Ignoring
international protests, the Taliban carry out their threat to destroy Buddhist
statues in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, saying they are an affront to Islam.
Sept.
4
A
month after arresting them, the Taliban put eight international aid workers on
trial for spreading Christianity. Under Taliban rule, proselytizing is punishable
by death. The group is held in various Afghan prisons for months and finally released
Nov. 15.
Sept.
9
Masood,
still head of the Northern Alliance and the nation's top insurgent, is killed
by assassins posing as journalists.
Sept.
11
Hijackers
commandeer four commercial airplanes and crash them into the World Trade Center
Towers in New York, the Pentagon outside Washington, D.C., and a Pennsylvania
field, killing thousands. Days later, U.S. officials say bin Laden, the Saudi
exile believed to be hiding in Afghanistan, is the prime suspect in the attack.
Oct.
7
Following
unanswered demands that the Taliban turn over bin Laden, U.S. and British forces
launch airstrikes against targets in Afghanistan. American warplanes start to
bomb Taliban targets and bases reportedly belonging to the al-Qaida network. The
Taliban proclaim they are ready for jihad.
Nov.
13
After
weeks of intense fighting with Taliban troops, the Northern Alliance enters Kabul.
The retreating Taliban flee southward toward Kandahar.
Dec.
7
Taliban
fighters abandon their final stronghold in Kandahar as the militia group's hold
on Afghanistan continues to disintegrate. Two days later, Taliban leaders surrender
the group's final Afghan territory, the province of Zabul. The move leads the
Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press to declare "the rule of the Taliban in Afghanistan
has totally ended."
Dec.
22
Hamid
Karzai, a royalist and ethnic Pashtun, is sworn in as the leader of the interim
government in Afghanistan. Karzai entered Afghanistan after living in exile for
years in neighboring Pakistan. At the U.N.-sponsored conference to determine an
interim government, Karzai already has the support of the United States and by
the end of the conference is elected leader of the six-month government.