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- 1991_in_Afghanistan abstract "See also: 1990 in Afghanistan and 1992 in Afghanistan.President Mohammad Najibullah, whom the U.S. government predicted would not last the summer when Soviet troops pulled out of Afghanistan in February 1989, continues to rule his war-wracked nation from a precarious position. A Moscow-brokered plan calls for Najibullah to step aside in favor of Prime Minister Khaliqyar, who would serve as a transitional administrative leader until a new government could be elected. However, on October 13 moderate guerrilla officials in Pakistan highlight the remaining obstacles to peace by withdrawing their support for Khaliqyar. The mujaheddin say his association with Najibullah makes him unacceptable. Afghanistan is like a maimed patient after 13 years of civil war. The streets of Kabul are full of one-legged men, victims of land mines. The government says it has released more than 19,000 prisoners in the past four years and has abolished the special tribunals set up to try those accused of political crimes. Meanwhile, fierce fighting continues between government troops and the Muslim guerrillas. The guerrillas launch their long-planned assault on Najibullah's hometown, the garrison town of Gardez in southeastern Afghanistan, and coordinate a series of attacks aimed at demoralizing the Afghan Army and destabilizing the government, but none of the attacks is decisive. In 1991 the guerrillas control 6 of Afghanistan's 31 provinces. In their only major gain during the year, they overrun a series of government-held garrisons to gain control of strategic areas along the border with the breakaway Soviet republics of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan. They also hold the narrow corridor linking Afghanistan with China.".
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- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageRevisionID "667441398".
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink 1990_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink 1992_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink 5,000_meters.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink 5000_metres.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Abdul_Rahim_Hatif.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Afghan_records_in_athletics.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Afghan_refugees.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Burhanuddin_Rabbani.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Category:1991_by_country.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Category:1991_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Category:1991_in_Asia.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Years_of_the_20th_century_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Fazal_Haq_Khaliqyar.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Mohammad_Najibullah.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink President_of_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink San_Diego.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink San_Diego,_California.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Sibghatullah_Mojaddedi.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLink Waheed_Karim.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLinkText "1991 in Afghanistan".
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageWikiLinkText "1991".
- 1991_in_Afghanistan hasPhotoCollection 1991_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Years_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan subject Category:1991_by_country.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan subject Category:1991_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan subject Category:1991_in_Asia.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan subject Category:Years_of_the_20th_century_in_Afghanistan.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan type Article.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan type Article.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan comment "See also: 1990 in Afghanistan and 1992 in Afghanistan.President Mohammad Najibullah, whom the U.S. government predicted would not last the summer when Soviet troops pulled out of Afghanistan in February 1989, continues to rule his war-wracked nation from a precarious position. A Moscow-brokered plan calls for Najibullah to step aside in favor of Prime Minister Khaliqyar, who would serve as a transitional administrative leader until a new government could be elected.".
- 1991_in_Afghanistan label "1991 in Afghanistan".
- 1991_in_Afghanistan sameAs Q4587225.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan sameAs Q4587225.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan wasDerivedFrom 1991_in_Afghanistan?oldid=667441398.
- 1991_in_Afghanistan isPrimaryTopicOf 1991_in_Afghanistan.