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Syria Crisis: Hague And Kerry Join Doha Talks

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Juni 2013 | 16.15

By Lisa Holland, Foreign Affairs Correspondent

Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague is joining the US Secretary of State John Kerry in Qatar to discuss the crisis in Syria.

Foreign ministers from other countries in the so-called "Friends of Syria" group - including Germany, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Qatar - are also attending the meeting in Doha.

Diplomatic sources told Sky News the Doha conference would try to continue the momentum of the recent G8 summit towards organising a conference which would be known as Geneva 2.

But the reality is that any such Geneva 2 conference follows on from a communique made at the first Geneva conference almost exactly a year ago, which now looks pretty hollow.

William Hague And John Kerry during a Friends of Syria meeting in Jordan in May. Hague and Kerry during a Friends of Syria meeting in Jordan last month

Then leaders - including Russia - agreed a transition plan for Syria, but they have failed to move it forward since.

It is hard to see how something along similar lines could deliver anything more.

The sticking point is the Russian reluctance to get involved in the internal affairs of Syria.

It refuses to call for President Bashar al Assad to step down.

The Friends of Syria meeting does not include the Russians.

But it may involve a Free Syrian Army general who will tell the diplomats that while they are making little progress diplomatically, on the ground opposition forces are losing ground to Mr Assad's troops.


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Edward Snowden Charged With Espionage

Edward Snowden, the whistleblower who revealed secret government spying programmes, has been charged with espionage by US authorities.

A provisional arrest warrant has been issued and Hong Kong authorities have been asked to detain him.

US prosecutors have filed a criminal complaint, charging Mr Snowden with three offences including unauthorised communication of national defence information, which comes under the Espionage Act, and theft of government property.

He is also charged with willful communication of classified communications intelligence information to an unauthorised person.

All three crimes listed carry a maximum 10-year prison penalty.

The former CIA technician, who has worked for America's National Security Agency (NSA), leaked details of American telephone and internet surveillance programmes.

Edward Snowden charge sheet Court papers list three offences including theft of government property

He revealed the existence of a surveillance system called Prism that was set up by the NSA to track the use of the internet directly from ISP servers.

The NSA and FBI have said that the secret programme provided "critical leads" in preventing "dozens of terrorist events" - although some terror experts dispute the claims.

President Obama has also said the programmes were carried out with "systems of checks and balances" and overseen by the courts and the US Congress.

The Prism revelations sparked outcry in the UK when The Guardian reported that the GCHQ eavesdropping agency had been accessing information about British citizens through Prism.

Mr Snowden fled to Hong Kong on May 20 after copying the last set of documents he intended to disclose at the NSA's office in Hawaii.

Umbrella and placards supporting Edward Snowden Protests in support of Mr Snowden have taken place in Hong Kong

Sky News Asia correspondent Mark Stone said the move marks the official start of government attempts to bring him back to the US.

"We are yet to hear from the Hong Kong police and authorities on whether or not they will act on the request by the Americans to arrest Edward Snowden.

"It's my understanding that they know exactly where he is. The Americans haven't yet asked for his extradition, they have simply asked the authorities to arrest him."

There are reports a private plane is on standby to take Mr Snowden from Hong Kong to Iceland, where he hopes to get asylum.

The latest documents from Mr Snowden claim to show that British spies have secretly accessed fibre-optic cables carrying emails, Facebook messages and other communications.

The Guardian reports that GCHQ can analyse data from the network of cables that carry global phone calls and internet traffic under an operation codenamed Tempora.

It claims that communications between innocent people are being processed, as well as those from people marked out as security threats.

An undated aerial handout photo shows the National Security Agency (NSA) headquarters building in Fort Meade, Maryland The NSA programme helped to prevent terror attacks, say US spy chiefs

"It's not just a US problem," Mr Snowden told The Guardian.

"The UK has a huge dog in this fight. They (GCHQ) are worse than the US."

Mr Snowden worked for the NSA as an employee of various outside contractors, including Dell and Booz Allen Hamilton.

"I can't in good conscience allow the US government to destroy privacy, internet freedom and basic liberties for people around the world with this massive surveillance machine they're secretly building," Mr Snowden previously told The Guardian.


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Brazil Protests: President Promises Reforms

Brazil's President has promised to improve public services but says any further violence will not be tolerated in a speech to the nation rocked by mass protests.

During a TV broadcast Dilma Rousseff appealed for unity and said the government knew there were many things "we can do quicker and better".

