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ID135549
Title ProperUN involvement in Afghanistan
Other Title InformationPost-Taliban reconstruction
LanguageENG
AuthorKumar, Suresh ;  Pant, Meha
Summary / Abstract (Note)Throughout history Afghanistan has been beset by warlordism, internal strife and also subjected to foreign invasions. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it was at the centre of the “Great Game” played between the Russian Empire and British India. In the late twentieth century the last Afghan war, which involved the mujahedeen with support from Pakistan, the US and other powers on one side and the Afghanistan communist government and the Soviet Union on the other, ended with letter’s withdrawal in 1989. In the mujahedeen and Taliban, the people of Afghanistan hoped for a future of peace and prosperity, rather than the hostility that was to come. In the aftermath of the 11 September 2001 attacks in the US, international forces invaded the country. Although the Taliban were toppled within a month, much was left to rebuild and reconstruct. This paper delineates the reconstructions process in Afghanistan and the role of the United Nations as institutions which have time and again been appointed as a guardian of peace and development in the world.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs Vol.8, No.3; Jul-Sep. 2014: p.116-138
Journal SourceWorld Affairs 2014-09 18, 3
Key WordsHuman Rights ;  Taliban ;  Afghanistan ;  Afghan War ;  UNAMA ;  Bonn Agreement ;  Mujahedeen ;  Soviet Intervention ;  United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan ;  United Nations ;  Reconstructions Process in Afghanistan ;  Post Soviet Withdrawal Conflict Transformation ;  Afghanistan Reconstruction Strategy ;  United Nations Plans