© 2007 proquest-csa llc. all rights reserved. © 2007 getty images, inc. in the late 19 th and...

Download © 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. © 2007 Getty Images, Inc. In the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries, Great Britain fought three wars with

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Slide 2 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. In the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries, Great Britain fought three wars with Afghanistan, all in an attempt to consolidate its Indian empire and prevent Russia from moving south. Slide 3 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. A contemporary cartoon depicts the combatants... Slide 4 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc.... who are more realistically captured by these photographs of British (left) and Afghan (right) troops. Slide 5 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Disputes over Afghanistans eastern border with British India (part of which became the independent state of Pakistan) persisted until the 1970s. Slide 6 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. During that period, Afghanistan had a cosmopolitan young king named Zahir Shah. Slide 7 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. He tried to modernize the Afghan economy... Slide 8 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc.... and to allow women greater opportunities than they had traditionally enjoyed in Afghanistans deeply Islamic society. Slide 9 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. But, especially outside the capital, Kabul, most Afghans led highly traditional lives. Slide 10 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Then, in 1978, Communists unhappy with the pace and scope of the kings reforms seized power in Afghanistan. Slide 11 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Islamic leaders called on Afghan citizens to oppose the countrys new communist government. Slide 12 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Late in 1979, the Soviet Union sent troops into Afghanistan to prevent the collapse of Communism. Slide 13 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. The Soviet troops met fierce resistance from Afghan guerrillas, or mujahideen (Islamic warriors). Slide 14 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Hundreds of thousands of Afghans died at the hands of Soviet troops, and millions more fled to Pakistan and Iran. Slide 15 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. However, during the Soviet occupation, Afghan women continued to enjoy rights comparable to mens. Slide 16 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. The United States supported the anti-communist mujahideen, who were now recruiting Muslim fighters from all over the world. Slide 17 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. The mujahideen made life very difficult for the Soviet troops, who eventually withdrew in 198889. Slide 18 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. But, after the Soviets left, Afghans could not agree on how to share power. A highly destructive civil war raged throughout most of the 1990s. Slide 19 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. The Afghan people, including hundreds of thousands of refugees who had returned from Pakistan and Iran, continued to suffer. Slide 20 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Support rose for a new group of mujahideen who seemed capable of restoring order to such a troubled situation. Slide 21 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. This group, consisting mostly of militant Islamists, was the Taliban. Taliban fighters won a series of battles in the mid 1990s, putting them in control of most of Afghanistan. Slide 22 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Taliban ministers restored order by enforcing their radical and extremely brutal interpretation of Islamic law, or sharia. Slide 23 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. They imposed dramatic restrictions on womens behavior, forcing them to wear the all-covering burqa. Slide 24 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Meanwhile, the Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, befriended and offered his governments protection to Saudi terrorist Osama bin Laden. Slide 25 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Bin Laden, a veteran of the campaign against the Soviets, set up terrorist training camps in Afghanistan and organized a series of attacks against U.S. interests. Slide 26 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. The most destructive of these occurred on September 11, 2001. Slide 27 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. After the Taliban ignored requests to hand over bin Laden, the United States led an international military coalition against Afghanistan. Slide 28 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. The multi-national coalition helped the Northern Alliance, a group of Afghan fighters opposed to the Taliban, recapture Kabul and all of Afghanistans other major cities. Slide 29 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. But bin Laden and several senior Taliban ministers escaped via the Tora Bora caves in eastern Afghanistan. Slide 30 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Even so, at the end of 2001, new Afghan president Hamid Karzai said he could see the sun rising on his country. Slide 31 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Restrictions on womens behavior were eased, Slide 32 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. multi-national forces trained new recruits to the Afghan national army, Slide 33 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. and millions of Afghans voted in democratic elections. Slide 34 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. But not all Afghans supported the reforms or accepted the continued presence of foreign troops. Slide 35 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Taliban militants and their sympathizers launched a series of attacks, including suicide bombings, against international troops and the Afghan government. Slide 36 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. Much of the militants funding comes from poppies, which are used to manufacture heroin. Slide 37 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. International troops remain in Afghanistan, trying to eradicate the drug trade and help the Afghan national army defeat resurgent Taliban forces. Slide 38 2007 ProQuest-CSA LLC. All rights reserved. 2007 Getty Images, Inc. However, with much of Afghanistan still in ruins from years of war and with few farmers willing to stop growing poppies, the troops face a monumentally difficult task.