"I am the president of all Brazil. Of those who support the demonstration and those who do not."

Demonstrators shout anti-government slogans behind part of a banner during one of many protests around Brazil's major cities in Sao Paulo Dilma Rousseff has condemned the violence by 'a minority'

Reaching out to those who feel the government should direct more money to public services rather than on hosting major sporting events, she insisted that "football and sport are symbols of peace and peaceful coexistence".

But she added she would not stand by if demonstrations turned violent, as has been the case in several cities hit by cases of looting and attacks on public buildings including the foreign ministry and several government offices.

"The government cannot stand by as people attack public property ... and bring chaos to our streets," she stressed.

President Dilma Rousseff President Rousseff supports peaceful protest

"We need to inject oxygen into our political system, and make it more transparent and resistant to the tough challenges facing a countries marked by extreme disparity between rich and poor."

But she insisted that "we cannot put up with violence".

"People have a right to criticise," added Ms Rousseff saying she would staunchly defend that right.

She added: "We need to oxygenate our political system ... and make it more transparent."

Ms Rousseff, a former Marxist rebel who fought against Brazil's 1964-85 military regime and was imprisoned for three years, pointedly referred to sacrifices her generation made to free the nation from dictatorship.

Her comments came after nearly one million demonstrators took to the streets on Friday across the country to denounce alleged corruption, poor public services and billions of dollars spent preparing for next year's World Cup soccer tournament and the 2016 Olympics in Brazil.

Ms Rousseff had cancelled a trip overseas because of the unrest, but stayed away from the public eye for most of the week.

Law enforcement troops take cover behind their shields as protesters throw stones during a demonstration outside the stadium before the Confederations Cup soccer match between Nigeria and Uruguay in Salvador Nearly a million protesters took to the streets on Friday

But critics of Ms Rousseff and her government have accused them of paying "lip service".

Carlos Cardozo, a 62-year-old financial consultant who joined Friday's protest in Rio, said he thought the unrest could cost Ms Rousseff next year's elections.

"Her paying lip service by saying she's in favour of the protests is not helping her cause," Mr Cardozo said. "People want to see real action, real decisions, and it's not this government that's capable of delivering."

At least one protester was killed in Sao Paulo on Thursday night when a motorist - apparently enraged about being unable to drive along a street - rammed his car into a crowd of demonstrators.

Unconfirmed news reports also said a 54-year-old cleaning woman had died on Friday after inhaling tear gas.


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Syria: Rebels Risk Own Lives Over DIY Weapons

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Juni 2013 | 16.15

By Sam Kiley, Middle East Correspondent, in northern Syria

High explosive powder is shaken into the nose cone of an improvised missile through a funnel fashioned from a mineral water bottle.

Then along comes a man with a long bolt. He shoves it down into the powder and starts whacking it with a steel-headed hammer.

One spark, a drift of cigarette ash, and the detonation of this arms factory would be heard and seen for many, many miles.

We agreed with our hosts, Syrian rebels with no connection to al Qaeda-linked groups, that we would not reveal the location of this installation. The reason was obvious.

For more than two years the rebels fighting Bashar al Assad had been begging the outside world for help.

They had seen how effective a no-fly zone had been in Libya.

Syria Some of the extraordinary weapons being produced

A generous interpretation of a United Nations Security Council Resolution which mandated the use of "all necessary means" to protect Libya's civilian population had meant that Nato and her allies were able to deploy aircraft effectively as the rebel air force.

Surely, given the scale of Mr Assad's assault on his own people, the Syrian fighters reasoned, they would get the same sort of support their Libyan brothers had enjoyed. They were wrong.

The West, led by the US, was heavily focused on getting out of, not into, conflicts in the Islamic world. Namely Iraq and Afghanistan.

And there was no chance that Russia would allow a UN resolution that sanctioned the use of air power against its ally in Damascus.

So no no-fly zone and no weapons shipments - aside from limited supplies from Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

The rebels were forced to improvise, or die. Weapons had to be made if they could not be given, or captured.

Syria This explosive device looked like a cartoon bomb

The factory we saw turned out some extraordinary weapons.

The most primitive was a "cannon" which ejected an explosive charge, made from a length of pipe stuffed with explosive which was detonated by a fuse that had to be lit with a match before being fired. It looked like a cartoon bomb.

A similar, smaller, contraption had been made from an old shotgun. The rebels make their explosive out of fertiliser and sugar.

Mortar barrels and rockets are turned on industrial lathes, using pipes bought from a builders' merchant.

