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War in Afghanistan (200114) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

War in Afghanistan Part of the war in Afghanistan, and the Global War on Terrorism Clockwise from top-left: British Royal Marines take part in the clearance of Nad-e Ali District of Helmand Province; two F/A-18 strike fighters conduct combat missions over Afghanistan; an anti-Taliban fighter during an operation to secure a compound in Helmand Province; A French chasseur alpin patrols a valley in Kapisa Province; U.S. Marines prepare to board buses shortly after arriving in southern Afghanistan; Taliban fighters in a cave hideout; U.S. soldiers prepare to fire a mortar during a mission in the Paktika Province, US troops disembark from a helicopter, a MEDCAP centre in Khost Province. Belligerents

Afghanistan Government Coalition:

Taliban

Allied groups

Taliban splinter groups

2001 invasion: Northern Alliance

2001 invasion: Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan

al-Qaeda

Hamid Karzai Ashraf Ghani Coalition:

Mohammed Omar(Deceased, non-combat) Akhtar Mansoor Abdul Ghani Baradar(POW)[4] Haibatullah Akhunzada[2] Jalaluddin Haqqani Obaidullah Akhund[4] Dadullah Akhund[4] Gulbuddin Hekmatyar Osama bin Laden Ayman al-Zawahiri

Afghan National Security Forces: 352,000[6] ISAF: 18,000+[7]

Taliban: 60,000 (tentative estimate)[8]

HIG: 1,500 - 2,000+[12] al-Qaeda: 50100[13][14] ~ 3,000 in 2001[15]

Afghan security forces: 21,950 killed[16] Northern Alliance: 200 killed[17][18][19][20] Coalition: Dead: 3,486 (all causes) 2,807 (hostile causes) (United States:2,356, United Kingdom:454,[21] Canada:158, France:88, Germany:57, Italy:53, Others:321)[22] Wounded: 22,773 (United States:19,950, United Kingdom:2,188, Canada:635)[23][24][25] Contractors: Dead: 1,582[26][27] Wounded: 15,000+[26][27]

The war in Afghanistan (or the American war in Afghanistan)[29][30] is the period in which the United States invaded Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks.[31] Supported initially by close allies, they were later joined by NATO beginning in 2003. It followed the Afghan Civil War's 19962001 phase. Its public aims were to dismantle al-Qaeda and to deny it a safe base of operations in Afghanistan by removing the Taliban from power.[32] Key allies, including the United Kingdom, supported the U.S. from the start to the end of the phase. This phase of the War is the longest war in United States history.[33][34][35][36][37]

In 2001, U.S. President George W. Bush demanded that the Taliban hand over Osama bin Laden and expel al-Qaeda; bin Laden had already been wanted by the United Nations since 1999. The Taliban declined to extradite him unless given what they deemed convincing evidence of his involvement in the 9/11 attacks[38] and declined demands to extradite other terrorism suspects apart from bin Laden. The request was dismissed by the U.S. as a delaying tactic, and on 7 October 2001 it launched Operation Enduring Freedom with the United Kingdom. The two were later joined by other forces, including the Northern Alliance.[39][40] In December 2001, the United Nations Security Council established the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), to assist the Afghan interim authorities with securing Kabul. At the Bonn Conference in December 2001, Hamid Karzai was selected to head the Afghan Interim Administration, which after a 2002 loya jirga in Kabul became the Afghan Transitional Administration. In the popular elections of 2004, Karzai was elected president of the country, now named the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.[41]

NATO became involved as an alliance in August 2003, taking the helm of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), and later that year assumed leadership of ISAF with troops from 43 countries. NATO members provided the core of the force.[42] One portion of U.S. forces in Afghanistan operated under NATO command; the rest remained under direct U.S. command. Taliban leader Mullah Omar reorganized the movement, and in 2003, launched an insurgency against the government and ISAF.[43][44] Though outgunned and outnumbered, insurgents from the Taliban, Haqqani Network, Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin and other groups have waged asymmetric warfare with guerilla raids and ambushes in the countryside, suicide attacks against urban targets and turncoat killings against coalition forces. The Taliban exploited weaknesses in the Afghan government, among the most corrupt in the world, to reassert influence across rural areas of southern and eastern Afghanistan. ISAF responded in 2006 by increasing troops for counterinsurgency operations to "clear and hold" villages and "nation building" projects to "win hearts and minds".[45][46] While ISAF continued to battle the Taliban insurgency, fighting crossed into neighboring North-West Pakistan.[47]

On 2 May 2011, United States Navy SEALs killed Osama bin Laden in Abbotabad, Pakistan. In May 2012, NATO leaders endorsed an exit strategy for withdrawing their forces. UN-backed peace talks have since taken place between the Afghan government and the Taliban.[48] In May 2014, the United States announced that "[its] combat operations [would] end in 2014, [leaving] just a small residual force in the country until the end of 2016".[49] As of 2015, tens of thousands of people have been killed in the war. Over 4,000 ISAF soldiers and civilian contractors as well as over 15,000 Afghan national security forces members have been killed, as well as nearly 20 thousand civilians. In October 2014, British forces handed over the last bases in Helmand to the Afghan military, officially ending their combat operations in the war.[50] On 28 December 2014, NATO formally ended combat operations in Afghanistan and transferred full security responsibility to the Afghan government, via a ceremony in Kabul.[51][52]

Afghanistan's political order began to break down with the overthrow of King Zahir Shah by his cousin Mohammed Daoud Khan in a bloodless 1973 coup. Daoud Khan had served as prime minister since 1953 and promoted economic modernization, emancipation of women, and Pashtun nationalism. This was threatening to neighboring Pakistan, faced with its own restive Pashtun population. In the mid-1970s, Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto began to encourage Afghan Islamic leaders such as Burhanuddin Rabbani and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, to fight against the regime. In 1978, Daoud Khan was killed in a coup by Afghan's Communist Party, his former partner in government, known as the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). PDPA pushed for a socialist transformation by abolishing arranged marriages, promoting mass literacy and reforming land ownership. This undermined the traditional tribal order and provoked opposition from Islamic leaders across rural areas. The PDPA's crackdown was met with open rebellion, including Ismail Khan's Herat Uprising. The PDPA was beset by internal leadership differences and was weakened by an internal coup on 11 September 1979 when Hafizullah Amin ousted Nur Muhammad Taraki. The Soviet Union, sensing PDPA weakness, intervened militarily three months later, to depose Amin and install another PDA faction led by Babrak Karmal.

The entry of the Soviet Union into Afghanistan in December 1979 prompted its Cold War rivals, the United States, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and China to support rebels fighting against the Soviet-backed Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. In contrast to the secular and socialist government, which controlled the cities, religiously motivated mujahideen held sway in much of the countryside. Beside Rabbani, Hekmatyar, and Khan, other mujahideen commanders included Jalaluddin Haqqani. The CIA worked closely with Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence to funnel foreign support for the mujahideen. The war also attracted Arab volunteers, known as "Afghan Arabs", including Osama bin Laden.

After the withdrawal of the Soviet military from Afghanistan in May 1989, the PDPA regime under Najibullah held on until 1992, when the collapse of the Soviet Union deprived the regime of aid, and the defection of Uzbek general Abdul Rashid Dostum cleared the approach to Kabul. With the political stage cleared of Afghan socialists, the remaining Islamic warlords vied for power. By then, Bin Laden had left the country. The United States' interest in Afghanistan also diminished.

In 1992, Rabbani officially became president of the Islamic State of Afghanistan, but had to battle other warlords for control of Kabul. In late 1994, Rabbani's defense minister, Ahmad Shah Massoud defeated Hekmatyr in Kabul and ended ongoing bombardment of the capital.[53][54][55] Massoud tried to initiate a nationwide political process with the goal of national consolidation. Other warlords, including Ismail Khan in the west and Dostum in the north maintained their fiefdoms.

In 1994, Mohammed Omar, a mujahideen member who taught at a Pakistani madrassa, returned to Kandahar and formed the Taliban movement. His followers were religious students, known as the Talib and they sought to end warlordism through strict adherence to Islamic law. By November 1994, the Taliban had captured all of Kandahar Province. They declined the government's offer to join in a coalition government and marched on Kabul in 1995.[56]

The Taliban's early victories in 1994 were followed by a series of costly defeats.[57] Pakistan provided strong support to the Taliban.[58][59] Analysts such as Amin Saikal described the group as developing into a proxy force for Pakistan's regional interests, which the Taliban denied.[58] The Taliban started shelling Kabul in early 1995, but were driven back by Massoud.[54][60]

On 27 September 1996, the Taliban, with military support by Pakistan and financial support from Saudi Arabia, seized Kabul and founded the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. They imposed their fundamentalist interpretation of Islam in areas under their control, issuing edicts forbidding women to work outside the home, attend school, or to leave their homes unless accompanied by a male relative.[62] According to the Pakistani expert Ahmed Rashid, "between 1994 and 1999, an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 Pakistanis trained and fought in Afghanistan" on the side of the Taliban.[63][64]

Massoud and Dostum, former arch-enemies, created a United Front against the Taliban, commonly known as the Northern Alliance.[65] In addition to Massoud's Tajik force and Dostum's Uzbeks, the United Front included Hazara factions and Pashtun forces under the leadership of commanders such as Abdul Haq and Haji Abdul Qadir. Abdul Haq also gathered a limited number of defecting Pashtun Taliban.[66] Both agreed to work together with the exiled Afghan king Zahir Shah.[64] International officials who met with representatives of the new alliance, which the journalist Steve Coll referred to as the "grand Pashtun-Tajik alliance", said, "It's crazy that you have this today Pashtuns, Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazara They were all ready to buy in to the process to work under the king's banner for an ethnically balanced Afghanistan."[68] The Northern Alliance received varying degrees of support from Russia, Iran, Tajikistan and India.

The Taliban captured Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998 and drove Dostum into exile.

