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Chronology of Afghanistan

1747 Afghanistan is officially unified by Ahmed Shah as the Durrani Empire after centruies of fighting among the Moghuls and Safavids. Ahmed Shah ruled from 1747-1773.
1809 Afghanistan disintegrates into three principalities: Kabul, Kahdahar, and Herat.
1837 Iran back by Russia invades Herat. The Afghan army, supported by the British, defends the country successfully.
1839-1842 In the First Afghan War, the British attempt to extend their empire to include Afghanistan. Dost Mohammad retains control but becomes a British Ally.
1863 Dost Mohammad takes Herat and reunites the kingdom.
1878-1880 The Second Afghan War of Britain Beginning of the second Afghan-British War. The British withdraw from Afghanistan and Abdur Rahman takes control of the country.
1919 (April) Amanullah Khan becomes the new emir and immediately declares Afghanistan free of British control.
1919 (May-October) The Third British Afghan War was probably shortened by First World War. The British are forced to recognize the sovereignty of Afghanistan.
1923 Amanullah signs the first Afghani constitution.
1933-1946 Through World War II, Afghanistan remains neutral.
1947 Britian withdraws from India and Pakistan is granted independance.
1953 Prince Daoud becomes Prime Minister of Afghanistan.
1963 Border with Pakistan closed over territory dispute. The royal family demands the resignation of Prime Minster Daoud and king Zahir Shah takes control of the country.
1964 King Zahir grants a new constitution, which bars royal family from parliment, grants freedom of speech and of the press, and gives women the right to vote.
1973 King Zahir is overthrown by Daoud with support of the Soviet Union. Daoud suspends the 1964 constitution and proclaims new Afghan Republic, electing himself president.
1978 In a coup led by the Afghani Communist Party, President Daoud and thirty members of his family are killed. Mohammad Taraki is named Prime Minister and the country becomes the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. However, uprisings led by Islamic radicals weakened the new regime and in 1979 the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in an attempt to rescue it.
1979-1989 The Soviet war with several Muslim factions in Afghanistan. The United States supported all radical Islamic organizations with billions of dollars in arms and by supplying arms manufacturers that flourished on the Pakistani border. Over 100 stinger surface-to-air missiles were never returned despite CIA efforts to repurchase them.
1989-1996 Once the Soviet army left Afghanistan, the various radical Muslim factions began fighting among themselves.
1995 Military forces of the Taliban captures Harat and begins its rise to power.
1996 The Taliban captures Kabul and imposes harsh Islamic law across the nation and Mulla Mohammad Omar declares himself supreme leader.
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