The rocket detonators are hand turned. A worker dropped one last week, and paid for the mistake with his life.

"We have invested a lot of money and effort in trying to get better at this, some of us have been killed working here - one man died last week, and many have lost pieces of themselves," said Abu Yahya, the manager of the factory.

Syria The weapons-makers are self-taught engineers

The US has recently decided to send lethal aid to the rebels - not game-changing equipment such as anti-aircraft weapons or tank-killing missiles - just small arms and rocket-propelled grenades.

These will be welcome - but they are the sort of thing that the rebels make for themselves.

The US is reluctant to send more powerful equipment because of fears that it could find its way into the hands of al Qaeda-affiliated groups which could then use anti-aircraft missiles to shoot down civilian aircraft.

Prime Minister David Cameron supports arming those rebels with no affiliations to al Qaeda - but whether he can sell the idea to Parliament remains in question.

Many British MPs do not believe that their national interests would be served by backing rebels who may turn against Europe.

But there remains another, more subtle, problem.

The arms factory we saw was a hive of innovation and improvisation. The self-taught engineers were making a remote-controlled rocket launcher out of plastic drainage pipes, the working parts of an adjustable TV satellite receiver and an old starter motor.

That level of artisanal arms manufacturing may, one day, pose a threat to the outside world from people who were abandoned by it.


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Clashes In Brazil As One Million March

The Brazilian government will hold an emergency meeting later amid spiralling protests over alleged corruption and high prices which have seen one million people take to the streets.

The demonstrations, which have spread to more than 80 cities across the country, look set to continue into a second week, prompting President Dilma Rousseff to assemble her top cabinet members and forcing her to cancel an overseas trip.

In Sao Paulo state, a protester was killed when a driver - apparently enraged about being unable to drive along a street - rammed his car into a crowd of demonstrators.

Protests in Rio de Janeiro Riot police in Rio were faced with the largest demonstrations

In Rio de Janeiro, 300,000 people staged a demonstration near City Hall, while in the capital Brasilia, hundreds of protesters tried to storm the foreign ministry building, leaving authorities "frightened", according to local newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo.

Clashes have also taken place in the Amazon jungle city of Belem, in Porto Alegre in the south, in the university town of Campinas north of Sao Paulo and in the northeastern city of Salvador.

Sky correspondent Jason Farrell, in Rio de Janeiro, said protests there began with a "carnival atmosphere", as demonstrators arrived "draped in flags or with stripes of Brazil's national green, yellow and blue painted onto their faces".

Demonstrators attend a protest against the Confederations Cup and Brazil's government in Recife More than 300,000 people joined protests in Rio de Janeiro

However, peaceful protesters were caught up in clashes between rioters and police, who fired tear gas and pepper spray into the crowds.

Law student Wallace Tarenta told Sky News: "I have come here because we need more money for hospitals and teachers and security - not more stadiums for the World Cup."

Protester Jorge Vieira added: "Brazil is a strong country, we have good natural resources and a strong government - but nothing goes to the people."

Brazil mass protests: one million march Riot police in Belem were confronted by stone-throwing demonstrators

The protests in Brazil were sparked by public anger about the rising cost of public transport.

Several city leaders have already revoked planned increases to bus and subway fares.

However, Sky's Jason Farrell said anger has now turned to a perceived lack of investment in public services, as well as the $15 billion cost of hosting next year's football World Cup.

BRAZIL Protests Celebrations in Sao Paulo, where planned fare hikes have been dropped

"On the face of it, Brazil has it all: a growing economy, a World Cup and the 2016 Olympics to look forward to," he said.

"But protesters say a corrupt government is damaging the lives of working people while squandering money on showcase stadiums.

"With riots breaking out in cities across the country, the world is now watching Brazil and wondering how it will cope with the pressures of hosting two of the world's biggest sporting events."


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Afghan Negotiators Boycott Talks With Taliban

Afghan peace negotiators have told Sky News they have no intention of attending talks with the Taliban in Qatar.

A spokesman said: "Taliban are not interested in peace, (their) only intention is in becoming the government again."

Afghan President Hamid Karzai had already cancelled a peace delegation to the security talks due to take place in Doha between the US and the Taliban.

Mr Karzai had been angered by a move by the Taliban to cast its new office in the Gulf nation of Qatar as a rival embassy.

The Qatari government insisted that a sign suggesting it was an embassy was removed, a move welcomed by the Americans.

But the negotiators say that Taliban officials removing the flag and sign was not enough to undo the damage done when they opened the office and have now confirmed they will not be attending the talks.

