Ismail Khan: Difference between revisions

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'''Ismail Khan''' is an Afghan regional leader, whose base has been centered around [[Herat]] city and province in the West. He is significant as being one of the Afghan leaders closest to Iran, although he has demonstrated some moves not in Iran's favor. A [[Dari]]-speaking [[Tajik]], he led the 1979 revolt against the Communist-friendly Taraki government's land reform, in which Soviet advisers and families were killed, triggering an intense Afghan-Soviet response that killed up to  24,000 Heratis and destroyed most of the city. He remained respected in the area and was considered to run a reasonably competent administration.<ref name=Johnson>{{citation
'''Ismail Khan''' is an Afghan regional leader, whose base has been centered around [[Herat]] city and [[Herat Province]] in the West. He is significant as being one of the Afghan leaders closest to Iran, although he has demonstrated some moves not in Iran's favor. A [[Dari]]-speaking [[Tajik]], he led the 1979 revolt against the Communist-friendly Taraki government's land reform, in which Soviet advisers and families were killed, triggering an intense Afghan-Soviet response that killed up to  24,000 Heratis and destroyed most of the city. He remained respected in the area and was considered to run a reasonably competent administration.<ref name=Johnson>{{citation
  | title = Ismail Khan, Herat, and Iranian Influence
  | title = Ismail Khan, Herat, and Iranian Influence
  | journal = Strategic Insights, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School
  | journal = Strategic Insights, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School

Revision as of 20:13, 10 May 2009

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Ismail Khan is an Afghan regional leader, whose base has been centered around Herat city and Herat Province in the West. He is significant as being one of the Afghan leaders closest to Iran, although he has demonstrated some moves not in Iran's favor. A Dari-speaking Tajik, he led the 1979 revolt against the Communist-friendly Taraki government's land reform, in which Soviet advisers and families were killed, triggering an intense Afghan-Soviet response that killed up to 24,000 Heratis and destroyed most of the city. He remained respected in the area and was considered to run a reasonably competent administration.[1]

He fought the Taliban but was defeated and escaped to Iran in 1995. In the Afghanistan War (2001-), he joined the Northern Alliance and was part of defeating the Taliban.[2] The U.S. fired cruise missiles at his headquarters in January 2002.

He became governor of Herat, a powerful post, but was removed in 2004 by President Hamid Karzai, who made him national Minister of Energy.[3]

References

  1. Thomas H. Johnson (July 2004), "Ismail Khan, Herat, and Iranian Influence", Strategic Insights, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School III (7)
  2. Ahmed Rashid (2000), Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia, Yale University Press, ISBN 0300089023, p. 37
  3. Peter Bergen (May 5, 2009), "Commentary: Afghan leader holding strong cards", CNN