Proper nounAfghanistan
From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License. The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan is a landlocked country in south-central Asia. It is bordered by Pakistan in the south and east, Iran in the west, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in the north, and China in the far northeast. In addition; India claims a border with Afghanistan at the Wakhan corridor as part of its claim on the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Kashmir currently controlled by Pakistan. The territories now comprising Afghanistan have been an ancient focal point of the Silk Road and human migration. The land is at an important geostrategic location, connecting East, South, West and Central Asia, and has been home to various peoples through the ages. The region has been a target of various invaders since antiquity, including by Alexander the Great, the Mauryan Empire, Muslim armies, and Genghis Khan, and has served as a source from which many kingdoms, such as the Greco-Bactrians, Kushans, Samanids, Ghaznavids, Ghurids, Timurids, and many others have risen to form empires of their own. The political history of Afghanistan begins in the 18th century with the rise of the Pashtun tribes (known as Afghans in Persian), when in 1709 the Hotaki dynasty established its rule in Kandahar and, more specifically, when Ahmad Shah Durrani created the Durrani Empire in 1747 which became the forerunner of modern Afghanistan. Its capital was shifted in 1776 from Kandahar to Kabul and most of its territories ceded to neighboring empires by 1893. In the late 19th century, Afghanistan became a buffer state in "The Great Game" between the British and Russian empires. On August 19, 1919, following the third Anglo-Afghan war, the country regained independence from the United Kingdom over its foreign affairs. Since the late 1970s Afghanistan has experienced a continuous state of civil war punctuated by foreign occupations in the forms of the 1979 Soviet invasion and the October 2001 US-led invasion that overthrew the Taliban government. In December 2001, the United Nations Security Council authorized the creation of an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) to help maintain security and assist the Karzai administration. The country is being rebuilt slowly with support from the international community and dealing with a strong Taliban insurgency. Origin of the nameThe first part of the name, "Afghan", is, at least since the 16th century AD, the Persian alternative name for the Pashtuns who are the founders and the largest ethnic group of the country. According to W. K. Frazier Tyler, M. C. Gillet and several other scholars "the word Afghan first appears in history in the Ḥudūd al-ʿĀlam in 982 AD." Al-Biruni referred to Afghans as various tribes living on the western frontier mountains of the Indus River, which would be the Sulaiman Mountains. A Moroccan traveller, Ibn Battuta, visiting Kabul in 1333 writes: We travelled on to Kabul, formerly a vast town, the site of which is now occupied by a village inhabited by a tribe of Persians called Afghans. However, it is unknown whether these historical Afghans were identical with the Pashtuns. Summarizing the available information, the Encyclopædia Iranica states: From a more limited, ethnological point of view, "Afghān" is the term by which the Persian-speakers of Afghanistan (and the non-Paštō-speaking ethnic groups generally) designate the Paštūn. The equation [of] Afghan [and] Paštūn has been propagated all the more, both in and beyond Afghanistan, because the Paštūn tribal confederation is by far the most important in the country, numerically and politically. It further explains: The term "Afghān" has probably designated the Paštūn since ancient times. Under the form Avagānā, this ethnic group is first mentioned by the Indian astronomer Varāha Mihira in the beginning of the 6th century CE in his Brihat-samhita. By the 17th century AD, it seems that the Pashtuns themselves began using the term as an ethnonym - a fact that is supported by traditional Pashto literature, for example, in the writings of the 17th-century Pashto poet Khushal Khan Khattak: Pull out your sword and slay any one, that says Pashtun and Afghan are not one! Arabs know this and so do Romans: Afghans are Pashtuns, Pashtuns are Afghans! The last part of the name, -stān is an ancient Iranian languages suffix for "place", prominent in many languages of the region. The term "Afghanistan", meaning the "Land of Afghans", was mentioned by the 16th century Mughal Emperor Babur in his memoirs, referring to the territories south of Kabul that were inhabited by Pashtuns (called "Afghans" by Babur). Until the 19th century the name was only used for the traditional lands of the Pashtuns, while the kingdom as a whole was known as the Kingdom of Kabul, as mentioned by the British statesman and historian Mountstuart Elphinstone. Other parts of the country were at certain periods recognized as independent kingdoms, such as the Kingdom of Balkh in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. With the expansion and centralization of the country, Afghan authorities adopted and extended the name "Afghanistan" to the entire kingdom, after its English translation had already appeared in various treaties between the British Raj and Qajarid Persia, referring to the lands subject to the Pashtun Barakzai Dynasty of Kabul. "Afghanistan" as the name for the entire kingdom was mentioned in 1857 by Friedrich Engels. It became the official name when the country was recognized by the world community in 1919, after regaining full independence over its foreign affairs from the British, and was confirmed as such in the nation's 1923 constitution. From Wikipedia under the
