Afghanistan timeline July–December 2001

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Afghanistan timeline

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[edit] December 31, 2001

  • U.S. President George W. Bush named Afghan-born Zalmay Khalilzad, a top-ranking Muslim in the U.S. government, as a special envoy to help Afghanistan recover from Taliban rule.
  • Pashtun soldiers, once loyal to the Taliban, attacked 20 Uzbek troops walking toward Yol Abad, Afghanistan. The gun battle lasted 20 minutes. A soldier from each side died.
  • Seventy British troops arrived in Kabul, as Afghan Interior Minister Yunus Qanooni and British Major General John McColl, who is to lead the international force, signed an agreement setting up an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
  • In a US air-raid on a suspected arms dump, US bombs killed 107 civilians at a village near the town of Gardez. Witnesses found pools of blood, scraps of flesh and clumps of human hair among the destroyed houses. The U.S. military rejected the accusation.
  • A US military spokesman said that the US was holding 180 prisoners from al-Qaeda or the Taliban; 164 are being held in Kandahar.

[edit] December 30, 2001

  • An unmanned RQ-4 Global Hawk surveillance drone crashed while returning from a mission supporting the war in Afghanistan. The aircraft was not shot down and plans were made to recover the wreckage.
  • In the early hours, Qalaye Niazi was bombed by at least one U.S. jet, one B-52 bomber and two helicopters obliterating the village. The United Nations said the dead included 17 men, 10 women and 25 children, and quoted a reliable local source for the information that 52 people had been killed.

[edit] December 29, 2001

[edit] December 26, 2001

[edit] December 24, 2001

  • James F. Dobbins left Kabul after the inauguration of the new Afghan government.

[edit] December 22, 2001

[edit] December 20, 2001

  • U.S. jets struck a convoy carrying tribal elders and guests en route to the ceremony in Kabul. U.S. officials insisted the convoy had opened fire on U.S. aircraft just before it was bombed, and that the convoy had been carrying leaders of al Qaeda the Taliban. Some 65 people were killed in that attack.
  • The U.N. Security Council authorized the deployment of a deployment of the British-led force to help protect Afghanistan's new interim government, but restricted it to the Kabul area. The force was expected to reach its full strength of about 5,000 by the end of February, 2003.

[edit] December 17, 2001

[edit] December 10, 2001

  • After surrounding a giant cave complex in the eastern Afghan region of Tora Bora, United States and Afghan troops intercepted a radio transmission that was believed to have come from Osama bin Laden. U.S. warplanes blanketed the area with bombs.

[edit] December 5, 2001

  • Three U.S. soldiers and six Afghans were killed and 19 Americans were wounded in a friendly fire air strike when an Air Force B-52 dropped a 2,000-pound satellite-guided bomb (JDAM) near their position north of Kandahar.
  • The Agreement on Provisional Arrangements in Afghanistan Pending the Re-Establishment of Permanent Government Institutions was signed by representatives of anti-Taliban forces and several other Afghan political parties and groups in Bonn, Germany.

[edit] November 25, 2001

[edit] November 20, 2001

  • Japan pledged logistics support for the U.S.-led anti-terrorism campaign in and around Afghanistan for six months.

[edit] November 19, 2001

  • Reuters journalists Harry Burton and Azizullah Haidari, Spanish journalist Julio Fuentes and Italian journalist Maria Grazia Cutuli were killed by unidentified gunmen at Tangi Abrishum, Afghanistan. Suspects of the murder were finally arrested April 21, 2003. On August 5, 2004, Reza Khan was formally accused of the crimes.

[edit] October 26, 2001

  • Abdul Haq was arrested by the Taliban and executed within hours by the militia. Haq was accused of trying to stir tribal revolt against its regime.

[edit] October 25, 2001

[edit] October 19, 2001

  • About 3,500 Afghan refugees poured into Pakistan, fleeing heavy night time attacks by U.S. aircraft on the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar. The UNHCR estimated that 10,000 had arrived in Balochistan Province in the last six days. Pakistan closed its borders in an effort to prevent a flood of new refugees, which aid officials estimated could number a million or more if unchecked.
  • Army Ranger Pfc. Kristofor Stonesifer, 28, and Spc. Jonn J. Edmunds, 20, were killed in the crash of a Black Hawk in Pakistan.

