<p>The former Soviet Union marched into Afghanistan on Christmas Eve, 1979, claiming it was invited by the new Afghan communist leader, Babrak Karmal, setting the country on a path of 40 years of seemingly endless wars and conflict.</p>.<p>Here is a timeline of some key dates in Afghanistan's 40 years of wars:</p>.<p>December 25, 1979 — Soviet Red Army crosses the Oxus River into Afghanistan. In neighboring Pakistan, Afghan mujahedeen, or Islamic holy warriors, are assembling, armed and financed by the U.S. for an anti-communist war.</p>.<p>1980s — CIA's covert Operation Cyclone funnels weapons and money for the war through Pakistani dictator Mohammed Zia-ul Haq.</p>.<p>1983 — President Ronald Reagan meets with mujahedeen leaders, calling them freedom fighters, at the White House.</p>.<p>September 1986 — The US provides the mujahedeen with shoulder-held anti-aircraft Stinger missiles, which turned around the course of the war and sped-up negotiated Soviet withdrawal.</p>.<p>January 1987 — Afghan Communist President Najibullah launches National Reconciliation Program to encourage the mujahedeen to join a new government of national reconciliation; they refuse.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/us-taliban-sign-historic-deal-see-chance-to-end-18-year-long-conflict-809311.html">US, Taliban sign historic deal; see chance to end 18-year long conflict</a></strong></p>.<p>February 15, 1989- The last Soviet soldier leaves Afghanistan, ending 10 years of occupation April 1992 — Mujahedeen groups enter Kabul as Najibullah tries to flee. He is stopped at the airport and put under house arrest at a U.N. compound.</p>.<p>1992-1996 — A power-sharing deal among seven mujahedeen leaders falls apart.</p>.<p>1994 — The Taliban emerge in southern Kandahar, mainly from the ranks of former mujahedeen fighters.</p>.<p>September 26, 1996 — The Taliban take Kabul after sweeping across the country with hardly a fight.</p>.<p>1996-2001— Though initially welcomed as an end to the fighting, the Taliban rule with a heavy hand under Mullah Mohammed Omar, imposing strict Islamic edicts, denying women the right to work and girls the right to go to school.</p>.<p>2000 — The Taliban eradicate opium production but laborers who lived off the poppy fields become even poorer.</p>.<p>March 2001 — The Taliban dynamite the world's largest standing Buddha statues in Bamyan province, to global shock.</p>.<p>September 9, 2001 — Two Arab-speaking suicide bombers, posing as journalists with Belgium passports, kill Masood in northern Takhar province.</p>.<p>September 2001 — Washington gives Mullah Omar an ultimatum: hand over bin Laden and dismantle militant training camps or prepare to be attacked.</p>.<p>October 7, 2001 — A US-led coalition launches an invasion of Afghanistan.</p>.<p>November 13, 2001 — The Taliban flee Kabul for Kandahar as the US-led coalition marches into the Afghan capital with the Northern Alliance.</p>.<p>December 5, 2001 - The Bonn Agreement is signed in Bonn, Germany, giving the majority of power to the Northern Alliance's key players and strengthening the warlords who had ruled between 1992 and 1996.</p>.<p>December 7, 2001 — Mullah Omar leaves Kandahar and the Taliban regime officially collapses.</p>.<p>December 13, 2001 — Karzai arrives in Kabul; contrary to the Bonn Agreement, militias loyal to warlords also enter the Afghan capital.</p>.<p>December 22, 2001 — Karzai is sworn in as chairman of a 29-member governing council established under the Bonn Agreement.</p>.<p>2004 and 2009 — General elections are held and Karzai is elected president for two consecutive terms, the limit under the Afghan constitution.</p>.<p>April 5, 2014 — Deeply flawed election results in the two front-runners, Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah, both claiming victory. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry negotiates a power-sharing deal for a so-called Unity Government, with Ghani serving as president and Abdullah as chief executive.</p>.<p>December 8, 2014 — American and NATO troops formally end their combat mission, transitioning to a support and training role though President Barack Obama had authorized U.S. forces to carry out operations against Taliban and al-Qaida targets.</p>.<p>2015-2018 — The Taliban surge further, staging near-daily attacks targeting Afghan and U.S. forces; scores of civilians die in the crossfire. An Islamic State group affiliate emerges in the east; the Taliban seize control of nearly half the country.</p>.<p>September 2018 — Seeking to fulfill his election promise to bring U.S. troops home, President Donald Trump appoints veteran Afghan-American diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad as negotiator with the Taliban.</p>.<p>2018-2019 — Zalmay engages in on-again, off-again talks with the Taliban, mainly in the Gulf Arab state of Qatar where the insurgents maintain a political office. The Taliban refuse to negotiate with the Kabul government</p>.<p>September 9, 2019 — After a particularly intense escalation in Taliban attacks, including a Kabul bombing that killed a U.S. soldier, Trump scraps talks with the Taliban.</p>.<p>September 28, 2019 — Presidential elections are held but official results are not known for months.</p>.<p>November 24, 2019 — Trump visits U.S. troops in Afghanistan on Thanksgiving, says the Taliban want to make a deal and signals the Qatar negotiations are back on.</p>.<p>February 15, 2020 — Washington says a temporary “reduction in violence” has been agreed upon with the Taliban as first step toward a final peace deal.</p>.<p>February 18, 2020 — Afghanistan's election commission declares Ghani the official winner of September elections; his rival Abdullah refuses to recognize the results and instead declares himself the winner.</p>.<p>February 29, 2020 — The U.S. and the Taliban sign a deal in Doha, Qatar, laying out the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan; the deal also envisions intra-Afghan talks on a future political road map. </p>
