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Balkh

This ancient town served as headquarters for Alexander the Great for two years after his invasion in 328 BC—inevitably, he renamed it Alexandria after himself. During a campaign to subdue the northern tribes threatening Balkh, Alexander married a loc...

Categories: Balkh


Bamian

Though horribly vandalized by the Taliban, Bamian remains one of the most extraordinary sites in Afghanistan. It was once world famous as an ancient center of Buddhist learning, and in its heyday (from the fifth to eighth centuries AD), the valley bo...

Categories: Bamian


Band-I-Amir

The barren Band-i-Amir region offers deep blue lakes set amid treeless desert and hills at an elevation of 9,800 ft/3,000 m. Up to two days could be spent exploring the area, probably in a sturdy four-wheel-drive vehicle. 125 mi/200 km west of Kabul.

Categories: Band-I-Amir


Begram

This out-of-the-way place was once known as Kapissa, capital of the Kushan (Indo-Greek) kings. Sights include the remains of a fort built by Alexander the Great. A number of other sites are waiting to be excavated. It's now home to the largest U.S. a...

Categories: Begram


Ghazni

Ghazni was one of the most powerful capitals in the world during the time of the Ghaznevid Empire, which stretched from the Tigris to the Ganges. Today Ghazni is not very large, but it does have a fabulous minaret shaped like a double star, as well a...

Categories: Ghazni


Herat

The country's third-largest city, Herat was once occupied by Alexander the Great. Enormous defensive walls and earthworks remain from ancient times. Destroyed in the early 13th century by Genghis Khan, it was later rebuilt. Although much of the old t...

Categories: Herat


Jalalabad

This ancient walled town guards the western end of the Khyber Pass. A playground for the rich and famous of the ancient world, Jalalabad continued to serve as a resort for the wealthy during the winter—Afghanistan's reinstated king once had a palace ...

Categories: Jalalabad


Kabul

Set atop a plateau nearly 6,000 ft/1,825 m high in the Hindu Kush mountain range, 3,000-year-old Kabul once rated at least a three-night stay. Today, the arid capital city is not much more than ruins. Thousands of missiles fell on the city during the...

Categories: Kabul


Kandahar

Kandahar, the nation's second-largest city, is considered to be the birthplace of modern Afghanistan. Virtually all of this 200-year-old city was destroyed during the battles of the last 20 years. Muhammad's Sacred Mantle (a cloak believed to have be...

Categories: Kandahar


Khyber Pass

The Khyber Pass is one of the world's most notorious highways. It winds 35 mi/55 km through the Himalaya to link Afghanistan and Pakistan. We recommend the trip with a caution or two: Even in more tranquil times, check locally about the safety of mak...

Categories: Khyber Pass


Kunduz

This town was known for having one of the most fascinating bazaars in the country before hostilities broke out. The nature of the bazaar has changed, but Kunduz's beautiful setting in the mountainous Badakhshan region is a permanent attraction. Kundu...

Categories: Kunduz


Lashkar Gah

Another town seriously damaged in Afghanistan's armed conflicts, Bost is the site of the ancient buildings, ramparts, arches and towers of what was once a capital of the Ghaznevid Empire. The Qalai Bost (arch) still has a human skeleton lying at its ...

Categories: Lashkar Gah


Mazar-I-Sharif

Mazar-i-Sharif is not that interesting in itself, but its airport is the closest to Balkh. Mazar-i-Sharif is worth a stop to visit the magnificent Tomb of Ali (a mosque said to be the resting place of Muhammad's adopted son, Ali) and to shop for the ...

Categories: Mazar-I-Sharif


Nouristan

Nuristan is one of the country's most unusual and inaccessible regions. Set in striking mountains near the territory of Kashmir (whose ownership is a matter of hot dispute), this dramatic, forested area is dotted with wooden hillside homes. The Greek...

Categories: Nouristan


Takht-I-Rostem

This Buddhist cave site just southwest of the town of Kholm dates from the fifth century. The caves once housed a monastery. 175 mi/280 km northwest of Kabul.

Categories: Takht-I-Rostem


This Central Asian country has started to rebuild after the fall of the repressive Taliban regime in November 2001. It is redefining its politics and alliances, and re-creating its physical infrastructure and society. But it still has a long way to go. Although little girls are once again allowed to attend school, many parts of the country remain lawless and outside central government control. Taliban and al-Qaida loyalists continue to kidnap and attack Westerners, though such instances are getting rarer. For now, most visitors to the country are likely to be soldiers, journalists and aid workers, but a few hardy tourists, and even a few tour groups, have ventured into the country. Free Afghanistan Vacation Package Quote


Afghanistan Travel Agents

More visitors are sure to follow, because Afghanistan has always been intriguing: It has a colorful history, rugged scenery, fascinating markets and a fiercely independent people. But with only a few lulls, war has raged there since the late 1970s. Always a remote destination, Afghanistan has become a desolate land struggling to find its place in the modern world.


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Afghanistan


This Central Asian country has started to rebuild after the fall of the repressive Taliban regime in November 2001. It is redefining its politics and alliances, and re-creating its physical infrastructure and society. But it still has a long way to go. Although little girls are once again allowed to attend school, many parts of the country remain lawless and outside central government control. Taliban and al-Qaida loyalists continue to kidnap and attack Westerners, though such instances are getting rarer. For now, most visitors to the country are likely to be soldiers, journalists and aid workers, but a few hardy tourists, and even a few tour groups, have ventured into the country.

