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Word: sovietize (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...this war the easy way, the fate of Abdul Haq should serve as a powerful antidote. Few knew how to fight in the rugged Afghan steppes and summits better than Haq, a legendary mujahedin guerrilla who lost his right foot to a land mine while helping rout the Soviets. He left Afghanistan during the post-Soviet power struggle and renounced politics after his wife and son were murdered in his Peshawar, Pakistan, home. But he recently returned to the Afghan frontier, hoping to enlist defectors and warlords in an anti-Taliban southern alliance. Because he was Pashtun--the dominant tribe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Rules Of Engagement | 11/5/2001 | See Source »

...Qaeda had its origins in the long war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. After Soviet troops invaded the country in 1979, Muslims flocked to join the local mujahedin in fighting them. In Peshawar, Pakistan, which acted as the effective headquarters of the resistance, a group whose spiritual leader was a Palestinian academic called Abdallah Azzam established a service organization to provide logistics and religious instruction to the fighters. The operation came to be known as al-Qaeda al-Sulbah-the "solid base." Much of its financing came from bin Laden, an acolyte of Azzam...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hate Club: Al-Qaeda's Web of Terror | 11/4/2001 | See Source »

Many armies have marched into AFGHANISTAN, including those led by Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan. But probably none were so bold as the Soviet Army, which took Kabul in a "lightning invasion" late in 1979. Taking the rest of the country would prove more problematic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 21 Years Ago In TIME | 10/29/2001 | See Source »

...tragedy of Afghanistan is simply its geography: it lies along the eastern tier of the "crescent of crisis," which in an oil-short world has become strategically vital to both the West and the Soviet Union. Can the Soviets subjugate the Afghans indefinitely? Pentagon experts doubt that Afghanistan ever could become Moscow's "Viet Nam," pointing out that Soviet supply lines to Afghanistan are short and the local population relatively small: 14 to 18 million. But some historians argue that the traditional fierceness of the Afghans is a quality that defies measure. In January 1842, after an adventure in Afghanistan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 21 Years Ago In TIME | 10/29/2001 | See Source »

Russia, a great, sentimental hope for corporations through the mid-'90s, looks increasingly serious about its WTO bid and is beginning to undertake the legal reforms necessary for membership. Could the former Soviet republic be a touchstone for advancements on a global scale? Russia's stock market capitalization, about $50 billion, still only approaches that of the United Parcel Service, and what passes for a recession in the U.S. would be a great achievement for Russia. Progress there is incremental, but, some say, palpable. "We're working, in a determined way, to bring to reality some of the things...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A New Kind of Trade War | 10/29/2001 | See Source »

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