Sky Foreign Affairs Correspondent Lisa Holland said: "It's something the Afghan government are furious about.

"They feel they've been sidelined. The situation's been made even worse by the fact the Taliban were allowed to open an office here (in Doha).

"The Afghan government say the Taliban have been allowed to look like a government in exile."

The Taliban has said it does not recognise the government of Mr Karzai.

It's representatives held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday at which they hoisted their flag and a banner with the name they used while in power more than a decade ago: "Political Office of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan."

The security talks are an ongoing discussion about the shape of a small international "back-up" force to stay in Afghanistan once combat troops have left at the end of next year.

The US has dropped its pre-condition for talks that the Taliban must ends its links to al Qaeda. That is likely to be part of an initial declaration of agendas between the two sides.

US officials say the first meeting will be about laying out each others' positions then they will go away and meet again in a few weeks.

Ahead of the talks a Taliban spokesman said the group was ready to free US soldier Sgt Bowe Bergdahl, who has been held captive in Afghanistan since 2009, in exchange for five Guantanamo Bay inmates.

Taliban spokesman Shaheen Suhail told the Associated Press that Sgt Bergdahl "is, as far as I know, in good condition".

He said the prisoner exchange was the first item on the Taliban's agenda before even opening the peace talks.

Meanwhile, Taliban fighters in Afghanistan hailed the rebels' new office in Qatar as evidence of their success on the front lines.

Mullah Ehsanullah, a local Taliban fighter in the Zherai district of Kandahar province, spoke to AFP news agency by telephone.

He said: "With the establishment of this office, we want to hold talks with the international community like an independent and sovereign state.

"We are reaching our goals in defeating the US, now we want to free our country from occupation. We want to build our country on our own."

The Taliban was in government in Afghanistan from 1996 until 2001 when they were ousted from power sparking a 12-year conflict.

There are currently around 100,000 coalition troops in Afghanistan from 48 countries. They are due to leave within 18 months.


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Snowden: Iceland Talks About Potential Asylum

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 20 Juni 2013 | 16.15

Iceland says a spokesman who claims to represent Edward Snowden has held talks with government officials about the potential of the NSA leaker applying for asylum in the Nordic country.

"A representative of his has, to my knowledge... had some informal discussions with some employees of a couple of ministries, but no formal discussions," Iceland Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson said.

He said that Mr Snowden, who is holed up in Hong Kong after blowing the lid on a vast US electronic spying programme, would need to be in Iceland in order to apply for asylum.

"So since he's not in the country it's not for me to comment on presently," he said.

Interior Minister Hanna Kristjansdottir told public broadcaster RUV on Tuesday that the government had been approached by a spokesman for the WikiLeaks website, Icelandic journalist Kristinn Hrafnsson, who wanted to "discuss the matter with a representative of the ministry".

Banner supporting Snowden in Hong Kong A banner showing support for Snowden in Hong Kong

"He got a meeting where the matter was discussed," she said.

However, she added the government did not feel bound by a 2010 resolution by the Icelandic parliament seeking to make the country a safe haven for journalists and whistleblowers from around the globe.

"The resolution is not a part of the laws that apply to asylum seekers," she said.

In an interview with the Guardian newspaper on June 10, Mr Snowden - who has been hailed a "hero" by Wikileaks founder Julian Assange - described Iceland as a country that shared his values.

Icelandic journalist and WikiLeaks spokesperson Kristinn Hrafnsson Mr Hrafnsson is an Icelandic journalist

However, observers say the new centre-right coalition in Reykjavik may be less willing to anger the United States than its leftist predecessor.

Mr Snowden, 29, leaked details of  the US National Security Agency's (NSA) spying programmes, which monitor private internet traffic.

US authorities have launched a criminal investigation.

The former CIA employee and NSA contractor fled to Hong Kong on May 20, but the US has yet to file any formal extradition request.

Chinese state media earlier said Hong Kong has the opportunity of "proving itself a free society in front of the world" by its handling of the Snowden case.

The editorial in the the Global Times newspaper appear to distance Beijing from any decision on his possible extradition.

Hong Kong is a semi-autonomous territory and has a separate legal system to mainland China.

The editorial also said Hong Kong - which has an extradition treaty with the US - should decide without interference from the mainland on Mr Snowden's fate.

HONGKONG Phones 1 Supporters of Snowden protest in Hong Kong

"Things will go much easier if Hong Kong plays a leading role in resolving this incident, rather than being told by Beijing or Washington what to do," the editorial said.