[edit] October 18, 2001

[edit] October 17, 2001

[edit] October 16, 2001

[edit] October 15, 2001

[edit] October 14, 2001

  • U.S. warplanes started to drop leaflets in hopes of convincing the Afghan people that they are not the targets of the ongoing strikes. One of the leaflets showed a western soldier shaking hands with a man in traditional Afghan garb, while another gave the frequencies and times of American broadcasts.

[edit] October 12, 2001

  • United States air attacks continued for a fifth straight day over Afghanistan. Bombers, carrier-based fighter aircraft and Tomahawk cruise missiles struck at multiple targets, including military installations, airports and radio transmitters. Local reports say that Kabul was attacked after 8 PM. Utilizing 5,000 pound, laser-guided bunker buster bombs, US government officials said the aim of the operations was to take out Taliban defensive infrastructure, hit Taliban units on the ground, and take out underground bunkers occupied by Taliban personnel and al Qaeda terrorists.

[edit] October 11, 2001

  • Reports of United States bombings in Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
  • The Bush administration said they are concerned that the Taliban regime could collapse before an interim government could be established, creating a power vacuum. As a result, the administration stepped up efforts to shape an interim government composed of Afghanistan's previously warring opposition forces and ethnic groups.
  • At a news conference, U.S. President George W. Bush stressed the need for the United States to remain engaged in Afghanistan to make sure "that all parties, all interested parties, have an opportunity to be part of a new government," but that the United Nations should take over the responsibility for "stabilization of a future government" after U.S. military action ceases.
  • Concerned that the U.S. bombing campaign could push the Taliban from power faster than a transition administration could be put in place, Barnett Rubin, an Afghanistan expert at New York University, urged the creation of a joint United Nations and Organization of the Islamic Conference that would include Turkey, Jordan, Morocco and Bangladesh. Although all are Islamic countries, none borders on Afghanistan, thus avoiding a scramble for dominance by neighboring states.
  • U.N. officials said they were concerned about getting involved in either administration or peacekeeping in Afghanistan because of its heavily armed and feuding factions.
  • U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Henry Osman said that U.S. forces refrained for political reasons from coordinating their targets with Afghan Northern Alliance commanders even though the airstrikes had helped these opposition fighters.
  • The United States said it saw Mohammed Zahir Shah as the unifying, transitional figure who could preside over a loya jirga of 120 delegates. The United States was involved in detailed talks on allotting seats in the supreme council; tentative plans included 50 seats for the Afghan Northern Alliance, 50 seats for the king's followers and 20 seats for other groups.

[edit] October 8, 2001

[edit] October 7, 2001

[edit] October 4, 2001

  • United States president George W. Bush announced that the US is to provide an extra $320M in aid to help Afghanistan's impoverished people during the coming winter. The money will be spent on food and medicines.

[edit] October 3, 2001

[edit] September 25

[edit] September 23

[edit] September 22

[edit] September 21

[edit] September 20

[edit] September 19

[edit] September 18

[edit] September 17

[edit] September 16

[edit] September 15

[edit] September 14

[edit] September 13

[edit] September 12

[edit] September 11

[edit] September 10

[edit] September 9

  • Afghan opposition leader Ahmed Shah Massoud was assassinated. A suicide bomber, posing as a journalist, blew himself up after gaining access to Masood's office. The suicide bomber was killed along with one of Masood's followers, and the Afghan commander's guards killed the second person posing as a journalist. The terrorists first conducted interviews with opposition soldiers in Shomali before meeting with Massoud. The bomb was either hidden in the camera or concealed around the waist of one of the terrorists. Massoud did not die immediately, and underwent emergency surgery at a hospital in Tajikistan.
  • The Afghan Supreme Court resumed the trial of eight foreign aid workers held for allegedly preaching Christianity, but no detainees, diplomats or journalists were present.
  • In Afghanistan, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan jailed 35 Afghan employees of one of the recently expelled foreign assistance groups.

