Veteran, Afghanistan War

OK, Grove, Headstone Symbols and Meanings, Afghanistan War Veteran

AFGHANISTAN WAR VETERAN - The War in Afghanistan began in 2001 after the September 11 attacks.  United States and NATO coalition forces attacked Taliban and Al Qaeda forces.  As of 2014, United States personnel are withdrawing from the country, ending over a decade of fighting.

For almost the entire first decade of the 21st century, the United States of America has been at war. Hundreds of thousands of United States armed forces personnel have been sent abroad to the Middle East to engage in what the administration of President George W. Bush referred to as the 'War on Terror.' In many ways, the central fight of the War on Terror has taken place in the isolated and mountainous nation of Afghanistan. Let's learn more about the War in Afghanistan, the longest war in the history of the United States.

For centuries, Afghanistan has been an unstable place, especially over the last century. In the early 1900s, Afghanistan was established as an independent country, no longer under the yoke of foreign powers.

Starting in the 1970s, there were a series of coup d'états, where power changed from one group to another.  In 1978, a civil war began within Afghanistan's borders between pro- and anti-communist forces.  The Soviet Union sent in military forces to support the communists, and a bloody conflict began.  During this fight, the United States provided money and military assistance to those fighting the Soviets.  Some of these were known as the Mujahideen, composed of Islamists who were staunchly opposed to the Soviet invasion. Over one million Afghans died during this conflict, but the Soviets were repulsed.

After fighting the Soviets, Afghanistan saw various warlords and extremist groups vie for control of the country over the coming years.  By the mid-1990s, a fundamentalist group called the Taliban took control of the country.  The Taliban ruled according to Islamic Sharia law and instituted extremely harsh restrictions on the country.

The Taliban created an environment in Afghanistan that bred terrorists.  Osama Bin Laden, a veteran of the fight against the Soviets, became a leading figure in the Al Qaeda terrorist organization, one of the largest and most sophisticated Islamic terror groups in the world.  It was from within Afghanistan that Bin Laden and his followers plotted to strike against the United States.

On September 11, 2001, Al Qaeda terrorists launched attacks against the United States.  Terrorists flew two planes full of innocents into buildings in New York City and one into the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.  A fourth plane was brought down by brave passengers in Southern Pennsylvania. Almost 3,000 Americans were killed in these terrorist attacks.