The conflict was brutal. According to the United Nations (UN), the Taliban, while trying to consolidate control over northern and western Afghanistan, committed systematic massacres against civilians. UN officials stated that there had been "15 massacres" between 1996 and 2001. The Taliban especially targeted the Shiite Hazaras.[69][70] In retaliation for the execution of 3,000 Taliban prisoners by Uzbek general Abdul Malik Pahlawan in 1997, the Taliban executed about 4,000 civilians after taking Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998.[71][72]

Bin Laden's so-called 055 Brigade was responsible for mass-killings of Afghan civilians.[73] The report by the United Nations quotes eyewitnesses in many villages describing "Arab fighters carrying long knives used for slitting throats and skinning people".[69][70]

By 2001, the Taliban controlled as much as 90% of the country, with the Northern Alliance confined to the country's northeast corner. Fighting alongside Taliban forces were some 28,00030,000 Pakistanis and 2,0003,000 Al-Qaeda militants.[56][73] Many of the Pakistanis were recruited from madrassas.[73] A 1998 document by the U.S. State Department confirmed that "2040 percent of [regular] Taliban soldiers are Pakistani." The document said that many of the parents of those Pakistani nationals "know nothing regarding their child's military involvement with the Taliban until their bodies are brought back to Pakistan". According to the U.S. State Department report and reports by Human Rights Watch, other Pakistani nationals fighting in Afghanistan were regular soldiers, especially from the Frontier Corps, but also from the army providing direct combat support.[59][76]

In August 1996, Bin Laden was forced to leave Sudan and arrived in Jalabad, Afghanistan. He had founded Al-Qaeda in the late 1980s to support the mujahideen's war against the Soviets, but became disillusioned by infighting among warlords. He grew close to Mullah Omar and moved Al-Qaeda's operations to eastern Afghanistan.

The 9/11 Commission in the U.S. reported found that under the Taliban, al-Qaeda was able to use Afghanistan as a place to train and indoctrinate fighters, import weapons, coordinate with other jihadists, and plot terrorist actions. While al-Qaeda maintained its own camps in Afghanistan, it also supported training camps of other organizations. An estimated 10,000 and 20,000 men passed through these facilities before 9/11, most of whom were sent to fight for the Taliban against the United Front. A smaller number were inducted into al-Qaeda.

After the August 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings were linked to bin Laden, President Bill Clinton ordered missile strikes on militant training camps in Afghanistan. U.S. officials pressed the Taliban to surrender bin Laden. In 1999, the international community imposed sanctions on the Taliban, calling for bin Laden to be surrendered. The Taliban repeatedly rebuffed these demands.

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Special Activities Division paramilitary teams were active in Afghanistan in the 1990s in clandestine operations to locate and kill or capture Osama bin Laden. These teams planned several operations, but did not receive the order to proceed from President Clinton. Their efforts built relationships with Afghan leaders that proved essential in the 2001 invasion.

During the Clinton administration, the U.S. tended to favor Pakistan and until 19981999 had no clear policy toward Afghanistan. In 1997, for example, the U.S. State Department's Robin Raphel told Massoud to surrender to the Taliban. Massoud responded that, as long as he controlled an area the size of his hat, he would continue to defend it from the Taliban.[56] Around the same time, top foreign policy officials in the Clinton administration flew to northern Afghanistan to try to persuade the United Front not to take advantage of a chance to make crucial gains against the Taliban. They insisted it was the time for a cease-fire and an arms embargo. At the time, Pakistan began a "Berlin-like airlift to resupply and re-equip the Taliban", financed with Saudi money.[80]

U.S. policy toward Afghanistan changed after the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings. Subsequently, Osama bin Laden was indicted for his involvement in the embassy bombings. In 1999 both the U.S. and the United Nations enacted sanctions against the Taliban via United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267, which demanded the Taliban surrender Osama bin Laden for trial in the U.S. and close all terrorist bases in Afghanistan.[81] The only collaboration between Massoud and the US at the time was an effort with the CIA to trace bin Laden following the 1998 bombings. The U.S. and the European Union provided no support to Massoud for the fight against the Taliban.

By 2001 the change of policy sought by CIA officers who knew Massoud was underway. CIA lawyers, working with officers in the Near East Division and Counter-terrorist Center, began to draft a formal finding for President George W. Bush's signature, authorizing a covert action program in Afghanistan. It would be the first in a decade to seek to influence the course of the Afghan war in favor of Massoud.Richard A. Clarke, chair of the Counter-Terrorism Security Group under the Clinton administration, and later an official in the Bush administration, allegedly presented a plan to incoming Bush National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice in January 2001.

A change in US policy was effected in August 2001. The Bush administration agreed on a plan to start supporting Massoud. A meeting of top national security officials agreed that the Taliban would be presented with an ultimatum to hand over bin Laden and other al-Qaeda operatives. If the Taliban refused, the US would provide covert military aid to anti-Taliban groups. If both those options failed, "the deputies agreed that the United States would seek to overthrow the Taliban regime through more direct action."[84]

Ahmad Shah Massoud was the only leader of the United Front in Afghanistan. In the areas under his control, Massoud set up democratic institutions and signed the Women's Rights Declaration.[85] As a consequence, many civilians had fled to areas under his control.[86][87] In total, estimates range up to one million people fleeing the Taliban.[88]

In late 2000, Ahmad Shah Massoud, a Tajik nationalist and leader of the Northern Alliance, invited several other prominent Afghan tribal leaders to a jirga in northern Afghanistan "to settle political turmoil in Afghanistan".[89] Among those in attendance were Pashtun nationalists, Abdul Haq and Hamid Karzai.[90][91]

In early 2001, Massoud and several other Afghan leaders addressed the European Parliament in Brussels, asking the international community to provide humanitarian help. The Afghan envoy asserted that the Taliban and al-Qaeda had introduced "a very wrong perception of Islam" and that without the support of Pakistan and Osama bin Laden, the Taliban would not be able to sustain their military campaign for another year. Massoud warned that his intelligence had gathered information about an imminent, large-scale attack on U.S. soil.[92]

On 9 September 2001, two French-speaking Algerians posing as journalists killed Massoud in a suicide attack in Takhar Province of Afghanistan. The two perpetrators were later alleged to be members of al-Qaeda. They were interviewing Massoud before detonating a bomb hidden in their video camera.[93][94] Both of the alleged al-Qaeda men were subsequently killed by Massoud's guards.

On the morning of 11 September 2001, a total of 19 Arab men carried out four coordinated attacks in the United States. Four commercial passenger jet airliners were hijacked.[95][96] The hijackers members of al-Qaeda's Hamburg cell [97] intentionally crashed two of the airliners into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing everyone on board and more than 2000 people in the buildings. Both buildings collapsed within two hours from fire damage related to the crashes, destroying nearby buildings and damaging others. The hijackers crashed a third airliner into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C.. The fourth plane crashed into a field near Shanksville, in rural Pennsylvania, after some of its passengers and flight crew attempted to retake control of the plane, which the hijackers had redirected toward Washington, D.C., to target the White House, or the U.S. Capitol. No one aboard the flights survived. According to the New York State Health Department, the death toll among responders including firefighters and police was 836 as of June 2009.[98] Total deaths were 2996, including the 19 hijackers.[98]

The United States invasion of Afghanistan occurred after the September 11 attacks in late 2001,[99] supported by allies including the United Kingdom.

U.S. President George W. Bush demanded that the Taliban hand over Osama bin Laden and expel al-Qaeda from Afghanistan. Bin Laden had been wanted by the U.N. since 1999 for the prior attack on the World Trade Center. The Taliban declined to extradite him unless the United States provided convincing evidence of his involvement in the 9/11 attacks.[38] They ignored U.S. demands to shut down terrorist bases and hand over other terrorist suspects. The request for proof of bin Laden's involvement was dismissed by the U.S. as a meaningless delaying tactic.

General Tommy Franks, then-commanding general of Central Command (CENTCOM), initially proposed immediately after the 9/11 attacks to President George W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld that the U.S. invade Afghanistan using a conventional force of 60,000 troops, preceded by six months of preparation. Rumsfield and Bush feared that a conventional invasion of Afghanistan could bog down as had happened to the Soviets and the British.[100] Rumsfield rejected Frank's plan, saying "I want men on the ground now!" Franks returned the next day with a plan utilizing Special Forces.[101] On September 26, 2001, fifteen days after the 9/11 attack, the U.S. covertly inserted members of the CIA's Special Activities Division led by Gary Schroen as part of team Jawbreaker into Afghanistan, forming the Northern Afghanistan Liaison Team.[102][103][104] They linked up with the Northern Alliance as part of Task Force Dagger.[105]

Two weeks later, Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA) 555 and 595, both 12-man Green Beret teams from 5th Special Forces Group, plus Air Force combat controllers, were airlifted by helicopter from the Karshi-Khanabad Air Base in Uzbekistan[106] more than 300 kilometers (190mi) across the 16,000 feet (4,900m) Hindu Kush mountains in zero-visibility conditions by two SOAR MH-47E Chinook helicopters. The Chinooks were refueled in-flight three times during the 11-hour mission, establishing a new world record for combat rotorcraft missions at the time. They linked up with the CIA and Northern Alliance. Within a few weeks the Northern Alliance, with assistance from the U.S. ground and air forces, captured several key cities from the Taliban.[102][107]

The U.S. officially launched Operation Enduring Freedom on 7 October 2001 with the assistance of the United Kingdom. The two were later joined by other countries.[39][40] The U.S. and its allies drove the Taliban from power and built military bases near major cities across the country. Most al-Qaeda and Taliban were not captured, escaping to neighboring Pakistan or retreating to rural or remote mountainous regions.[citation needed]

On 20 December 2001, the United Nations authorized an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), with a mandate to help the Afghans maintain security in Kabul and surrounding areas. It was initially established from the headquarters of the British 3rd Mechanised Division under Major General John McColl, and for its first years numbered no more that 5,000.[108] Its mandate did not extend beyond the Kabul area for the first few years.[109] Eighteen countries were contributing to the force in February 2002.

At the Bonn Conference in December 2001, Hamid Karzai was selected to head the Afghan Interim Administration, which after a 2002 loya jirga in Kabul became the Afghan Transitional Administration. In the popular elections of 2004, Karzai was elected president of the country, now named the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.[41]

In August 2003, NATO became involved as an alliance, taking the helm of the International Security Assistance Force.[42] One portion of U.S. forces in Afghanistan operated under NATO command; the rest remained under direct U.S. command. Taliban leader Mullah Omar reorganized the movement, and in 2003, launched an insurgency against the government and ISAF.[43][44]

After evading coalition forces throughout mid-2002, Taliban remnants gradually regained confidence and prepared to launch the Taliban insurgency that Omar had promised.[110] During September, Taliban forces began a jihad recruitment drive in Pashtun areas in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Pamphlets distributed in secret appeared in many villages in southeastern Afghanistan called for jihad.[111]

Small mobile training camps were established along the border to train recruits in guerrilla warfare.[112] Most were drawn from tribal area madrassas in Pakistan. Bases, a few with as many as 200 fighters, emerged in the tribal areas by the summer of 2003. Pakistani will to prevent infiltration was uncertain, while Pakistani military operations proved of little use.[113]

The Taliban gathered into groups of around 50 to launch attacks on isolated outposts, and then breaking up into groups of 510 to evade counterattacks. Coalition forces were attacked indirectly, through rocket attacks on bases and improvised explosive devices.