"Hong Kong has the chance to expand its political freedom to a larger extent, setting an example for the rest of the world."

The editorial also criticised the US government, which it called "stuck in an embarrassing position", citing increasing "public sympathy" for Mr Snowden.

"Public opinion will have a large impact on Snowden's destiny," the editorial said.

"It seems that Snowden being extradited back to the US has become an inconceivable option.

"Selfishness has been pushing Washington to employ double standards in political affairs. If it doesn't readjust such policies, its international reputation will be permanently damaged."

Experts have claimed that Mr Snowden is testing Hong Kong's civil liberties under its "one country, two systems" framework by retreating to the former British colony, which was returned to China in 1997.


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US 'Postpones' Taliban Talks Amid Karzai Fury

Taliban Insurgency: A Timeline

Updated: 4:44pm UK, Tuesday 18 June 2013

As Afghan forces take control of national security, marking a major milestone for the withdrawal of US-led combat troops, here is a timeline of the 12 years of Taliban insurgency in the country.

:: September 11, 2001 - al Qaeda hijackers fly passenger planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, killing nearly 3,000 people. Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is known to live in Afghanistan, which is ruled by the Taliban.

:: October 7, 2001 - A US-led military campaign begins with air strikes against Afghanistan, followed by troops, to hunt down bin Laden and topple the Taliban.

:: December 2001 - The Taliban are forced from power, but bin Laden is not found. Plans are laid for an interim government and a multinational force. Hamid Karzai is appointed to lead the government and the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) begins to deploy.

:: October 9, 2004 - Afghanistan's first presidential election takes place. Mr Karzai is proclaimed the winner. He is declared to have won another term in November 2009, amid accusations of massive electoral fraud.

:: February 2007 - Taliban insurgents attack at US base as vice president Dick Cheney visits, killing 24 people.

:: November 2008 - Barack Obama is elected US president, and vows to end the war in Iraq and focus on Afghanistan.

:: December 1, 2009 - Mr Obama orders a "surge" of 30,000 troops into Afghanistan but says withdrawals will begin in July 2011. The number of NATO-led forces reaches a peak of 150,000 in the summer of 2010.

:: May 2, 2011 - Osama bin Laden is killed by US special forces in the Pakistan town of Abbottabad.

:: June 22, 2011 - Mr Obama announces the withdrawal of 33,000 US troops by the middle of 2012.

:: July 2011 - Western troops and officials begin handing authority to Afghan forces in some areas.

:: August 6, 2011 - 30 US troops, mostly special forces, and eight Afghans die when the Taliban shoots down their helicopter in the biggest single loss for foreign troops in the war.

:: September 20, 2011 - Burhanuddin Rabbani, a former president and Mr Karzai's peace envoy, becomes the most senior politician to be killed since the start of the conflict in an assassination blamed by Afghan officials on the Taliban.

:: November 27, 2011 - US air strikes kill 24 Pakistani soldiers, prompting Pakistan to suspend overland NATO supply routes into Afghanistan for several months.

:: December 6, 2011 - At least 84 people die in suicide blasts at shrines on the Shiite holday day of Ashura. The biggest attack takes place in Kabul, killing 80.

:: February 2012 - Deadly protests kill 40 people and force Mr Obama to apologise after US troops burn copies of the Koran on an Afghan military base.

:: March 11, 2012 - A rogue US soldier walks off his base in Kandahar and kills 16 Afghans, most of them women and children.

:: February 2013 - Mr Obama announces 34,000 US troops will return from Afghanistan by mid-February 2014. There are currently 98,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan.

At least 3,336 foreign troops have died since the start of operations in 2001.


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Protesters Try To Force Way Into Brazil Match

Brazilian protesters outraged over the costs of hosting next year's World Cup have clashed with police outside a football stadium, as the government deployed elite forces to contain the unrest.

Violence erupted near the £155m Castelao stadium in the city of Fortaleza where the national side faced Mexico in the Confederations Cup.

Protests in Fortaleza Protesters march towards the Castelao stadium in Fortaleza

Some 15,000 demonstrators gathered near the venue - one of several hosting matches in the tournament.

Protesters hurled stones at the police, who responded with tear gas and rubber bullets.

Sky Sports News reporter Geraint Hughes, in Fortaleza, said: "Many of the protesters tried to gain access to the game. There were some running battles between police and protesters."