GNU Free Documentation License My husband is flying back from afghanistan and I wanted to track his flight? Q. My hubby is flying back into the country and I wanted to track his flight, is there another website besides flightstats that i can use to help track the flight? I don't have much to go on, all I know is that he is leaving from Kabul Afghanistan and arriving in Dallas. I know that there will be several stops in different countries but I don't know how to go about finding out where they will be. Can anyone help me? Asked by munkeymee - Wed May 14 22:47:14 2008 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments A. you cant my wife tried when i came back but it didnt work Answered by rock_n_rye_ninja - Wed May 14 22:51:32 2008 How is opium harvested legally for pain medication, and is it harvested in Afghanistan legally for medicine? Q. A lot of people are prescribed pain pills in America that contain opium, and doctors use morphine a lot in emergency rooms for people in a lot of pain. Is part of the war in Afghanistan over the legal production of opiates? I've heard the poppy flower/plant is mostly grown in Afghanistan. Asked by ghost - Sat Dec 19 11:07:21 2009 - - 3 Answers - 1 Comments A. Opium is found in common poppy plants, and even poppy seeds you find on muffins and begals have a small amount of opium in them (not enough to get you "high", but enough to register in a drug test if you eat enough of them). Some species contain higher concentration of opium than other. If you are properly licensed by the government, you are allowed to grow and manufacture these drugs for pharmaceutical use only. The war in Afghanistan and the use of opium for pharmaceutical drugs have no correlation to each other. Answered by Mutt - Sat Dec 19 13:02:50 2009 How much would a paratrooper in the British army serving in Afghanistan be paid while on tour?
Q. How much would a paratrooper(private rank) in the British army serving in Afghanistan be paid after while on tour? Asked by Dean H - Wed Apr 1 13:44:02 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. Private, Pay Level 1 is 1,352 PCM... Plus any allowances ect, but really not much more than light role, mech on PL1 ect Answered by Santa In Your Panties - Thu Apr 2 13:09:32 2009 From Yahoo Answer Search: "afghanistan" US army suicide rate exceeds national average - Financial Times
Fri, 30 Jul 2010 01:56:29 GMT+00:00 Financial Times The US military has been stretched thin by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, with many troops being sent on four or five war-zone deployments since 2001, ... Poor leadership, not repeat deployments blamed for rise in Army suicides MiamiHerald.com Army suicides linked to risky behavior, lax discipline USA Today Army: Rising suicide rate reflects risk-taking The Associated Press CBS News - AFP - Wall Street Journal Worth the read: on a Republican Congress and schools in Afghanistan - Rochester City Newspaper (blog)
Thu, 29 Jul 2010 14:07:01 GMT+00:00 Rochester City Newspaper (blog) Kristof cites the expense of our war in Afghanistan and notes that we'd be far better off spending that money where it would really help: on schools. ... Afghanistan copter crash kills 2 US service members - Los Angeles Times
Thu, 22 Jul 2010 16:44:04 GMT+00:00 copter crash kills 2 US service members Los Angeles Times American military deaths in Afghanistan are running at the highest level of the nine-year war. A record 60 US service members were killed last month, ... Helicopter Crash in Afghanistan Kills 2 Coalition Members Voice of America Afghanistan : 6 Police Officers Beheaded New York Times Nato helicopter crashes in Afghanistan , killing two BBC News Xinhua - The Associated Press - New York Daily News From Google News Search: "afghanistan" miss afghanistan jpg
602px x 400px | 53.20kB [source page] T iadvacetileta Vida Samadzaiova reprezentuje poprve v historii Afghanistan na sout i Miss Zem ktera se kona ve filipinske Manile Finale je planovano na 9 listopadu TK AP Afghanistan 08 jpg
525px x 351px | 186.60kB [source page] A convoy of refugees crossing the border from Afghanistan to Pakistan fleeing the US led bombing campaign 8 11 Woman walking in Afghanistan jpg
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Soeren Kern hu, 29 Jul 2010 07:20:13 GM The leaking of a massive cache of classified Pentagon documents on the war in . Afghanistan. has been on the front pages of newspapers and magazines across Europe. Although there have been many sensational headlines, the overall media ... Afghanistan : Taliban 'hunting down informants' (Thanks to ...
JackBlood Fri, 30 Jul 2010 17:33:41 GM Earlier this week, Wikileaks published 9000 documents mostly reports detailing operations by American and other allied forces in . Afghanistan. between 2004 and 2009. The website is threatening to publish thousands more documents. ... Missing Sailor's Body Found in Afghanistan Liveshots
Conor Powell ue, 27 Jul 2010 11:41:26 GM KABUL- The body of one of the two US sailors missing in . Afghanistan. has been found, according to. From Google Blog Search: "afghanistan" Afghanistan is a country in Asia. Sourced
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