To coordinate the strategy, Omar named a 10-man leadership council, with himself as its leader.[113] Five operational zones were assigned to Taliban commanders such as Dadullah, who took charge in Zabul province.[113] Al-Qaeda forces in the east had a bolder strategy of attacking Americans using elaborate ambushes. The first sign of the strategy came on 27 January 2003, during Operation Mongoose, when a band of fighters were assaulted by U.S. forces at the Adi Ghar cave complex 25km (15mi) north of Spin Boldak.[114] 18 rebels were reported killed with no U.S. casualties. The site was suspected to be a base for supplies and fighters coming from Pakistan. The first isolated attacks by relatively large Taliban bands on Afghan targets also appeared around that time.

As the summer continued, Taliban attacks gradually increased in frequency. Dozens of Afghan government soldiers, NGO humanitarian workers, and several U.S. soldiers died in the raids, ambushes and rocket attacks. Besides guerrilla attacks, Taliban fighters began building up forces in the district of Dai Chopan in Zabul Province. The Taliban decided to make a stand there. Over the course of the summer, up to 1,000 guerrillas moved there. Over 220 people, including several dozen Afghan police, were killed in August 2003. In late August 2005, Afghan government forces attacked, backed by U.S. troops with air support. After a one-week battle, Taliban forces were routed with up to 124 fighters killed.

On 11 August 2003, NATO assumed control of ISAF.[109] On 31 July 2006, ISAF assumed command of the south of the country, and by 5 October 2006, of the east.[115] Once this transition had taken place, ISAF grew to a large coalition involving up to 46 countries, under a U.S. commander.

From January 2006, a multinational ISAF contingent started to replace U.S. troops in southern Afghanistan. The British 16th Air Assault Brigade (later reinforced by Royal Marines) formed the core of the force, along with troops and helicopters from Australia, Canada and the Netherlands. The initial force consisted of roughly 3,300 British,[116] 2,300 Canadian,[117] 1,963 Dutch, 300 Australian,[118] 290 Danish[119] and 150 Estonian troops.[120] Air support was provided by U.S., British, Dutch, Norwegian and French combat aircraft and helicopters.

In January 2006, NATO's focus in southern Afghanistan was to form Provincial Reconstruction Teams with the British leading in Helmand while the Netherlands and Canada would lead similar deployments in Orzgn and Kandahar, respectively. Local Taliban figures pledged to resist.[121]

Southern Afghanistan faced in 2006 the deadliest violence since the Taliban's fall. NATO operations were led by British, Canadian and Dutch commanders. Operation Mountain Thrust was launched on 17 May 2006, with. In July, Canadian Forces, supported by U.S., British, Dutch and Danish forces, launched Operation Medusa.

A combined force of Dutch and Australians launched a successful offensive between late April to mid July 2006 to push the Taliban out of the Chora and Baluchi areas.

On 18 September 2006 Italian special forces of Task Force 45 and airborne troopers of the 'Trieste' infantry regiment of the Rapid Reaction Corps composed of Italian and Spanish forces, took part in 'Wyconda Pincer' operation in the districts of Bala Buluk and Pusht-i-Rod, in Farah province. Italian forces killed at least 70 Taliban. The situation in RC-W then deteriorated. Hotspots included Badghis in the very north and Farah in the southwest.

Further NATO operations included the Battle of Panjwaii, Operation Mountain Fury and Operation Falcon Summit. NATO achieved tactical victories and area denial, but the Taliban were not completely defeated. NATO operations continued into 2007.

In January and February 2007, British Royal Marines mounted Operation Volcano to clear insurgents from firing-points in the village of Barikju, north of Kajaki.[122] Other major operations during this period included Operation Achilles (MarchMay) and Operation Lastay Kulang. The UK Ministry of Defence announced its intention to bring British troop levels in the country up to 7,700 (committed until 2009).[123] Further operations, such as Operation Silver and Operation Silicon, took place to keep up the pressure on the Taliban in the hope of blunting their expected spring offensive.[124][125]

In February 2007, Combined Forces Command-Afghanistan inactivated. Combined Joint Task Force 76, a two-star U.S. command headquartered on Bagram Airfield, assumed responsibility as the National Command Element for U.S. forces in Afghanistan.[126] Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, or CSTC-A, the other two-star U.S. command, was charged with training and mentoring the Afghan National Security Forces.

On 4 March 2007, U.S. Marines killed at least 12 civilians and injured 33 in Shinwar district, Nangrahar,[127] in a response to a bomb ambush. The event became known as the "Shinwar massacre".[128] The 120 member Marine unit responsible for the attack were ordered to leave the country by Army Major General Frank Kearney, because the incident damaged the unit's relations with the local Afghan population.[129]

Later in March 2007, the US added more than 3,500 troops.

On 12 May 2007, ISAF forces killed Mullah Dadullah. Eleven other Taliban fighters died in the same firefight.

During the summer, NATO forces achieved tactical victories at the Battle of Chora in Orzgn, where Dutch and Australian ISAF forces were deployed.

On 16 August, eight civilians including a pregnant woman and a baby died when Polish soldiers shelled the village of Nangar Khel, Paktika Province. Seven soldiers have been charged with war crimes.

On 28 October about 80 Taliban fighters were killed in a 24-hour battle in Helmand.[130]

Western officials and analysts estimated the strength of Taliban forces at about 10,000 fighters fielded at any given time. Of that number, only 2,000 to 3,000 were highly motivated, full-time insurgents. The rest were part-timers, made up of alienated, young Afghans, angered by bombing raids or responding to payment. In 2007, more foreign fighters came than ever before, according to officials. Approximately 100 to 300 full-time combatants are foreigners, usually from Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Chechnya, various Arab countries and perhaps even Turkey and western China. They were reportedly more fanatical and violent, often bringing superior video-production or bombmaking expertise.[131]

On 2 November security forces killed a top-ranking militant, Mawlawi Abdul Manan, after he was caught crossing the border. The Taliban confirmed his death.[132] On 10 November the Taliban ambushed a patrol in eastern Afghanistan. This attack brought the U.S. death toll for 2007 to 100, making it the Americans' deadliest year in Afghanistan.[133]

The Battle of Musa Qala took place in December. Afghan units were the principal fighting force, supported by British forces.[134] Taliban forces were forced out of the town.

Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that while the situation in Afghanistan is "precarious and urgent", the 10,000 additional troops needed there would be unavailable "in any significant manner" unless withdrawals from Iraq are made. The priority was Iraq first, Afghanistan second.[135]

In the first five months of 2008, the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan increased by over 80% with a surge of 21,643 more troops, bringing the total from 26,607 in January to 48,250 in June.[136] In September 2008, President Bush announced the withdrawal of over 8,000 from Iraq and a further increase of up to 4,500 in Afghanistan.[137]

In June 2008, British prime minister Gordon Brown announced the number of British troops serving in Afghanistan would increase to 8,030 a rise of 230.[138] The same month, the UK lost its 100th serviceman.[139]

On 13 June, Taliban fighters demonstrated their ongoing strength, liberating all prisoners in Kandahar jail. The operation freed 1200 prisoners, 400 of whom were Taliban, causing a major embarrassment for NATO.[140]

On 13 July 2008, a coordinated Taliban attack was launched on a remote NATO base at Wanat in Kunar province. On 19 August, French troops suffered their worst losses in Afghanistan in an ambush.[141] Later in the month, an airstrike targeted a Taliban commander in Herat province and killed 90 civilians.

Late August saw one of NATO's largest operations in Helmand, Operation Eagle's Summit, aiming to bring electricity to the region.[142]

On 3 September, commandos, believed to be U.S. Army Special Forces, landed by helicopter and attacked three houses close to a known enemy stronghold in Pakistan. The attack killed between seven and twenty people. Local residents claimed that most of the dead were civilians. Pakistan condemned the attack, calling the incursion "a gross violation of Pakistan's territory".[143][144]

On 6 September, in an apparent reaction, Pakistan announced an indefinite disconnection of supply lines.[145]

On 11 September, militants killed two U.S. troops in the east. This brought the total number of U.S. losses to 113, more than in any prior year.[146] Several European countries set their own records, particularly the UK, who suffered 108 casualties.[22]

In November and December 2008, multiple incidents of major theft, robbery, and arson attacks afflicted NATO supply convoys in Pakistan.[147][148][149] Transport companies south of Kabul were extorted for money by the Taliban.[149][150] These incidents included the hijacking of a NATO convoy carrying supplies in Peshawar,[148] the torching of cargo trucks and Humvees east of the Khyber pass[151] and a half-dozen raids on NATO supply depots near Peshawar that destroyed 300 cargo trucks and Humvees in December 2008.[152]

An unnamed senior Pentagon official told the BBC that at some point between 12 July and 12 September 2008, President Bush issued a classified order authorizing raids against militants in Pakistan. Pakistan said it would not allow foreign forces onto its territory and that it would vigorously protect its sovereignty.[153] In September, the Pakistan military stated that it had issued orders to "open fire" on U.S. soldiers who crossed the border in pursuit of militant forces.[154]

On 25 September 2008, Pakistani troops fired on ISAF helicopters. This caused confusion and anger in the Pentagon, which asked for a full explanation into the incident and denied that U.S. helicopters were in Pakistani airspace.

