government of Germany Retrieved 23 August 2021 Coffey David 19 August 2021 Does the Taliban victory in Afghanistan mean the end of US global clout Radio France Internationale Government of France through France Medias Monde Retrieved 23 August 2021 England Andrew Warrell Helen Manson Katrina Kazmin Amy 18 August 2021 Taliban victory sparks concerns al Qaeda could regroup The New York Times Nikkei Inc Retrieved 23 August 2021 Mudassir Malik 16 August 2021 Afghanistan Life in Kabul after the Taliban victory BBC News BBC Retrieved 23 August 2021 Massaro Chris 17 August 2021 With Taliban victory Afghanistan could become the second school of jihadism Fox News Fox Corporation Retrieved 23 August 2021 Tharoor Ishaan 18 August 2021 Pakistan s hand in the Taliban s victory The Washington Post Fred Ryan Retrieved 23 August 2021 Khan Tahir 16 May 2021 Rebel Taliban leader dies of injuries days after attack Daily Times Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar is dead The Express Tribune 29 July 2015 Retrieved 29 July 2015 a b Mullah Najibullah Too Radical for the Taliban Newsweek 30 August 2013 Retrieved 22 August 2015 Who Is the New Leader of Islamic State Khorasan Province Lawfare 2 September 2020 Shalizi Hamid 7 April 2018 Afghan air strike kills Islamic State commander via www reuters com ISAF s mission in Afghanistan 2001 2014 Archived NATO 11 August 2003 Retrieved 16 September 2021 Editorial Jpost 22 May 2012 NATO sets irreversible but risky course to end Afghan war The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 16 September 2021 The Afghan National Security Forces Beyond 2014 Will They Be Ready PDF Centre for Security Governance February 2014 NATO and Afghanistan NATO 6 July 2021 Peters Heidi M Plagakis Sofia 10 May 2019 Department of Defense Contractor and Troop Levels in Afghanistan and Iraq 2007 2018 crsreports congress gov Congressional Research Service Retrieved 4 December 2019 Matthew DuPee 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April 2011 How many al Qaeda operatives are now left in Afghanistan Threat Matrix Longwarjournal org Archived from the original on 6 July 2014 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Al Qaeda in Afghanistan Is Attempting A Comeback The Huffington Post 21 October 2012 Archived from the original on 10 December 2013 Retrieved 10 April 2014 S 2018 705 E S 2018 705 Desktop undocs org Exhausted and abandoned why Afghanistan s army collapsed a b c d Human and Budgetary Costs to Date of the U S War in Afghanistan 2001 2022 Figures Costs of War The Costs of War Retrieved 2 September 2021 Scores Killed in Fresh Kunduz Fighting Foxnews com 26 November 2001 Retrieved 2 October 2008 Morello Carol Loeb Vernon 6 December 2001 Friendly fire kills 3 GIs Post Gazette Retrieved 2 October 2008 Terry McCarthy Kunduz 18 November 2001 A Volatile State of Siege After a Taliban Ambush Time Archived from the original on 30 May 2012 Retrieved 2 October 2008 John Pike 9 December 2001 VOA News Report Globalsecurity org Retrieved 9 February 2010 US Bombs Wipe Out Farming Village Rawa org Retrieved 9 February 2010 Afghanistan statistics UK deaths casualties mission costs and refugees PDF House of Commons Retrieved 18 August 2020 U S Department of Defense CASUALTY STATUS PDF US Department of Defense Number of Afghanistan UK Military and Civilian casualties 7 October 2001 to 30 November 2014 PDF www gov uk Retrieved 28 June 2017 Over 2 000 Canadians were wounded in Afghan mission report National Post Retrieved 1 February 2012 a b U S Department of Labor Office of Workers Compensation Programs OWCP Defense Base Act Case Summary by Nation Dol gov Retrieved 2 August 2011 a b T Christian Miller 23 September 2009 U S Government Private Contract Worker Deaths and Injuries Projects propublica org Retrieved 2 August 2011 Costs of War Figures Watson Institute Brown University UCDP Uppsala Conflict Data Program www ucdp uu se International Security Assistance Force ISAF Key Facts and Figures PDF Resolute Support Mission RSM Key Facts and Figures PDF Xu Ruike 5 January 2017 Alliance Persistence within the Anglo American Special Relationship The Post Cold War Era ISBN 978 3 319 49619 1 Securing Stabilizing and Reconstructing Afghanistan Key Issues for Congressional Oversight www govinfo gov Retrieved 31 October 2022 Afghanistan falling into hands of Taliban The Guardian 22 November 2007 Nations United Ten Stories the world should know more about 2007 United Nations Archived from the original on 18 January 2017 Retrieved 28 June 2017 International Security Assistance Force ISAF Key Facts and Figures PDF nato int 4 March 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 12 October 2017 Retrieved 19 July 2017 NATO to endorse Afghan exit plan seeks routes out Reuters 21 May 2012 Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 12 March 2019 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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