More visitors are sure to follow, because Afghanistan has always been intriguing: It has a colorful history, rugged scenery, fascinating markets and a fiercely independent people. But with only a few lulls, war has raged there since the late 1970s. Always a remote destination, Afghanistan has become a desolate land struggling to find its place in the modern world.

Geography

A landlocked country, Afghanistan is split in two by the mountains of the Hindu Kush, the foothills of the Himalayas, which run through the center of the country. Desert areas are found in the south and southwest, and the northeast of the country is rugged and mountainous.

History

From earliest recorded history, this part of Central Asia (which was known as Bactria in ancient times and as Khorasan in the Middle Ages) has been the target of migrating civilizations and cultures. A succession of invaders tried to rule the Bactrians, including Alexander the Great and armies of Buddhists and Muslims. Each conquering force left its mark on the land and its people, but each outside ruler was ultimately driven out. Afghanistan was later part of Persia but was split off by the British in 1857 as a buffer state against the southward expansion of the Russian Empire. But Britain, too, was unable to keep Afghanistan under its influence.

In the 20th century, it was the Soviets' turn. Although they used as many as 150,000 troops and all the tools of modern warfare, they ran into the brick-wall tenacity of Afghan guerrilla fighters (known as mujahideen) and the country's uncompromising terrain (mountain ranges soar as high as 25,000 ft/7,600 m; the average elevation is 5,000 ft/1,525 m).

After the pullout of the Red Army, the conflict turned into a bloody civil war when the many mujahideen factions turned on each other. After the fall of President Najibullah in 1992, two primary alliances battled for control of the country, one ethnically Tajik, one ethnically Pashtun and Uzbek. It was a third group, however—an armed militia known as the Taliban—that began turning the tide in its direction by 1996. (Taliban is Farsi for "students" or "seekers of the truth.") Ostensibly a group of Sunni Islamic students from religious schools in southern Afghanistan and Pakistan, the Taliban quickly captured large parts of the country, leading to a widespread belief that it received substantial support from Pakistan's government. By 2001, it controlled most of the country, though pockets of resistance, mostly in the ethnically Tajik Panshir valley, remained.

The Taliban's ultraconservative interpretation of Islam shocked many, both inside and outside the country. Following the Taliban's rise to power, public amputations and executions became commonplace, and women's rights became virtually nonexistent. The govenment's suspected support for terrorist groups—Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network, in particular—brought about the current crisis. The terrorist attacks in the U.S. on 11 September 2001 have been linked to bin Laden's operatives. When the Taliban refused to hand over the radical leader and take other actions against bin Laden's group, the U.S. and a coalition of other nations began bombing targets inside Afghanistan. The Taliban surrendered within months. Now, following nationwide elections, Afghanistan has an elected president, Hamid Karzai, and a loya jirga(a Pashto phrase meaning "grand council"), which includes Afghanistan's long-deposed King Mohammad Zahir Shah. Meanwhile, U.S. antiterrorism forces continue to comb the country for al-Qaida operatives, who remain especially active in the southeast of the country.

Snapshot

Afghanistan's foremost attractions are mountainous scenery, nomadic culture, ancient ruins, the Khyber Pass and shopping. Add to those the often poignant debris of two decades of war.

Even in peacetime, Afghanistan is only for those who have traveled extensively in developing countries, who enjoy history, anthropology and archaeology, and who can tolerate high elevations. It has never been a place for those who expect punctuality, require deluxe accommodations or who abhor dusty or primitive conditions.

Potpourri

Buzkashi is a pololike sport played by dozens of players on horseback (primarily in the north, especially around Kunduz and Mazar-i-Sharif). It's fast-moving and somewhat dangerous. Originally, the head of an enemy was used in place of a ball—today, a goat's carcass serves the purpose.

Afghanistan is one of the largest opium-producing countries in the world. Most is refined and sold as heroin throughout the world.

During the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, the U.S., Pakistan, Iran and Saudi Arabia armed and trained the mujaheddin insurgents and encouraged thousands of radical young men from all over the Islamic world to join the jihad, or holy war, against the Russians. These foreign rebels later became the basis of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network, as well as many terror groups around the world, from Indonesia to Morocco.

Modern realities have shaped some of the nation's oldest traditions. Many of Afghanistan's new woven carpets include images of tanks, fighter planes and helicopters.

The trout fishing is excellent at the Salang Pass, north of Kabul. The pass also has one of the world's highest tunnels (11,000 ft/3,350 m), built by the Soviets to facilitate their control over the country.

Officially, more than 13,000 Soviet troops died in Afghanistan, and 35,000 were wounded. Recently released figures confirm that the death toll was exactly twice as high, at 26,000.

Zoroastrianism, whose central tenet is the belief in an eternal struggle between good and evil, was once one of the world's great religions. Based in the Afghan city of Balkh, the religion has influenced Hinduism, Judaism and Christianity.

Afghanistan has three main languages—Pashtun, spoken by the majority Pashtun people of south and east Afghanistan; Dari, a variant of Persian (Farsi) spoken by ethnic Tajiks in the northeast of the country; and Uzbek, a Turkic language spoken by the Uzbek minority in the west and north. The lingua franca is Dari, spoken by all educated Afghans.




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