A further split occurred when U.S. troops apparently landed on Pakistani soil to carry out an operation against militants in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province. 'Pakistan reacted angrily to the action, saying 20 innocent villagers had been killed by US troops'.[155] However, despite tensions, the U.S. increased the use of remotely piloted drone aircraft in Pakistan's border regions, in particular the Federally Administered Tribal Regions (FATA) and Balochistan; as of early 2009, drone attacks were up 183% since 2006.[156]

By the end of 2008, the Taliban apparently had severed remaining ties with al-Qaeda.[157] According to senior U.S. military intelligence officials, perhaps fewer than 100 members of al-Qaeda remained in Afghanistan.[158]

In a meeting with General Stanley McChrystal, Pakistani military officials urged international forces to remain on the Afghan side of the border and prevent militants from fleeing into Pakistan. Pakistan noted that it had deployed 140,000 soldiers on its side of the border to address militant activities, while the coalition had only 100,000 soldiers to police the Afghanistan side.[159]

In response to the increased risk of sending supplies through Pakistan, work began on the establishment of a Northern Distribution Network (NDN) through Russia and Central Asian republics. Initial permission to move supplies through the region was given on 20 January 2009, after a visit to the region by General David Petraeus.[160] The first shipment along the NDN route left on 20 February from Riga, Latvia, then traveled 5,169km (3,212mi) to the Uzbek town of Termez on the Afghanistan border.[161] In addition to Riga, other European ports included Poti, Georgia and Vladivostok, Russia.[162] U.S. commanders hoped that 100 containers a day would be shipped along the NDN.[161] By comparison, 140 containers a day were typically shipped through the Khyber Pass.[163] By 2011, the NDN handled about 40% of Afghanistan-bound traffic, versus 30% through Pakistan.[162]

On 11 May 2009, Uzbekistan president Islam Karimov announced that the airport in Navoi (Uzbekistan) was being used to transport non-lethal cargo into Afghanistan. Due to the still unsettled relationship between Uzbekistan and the U.S. following the 2005 Andijon massacre and subsequent expulsion of U.S. forces from Karshi-Khanabad airbase, U.S. forces were not involved in the shipments. Instead, South Korea's Korean Air, which overhauled Navoi's airport, officially handled logistics.[164]

Originally only non-lethal resources were allowed on the NDN. In July 2009, however, shortly before a visit by new President Barack Obama to Moscow, Russian authorities announced that U.S. troops and weapons could use the country's airspace to reach Afghanistan.[165]

Human rights advocates were (as of 2009) concerned that the U.S. was again working with the government of Uzbekistan, which is often accused of violating human rights.[166] U.S. officials promised increased cooperation with Uzbekistan, including further assistance to turn Navoi into a regional distribution center for both military and civilian ventures.[167][168]

In January, about 3,000 U.S. soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 10th Mountain Division moved into the provinces of Logar and Wardak. Afghan Federal Guards fought alongside them. The troops were the first wave of an expected surge of reinforcements originally ordered by President Bush and increased by President Obama.[169]

In mid-February, it was announced that 17,000 additional troops would be deployed in two brigades and support troops; the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade of about 3,500 and the 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, a Stryker Brigade with about 4,000.[170] ISAF commander General David McKiernan had called for as many as 30,000 additional troops, effectively doubling the number of troops.[171] On 23 September, a classified assessment by General McChrystal included his conclusion that a successful counterinsurgency strategy would require 500,000 troops and five years.[172]

In November, Ambassador Karl W. Eikenberry sent two classified cables to Washington expressing concerns about sending more troops before the Afghan government demonstrates that it is willing to tackle the corruption and mismanagement that has fueled the Taliban's rise. Eikenberry, a retired three-star general who in 20062007 commanded U.S. troops in Afghanistan, also expressed frustration with the relative paucity of funds set aside for development and reconstruction.[173] In subsequent cables, Eikenberry repeatedly cautioned that deploying sizable American reinforcements would result in "astronomical costs" tens of billions of dollars and would only deepen the Afghan government's dependence on the United States.

On 26 November, Karzai made a public plea for direct negotiations with the Taliban leadership. Karzai said there is an "urgent need" for negotiations and made it clear that the Obama administration had opposed such talks. There was no formal US response.[174][175]

On 1 December, Obama announced at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point that the U.S. would send 30,000 more troops.[176] Antiwar organizations in the U.S. responded quickly, and cities throughout the U.S. saw protests on 2 December.[177] Many protesters compared the decision to deploy more troops in Afghanistan to the expansion of the Vietnam War under the Johnson administration.[178]

On 4 September, during the Kunduz Province Campaign a devastating NATO air raid was conducted 7 kilometres southwest of Kunduz where Taliban fighters had hijacked civilian supply trucks, killing up to 179 people, including over 100 civilians.[179]

On 25 June US officials announced the launch of Operation Khanjar ("strike of the sword").[180] About 4000 U.S. Marines from the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade[181] and 650 Afghan soldiers[182] participated. Khanjar followed a British-led operation named Operation Panther's Claw in the same region.[183] Officials called it the Marines' largest operation since the 2004 invasion of Fallujah, Iraq.[181] Operation Panther's Claw was aimed to secure various canal and river crossings to establish a long-term ISAF presence.[184]

See the article here:
War in Afghanistan (200114) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irn – Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Para el verbo "Ir" conjugado en futuro de la tercera persona del plural, vase drae:ir. Jomhuriye Eslmiye Irn Repblica Islmica de Irn Lema: . . (en persa: Independencia, Libertad, Repblica Islmica) Himno: Sorud-e Mell-e Yomhur-e Eslam-e Irn

Irn, cuyo nombre oficial es Repblica Islmica de Irn (en persa, , transliterado omhuri Eslmi Irn, y pronunciado Yomhur-e Eslam-e Irn), es un Estado de Oriente Medio y Asia Occidental. Desde el I milenioa.C. hasta 1935 fue conocido en Occidente como Persia, aunque hoy en da este nombre sigue siendo vlido y aceptado junto con el de Irn. Limita con Pakistn y Afganistn por el este; Turkmenistn por el noreste, el mar Caspio por el norte y Azerbaiyn y Armenia por el noroeste; Turqua e Irak por el oeste y finalmente con la costa del golfo Prsico y el golfo de Omn por el sur.

Es el decimoctavo pas ms extenso del mundo con 1 648 195 km, Irn tiene una poblacin de casi 80 millones de personas de diversas etnias.[3] Es un pas con una importancia significativa en la geopoltica al encontrarse entre Oriente Prximo y Asia Central. Tehern es la capital, adems de ser el centro poltico, industrial, comercial y cultural del pas. Irn es una potencia regional[4][5] al que sus grandes reservas de hidrocarburos (cuartas reservas de petrleo y primeras de gas a nivel mundial)[6] confieren una situacin de superpotencia energtica en potencia y le reportan desde hace dcadas una sustancial renta petrolera.

La diversidad tnica del pueblo de Irn, tales como persa, kurdo, turco, lor, rabe, turcomano y balochi, entre otros, forman parte de la cultura iran y han proporcionado un atractivo especial a este amplio territorio.

Irn, junto a Irak, es el hogar de las civilizaciones ms antiguas.[7] Las primeras dinastas conocidas en el oeste de Irn son las de Elam, desde 2800 a. C. Los medos formaron el primer imperio que abarc el Gran Irn en 625 a. C.[8] Estos fueron sucedidos por el Imperio aquemnida, helenizado por los selecidas tras la conquista por Alejandro Magno y recentrado despus en referencias autctonas por los sucesivos imperios de los partos arscidas y los sasnidas. Los musulmanes la conquistan en el 651 d. C., con el resultado de la difusin de la lengua persa por toda la Meseta iran y de distintos aspectos de la cultura iran a lo largo del mundo islmico.

En 1501 el surgimiento de la dinasta Safav produjo la sustitucin del islam sun, hasta entonces mayoritario, por el chiismo duodecimano como religin oficial del reino, adems de una intensa persecucin de la mayor parte de cofradas sufes desarrolladas tras la invasin mongola del siglo XII. Bajo el gobierno de Nader Shah, iniciado en 1736, Irn alcanz su mayor extensin territorial desde la poca sasnida.[9] Durante el siglo xix, Irn perdi grandes cantidades de territorio en la Guerra ruso-persa (18041813) al Imperio ruso en el Cacaso.[10][11] A principios del siglo xx, la Revolucin Constitucional de 1906 estableci la primera asamblea legislativa del pas (y del continente asitico), sometiendo el poder monrquico a una constitucin. En 1953, el primer ministro Mosaddeq que haba nacionalizado el petrleo dos aos antes, fue derrocado por un golpe de estado, orquestado por Reino Unido y Estados Unidos, lo que permiti al Sha Reza Pahlevi tener un mayor poder sobre el gobierno nacional. La monarqua lleg a su fin en 1979, mediante una revolucin popular que deriv en una contrarrevolucin islamista, al terminar siendo liderada por islamistas, dirigidos por Jomeini, lo que dio lugar al establecimiento de una repblica islmica el 1 de abril de 1979.[12][8] En 2015 se firm el Plan de Accin Conjunto y Completo con los P5+1 sobre el programa nuclear de Irn.[13]

Irn es miembro fundador de Naciones Unidas, Movimiento de Pases No Alineados, Organizacin para la Cooperacin Islmica y OPEP. El sistema poltico de Irn est basado en la Constitucin de la Repblica Islmica de 1979, que regula las relaciones entre los distintos rganos de gobierno. La mxima autoridad estatal es el Lder Supremo de Irn, aunque la direccin cotidiana de la administracin corre a cargo del presidente. La religin y la lengua oficiales del pas son, respectivamente, el Islam chi duodecimano y el persa.[14]

El nombre Irn es un cognado de ario,[15] y significa tierra de los arios.[16][17] El topnimo aparece por primera vez en los textos avsticos bajo la forma Aryn vaa, referido a una regin que suele ubicarse en Asia Central.[18] Desde la poca sasnida se registran las voces rnahr y rn, que perviven tal cual hasta el siglo xxi d. C. en distintos dialectos orientales del persa y de las que la segunda est atestada ya en una inscripcin del siglo iii a. C., junto a un texto paralelo en parto en el que aparece el etnnimo aryn, ya con el significado de arios, iranios o iranes.[19]

Irn presenta vestigios de ocupacin humana ya desde la Edad de piedra. Durante el Neoltico se desarroll un proceso de sedentarizacin, produccin estable de alimentos y establecimiento de rutas de intercambio de corta distancia. La Edad del Cobre, caracterizada por la aparicin de elementos de cobre y cermica pintada en Susiana (sudoeste de Irn) y en Sialk (centro-oeste), se extiende en Irn a lo largo del IV milenioa.C. Comienzan a surgir asentamientos urbanos, en un proceso regional que se desarrolla entre Anatolia, Mesopotamia, el Complejo Arqueolgico de Bactria-Margiana y la Cultura del valle del Indo.

