Exif II*
B ( 1 2 ; . . i \ Herat Province (Afghanistan) - Nov 2001
In the late autum of 2001, the U.S. military, with British support, begins a bombing campaign against Taliban forces, officially launching Operation Enduring Freedom. Canada, Australia, Germany, and France pledge future support. The war’s early phase mainly involves U.S. air strikes on al-Qaeda and Taliban forces that are assisted by a partnership of about one thousand U.S. special forces, the Northern Alliance, and ethnic Pashtun anti-Taliban forces. The first wave of conventional ground forces arrives twelve days later. Most of the ground combat is between the Taliban and its Afghan opponents. The Taliban regime unravels rapidly after its loss at Mazar-e-Sharif on November 9, 2001, to forces loyal to Abdul Rashid Dostum, an ethnic Uzbek military leader. Over the next week Taliban strongholds crumble after coalition and Northern Alliance offensives on Taloqan (11/11), Bamiyan (11/11), Herat (11/12), Kabul (11/13), and Jalalabad (11/14). On November 14, 2001, the UN Security Council passes Resolution 1378, calling for a “central role” for the United Nations in establishing a transitional administration and inviting member states to send peacekeeping forces to promote stability and aid delivery.
A truck full of refugees driving on the main desert road towards the iranian border - ' - ' Adobe Photoshop CS6 (Macintosh) 2021-08-20T14:58:24+02:00 ©Massimo Sciacca/Prospekt ©2001 by Massimo Sciacca
All rights reserved 0220
Ducky H xhttp://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/ Herat Province (Afghanistan) - Nov 2001
In the late autum of 2001, the U.S. military, with British support, begins a bombing campaign against Taliban forces, officially launching Operation Enduring Freedom. Canada, Australia, Germany, and France pledge future support. The war’s early phase mainly involves U.S. air strikes on al-Qaeda and Taliban forces that are assisted by a partnership of about one thousand U.S. special forces, the Northern Alliance, and ethnic Pashtun anti-Taliban forces. The first wave of conventional ground forces arrives twelve days later. Most of the ground combat is between the Taliban and its Afghan opponents. The Taliban regime unravels rapidly after its loss at Mazar-e-Sharif on November 9, 2001, to forces loyal to Abdul Rashid Dostum, an ethnic Uzbek military leader. Over the next week Taliban strongholds crumble after coalition and Northern Alliance offensives on Taloqan (11/11), Bamiyan (11/11), Herat (11/12), Kabul (11/13), and Jalalabad (11/14). On November 14, 2001, the UN Security Council passes Resolution 1378, calling for a “central role” for the United Nations in establishing a transitional administration and inviting member states to send peacekeeping forces to promote stability and aid delivery.
A truck full of refugees driving on the main desert road towards the iranian border ©2001 by Massimo Sciacca
All rights reserved ©Massimo Sciacca/Prospekt Massimo Sciacca 2001 Afghanistan Herat Afghanistan war Afghan war Taliban mujahideen Enduring Freedom Afghan women Afghan refugees al Qaeda adobe:docid:photoshop:e4dead42-c526-11dd-9ab5-e4fb6ca5d396 Photoshop 3.0 8BIM Z %G xAHerat Province (Afghanistan) - Nov 2001
In the late autum of 2001, the U.S. military, with British support, begins a bombing campaign against Taliban forces, officially launching Operation Enduring Freedom. Canada, Australia, Germany, and France pledge future support. The war’s early phase mainly involves U.S. air strikes on al-Qaeda and Taliban forces that are assisted by a partnership of about one thousand U.S. special forces, the Northern Alliance, and ethnic Pashtun anti-Taliban forces. The first wave of conventional ground forces arrives twelve days later. Most of the ground combat is between the Taliban and its Afghan opponents. The Taliban regime unravels rapidly after its loss at Mazar-e-Sharif on November 9, 2001, to forces loyal to Abdul Rashid Dostum, an ethnic Uzbek military leader. Over the next week Taliban strongholds crumble after coalition and Northern Alliance offensives on Taloqan (11/11), Bamiyan (11/11), Herat (11/12), Kabul (11/13), and Jalalabad (11/14). On November 14, 2001, the UN Security Council passes Resolution 1378, calling for a “central role” for the United Nations in establishing a transitional administration and inviting member states to send peacekeeping forces to promote stability and aid delivery.
A truck full of refugees driving on the main desert road towards the iranian borderz ©Massimo SciaccaP ©Massimo Sciacca/ProspektU The Afghan Affairn ©Massimo Sciaccas ©Massimo SciaccaZ Herate Afghanistan Massimo Sciacca 2001 Afghanistan Herat Afghanistan war
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