msnbc.com news services
updated 12/3/2010 6:42:06 PM ET 2010-12-03T23:42:06

Speaking to nearly 4,000 U.S. troops here after a secret overnight flight from Washington, President Barack Obama on Friday said they were making "important progress" against militants in Afghanistan.

"Today we can be proud that there are fewer areas under Taliban control," he said.

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"We said we were going to break the Taliban's momentum," he added. "That's what you're doing. You're going on the offense, tired of playing defense."

Obama had traveled to Afghanistan to thank the troops and to deal with frayed relations with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

But plans for a face-to-face meeting with Karzai were abruptly scrapped. The White House and Afghan officials blamed the last-minute cancellation on rough weather. Instead, the two leaders spoke by phone, Obama at the air base and Karzai in Kabul.

Obama's surprise visit to the war zone, his second as president, came 10 days before he is to address the nation about a new review of U.S. strategy to defeat the Taliban and strengthen the Afghan government so American troops can begin leaving next year.

Newsweek: Why Obama made the surprise trip

The trip also came at a particularly awkward moment in already strained U.S. relations with Afghanistan because of new and embarrassing leaked cables alleging widespread fraud and underscoring deep American concerns about Karzai.

There was no mention of that as the president spoke to more than 3,500 service members packed into a huge airplane hangar. After his remarks, he spent more than 10 minutes shaking hands, going around the hangar three times as they grabbed his hand and held cameras and cell phones high to take photos.

Image: Obama meets with troops at Bagram Air Force Base
Jim Young  /  Reuters
President Barack Obama greets troops at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan on Friday.

Obama stayed on this U.S. military base, the headquarters of the 101st Airborne Division, the entire time he was here, just under four hours. He huddled with U.S. Gen. David Petraeus, the top NATO commander in Afghanistan and U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry. And he visited wounded soldiers at a base hospital, personally dispensing five Purple Hearts to wounded service members.

"Because of the progress we're making, we look forward to a new phase next year, the beginning of the transition to Afghan responsibility," Obama told the troops. He thanked them for their efforts, noting the difficulty in being away from home during the holidays, and they repeatedly cheered him in return.

Slideshow: Afghanistan at a crossroads (on this page)

He said the U.S. was continuing "to forge a partnership with the Afghan people for the long term." And he said, "we will never let this country serve as a safe haven for terrorists who would attack the United States of America again. That will never happen."

There are now about 150,000 coalition forces in Afghanistan, roughly 100,000 of them Americans. The U.S. and its NATO partners agreed last month in Lisbon, Portugal, to begin turning over control to local Afghan authorities in 2011, with a goal of completing that transition by the end of 2014.

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White House officials said gusty winds and swirling dust led them to cancel Obama's planned helicopter visit to Kabul, about 30 miles north of here. A backup plan for a secure videoconference was also scrapped.

Waheed Omar, a Karzai spokesman, said the Afghan leader was "not upset" that the palace visit was scuttled. He noted that the two leaders had met during the conference in Lisbon and discussed the situation in Afghanistan in detail.

Obama, who has tripled U.S. troop strength in Afghanistan, has come under increasing pressure to demonstrate progress in turning the tide against the Taliban insurgency in the battle that has now gone on for more than nine years. In his remarks to the troops, Obama cited "important progress."

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"We said we were going to break the Taliban's momentum. And that's what you're doing. You're going on the offense, tired of playing defense, targeting their leaders, pushing them out of their strongholds. Today, we can be proud that there are fewer areas under Taliban control and more Afghans have a chance to build a more hopeful future," he said.

He thanked the troops for their work and sacrifice "on behalf of more than 300 million Americans."

"You give me hope. You give me inspiration. Your resolve shows that Americans will never succumb to fear," he said to cheers and shouts.

Petraeus, the commander Obama is looking to to turn things around, introduced Obama to the troops and teased the president about the basketball injury to his lip last week. Presenting him with a 101st Airborne T-shirt, Petraeus told the president: "No one will mess with you if you wear this, Mr. President."