<p>The former Soviet Union marched into Afghanistan on Christmas Eve, 1979, claiming it was invited by the new Afghan communist leader, Babrak Karmal, setting the country on a path of 40 years of seemingly endless wars and conflict.</p>.<p>Here is a timeline of some key dates in Afghanistan's 40 years of wars:</p>.<p>December 25, 1979 — Soviet Red Army crosses the Oxus River into Afghanistan. In neighboring Pakistan, Afghan mujahedeen, or Islamic holy warriors, are assembling, armed and financed by the U.S. for an anti-communist war.</p>.<p>1980s — CIA's covert Operation Cyclone funnels weapons and money for the war through Pakistani dictator Mohammed Zia-ul Haq.</p>.<p>1983 — President Ronald Reagan meets with mujahedeen leaders, calling them freedom fighters, at the White House.</p>.<p>September 1986 — The US provides the mujahedeen with shoulder-held anti-aircraft Stinger missiles, which turned around the course of the war and sped-up negotiated Soviet withdrawal.</p>.<p>January 1987 — Afghan Communist President Najibullah launches National Reconciliation Program to encourage the mujahedeen to join a new government of national reconciliation; they refuse.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/us-taliban-sign-historic-deal-see-chance-to-end-18-year-long-conflict-809311.html">US, Taliban sign historic deal; see chance to end 18-year long conflict</a></strong></p>.<p>February 15, 1989- The last Soviet soldier leaves Afghanistan, ending 10 years of occupation April 1992 — Mujahedeen groups enter Kabul as Najibullah tries to flee. He is stopped at the airport and put under house arrest at a U.N. compound.</p>.<p>1992-1996 — A power-sharing deal among seven mujahedeen leaders falls apart.</p>.<p>1994 — The Taliban emerge in southern Kandahar, mainly from the ranks of former mujahedeen fighters.</p>.<p>September 26, 1996 — The Taliban take Kabul after sweeping across the country with hardly a fight.</p>.<p>1996-2001— Though initially welcomed as an end to the fighting, the Taliban rule with a heavy hand under Mullah Mohammed Omar, imposing strict Islamic edicts, denying women the right to work and girls the right to go to school.</p>.<p>2000 — The Taliban eradicate opium production but laborers who lived off the poppy fields become even poorer.</p>.<p>March 2001 — The Taliban dynamite the world's largest standing Buddha statues in Bamyan province, to global shock.</p>.<p>September 9, 2001 — Two Arab-speaking suicide bombers, posing as journalists with Belgium passports, kill Masood in northern Takhar province.</p>.<p>September 2001 — Washington gives Mullah Omar an ultimatum: hand over bin Laden and dismantle militant training camps or prepare to be attacked.</p>.<p>October 7, 2001 — A US-led coalition launches an invasion of Afghanistan.</p>.<p>November 13, 2001 — The Taliban flee Kabul for Kandahar as the US-led coalition marches into the Afghan capital with the Northern Alliance.</p>.<p>December 5, 2001 - The Bonn Agreement is signed in Bonn, Germany, giving the majority of power to the Northern Alliance's key players and strengthening the warlords who had ruled between 1992 and 1996.</p>.<p>December 7, 2001 — Mullah Omar leaves Kandahar and the Taliban regime officially collapses.</p>.<p>December 13, 2001 — Karzai arrives in Kabul; contrary to the Bonn Agreement, militias loyal to warlords also enter the Afghan capital.</p>.<p>December 22, 2001 — Karzai is sworn in as chairman of a 29-member governing council established under the Bonn Agreement.</p>.<p>2004 and 2009 — General elections are held and Karzai is elected president for two consecutive terms, the limit under the Afghan constitution.</p>.<p>April 5, 2014 — Deeply flawed election results in the two front-runners, Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah, both claiming victory. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry negotiates a power-sharing deal for a so-called Unity Government, with Ghani serving as president and Abdullah as chief executive.</p>.<p>December 8, 2014 — American and NATO troops formally end their combat mission, transitioning to a support and training role though President Barack Obama had authorized U.S. forces to carry out operations against Taliban and al-Qaida targets.</p>.<p>2015-2018 — The Taliban surge further, staging near-daily attacks targeting Afghan and U.S. forces; scores of civilians die in the crossfire. An Islamic State group affiliate emerges in the east; the Taliban seize control of nearly half the country.</p>.<p>September 2018 — Seeking to fulfill his election promise to bring U.S. troops home, President Donald Trump appoints veteran Afghan-American diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad as negotiator with the Taliban.</p>.<p>2018-2019 — Zalmay engages in on-again, off-again talks with the Taliban, mainly in the Gulf Arab state of Qatar where the insurgents maintain a political office. The Taliban refuse to negotiate with the Kabul government</p>.<p>September 9, 2019 — After a particularly intense escalation in Taliban attacks, including a Kabul bombing that killed a U.S. soldier, Trump scraps talks with the Taliban.</p>.<p>September 28, 2019 — Presidential elections are held but official results are not known for months.</p>.<p>November 24, 2019 — Trump visits U.S. troops in Afghanistan on Thanksgiving, says the Taliban want to make a deal and signals the Qatar negotiations are back on.</p>.<p>February 15, 2020 — Washington says a temporary “reduction in violence” has been agreed upon with the Taliban as first step toward a final peace deal.</p>.<p>February 18, 2020 — Afghanistan's election commission declares Ghani the official winner of September elections; his rival Abdullah refuses to recognize the results and instead declares himself the winner.</p>.<p>February 29, 2020 — The U.S. and the Taliban sign a deal in Doha, Qatar, laying out the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan; the deal also envisions intra-Afghan talks on a future political road map. </p>