The '
Afghan Civil War' continued after the capture of
Kabul by the
Taliban, with the formation of the
United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan (more commonly known as the Northern Alliance), which attempted to oust the Taliban, from 1996 to 2001. It proved largely unsuccessful, as the Taliban continued to make gains and eliminated much of the Alliance's leadership. The Northern Alliance was supported by
Russia,
Iran and
India while the
Taliban were supported by
Saudi Arabia,
Pakistan and the
United Arab Emirates.
Background
Since
1978,
Afghanistan had been in a
civil war between different factions. The
Mujahideen eventually succeeded in taking control in
1992, only to then descend into chaos as they fractured into different groups all fighting for control of the nation. In
1994 the
Taliban was formed and made gains against the other factions, and by
1996 they had taken Kabul and executed the former
President of Afghanistan,
Mohammad Najibullah, who had been residing there under
UN protection since his
regime was ousted in
1992. The Taliban practiced a radical form of
Sunni Islam that took strict stances on women, society, and even other
Muslims.
Timeline
Northern Alliance formed
After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban on
September 27,
1996,
[1] General
Dostum joined forces with
Ahmed Shah Massoud to form the Northern Alliance, a grouping of
militia that aimed to defeat the Taliban.
[2] The Northern Alliance began to get funding and arms from
Russia and
Iran, who both feared the Taliban's growing influence.
Alliance pushes to Kabul
In
October 1996, the Taliban began to strike points north of Kabul with
jets and
artillery while Dostum and Massoud massed forces in preparation for an
offensive.
[3] On
October 19th, the alliance pushed forward with
tanks,
armored personnel carriers, and heavy weapons into the
Bagram airbase, which was the first major victory against the Taliban since they lost Kabul.
[4] They continued their advance and vowed to retake Kabul, with Massoud's
front line commander stating "God willing, we will be in Kabul today or tomorrow."
[5] But fighting raged for several days, and the lack of a major breakthrough forced the Alliance to withdraw to northern positions.
[6]
Dostum faces uprising
In
1997 the Taliban began an offensive against the territories held by General Dostum that caused some of his forces to rebel and join the Taliban on
May 20th.
[7] This led him to flee Afghanistan, leaving much of his army behind, and enter the safety of
Uzbekistan. The newly Taliban-friendly forces handed over the city of
Mazari Sharif to the Taliban. Soon, however, their strict stance against Shiite Muslims led the former Dostum forces to turn against the Taliban. In intense fighting in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif, the Taliban were defeated, and 3,000 of their soldiers were captured and executed. The forces of Massoud attempted another push towards the capital. After making gains north of the capital, they once again met heavy resistance in Kabul.
[8] The Taliban continued to push into the Alliance's territory, however, and reached Mazar-i-Sharif, taking it again by
August 8,
1998. Upon taking it, they began a
mass killing of the locals; 4,000 to 5,000
civilians were executed, and many more reported
tortured.
[9] This offensive by the Taliban left them in control of 90% of the nation.
Iranian crisis
Also among those killed in Mazari Sharif were several Iranian
diplomats. Others were kidnapped by the Taliban, touching off a hostage crisis that nearly escalated to a full scale war, with 250,000 Iranian soldiers massed on the Afghan border at one time.
[10] It was later admitted that they were killed by the Taliban, and their bodies were returned to Iran.
[11] In September the Taliban claimed that Iran violated its
airspace, and later Iran claimed minor clashes occurred between the Taliban and Iran after it led a
raid into eastern Iran, though the Taliban denied it led the raid.
[12]
[13] Eventually with UN
mediation, the tensions cooled.
Continued push
The Taliban continued to push north, making gains against the Northern Alliance in
1999. At one time they held roughly 95% of the nation and had pushed the Northern Alliance out of range of Kabul entirely. But Ahmed Shah Massoud once again defended the
Panjshir Valley from Taliban advances and brought the war to another stand still.
Massoud assassinated
On
September 9,
2001, a
suicide bomber, posing as a journalist, blew himself up after gaining access to Massoud's office. The suicide bomber was killed along with one of Massoud's followers, and the Afghan commander's guards killed the second person posing as a journalist. Massoud was struck in the chest with shrapnel from the bomb, which was either hidden in the camera or concealed around the waist of one of the terrorists. Massoud died shortly after being taken to
Tajikistan for emergency care. It is suspected that Al Qaeda carried out this attack to eliminate the Northern Alliance's most skilled leader in order to secure their protection under the Taliban after the
September 11th, 2001 attacks.
[14] Though some feared that his death would lead to chaos, the Northern Alliance held together and would go on to work with the USA and its coalition in
Operation Enduring Freedom. At the time of Massoud's assassination, Northern Alliance strength was estimated at 11,000 troops and the Taliban at 45,000.
[15]
See also
★
Afghan Civil War
★
Timeline of the history of Afghanistan
★
History of Afghanistan since 1992
References
1. Afghan rebels seize capital, hang former president
2. Afghan warlord vows to join fight against Taliban
3. Taliban bombards targets in northern Afghanistan
4. Afghan government forces recapture key military positions
5. Afghan government troops close in on capital
6. Heavy fighting with no results in Afghanistan
7. Afghan Taliban claim advances against warlord
8. Afghanistan's Taliban, opposition both claim gains
9. U.N. report details Taliban mass killings
10. Iranian military exercises draw warning from Afghanistan
11. Taliban threatens retaliation if Iran strikes
12. Afghanistan claims Iranian aircraft invaded its airspace
13. Iran reports clash with Afghan militia
14. Flawed Ally Was Hunt's Best Hope
15. Taliban and the Northern Alliance