At the base hospital, Obama met with platoon members from the unit that lost six soldiers this week in brazen killings by an Afghan border policeman who turned fire on his U.S. trainers.

Mentioning that visit and his meeting with what Petraeus called "wounded warriors," Obama told the assembled troops: "I don't need to tell you this is a tough fight. ... It's a tough business. Progress comes slow. And there are going to be difficult days ahead. Progress comes at a high price."

Newly leaked U.S. cables show American diplomats portraying Afghanistan as rife with graft to the highest levels of government, with tens of millions of dollars flowing out of the country and a cash transfer network that facilitates bribes for corrupt Afghan officials, drug traffickers and insurgents.

A main concern in the cables appears to be Karzai himself, who emerges as a mercurial figure. In a July 7, 2009, dispatch, Eikenberry describes "two contrasting portraits" of the Afghan president.

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"The first is of a paranoid and weak individual unfamiliar with the basics of nation building and overly self-conscious that his time in the spotlight of glowing reviews from the international community has passed," the cable says. "The other is that of an ever-shrewd politician who sees himself as a nationalist hero. ... In order to recalibrate our relationship with Karzai, we must deal with and challenge both of these personalities."

Obama aides later said the subject of the cables didn't come up during the Obama-Karzai phone call, which lasted 15 minutes. Ben Rhodes, a White House national security aide, told reporters Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had already spoken to Karzai about WikiLeaks disclosures.

After the long, unannounced flight from Washington, Obama landed in darkness under intense security.

He stepped off Air Force One clad in a brown leather jacket that he was also wearing when he spoke to troops. Plans of his trip into the war zone were tightly guarded.

Despite the upcoming review results, White House officials on the trip played down the significance of his upcoming speech. No big policy changes are expected, they said.

To deal with any doubts about reasons for the Karzai meeting being canceled, reporters traveling with Obama were escorted outside the air field hangar to get a glimpse of the conditions. The wind was blowing strongly, kicking up dust clouds as troops streamed in to hear Obama. An American flag whipped against its pole. At the presidential palace, U.S. armored vehicles were securing entrances. Carpets were ready to be unrolled.

The war in Afghanistan is the nation's longest after Vietnam, launched in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. This has been the deadliest year to date for U.S. forces in Afghanistan. More than 1,300 have died here since the war began, more than 450 in 2010.

The visit comes a year after Obama announced he was sending an additional 30,000 troops to try to gain control — and then get the United States out — of a worsening conflict. Obama's plan is to start pulling U.S. forces out of Afghanistan in July.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Video: Obama looks to boost troops on surprise trip

  1. Closed captioning of: Obama looks to boost troops on surprise trip

    >>> the unemployment numbers came out, as savannah mentioned, the president turned up in afghanistan . and chuck todd , on the white house lawn, has that part of the story. chuck, good evening.

    >> reporter: good evening, brian . what made this trip doubly surprising is it happened today, a day of the jobs report, the day of the debt commission, and in the midst of this tax negotiation with a gridlocked congress, and all of it for a trip to afghanistan secretly done that was designed simply to boost troop morale. the president turned up in the dark of night at bagram airfield in afghanistan today. president obama was last seen at the white house hanukkah reception last night at 6:44 p.m .

    >> happy hanukkah , everybody.

    >> reporter: just at 9:30 p.m ., he snuck off for a 13-hour flight, landing at 11:00 this morning in afghanistan . on the ground for less than four hours, the president was briefed by his team, led by general david petraeus , and ambassador carl eikenberry. although high winds prevented the president was taking a helicopter to kabul for a planned meeting with president karzai, the two did speak by phone. it was just two weeks ago, the two sat across the table from each other at the nato summit in portugal. but the central focus of this visit to afghanistan was to give a holiday morale boost to the troops.

    >> i want to make sure that i could spend a little time this holiday with the men and women of the finest fighting force that the world has ever known, and that's all of you.

    >> reporter: the president also discussed the mission.