Demonstrators confront Brazilian riot police as they attempt to approach the Estadio Castelao during the Confederations Cup soccer match between Brazil and Mexico, in Fortaleza National forces block the march

The national force was also sent to several states including Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, Minas Gerais and Brasilia, while an additional 6,000 state police troopers were deployed to Fortaleza.

Demonstrations initially sparked by an increase in bus fares in Sao Paulo have quickly spiralled into nationwide marches against corruption, poor public services and the £9.5bn cost of staging the 2014 World Cup.

Hundreds of thousands of people have taken to the streets in the past two weeks to voice their anger over the spending.

Demonstrators run during clashes with riot police near the Estadio Castelao in Fortaleza Demonstrators run as police attempt to disperse the crowds with tear gas

"We are protesting the use of public funds for the construction of stadiums, money that should be used for education," said 18-year-old Matheus Dantas, amid a sea of Brazilian flags.

The fresh violence flared on Wednesday night as authorities in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro announced a U-turn on the increase in fares on public transport.

Several other Brazilian cities including Porto Alegre and Recife had already rolled back their fare increases.

Protesters hold signs before the Confederations Cup Group A soccer match between Brazil and Mexico at the Estadio Castelao in Fortaleza Protests during the Brazil and Mexico Confederations Cup tie

President Dilma Rousseff has promised to "listen to the voices calling for change".

On Tuesday, riot police and tens of thousands of protesters clashed in Sao Paulo - the largest city.

What could be the country's biggest demonstration in three decades is planned for Rio later, with around half a million people expected to line the streets of the city ahead of another Confederations Cup game between Spain and Tahiti.


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Afghanistan: Taliban 'Admit' US Troop Attack

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 Juni 2013 | 16.15

Taliban Insurgency: A Timeline

Updated: 4:44pm UK, Tuesday 18 June 2013

As Afghan forces take control of national security, marking a major milestone for the withdrawal of US-led combat troops, here is a timeline of the 12 years of Taliban insurgency in the country.

:: September 11, 2001 - al Qaeda hijackers fly passenger planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, killing nearly 3,000 people. Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is known to live in Afghanistan, which is ruled by the Taliban.

:: October 7, 2001 - A US-led military campaign begins with air strikes against Afghanistan, followed by troops, to hunt down bin Laden and topple the Taliban.

:: December 2001 - The Taliban are forced from power, but bin Laden is not found. Plans are laid for an interim government and a multinational force. Hamid Karzai is appointed to lead the government and the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) begins to deploy.

:: October 9, 2004 - Afghanistan's first presidential election takes place. Mr Karzai is proclaimed the winner. He is declared to have won another term in November 2009, amid accusations of massive electoral fraud.

:: February 2007 - Taliban insurgents attack at US base as vice president Dick Cheney visits, killing 24 people.

:: November 2008 - Barack Obama is elected US president, and vows to end the war in Iraq and focus on Afghanistan.

:: December 1, 2009 - Mr Obama orders a "surge" of 30,000 troops into Afghanistan but says withdrawals will begin in July 2011. The number of NATO-led forces reaches a peak of 150,000 in the summer of 2010.

:: May 2, 2011 - Osama bin Laden is killed by US special forces in the Pakistan town of Abbottabad.

:: June 22, 2011 - Mr Obama announces the withdrawal of 33,000 US troops by the middle of 2012.

:: July 2011 - Western troops and officials begin handing authority to Afghan forces in some areas.

:: August 6, 2011 - 30 US troops, mostly special forces, and eight Afghans die when the Taliban shoots down their helicopter in the biggest single loss for foreign troops in the war.

:: September 20, 2011 - Burhanuddin Rabbani, a former president and Mr Karzai's peace envoy, becomes the most senior politician to be killed since the start of the conflict in an assassination blamed by Afghan officials on the Taliban.

:: November 27, 2011 - US air strikes kill 24 Pakistani soldiers, prompting Pakistan to suspend overland NATO supply routes into Afghanistan for several months.

:: December 6, 2011 - At least 84 people die in suicide blasts at shrines on the Shiite holday day of Ashura. The biggest attack takes place in Kabul, killing 80.

:: February 2012 - Deadly protests kill 40 people and force Mr Obama to apologise after US troops burn copies of the Koran on an Afghan military base.

:: March 11, 2012 - A rogue US soldier walks off his base in Kandahar and kills 16 Afghans, most of them women and children.

:: February 2013 - Mr Obama announces 34,000 US troops will return from Afghanistan by mid-February 2014. There are currently 98,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan.

At least 3,336 foreign troops have died since the start of operations in 2001.


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