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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A seven page paper which looks at foreign relations between the USA and Afghanistan in the past and currently, with specific reference to US foreign policy regarding the Afghan government, international terrorism, bin Laden and the ramifications which the recent terrorist attacks have had in terms of American relations with both East and West.
Bibliography lists 6 sources
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JL2Usfp.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
way in which the USSR and Afghanistan have interacted in recent years. For example, there is a long history of antagonism between the two superpowers which were primarily in evidence
during the Cold War, and which has had a salient effect on the way that the USA regards Russian political and military action in other countries. In 1986, for example,
the US began supplying military aid to the Afghani Mujaheddin in order to aid them in their conflict with Soviet forces; however, two years later both the US and the
USSR signed peace agreements with regard to Afghanistan and Soviet troops in the country were withdrawn; this was in line with other diplomatic moves initiated by Gorbachevs government, and which
helped to bring about the demise of the old USSR and the beginnings of more cordial relations between East and West as a whole. However, the
situation in Afghanistan, from a domestic point of view, was not significantly alleviated by the fact that the USA and USSR were no longer seen to be directly involved in
its political and military affairs. Civil war continued and there was continued conflict between rival factions, resulting in severe damage to the countrys infrastructure and a considerable increase in the
flow of refugees into neighboring countries such as Iran and Pakistan. The factional conflict eventually resulted in the fundamentalist Taliban taking control of the southern part of the country with
the more liberal Alliance movement retaining the north. This is itself had a significant effect on the majority of the population who did not subscribe to the Talibans religious and
social policies and were forced to succumb to the imposition of a strict and fundamentalist regime. Since the late 1990s, American foreign policy towards Afghanistan
...