    >> we said we were going to break the taliban's momentum, and that's what you're doing. you're going on the offense. tired of playing defense.

    >> reporter: and he scored one easy applause line about their paycheck.

    >> you may have noticed during these tough budget times, i took the step for freezing pay for our federal workforce. but because of the service that you render, all who wear the uniform of the united states of america are exempt from that action.

    >> reporter: all dramatic theater on a day when the president faced a flurry of pressing issues at home, include including rising unemployment and a congress gridlocked over taxes.

    >> it's jarring to find the president going off to afghanistan on a trip that might well have taken place closer to christmas.

    >> reporter: the president's abrupt departure left the vice president to deal with today's bad jobs news. while on the ground, brian , the president handed out personally five purple hearts and by the way, this is december. there's going to be a big review supposedly of the afghanistan strategy. but a couple people close to the strategy review said to me a while ago the whole nato decision to put the deadline for troops of 2014 largely means this december review, there's not much to it.

    >> chuck, let's talk about secrecy. you heard the vice president say i'm not at bagram. that was part of the feint. secrets can be kept. electronics are taken away, they're told to tell no one, and the deal has been if the secret gets out, they're going to turn air force around and come home.

    >> it's been a practice due to war zones. any time you saw it with president bush and we've seen it continued with president obama , that the press corps does agree to these rules, the traveling press corps that does go with the president on these trips, brian .

    >> on this big day of economic news domestically as we said. chuck todd , savannah guthrie , thanks to you both.

Photos: 2012

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  1. Mourners at the funeral of former Taliban minister Maulvi Arsala Rahmani, a senior member of the High Peace Council, in Kabul on May 14, 2012. Gunmen shot dead the top Afghan peace negotiator, dealing a fresh blow to the country's attempts to negotiate a deal with Taliban insurgents, security sources said. (Mohammad Ismail / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  2. Afghan cardiologist Rahima Stanikzair, 43, monitors an infant's heart at the French Medical Institute for Children in Kabul on May 13. (Bay Ismoyo / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  3. Afghan policemen perform a drill during a graduation ceremony at the Adraskan police training centerin Herat province on May 13, where some 900 officers completed their eight-week training course. Afghan President Hamid Karzai announced a new transfer of security control from NATO that will see local forces take responsibility for 75 percent of Afghanistan's population. (Aref Karimi / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  4. European Union ambassador Vygaudas Usackas attempts a putt at the Kabul golf course on May 11. The air at Afghanistan's only golf course is certainly easier to breathe than the dust and pollution of the chaotic capital, but golfers accustomed to the soothing sight of immaculate lawns would be in for a shock. (Bay Ismoyo / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  5. A cinema goer watches a Pashto film at Cinema Pamir in Kabul on May 3. Once a treasured luxury for the elite, Afghan cinemas are dilapidated and reflect an industry on the brink of collapse from conflict and financial neglect. (Danish Siddiqui / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  6. U.S. President Barack Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai meet to sign the Strategic Partnership Agreement at the Presidential Palace in Kabul on May 2. The deal ensures American military and financial support for the Afghan people for at least a decade beyond 2014, the deadline for most foreign combat forces to withdraw. (Kevin Lamarque / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  7. Editor's note:
    This image contains graphic content that some viewers may find disturbing.