A comienzos del III milenioa.C. aparece en Susa una forma de escritura, posiblemente derivada del sistema sumerio para representar la lengua elamita. El Imperio elamita del sudoeste de Irn compite con los imperios vecinos de Babilonia y Asiria. A partir del 2000a.C. los medos y los persas, pueblos arios o indoeuropeos, comenzaron a desplazarse desde las llanuras del sur de Rusia y Asia Central hacia Europa y Asia. A mediados del siglo VIIa.C., grupos de tribus iranias identificadas como medos, establecidos al norte y noroeste de Irn, se libran del yugo asirio, estableciendo su poder sobre la regin. Gracias a Cixares y Astiages se acaba con el podero asirio, tomando Nnive en 612a.C. y fundando el primer imperio iranio. De ese mismo perodo son las fuentes que mencionan a Ciro I, rey de Anshan.

El dominio meda, no obstante, fue breve, gracias a la labor emprendida por un noble persa de la familia Aquemnida, Ciro (555-529a.C.), rey de Anshan, quien unific a los persas, someti a los medos y conquist Babilonia, Siria, el Levante mediterrneo y Asia Menor. Su labor de conquista fue continuada por su hijo y sucesor, Cambises (530-522), quien se anexion Egipto y marc la mxima extensin del Imperio aquemnida, configurando el mayor imperio hasta entonces conocido en el Prximo Oriente.

El esplendor del Imperio persa viene marcado por la figura de Daro I (522-486). Se dedic fundamentalmente a organizar el extenso imperio heredado a travs de satrapas. Elabor una red de caminos con los que se pretenda unir las diversas partes del imperio, el ms famoso de los cuales es el Camino Real de Susa a Sardes, y tambin palacios y monumentos en las capitales: Susa y Perspolis. Convirti en religin oficial el mazdesmo. Con l comenz tambin el declive del Imperio aquemnida, al emprender una lucha contra los griegos que se conocera como las guerras mdicas y que continuaron sus sucesores: Jerjes I, Artajerjes I, Daro II, Artajerjes II y Daro III. Las continuas derrotas de los persas culminaron con la invasin en 334a.C. y fin del propio imperio por Alejandro Magno (336a.C.). A su muerte, los sucesores o Didocos se repartieron sus territorios, y pas a Seleuco I Nictor (300a.C.).

Los selucidas gobernaron durante una poca de gran debilidad, tanto externa como interna. El declive del imperio selucida fue aprovechado por la dinasta arscida de Partia, que gobern el antiguo Irn a partir del ao 250a.C. Los partos (Parni) eran un pueblo de origen septentrional, que construyeron un imperio a partir de la regin a orillas del mar Caspio. En los cuatro siglos siguientes, los partos defendieron el territorio de la antigua Persia frente a los romanos, al tiempo que funcion como intermediario entre Roma y China. En 226 surge el Imperio sasnida (226-652) que luch a lo largo de los siglos contra los romanos, los bizantinos y las tribus que lo acosaban desde Asia Central. Slo la invasin rabe del siglo VII, en plena expansin del Islam, pudo ponerle fin con la derrota del ltimo sah, Yazdgard III.

A mediados del siglo VII, concretamente en el ao 636d.C. (14 de la Hgira), se produjo la conquista de Irn por los musulmanes rabes. Los califas de Damasco y primeros abbases fueron tolerantes hacia las antiguas religiones, perdurando en Persia las creencias zoroastrianas, monofisitas y nestorianas. Tendencias contrarias a Damasco (chiismo, jariyismo, encontraron su amparo en la meseta irania, y acabaron interviniendo en la revuelta de 747 contra los omeyas. Los nuevos califas de Bagdad dependieron cada vez ms de sus jefes militares, persas primero y turcos despus. Amplias zonas de Persia escaparon a su control, constituyndose en reinos independientes. Las revueltas contra el poder central fueron especialmente intensas en el Jorasn, cuyo primer reino independiente fue establecido por Tahir ibn Husayn, prncipe de Nishapur, de Jorasn y de Kermn (822). La primera dinasta en Jorasn, despus de la introduccin del Islam, fue la dinasta saffar (861-1003). Los Samanes (875-999), tambin oriundos del Jorasn, gobernaron extensos territorios, desde el mar de Aral al ocano ndico y el golfo Prsico. Los Buyes (932-1055) son una dinasta fundada por un prncipe persa de sangre real prximo a los chiitas; reinaron en Persia occidental, llegando luego a Bagdad, hasta Fars y Kermn. Gobernador de Jorasn era el un turco que se sublev contra el califa en 961 y fund en Ghazna (Afganistn) un imperio que se extendi hacia el Jorasn iran.

Los buyes de Persia se vieron conquistados por los turcos selycidas que hacia el ao 1000 invadieron el Jorasn y el Irak. En 1092, a la muerte del sultn, Persia se convirti en reino independiente gobernado por uno de los hijos del sultn. Un siglo despus (1190), los Jorezmitas fundaron un imperio iranio sobre Persia oriental hasta Afganistn. Los jorezmitas, como el resto de Persia, fue conquistado por los mongoles de Gengis Kan (1220), fundndose el kanato de Persia (o "Iljanato"). Los ejrcito mongoles de Tamerln asolaron Persia en 1380-1385. Los Timures gobernaron entre 1370 y 1506.

El siglo XVI fue el de la independencia con la dinasta safav o sefvida. Tiene su origen en las rdenes religiosas sufes (msticos chiitas) de las montaas de Azerbaiyn. Organizaron su estado en torno al santuario de Ardabil, cerca del mar Caspio. Ismail, su jefe, se proclam sah en el ao 1501. El reino sefvida consolid definitivamente la diferencia entre los persas y el resto de los musulmanes, al consagrar la preeminencia del chiismo dentro de Irn. De esta dinasta, cabe destacar el reinado de Abs el Grande (1587-1629).

En 1794 los Zand fueron apartados del poder por Agha-Mohamed-Khan, quien inaugur el perodo kadjar o kayar de Persia. Los kayares gobernaron en Persia desde 1786 hasta 1925. A lo largo del siglo XIX, Persia se vio sometida a las influencias de Rusia y el Imperio britnico, que luchaban entre s por ser la potencia hegemnica al tiempo que modernizaban el pas. En 1907 se lleg a un acuerdo anglo-ruso para diferenciar entre zonas de influencia de uno y otro.

En el ao 1925 subi al poder Reza Pahlav, jefe militar de ideologa nacionalista. En 1941 Reza Pahlav abdic en su hijo Mohammad Reza Pahlav. Tras la Segunda Guerra Mundial se intensific el movimiento nacionalista. En 1953, el primer ministro Mohammad Mosaddeq, fue expulsado del poder al intentar nacionalizar los recursos petrolferos, en un golpe de estado orquestado por britnicos y estadounidenses a travs de su embajada y denominada (Operacin Ajax). El sah, con el apoyo de los Estados Unidos y el Reino Unido empez la modernizacin de la industria del pas, y al mismo tiempo elimin toda oposicin a su rgimen con la ayuda de la agencia de Inteligencia SAVAK.

El descontento popular estall en enero de 1978 con manifestaciones en contra del sah.[20] El sah huy de Irn en enero de 1979, al tiempo que Ruhollah Jomeini volva del exilio. Irn se convirti en Repblica islmica el 1 de abril de ese mismo ao. Las relaciones con los Estados Unidos se volvieron antagnicas cuando estudiantes de Irn entraron y capturaron al personal de la embajada de este pas y los catalogaron como espas y ligados con la CIA para derrocar al ayatol como hicieron con Mosaddeq en 1953.[21] El 23 de septiembre de 1980 estall la guerra entre Irn e Irak, despus de que este ltimo pas denunciara el tratado fronterizo de 1975; acab en 1988. Ese mismo ao, en 1988, el rgimen islmico ejecut en secreto a miles de prisioneros polticos, entre miembros del PMOI y militantes izquierdistas del Fedaian y el Tudeh (Partido Comunista); Amnista Internacional document la ejecucin de 4482 prisioneros, mientras que la oposicin lo cifra en hasta 30000 personas.[22] Al ao siguiente muri Jomeini, sucedindole Al Jamenei como jefe de estado.

En 2002, el presidente de los Estados Unidos George W. Bush incluy a Irn en el llamado eje del mal, aludiendo a que, segn l, es un estado que apoya el terrorismo. La sospecha de que su programa nuclear iran pueda tener fines militares ha llevado a un enfrentamiento entre Irn y los pases occidentales.

Las elecciones presidenciales de 2009, oficialmente ganadas por el presidente saliente Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, fueron contestadas por las oposiciones que llegaron a imponentes manifestaciones por parte de los simpatizantes de su rival electoral, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, probablemente las mayores despus de la revolucin de 1979. A partir del conflicto, en junio de 2009 se inform de que empresas alemanas en Irn huyeron tras los disturbios.[23]

A lo largo de 2011 tuvieron lugar una serie de acontecimientos que tensaron an ms las relaciones entre Irn (por un lado) y EE. UU., Israel y la UE (por otro). La Repblica Islmica acus al Mossad y a EE. UU. de estar detrs de una serie de ataques algunos mortales contra fsicos que trabajaban en su programa nuclear. Por su parte, a principios de diciembre del mismo ao, EE. UU. acus a Irn de haber intentado asesinar en Washington al embajador de Arabia Saud, algo que Irn neg categricamente y que algunos analistas polticos internacionales calificaron como una "burda" operacin estadounidense. A este conflicto sigui la cada de un vehculo areo no tripulado estadounidense en territorio iran, que EE. UU. explic a causa de un fallo tcnico, mientras que Irn aseguraba que haba sido abatido por sus tropas y acusaba a la Casa Blanca de espionaje. La negativa por parte iran a devolver los restos del mismo dieron otra vuelta de tuerca a las malas relaciones entre ambos pases.[24] Desde Israel, adems, el Primer Ministro Benjamn Netanyahu estuvo ejerciendo presin sobre EE. UU., la UE y su propio ejrcito para atacar las instalaciones nucleares iranes.[25]

Desde la Revolucin Islmica de 1979 y tras siete dcadas de monarqua constitucional, el estado iran adopta la forma de repblica islmica, de acuerdo con la constitucin de 1979. El sistema abarca varios rganos directivos conectados intrincadamente. El lder Supremo de Irn es responsable de la delineacin y de la supervisin de las polticas generales del estado.[26] El lder es comandante en jefe de las fuerzas armadas y controla las operaciones de inteligencia y la seguridad del estado. Tiene la potestad de declarar la guerra, as como de designar y despedir al jefe del poder judicial, del rgano de radiotelevisin estatal y al mximo comandante del Ejrcito de Guardianes de la Revolucin Islmica.[26] Designa a seis de los doce miembros del Consejo de Guardianes. El cargo de lder puede ser desempeado por un alfaqu desde 1989, Seyyed Al Jamene o por un directorio de los mismos, designados por la Asamblea de Expertos en Liderazgo, elegida por sufragio universal y habilitada para destituir al lder o lderes.[26]

Despus del lder, el presidente de la repblica es el funcionario de mayor rango del pas.[26][27] Es el responsable de que la constitucin sea obedecida. Es, adems, el jefe del gobierno de Irn. Ha de notarse que a diferencia de lo sucedido en otros pases, no es el jefe de las fuerzas armadas.