[edit] September 8

  • Eight foreign aid workers on trial for promoting Christianity in Afghanistan appeared for the first time in the Supreme Court, and said they were innocent of proselytising. The hearing was presided over by Chief Justice Noor Mohammad Saqib and 18 other judges. One of the six female defendants was wearing the head-to-toe cloak which is mandatory for Afghan women in public, while the others had veils over their hair only. The defendants walked slowly into the court under the escort of armed guards, who did not allow them to answer questions from journalists waiting outside the court. The mother of one of the US prisoners and the father of another accompanied their daughters into the court, but the cousin of the Australian man was kept waiting outside along with Australian, German and US diplomats.
  • The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan took control of the Shokhi and Khan Aqa districts in Kapisa province after several days of heavy clashes with the Afghan Northern Alliance led by Ahmad Shah Masood.

[edit] September 7

  • The trial of eight foreign aid workers detained in Afghanistan on charges of preaching Christianity went into recess for a weekly holiday.

[edit] September 6

[edit] September 5

[edit] September 4

[edit] September 3

  • In Kabul, Afghanistan, the trial began for eight foreign aid workers, as the nine-judge bench of the Supreme Court held preliminary deliberations. Evidence included Bibles and video and audio tapes, along with investigation files from the religious police. Shelter Now denied its staff were involved in missionary work, however the Taliban claimed to have written confessions from the detainees. The accused were Georg Taubmann, Katrin Jelinek, Margrit Stebner and Silke Durrkopf, all German; Australians Peter Bunch and Diana Thomas; and U.S. citizens Dayna Curry and Heather Mercer.

[edit] September 2

[edit] September 1

  • About two dozen foreign aid workers were expelled from Afghanistan by the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan for allegedly preaching Christianity. The workers were from the international aid organization SERVE and the U.S.-based International Assistance Mission.
  • The parents of U.S. citizens Dayna Curry and Heather Mercer visited their daughters for about 30 minutes accompanied by U.S. diplomat David Donahue. Curry, Mercer and six other foreign aid workers (two Germans and four Australians) with Shelter Now International on charges of spreading Christianity. Eight of the foreign aid workers were transferred late from Kabul's juvenile correction center to an unknown place.

[edit] August 31, 2001

[edit] August 30, 2001

[edit] August 29, 2001

  • The captain of the MS Tampa, carrying 438 asylum seekers (420 from Afghanistan), declared a state of emergency and proceeded to enter Australian territorial waters, despite Australian government orders not to. The Australian government responded by dispatching Australian troops to board the ship and prevent it from approaching any further to Christmas Island. The MS Tampa captain was instructed to move the ship back into international waters. He refused. The Norwegian government warned the Australian government not to seek to force the ship to return to international waters against the captain's will. The Australian government tried to persuade Indonesia to accept the asylum seekers; Indonesia refused. The refugees were loaded onto an Australian Navy vessel. Most were transported to the small island country of Nauru and the rest to New Zealand.
  • Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan soldiers returned to Iran a border kiosk that they had seized on August 27.

[edit] August 27, 2001

[edit] August 26, 2001

  • 438 asylum seekers (420 from Afghanistan) were saved from a sinking Indonesian vessel by the MS Tampa. The captain planned to take the asylum seekers to Indonesia, but the asylum seekers apparently threatened the captain and allegedly said they would jump overboard unless they were taken to Australia, prompting the captain set sail for Christmas Island instead. The Australian government however refused permission for the ship to enter Australia's territorial waters.

[edit] August 5, 2001

[edit] August 3, 2001

[edit] July 2, 2001

Taliban Deputy Foreign Minister Mullah Abdul Jalil told U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan William Milam that Osama bin Laden had not been "convicted and that the Taliban still consider him innocent."

[edit] July 3, 2001

The Taliban regime reacts angrily to the U.S. renewal of trade sanctions. The U.S. authorities cite the regime's apparent protection of Saudi "terrorist" Osama bin Laden.

[edit] Mid-July 2001

The Internet is outlawed by the governing Taliban in an effort to prevent the spread of anti-Islamic material. The regime also says it will no longer recognize university qualifications obtained abroad, in particular those from the Afghan University in Peshawar, Pakistan.

[edit] Mid-July 2001

A cholera epidemic reportedly kills 45 people in a single day in the northern Balkh province. The area is on the front line between Taliban and opposition forces.

[edit] July 30, 2001

The UN Security Council votes to employ new measures to help enforce the arms embargo on Afghanistan. Monitors will be stationed in neighbouring countries to ensure the sanctions are upheld.