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    Covered in blood, a survivor is driven from the scene of a suicide bomb attack in Kabul on May 2. Taliban insurgents claimed responsibility for a suicide attack in the Afghan capital shortly after US President Barack Obama left the city. (Bay Ismoyo / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  8. Boys play a pitch gambling game in Band-e-Qargha Gulestan Park in Kabul on April 27. (Johannes Eisele / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  9. U.S. soldier Nicholas Dickhut from 5-20 infantry regiment attached to 82nd Airborne points his rifle at a doorway after coming under fire by the Taliban while on patrol in Zharay district in Kandahar province on April 26. (Baz Ratner / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  10. An old taxi transporting sacks of vegetables navigates a flooded street after heavy rains in Kabul on April 21. (Ahmad Nazar / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  11. An Afghan National Army soldier keeps watch as a NATO helicopter flies over the site of an attack in Jalalabad province on April 15. Gunmen launched multiple attacks in the Afghan capital Kabul and three other provinces. "These attacks are the beginning of the Spring Offensive and we had planned them for months," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Reuters. (Parwiz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  12. A woman cries as she talks on the phone to her family during a gunbattle in Kabul on April 15. The Taliban launched a series of coordinated attacks on at least seven sites across the Afghan capital, targeting NATO headquarters, the parliament and diplomatic residences in one of the most serious assaults on the city since U.S.-backed Afghan forces removed the Taliban from power in 2001. (Ahmad Jamshid / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  13. Afghan special forces are seen on top of a building which had been occupied by militants, in Kabul on April 16, 2012. A brazen, 18-hour Taliban attack on the Afghan capital ended when insurgents who had holed up overnight in two buildings were overcome by heavy gunfire from Afghan-led forces and pre-dawn air assaults from U.S.-led coalition helicopters. (Musadeq Sadeq / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  14. Editor's note:
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    Afghan policemen use mobile phones to photograph the dead body of an insurgent lying on the floor inside a building in Kabul on April 16. A total of 36 Taliban militants were killed as they mounted a wave of attacks across Afghanistan, Interior Minister Bismillah Mohammadi said. (Shah Marai / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  15. Afghan policemen and officials stand next to the wreckage of a car used in a suicide attack in front of the building from which insurgents launched an assault, in Kabul on April 16. (Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  16. An Afghan technician works on a prosthetic limb at one of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) hospitals for war victims and the disabled in Kabul on April 14. The ICRC orthopaedic project, which began in 1988 in Kabul, now has seven centers in Afghanistan. (Johannes Eisele / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  17. A girl holds a lamb on the outskirts of Herat on April 10. (Aref Karimi / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  18. Victims of a suicide attack are transported in the back of a police truck in Guzara, Herat province, on April 10. A suicide blast blew up a four-wheel-drive vehicle outside a government office, killing and wounding scores of people, authorities said. (Hoshang Hashimi / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  19. Injured U.S. Army dog handler Aaron Yoder and his dog Bart, attached to Alpha troop 4-73 Cavalry Regiment, 4th brigade 82nd Airborne division, are evacuated in a helicopter during a fire exchange with Taliban fighters while on a mission in the Maiwand district in Kandahar province on April 9. Yoder was transfered to Texas for further treatment to a leg wound, The Goshen News reported. (Baz Ratner / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  20. Schoolchildren carry their chairs to a class in an open area in Mazar-i Sharif on April 9. At the start of the school year in March, Minister for Education Ghulam Farooq Wardak said there are now 8.4 million schoolgoing children in Afghanistan, 39% of them girls. But he added that 9.5 million children were still being deprived of education in the country. (Qais Usyan / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  21. Editor's note:
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    Wounded U.S. soldiers lie on the ground at the scene of a suicide attack in Maimanah, the capital of Faryab province, on April 4. A suicide bomber blew himself up, killing at least 10 people, including three NATO service members, officials said. (Gul Buddin Elham / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  22. A man carries a bundle of wood in Nahr-i Sufi in the province of Kunduz on March 30. The Afghan economy has always been based on agriculture, despite the fact that only 13% of its total land is arable and just 8% is currently cultivated. (Johannes Eisele / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  23. Security forces escort captured Taliban militants disguised in female dress to be presented to the media in Mehterlam, Laghman province, on March 28. Afghan intelligence forces said they had arrested seven Taliban militants. (Rahmat Gul / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  24. A ceremony at the Sakhi Shrine in Kabul on March 20 during celebrations marking the start of Nowruz, the Persian new year. Coinciding with the spring equinox, it is marked in parts of the Balkans, the Black Sea Basin, the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Middle East and other regions. (Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  25. Wreckage of a Turkish Sikorsky military helicopter lying at the scene where it crashed at the Bagrami district on the outskirts of Kabul on March 16. Two children and 12 Turkish soldiers were among those killed when a helicopter crashed into a house, officials said. (Jawad Jalali / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  26. U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during a visit to the Presidential Palace in Kabul on March 15. (Scott Olson / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  27. A villager points to a spot where a family was allegedly shot in their home by a rogue US soldier in Alkozai, a village in Panjwayi, Kandahar province on March 11. An AFP reporter counted 16 bodies — including women and children — in three Afghan houses after the soldier walked out of his base and began shooting civilians. (Mamoon Durrani / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  28. Editor's note:
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    A mourner cries over the bodies of civilians, allegedly shot by a rogue US soldier, after they were loaded into the back of a truck in Alkozai on March 11. NATO's International Security Assistance Force said it had arrested a soldier "in connection to an incident that resulted in Afghan casualties in Kandahar province", without giving a figure for the dead or wounded. (Jangir / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  29. A U.S. soldier keeps watch as Taliban militants hand over their weapons. A group of 100 Taliban members were taking part in the government's reconciliation and reintegration program in Laghman province on March 12. (Parwiz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  30. Smoke rises from the site of a bomb blast in Spin Boldak on March 7, 2012. A motorcycle bomb in southern Afghanistan near Pakistan’s border killed four civilians and injured eight, Parwiz Najib, a senior official in the provincial governor’s office said. (Akhter Gulfam / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  31. Police transfer an injured man to a local hospital in Spin Boldak after a motorcycle bomb exploded on March 7. (Akhter Gulfam / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  32. A graffiti piece by Shamsia Hassani and Qasem Foushanji is seen on a wall in Kabul on March 5. Encased in a head-to-toe burqa, the image depicts a distraught woman slumped on a cement stairwell, the work of Afghanistan's first street artists who use graffiti to chronicle violence and oppression. (Mohammad Ismail / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  33. A boy from a displaced family holds up his food voucher as he fights with others to get rations from a truck organized by the World Food Program in Kabul on March 4. Every day, 400 people join the ranks of a half million displaced by fighting and natural disaster in Afghanistan. Many are left to starve, even in the capital Kabul. (Anja Niedringhaus / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  34. Afghans shout anti-U.S. slogans during a protest outside the U.S. military base in Bagram, north of Kabul on Feb. 21. More than 2,000 Afghans protested outside the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan on following a report that foreign troops had improperly disposed of copies of the Quran and other religious items. A pile of wood and tires, set on fire by the protesters, burns in the background. (Mohammad Ismail / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  35. A U.S. soldier wields his assault rifle as another soldier handles a shotgun while standing at the gate of Bagram airbase during a protest against Quran desecration on Feb. 21. (Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  36. An Afghan man aims a slingshot toward U.S. soldiers at the gate of Bagram airbase during a protest on Feb. 21. (Shah Marai / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  37. Newly graduated Afghan border police take their oath during their graduation ceremony at the border police headquarters in Jalalabad, Nangarhar province, east of Kabul, on Jan. 31. More than 40 border police officers graduated after receiving 10 weeks of training in Jalalabad. (Rahmat Gul / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  38. Afghan police look at a police vehicle that was hidden under dried plants during an operation in Qarabagh, Ghazni province, west of Kabul, on Friday, Feb. 17. The vehicle had previously been captured by Taliban militants and was recovered by Afghan police. (Rahmatullah Naikzad / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  39. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, left, arrives with Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, center, at Prime Minister House in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Feb. 16. Karzai arrived in Pakistan for talks on how Islamabad can facilitate peace negotiations with the Afghan Taliban. (B.k. Bangash / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  40. A wounded child receives treatment at a hospital in Nangarhar Province on Feb. 12. Unknown gunmen shot and killed a judge and injured six of his family members on in the eastern province of Nangarhar, Ahmadzia Abdulzai, the provincial spokesman said. (Parwiz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  41. 16-year-old Aatifa cries in Herat's main hospital on Feb. 5. Burned by a fire she began herself, Aatifa's childlike frame is painstakingly wrapped in thick bandages — her shrieks of "Allah" echoing around the hospital ward where surgeons prepare to graft skin back on to her skeletal torso. Her wide blue eyes alternating between flashes of anger and wells of tears, she struggles to explain what led her to douse her own body in petrol, step outside her marital compound and light a match. (Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  42. An Afghan father and his son try to stay warm outside the mud hut where he and his wife live with their 11 children, as snow falls at the Charahi Qambar refugee camp in Kabul, Feb. 3. More than 40 people, most of them children, have frozen to death in what has been Afghanistan's coldest winter in years. (Andrea Bruce / The New York Times via Redux Pictures) Back to slideshow navigation
  43. Street scene after a snowstorm in Kabul on Jan. 23. (Musadeq Sadeq / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  44. French soldiers carry a flag-draped coffin during a ceremony at the military airbase at Kaia on Jan. 22. Four French soldiers were killed and 17 wounded in an attack carried out by an Afghan soldier in the Taghab valley of Eastern Kapisa province. (Ghislain Mariette / ECPAD via Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  45. Members pray during the opening of a new session of the Afghan parliament in Kabul on Jan. 21. (Shah Marai / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  46. A U.S. soldier keeps watch at the site of an explosion in Kandahar on Jan. 19. A suicide bomber killed seven civilians, including two children, and wounded eight in an attack on the main gate of the Kandahar airfield, Kandahar governor's spokesman Zalmai Ayobi said. (Ahmad Nadeem / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  47. Col. Din Mohammad, left, explains the instrument panel of a Soviet-made helicopter to a new cadre of Afghan pilots and air crews at the air force university in Kabul on Jan. 16. (Musadeq Sadeq / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  48. Faizullah Zaki, seated left, a spokesman for former Northern Alliance general Abdul Rashid Dostum, speaks as prominent opposition leader Ahmad Zia Masood, center, and ethnic Hazara leader Mohammad Muhaqiq listen during a press conference at the airport in Kabul on Jan. 13. The opposition leaders said that they support possible U.S.-brokered peace negotiations with Taliban militants, but want to be part of any talks. (Musadeq Sadeq / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  49. Relatives mourn at the hospital where victims of a suicide attack were brought for treatment in Kandahar on Jan. 12. (Allauddin Khan / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
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    A still image taken Jan. 11 from an undated YouTube video shows what is believed to be U.S. Marines urinating on the bodies of dead Taliban soldiers in Afghanistan. (Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  51. An internally displaced boy looks out from a tent at a camp in Dihdadi district on the outskirts of Mazar-i-Sharif on Jan. 8. (Qais Usyan / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  52. Girls play sitars at the Kabul Music Academy on Jan. 7. (Omar Sobhani / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  53. A policeman inspects the scene of an explosion in Kandahar on Jan. 4. Nearly a dozen people were killed and at least 28 others were injured in two separate suicide bomb attacks in the city on Jan. 3. In the first attack, a suicide bomber detonated a tricycle in downtown Kandahar, killing four civilians and three policeman, police chief General Abdul Raziq said. (Jangir / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  54. Women clad in burqas walk past a tree in Bagram, north of Kabul, on Jan. 3. President Hamid Karzai called for a prison facility inside the U.S.-run Bagram Airfield to be handed over to Afghan control. (Ahmad Masood / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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  1. Image: A portrait of former Taliban minister Rahmani, a senior member of the High Peace Council, is seen in Kabul
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    Slideshow (158) Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads - 2010
  4. Image: U.S. army soldiers from Task Force Denali 1-40 Cav reposition a 105mm Howitzer during snowfall at FOB Wilderness in Paktya province
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    Slideshow (88) Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads - 2009: Troops
  5. Image: Afghan protesters shout slogans during a protest in Kabul
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    Slideshow (31) Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads - 2009: Civilians

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