Segn la ley, todos los candidatos presidenciales deben ser aprobados por el Consejo de Guardianes antes de que formalicen su candidatura. Una vez confirmados como candidatos, el presidente es elegido por mayora absoluta en sufragio universal para un mandato de cuatro aos.[27] Despus de su eleccin, el presidente designa y supervisa el consejo de ministros, coordina las decisiones gubernamentales, y selecciona las medidas gubernamentales que expone al Parlamento. Ocho vicepresidentes sirven debajo del presidente, as como un gabinete de 21 ministros, el cual, debe ser aceptado por el Parlamento.

El parlamento Iran es unicameral,[28] la Asamblea Consultiva Islmica est conformada por 290 miembros, elegidos para un periodo de cuatro aos.[28] Son elegidos por voto directo y secreto, en candidaturas individuales. Establece la legislacin, ratifica tratados internacionales, y aprueba el presupuesto del pas. Toda la legislacin de la asamblea debe ser ratificada por el Consejo de Guardianes, que acta en este sentido como una cmara alta.[29] Una prerrogativa constitucional establece cinco escaos para representantes elegidos entre integrantes de las minoras religiosas no islmicas reconocidas: cristianos, judos y zoroastrianos, lo que les da una representatividad poltica cercana al 1,5% que representan. Los sunes votan junto al resto de la poblacin. Las candidaturas al parlamento requieren la aprobacin del Consejo de Guardianes.

La Asamblea de los Expertos, que tiene sesiones semanales, se compone de 86 clrigos "virtuosos y doctos" elegidos por sufragio universal para un periodo de ocho aos. Igualmente que en las elecciones presidenciales y parlamentarias, el Consejo de Guardianes determina elegibilidad para candidatura en esta asamblea.[30] Los miembros de la Asamblea de Expertos asimismo eligen al Lder Supremo dentro de sus propios miembros y lo reconfirman peridicamente.[30] Nunca se ha sabido que la asamblea desafe una decisin del Lder. Doce miembros forman el Consejo de Guardianes, seis de los cuales son clrigos designados por el Lder. El jefe de la judicatura recomienda los seis restantes, que han de ser alfaques juristas especializados en derecho islmico, y son nombrados oficialmente por el Parlamento. El Consejo de Guardianes est investido con la potestad de interpretar la constitucin y determinar si las leyes aprobadas por el Parlamento estn en lnea con la constitucin y con la Sharia (ley islmica). Por lo tanto el Consejo puede ejercer veto sobre el Parlamento. Si una ley aprobada por el Parlamento se juzga incompatible con la Constitucin o con la Shara, se remite de nuevo al Parlamento para su revisin. El Consejo tambin examina a los candidatos presidenciales, parlamentarios y de la Asamblea de Expertos, para confirmar que son aptos para postular una candidatura.

Creado por el ayatol Jomeini en 1988, el Consejo de Discernimiento del Inters del Estado tiene la autoridad para mediar conflictos entre el parlamento y el Consejo de Guardianes. El Consejo de Discernimiento opera tambin, segn la ley fundamental, como organismo consultivo del lder supremo, hacindole uno de los cuerpos de gobierno de ms alcance del pas, por lo menos en nombre.

El jefe de la judicatura es designado por el lder, que a su vez designa al presidente del Tribunal Supremo y al procurador pblico principal.

Los tribunales pblicos ven los casos civiles y penales. Hay tambin un Tribunal de la Revolucin que juzga ciertas categoras de delitos, como crmenes contra la seguridad nacional, contrabando de narcticos y actos contra la Repblica Islmica. Las sentencias emitidas en estos tribunales son definitivas e inapelables.

Las sentencias del Tribunal Especial del Clero, que funciona con independencia del marco judicial regular y que responde solamente ante el lder, son tambin definitivas e inapelables. Este Tribunal Administrativo Especial atiende las denuncias de delitos imputados a clrigos, aunque tambin ha visto casos que implicaban a laicos[citarequerida].

Las Fuerzas Armadas de Irn, compuesto por:

En materia de derechos humanos, respecto a la pertenencia en los siete organismos de la Carta Internacional de Derechos Humanos, que incluyen al Comit de Derechos Humanos (HRC), Irn ha firmado o ratificado:

Las violaciones de los derechos humanos en Irn se centran en la ausencia de libertad de expresin, de libertad de reunin, de libertad de culto, del derecho a la informacin, del derecho a la debida defensa en juicio, la tortura y la pena capital. En Irn se producen detenciones arbitrarias y ejecuciones sumarias, la situacin en las crceles es catastrfica. Las fuerzas de seguridad cometen graves abusos a los derechos humanos y el poder judicial lo avala. Las manifestaciones o protestas callejeras son reprimidas aunque sean pacficas. No existe el derecho de reunin ni de pensamiento. Se encarcela a los opositores polticos, a los periodistas que no apoyan al gobierno de turno, a activistas sociales y defensores de los derechos humanos, a polticos y a abogados.

La pena capital es aplicada tanto a adultos como a menores de edad, a delincuentes comunes como a usuarios de drogas, periodistas, blogeros o usuarios de las redes sociales. El gobierno bloquea los sitios web e interfiere las comunicaciones con el exterior.

Las mujeres y las minoras raciales o religiosas son ciudadanos de segunda. Existe un estricto cdigo de vestimenta y se encarcela a las mujeres que no lo cumplen. Se realizan lapidaciones de mujeres por atentar contra el honor. Las minoras sexuales son perseguidas. En el ndice global de brecha de gnero realizado en 2015 por el Foro Econmico Mundial, Irn ocupa el puesto 137 de 140 pases.[41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57]

Irn se divide en treinta provincias (ostn), cada una gobernada por un gobernador designado (, ostndr) por el ministro del Interior. Las provincias se dividen en los condados (shahrestn), y se subdividen en distritos (bakhsh) y distritos secundarios (dehestn).

Se trata de un pas dominado por la meseta irania, rodeada por diversas cadenas montaosas, como los montes Zagros (en el suroeste) y los Elburz (en el Norte), encontrndose en esta ltima el Damavand a 5610 m, punto ms alto del pas. Las principales llanuras son las que estn a lo largo de la costa del mar Caspio (depresin aralo-cspica) y la depresin mesopotmica en el golfo Prsico junto a la frontera con Irak en Arvandrud (Chat-el-Arab). Iran pertenece al continente de Asia.

Tiene clima continental desrtico o seco. Todo Irn es rido o semirido, excepto en la costa del mar Caspio donde domina un clima subtropical. Los principales ros de Irn son el Sefid-Rud, el Karun y el Hilmand. Las principales ciudades son Tehern (la capital), Tabriz, Mashhad, Esfahn, Shiraz, Abadn, Ahwaz y Kermanshah.

La explotacin del petrleo en el siglo XX ha provocado que tanto la extraccin del crudo, su refino y la elaboracin de productos derivados, sea la principal fuente de riqueza del moderno Irn.[58] Actualmente Irn posee una amplia variedad de tecnologa propia, con fbricas de automviles, tractores y maquinaria en general.

La mayor parte de la poblacin vive de un sector primario autosuficiente. Predomina la ganadera ovina, con el fin de obtener lana para la elaboracin de alfombras persas. Los terrenos agrcolas se dedican a cereales (como el trigo), el algodn y el tabaco. El sector servicios y comercial est representado por empresas privadas de pequeo tamao.[59]

Al ao 2007, Irn tiene una poblacin de 65.397.000 habitantes.[60] La esperanza de vida es de 70 aos. El 79,4% de la poblacin est alfabetizada. El promedio de hijos por mujer es de 1,71.

Casi dos tercios de la poblacin habla alguna lengua indoirania, aunque la nica oficial es el persa, escrito en un alfabeto rabe modificado. tnicamente el 61% son persas, 9% kurdos y el 2% baluches. Dentro del grupo trquico destacan los azeres (24%) y los turkmenos (2%), pero tambin hay rabes (3%), armenios, judos tnicos, y asirios. En las escuelas se ensea el rabe, por ser la lengua en que est escrito el Corn.

La mayora son musulmanes: 89% chiitas, la religin oficial del estado y un 9% sunnitas. Entre las religiones minoritarias destacan la Fe bah', el zoroastrismo, el judasmo y el cristianismo.

En la Antigedad haba religiones politestas en Irn, en el siglo viii a. C. se inicia el zoroastrianismo o mazdesmo, que es hecho religin oficial en el siglo vi. En 636 d. C. la zona es conquistada por los rabes y la religin oficial pasa a ser el islam. La dinasta Safav iniciada en 1501, unifica al pas e instaura como religin oficial del pas el islam chi duodecimano, que sigue sindolo en el siglo xxi.

