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  2. Mullah Omar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullah_Omar

    Mullah Muhammad Omar (Pashto: محمد عمر, romanized: Muḥammad ʿUmar; 1960 – 23 April 2013) was an Afghan militant leader and cleric who founded the Taliban in 1994. During the Third Afghan Civil War , the Taliban fought the Northern Alliance and took control of most of the country, establishing the First Islamic Emirate for which Omar ...

  3. List of Taliban insurgency leaders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Taliban_insurgency...

    Reported to be a leader in the Taliban's Quetta Shura; Reported captured in late February 2010; Mohammad Hassan Akhund: First Deputy Council of Ministers: At large; spoke to Reuters by satellite telephone from an undisclosed location on May 4, 2003 [citation needed] Reported to be a leader in the Taliban's Quetta Shura. [14]

  4. History of the Taliban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Taliban

    Flag of the Taliban. The Taliban (/ ˈ t æ l ɪ b æ n, ˈ t ɑː l ɪ b ɑː n /; Pashto: طَالِبَانْ, romanized: ṭālibān, lit. 'students'), which also refers to itself by its state name, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, [1] [2] is an Afghan militant movement, that governs Afghanistan, with an ideology comprising elements of Pashtun nationalism and the Deobandi movement of ...

  5. Close aide to Taliban’s notorious ‘one-eyed mullah’ named ...

    www.aol.com/close-aide-taliban-notorious-one...

    Afghanistan’s new central bank chief served as an adviser to Mullah Mohammad Omar

  6. List of heads of state of Afghanistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_heads_of_state_of...

    Taliban: Supreme Leader; Deposed during the fall of Kabul, [30] and went into hiding following the fall of Kandahar on 7 December 2001; [31] [32] Continued to claim the position in rebellion during the Taliban insurgency until his death on 23 April 2013; Between 1996 and 2001, the Islamic Emirate never attained widespread international ...

  7. Taliban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taliban

    Taliban leaders "repeatedly told" Rashid that "if they gave women greater freedom or a chance to go to school, they would lose the support of their rank and file." [202] November 1999 public execution in Kabul of a mother of five who was found guilty of killing her husband with an axe while he slept. [203] [204] [205]

  8. Assessing Claims That Trump Freed the Leader of Afghanistan ...

    www.aol.com/news/assessing-claims-trump-freed...

    None of the senior Taliban leaders who run the insurgency put their names on this agreement. It appears the U.S., Pakistan, and the Taliban used Baradar as a prop to grant the proceedings the ...

  9. EXPLAINER: Who was al-Zawahri — and why did US kill him? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/explainer-al-zawahri-why-did...

    But it was a Taliban government that took in al-Qaida's leaders in the mid-1990s and allowed them to plot the 9/11 attacks there, sparking the 20-year U.S.-led war there.