9/11 Attacks

The United States invasion of Afghanistan occurred after the September 11 attacks in late 2001 and after 18 years people of Afghanistan still faced with lethal violence which rooted in US presence in the country.

Iran Press/America: On 1 September, Just before the top American negotiator, Zalmay Khalilzad, said the Taliban and Americans were on 'the threshold of an agreement,' the Taliban attacked poorly defended provincial capitals and forced the Afghan government to send in commandos to keep the cities from being overrun.

one week later, in a series of three tweets on Saturday, Donald Trump announced the decision after learning that the Taliban had killed a Romanian soldier serving with the Nato-led mission and 11 others in a car bombing in Kabul on Thursday to gain leverage in the talks.

Trump has cited the death of a US service member in one of those blasts as the reason why he now calls Washington-Taliban negotiations “dead.”

Afghanistan has become the longest war the US has ever fought. There are about 14,000 US troops still deployed in the country.

Related News:

Trump cancels secret meeting with Taliban leaders

Washington-Taliban negotiations 'dead'.

Meanwhile, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations has urged the US to withdraw from its military forces Afghanistan after 18 years, saying Washington has no other option but to pull its troops out of the country.

The United States invasion of Afghanistan occurred after the September 11 attacks in late 2001, supported by close US allies. The conflict is also known as the US war in Afghanistan. Its public aims were to dismantle al-Qaeda and to deny it a safe base of operations in Afghanistan by removing the Taliban from power.

The September 11, 2001 attacks, also known as the 9/11 attacks, was a series of strikes in the US which killed nearly 3,000 people and caused about $10 billion worth of property and infrastructure damage.

US officials assert that the attacks were carried out by 19 al-Qaeda terrorists but many experts have raised questions about the official account.

They believe that rogue elements within the US government, such as former Vice President Dick Cheney, orchestrated or at least encouraged the 9/11 attacks in order to accelerate the US war machine and advance the Zionist agenda.

Putin warned Bush ahead of 9/11 attacks

New inter-agency reports indicated that Russian President Vladimir Putin had warned his US counterpart George W. Bush about an imminent terrorist threat two days before the 9/11 attacks took place, a former CIA analyst has reportedly revealed.

Russian President Vladimir Putin had warned his US counterpart George W. Bush

The warning is mentioned by George Beebee, a senior Bush-era CIA analyst, in his book titled “The Russia Trap: How Our Shadow War with Russia Could Spiral into Nuclear Catastrophe,” which was released earlier this week, according to RT.

Putin had telephoned President Bush two days before the attacks to warn that Russian intelligence has detected signs of an incipient terrorist campaign, ‘something long in preparation,’ coming out of Afghanistan,” reads part of the book.

Although Moscow’s warning to Washington has been public knowledge for years as top Russian intelligence officials talked about them shortly after the incident, Beebee suggested Bush had been warned by Putin personally meaning that it was not just limited to exchange between the intelligence agencies.

Other warnings ignored by US officials

In addition to Russia, Britain’s intelligence service and that of the United States itself had also warned of such an incident, however, it remains a mystery whether the White House heeded those warnings and did anything to prevent it.

Condoleezza Rice, the then-national security adviser and later secretary of state, also hinted at the mindset of the White House officials at the time in her memoirs.

9/11 Attacks

In ‘No Higher Honor,’ Rice did say that she had ignored an earlier warning from Putin about Saudi-funded extremists in Pakistan that the Russian president then said would cause a “major catastrophe.”

Rice wrote, after dismissing the warning, she “chalked it up to Russian bitterness toward Pakistan for supporting the Afghan mujahideen” fighters during the Soviet Union's war in Afghanistan.

A special review commission on 9/11 has found that disagreements still persist within the FBI over whether there was a broader conspiracy in the US to carry out the 2001 attacks.

Former al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden eluded US authorities for years in the wake of the attacks, but US Special Forces finally got a hold of him and killed him in 2011, during a raid in Pakistan

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9/11 Attacks
18 anniversary 9/11 attack
Russian President Vladimir Putin had warned his US counterpart George W. Bush
Washington-Taliban negotiations