La Cultura de Irn es una mezcla entre la cultura preislmica y la cultura islmica. La cultura iran probablemente se origin en Asia Central, teniendo su origen en la Cultura de Andronovo 2000a.C. La cultura iran ha tenido durante mucho tiempo un lugar preponderante en la cultura Medio Oriental y de Asia Central, con el persa considerado el idioma de los intelectuales durante gran parte del II milenio. Durante la poca Sasnida, Irn influy en la cultura China, la India y la civilizacin romana considerablemente.[61] Esta influencia desempe un papel prominente en la formacin del arte medieval de asiticos y europeos.[62] Esta influencia se expandi en el mundo islmico. Gran parte de lo que ms tarde pas a denominarse aprendizaje Islmico, tales como la filologa, la literatura, la jurisprudencia, la filosofa, la medicina, la arquitectura y las ciencias se basan en algunas de las prcticas adoptadas por los Sasnidas y persas.[63][64][65]

El arte del imperio aquemnida se vio influido por el egipcio y el caldeoasirio. Se concreta en construcciones de gran monumentalidad, como los grandes palacios reales, entre los que cabe citar el de Ciro en Susa o los de Daro y Jerjes en Perspolis. Tambin cabe citar las tumbas reales, como el sepulcro de Ciro o las tumbas excavadas en la roca. Esta arquitectura se ve ornamentada con escultura, tanto estatuas como bajorrelieves. De los caldeoasirios tomaron los persas la escritura cuneiforme y las representaciones de animales mitolgicos. Combinaron el ladrillo mesopotmico con materiales ms duraderos como la piedra; y usaron igualmente el sistema arquitrabado propio de los egipcios junto con el arco y la bveda. En estos palacios pueden verse las apadanas o salas de ceremonias hipstilas, con elevadas columnas rematadas en capitel formado por dos troncos de toro. Destacan los revestimientos de ladrillos esmaltados polcromos o cermica vidriada, entre los que el ms conocido es el llamado "friso de los Arqueros" o "de los Inmortales" del palacio de Susa; cabe mencionar igualmente el "friso de los portadores de ofrendas" del palacio de Perspolis, y el puente de Davazdah cheshmeh en la ciudad histrica de Amol.

En poca helenstica y romana (siglo IV a. C.-siglo III d. C.) se dej sentir la influencia griega. Es posteriormente, en poca sasnida, cuando se retoman los temas irnicos y en especial se impulsaron las artes menores como la cermica. Cuando en el siglo VII la meseta de Irn pas a dominio rabe, el arte islmico resultante conserv rasgos iranios que lo diferenciaban del arte que se estaba haciendo en Siria: la arquitectura sigui siendo ornamentada como en poca sasnida, se emplearon materiales como el ladrillo o el adobe y se sigui recurriendo a la bveda. Dentro de la arquitectura islmica persa destaca la Mezquita Azul de Tabriz y el palacio de Ispahn.

Al caer Persia bajo el dominio mongol, llegaron influencias del Extremo Oriente, y cobr as auge la miniatura, con especial influencia china; la miniatura persa alcanzara su mximo esplendor en el siglo siguiente. Tambin el tejido tuvo un gran desarrollo. El arte persa influy ms all de la meseta irania, contribuyendo directamente al esplendor de Samarcanda (en el actual Uzbekistn), donde trabajaron artistas persas, esta influencia puede verse, por ejemplo, en la decoracin en cermica vidriada, en los altos tambores que sostienen las cpulas o los mocrabes de los prticos de entrada. Como arquitectura moderna, construida en el siglo xx se puede citar el Monumento Azadi.

La lengua persa evolucion a lo largo del tiempo. En persa antiguo avstico, lengua irania relacionada con el snscrito, se escribi el Zend Avesta de Zoroastro (aproximadamente, siglo VII a. C. o siglo VI a. C.), que combina poesa con normas de Derecho. El persa pahlevi se desarrolla entre el siglo III y el VII. La conquista rabe hace que a partir del siglo vii se use esta lengua. Sin embargo, el renacimiento de una lengua nacional se produce a partir del siglo X. Se trata del neo-persa, en el que escribieron los grandes poetas medievales persas como Rudaki, Firdusi, Hafiz Shirazi, Saadi y Omar Jayyam. En rabe, destaca la figura del pensador Algacel.[65][66]

Despus de la islamizacin de Irn, rituales islmicos han penetrado en la cultura iran. El ms notable de ellos es la conmemoracin de Husayn ibn Ali. Cada ao en el Da de Ashura la mayora de los iranes, incluidos los armenios y los zorostricos participan en el duelo por los mrtires de la batalla de Karbala. La vida cotidiana en el Irn moderno est estrechamente interrelacionadas con el Chiismo y el arte, la literatura y la arquitectura del pas son un siempre presente recordatorio de su profunda tradicin nacional y de una ms amplia cultura literaria. El nuevo ao iran (Nowruz) es una antigua tradicin que se celebra el 21 de marzo para marcar el comienzo de la primavera en Irn. Tambin se celebra en Afganistn, la Repblica de Azerbaiyn, Uzbekistn, Turkmenistn, Tayikistn, Kazajistn y anteriormente tambin en Georgia y Armenia. Tambin es celebrado por los kurdos de Iraq y Anatolia.[67] El Nowruz fue nominado por la Unesco como una de las Obras Maestras del Patrimonio Oral e Inmaterial de la Humanidad en 2004.[68]Internet es popular entre la juventud iran, lo que ha convertido a Irn en el cuarto pas con ms blogueros en el mundo.[69]

El cine iran ha prosperado en el moderno Irn, y varios directores iranes han recibido reconocimiento mundial por su trabajo. Pelculas Iranes han ganado ms de trescientos premios en los ltimos veinticinco aos. Uno de los ms conocidos directores es Abbas Kiarostami. Los medios de comunicacin de Irn son una mezcla de empresas privadas y de propiedad estatal, pero los libros y las pelculas deben ser aprobados por el Ministerio de Cultura y Orientacin Islmica antes de ser liberados al pblico. En los ltimos aos, el cine iran se ha convertido en una expresin de libertad y arte a travs de la cual los ciudadanos pueden expresar sus ideas. Un ejemplo de esto es la pelcula Esto no es una pelcula dirigida por Jafar Panahi que logra mostrar las condiciones que se vive en la repblica Persa, sin perder la creatividad y el humor.

Con dos tercios de la poblacin por debajo de los 25 aos, los iranes practican una gran cantidad de deportes, tanto tradicionales como modernos. Irn es el lugar de nacimiento del polo.[70] y el Varzesh-e Pahlavani. La lucha libre ha sido reconocida tradicionalmente como el deporte nacional, aunque el deporte ms popular es el ftbol, cuya seleccin nacional ha participado en la Copa Mundial de Ftbol tres veces y ganado la Copa Asitica tres veces tambin. Clasific a jugar la Copa Mundial de Ftbol en Brasil, en el 2014, en el que result sorteada con las selecciones de Argentina, Bosnia y Nigeria. Irn se convirti en el primer pas de Oriente Medio en alojar los Juegos Asiticos en 1974. Este pas es hogar de establecimientos nicos de esqu, con el complejo alojado en la montaa Tochal como el quinto complejo de esqu ms grande del mundo (3730 msnm), el cual est localizado a slo quince minutos de Tehern. Ya que es un pas montaoso, Irn es un lugar apropiado para practicar el senderismo, la escalada[71] y el montaismo.[72][73]Voleibol en Irn desde 2011, lleg a ser ms popular. Maravillas Hecho de la Liga Mundial en 2013 y la Copa del Mundo de 2014, tambin subieron.

Merinero Martin, Mara Jess:Irn 2005-2013. De Ahmadineyad a Rohani.Madrid, Editorial Sntesis, 2014

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Eric Holder: Black Panther case focus demeans ‘my people …

Attorney General Eric Holder finally got fed up Tuesday with claims that the Justice Department went easy in a voting rights case against members of the New Black Panther Party because they are African American.

Holder's frustration over the criticism became evident during a House Appropriations subcommittee hearing as Rep. John Culberson (R-Texas) accused the Justice Department of failing to cooperate with a Civil Rights Commission investigation into the handling of the 2008 incident in which Black Panthers in intimidating outfits and wielding a club stood outside a polling place in Philadelphia.

The Attorney General seemed to take personaloffense at a comment Culberson read in which former Democratic activist Bartle Bull called the incident the most serious act of voter intimidation he had witnessed in his career.

"Think about that," Holder said. "When you compare what people endured in the South in the 60s to try to get the right to vote for African Americans, and to compare what people were subjected to there to what happened in Philadelphiawhich was inappropriate, certainly thatto describe it in those terms I think does a great disservice to people who put their lives on the line, who risked all, for my people," said Holder, who is black.

Holder noted that his latesister-in-law, Vivian Malone Jones, helped integrate the University of Alabama.

"To compare that kind of courage, that kind of action, and to say that the Black Panther incident wrong thought it might be somehow is greater in magnitude or is of greater concern to us, historically, I think just flies in the face of history and the facts.," Holder said with evident exasperation.

In a series of questions and comments earlier in the hearing, Culbersoninsisted that race had infected the decision-making process."Theres clearly evidence, overwhelming evidence, that your Department of Justice refuses to protect the rights of anybody other than African Americans to vote," the Texas Republican said. "There's a pattern of a double standard here."

I would disagree very vehemently with the notion that theres overwhelming evidence that that is in fact true, Holder replied. This Department of Justice does not enforce the law in a race-conscious way.

Rep. Chaka Fattah, a Democrat from Philadelphia, said the Black Panthers "should not have been there." But he said the GOP was making too much out of a fleeting incident involving a couple of people.

"Themost unethical thing a personcan do is make allegations basedon absolutely nothing," Fattah said. "The only issue of race is singling out this particular decision...That this rises to national significance is bogus on its face."

UPDATE: This post has been updated with minor changes to the syntax of some quotes.

Josh Gerstein is a senior reporter for POLITICO.

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Eric Holder: Black Panther case focus demeans 'my people ...

Democracy | Scholastic.com

Democracy is a form of government in which a substantial proportion of the citizenry directly or indirectly participates in ruling the state. It is thus distinct from governments controlled by a particular social class or group or by a single person. In a direct democracy citizens vote on laws in an assembly, as they did in ancient Greek city-states and do today in New England towns. In an indirect democracy citizens elect officials to represent them in government; representation is typical of most modern democracies. Today the essential features of democracy, as understood in the Western world, are that citizens be sufficiently free in speech and assembly, for example to form competing political parties and that voters be able to choose among the candidates of these parties in regularly held elections.

Origins of Democracy The term democracy is derived from the Greek words demos ("the people") and kratia ("rule"). The first democratic forms of government developed in the Greek city-states during the 6th century B.C. Although demos is sometimes said to mean just "the poor," Aristotle's Constitution of Athens shows that in Athens all citizens, rich and poor, participated fully in government; minors, women, slaves, and foreigners, however perhaps 90 percent of the population were not citizens.

Greek democratic institutions collapsed under the imperial onslaught first of Macedonia and later of Rome. Republican Rome had popular assemblies (comitia), in which the citizens met to elect officials and make laws. The comitia lost their powers, however, first to the aristocratic Roman Senate and ultimately to the Roman emperors. Democratic ideas did not reappear on a significant scale until the 17th century. The barbarian invasions and the fall of Rome in the 5th century A.D. produced a European society that was primarily concerned with security rather than with democratic institutions. This gave rise to the rigidly hierarchical systems of feudalism and manorialism. Political attitudes were, moreover, shaped by the powerful Christian church, which taught, in effect, that existing institutions had divine sanction.

Representation. Nonetheless, the Middle Ages saw the establishment of rudimentary representative bodies that began to lay the foundation for the later development of democratic institutions. The medieval kings claimed divine authority to rule, but they relied on their principal baronial vassals for practical advice, rendered in council. Gradually, the councils claimed more than advisory powers, and their membership was expanded to include elected representatives from the knightly and burgher classes. This was the genesis of the modern legislature. The British Parliament traces its history directly back to such an institution, and the development of political democracy in Britain can be measured, first, by the gradual assertion of parliamentary supremacy over the hereditary monarch and, second, by the even more gradual transformation of Parliament into a fully representative body (that is, a body elected by the entire adult population on the basis of one person, one vote). In the English Civil War of the 17th century, Parliament briefly won full supremacy over the crown, but it vigorously rejected the constitution proposed by a radical and unsuccessful group known as the Levellers, which called for universal male suffrage, fair representation, and the abolition of noble privilege.

Popular Sovereignty. The Levellers were far in advance of their time, but a philosopher of the same century, John Locke, articulated a theory of government that was to be seminal in democratic development. Locke argued that the political state is created by a social contract in which individuals give up their personal right to interpret the laws of nature in return for a guarantee that the community (or state) protect their natural rights of life, liberty, and property. If the state does not fulfill that guarantee, the people have the right to overthrow the government. This idea of popular sovereignty was taken a step further by Jean Jacques Rousseau, who argued that the only legitimate state was one based on the "general will" of the people. Unfortunately, the general will has been difficult to identify in practice; thus this element of Rousseau's thinking has also been viewed as the basis of modern totalitarianism, in which a dictator interprets the general will.

The Lockean tradition was reflected in the Declaration of Independence, which presented the colonists' philosophical justification for the American Revolution and reflected the ideas of Locke and Rousseau; the new United States of America became the first modern democratic state. The same ideas, but with more radical assertions of social as well as political equality, nourished the French Revolution of 1789. France, however, did not achieve real democracy until the Third Republic (18701940). During the 19th century democratic forms of government also developed in Britain where the Reform Acts of 1832, 1867, and 1884 greatly expanded parliamentary suffrage and in the self-governing British colonies of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, as well as in Switzerland, Scandinavia, and the Low Countries.

All other modern democracies are the product of the 20th century; beginning then, most states called themselves democratic. Many such governments, however, rule in the name of the people without allowing real popular participation. During most of the 20th century this was true in the Communist world, where Marxist-Leninist theorists rejected Western-style democracy as the creation of capitalism. They argued that true democracy is impossible without full economic and social equality, which can only be achieved by overthrowing the capitalist class and establishing a dictatorship of the proletariat. The Soviet Union the most important Communist state collapsed as party theorists abandoned at the end of the 1980s the rigid positions they had held in the past. (A wide range of political groups evolved in the new Russia, although the new parties still had to contend with a lingering authoritarianism.) Communist China remains firmly antidemocratic. In some countries, however, such as Italy and France, Communists have joined at times with other socialists in working toward their goals through democratic institutions.

Democratic Ideals and Practice An increase in popular participation in government has often come about because the ruling group sees political advantage in it. For example, when Cleisthenes created Athenian democracy about 510 B.C., he was apparently packing the assembly with new voters. In the United States several major expansions of the electorate occurred for similar reasons: Jeffersonian Republicans eliminated property qualifications to win the votes of the very poor; Republicans passed (1870) the 15th Amendment (on black voting) to win blacks' votes in southern and border states; progressive reformers in the early 20th century pushed for women's suffrage, expecting that women, more frequently than men, would support humanitarian causes such as temperance; and Republicans and Democrats vied with each other in the 1950s and s to promote black voting in the South in order to win black votes.

Not every expansion of the electorate is so consciously self-serving, however. In colonial America, participation widened almost by accident. Most colonies initially adopted the traditional English property qualification for voting: the 40-shilling freehold. This represented an income that was very high in late medieval times and still fairly high in the 17th century. By 1776, inflation and prosperity had enabled the vast majority of adult males to qualify as electors. In the 20th century some countries, such as Turkey and India, greatly expanded their electorates as an incidental consequence of the decision to adopt democratic forms. In the latter cases, democracy was adopted because it represented an ideal.

The Ideal of Justice. Democracy has attracted support from the time of ancient Greece until today because it represents an ideal of justice as well as a form of government. The ideal is the belief that freedom and equality are good in themselves and that democratic participation in ruling enhances human dignity. The ideal and the practice of democracy are inseparably linked because rulers subject to voter approval are more likely to treat the voters justly. For example, in the United States during the 1920s many blacks moved from the South, where they could not vote, to the North, where they could and did. In the 1930s this black vote became critical for both major political parties, and they began to emphasize civil rights. As a result both of Supreme Court decisions and of partisan politics, southern blacks obtained voting rights and civil rights. The oppression established in the South in the 1880s has thus been almost eliminated, not simply because of the ideal of justice but because the blacks became part of the political system. Although full racial equality has not yet been achieved, political participation has encouraged the fair treatment of a minority.

Freedom and Faction. The vote itself is not enough to guarantee that oppression will be eliminated. Many modern dictatorships, both of the left and of the right, require almost all adults to vote; yet dissident voices are nevertheless suppressed. For participation to be an effective method or a feasible ideal, it must be accompanied by political liberty. As James Madison wrote in The Federalist, "Liberty is to faction as air is to fire." The freedoms that promote faction are important not only as high moral ideals but also as a method of realizing democracy.

Almost all traditional freedoms (freedom of speech, freedom of religion, economic freedom) were gained as a result of factional disputes within oligarchical governments. They were extended by persons in office who expected, if and when they left office, to be persecuted by their successors. As factions grew in size, the liberties were gradually extended to the whole electorate and thereby became protections for democratic political parties and freely organized elections.

For example, the speaker at the opening of late medieval English Parliaments petitioned the king to grant members the privilege of not being prosecuted for anything they said in Parliament. As a result, factions flourished within Parliament, but not outside. During the English Civil War censorship and prosecution for assembly were removed, and parliamentary free speech was extended to the general public. Since then, free speech, although not always practiced, has been regarded as an essential element of democratic liberty. Similarly, habeas corpus, a writ ordering the release of a prisoner held illegally or without having been charged, was originally enacted in 1679 in order to get Whigs out of jail.

Freedom of religion and economic freedom, now usually considered ends in themselves, also originated in the protection of factions. Religious sects were themselves the main political factions in the European wars of the 16th and 17th centuries, and their secular leaders were the most likely to be severely persecuted in defeat. Economic freedom, the privilege of having, keeping, and inheriting property, is protected in the provision against forfeiture for treason in the U.S. Constitution (1787) and is emphasized as a democratic liberty in the American Bill of Rights (1789) and in the French Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789). It has an obvious relation to faction and freedom in general: if governments can seize property without compensation, then dissenters may lose their basis of economic support. Such confiscation by modern collectivist dictatorships has undoubtedly helped them eliminate effective opposition. Although democratic governments do take private property, as in the use of eminent domain or nationalization, restrictions have been placed on the excessive use of such power through the application of due process of law.

Equality, another ancient ideal, is inseparable from the democratic method. The right to vote means little unless votes are equal and voters have the same influence. Thus equality of treatment under the law is, like freedom, both an ideal and a method of democracy. Some theorists would add equality of resources, or at least equality of opportunities, to the ideal characteristics of democracy. Such goals, however, conflict with the ideal of economic freedom and certainly cannot be taken as a defining characteristic of democracies as they now exist.

Difficulties of Democracy Democracies are not easy to establish or to maintain. Because two sets of rulers are required, one to govern and the other to take over when the first set loses an election, democracy is expensive. Some societies seem too poor to afford the luxury of leaders-in-reserve. In the modern world, moreover, democracy requires almost universal literacy, which is also expensive. The worst defect of democracy is that politicians are under constant pressure from the lobbyists of special-interest groups to support particular public policies. Because their future depends on winning elections, and because elections are won by attracting marginal voters, politicians seek the support of marginal voters who belong to such groups by promising to vote for legislation they favor. This weights the legislative process in favor of interest groups, especially the well organized and well funded. The sum of the benefits granted to these groups may be more than the society can afford. These kinds of expenses have contributed to the downfall of democratic governments as happened in various regions in the second half of the 20th century. Democracy thus lost can sometimes be regained, however, as the history of Latin America, in particular, demonstrates. Many newly emerging democratic nations are threatened by ethnic or religious tensions and lack the basic institutions on which a democracy depends, contributing to chronic instability.

William H. Riker

Bibliography: Bickford, Susan, The Dissonance of Democracy: Listening, Conflict, and Citizenship (1996); Cammack, Paul A., Capitalism and Democracy in the Third World (1997); Diamond, Larry, and Plattner, M. F., The Global Resurgence of Democracy (1993); Elshtain, J. B., Democracy on Trial (1995); Gellner, Ernst, Conditions of Liberty (1994); Hodge, Carl C., All of the People, All of the Time: American Government at the End of the Century (1997); LeDuc, Lawrence, et al., eds., Comparing Democracies: Elections and Voting in Global Perspective (1996); Lipsitz, Lewis, and Speak, D. M., American Democracy, 3d ed. (1993); Pridham, Geoffrey, et al., Building Democracy? The International Dimension of Democratisation in Eastern Europe (1997); Putnam, R. D., Making Democracy Work (1995); Snyder, Jack, From Voting to Violence: Democratization and Nationalist Conflict (2000); Vanhanen, Tatu, Prospects of Democracy: A Study of 172 Countries (1997).

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Democracy | Scholastic.com