Timeline of the 21st Century

A complete, printable version of this timeline is available for download.

Jan. 2000 Algeria: Civil war continues as Islamic extremists combat Algerian forces. Over 100,000 people have been killed since 1992.
Western Sahara: UN Security Council posits options to break the impasse in the Western Sahara between local Polisario Front and Moroccan forces.
Feb. 2000 Iran: Reformist politicians edge out conservative and independent candidates in parliamentary elections;
reformists reach majority.
Qatar: Cousin of then emir, Sheikh Hamad al-Thani, and 32 others are jailed for life for failed coup attempt in 1996.
Mar. 2000 Morocco: Half a million Muslim ultraconservatives march in Casablanca to oppose government’s extension of women’s rights. 250,000 supporters of women’s rights march in Rabat.
UAE: Defense contractor Lockheed Martin and UAE sign a contract for 80 F-16 jets.
Apr. 2000 Tunisia: 1st president of Republic of Tunisia, Habib Bourguiba, dies.
Israel: Israeli military forces retreat from southern Lebanon due to extended conflict with the anti-Israeli faction, Hezbollah, but hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah continue.
May 2000 Lebanon: Pro-Israel South Lebanese Army collapses to Hezbollah military advances, prompting Israel to vacate southern Lebanon.
Turkey: Ahmet Sezer is elected as the 10th president of Turkey.
Jun. 2000 Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia and Yemen sign an agreement to end years of border disputes.
Syria: President Hafez al-Assad dies and is succeeded by his second son, Bashar.
Jul. 2000 Afghanistan: Taliban leaders forbid farmers from growing opium poppy plants, citing religious edicts. Afghan farmers are growing 75% of the world’s opium exports.
Palestine: U.S. President Bill Clinton acts as mediator in peace talks between Israel and Palestine. Peace terms fall through at the Camp David negotiations, reigniting hostilities.
Sep. 2000 Bahrain: Bahrain’s Consultative Council appoints non-Muslims and women to its panel for the first time, including a Christian woman and a Jewish businessman.
Jordan: Military court sentences six suspected terrorists to death for plotting attacks against Israeli and U.S. targets.
Oman: First-ever direct elections are held and two women are voted to serve on Sultan Qaboos’ advisory council.
Oct. 2000 Egypt: Arab leaders convene in Cairo for Arab League Summit, calling for Arab-Israeli peace talks, but remain critical of Israel.
Libya: Libyan delegation walks out of summit, angry over Egypt’s continued ties with Israel.
Yemen: Terrorists crash an explosive boat into the USS Cole while the latter was docked outside the port city of Aden, killing 17 American sailors.
Nov. 2000 Iraq: Iraq rejects new UN Security Council weapons inspections proposals unless sanctions over its 1990 invasion of Kuwait are abolished.
Dec. 2000 Kuwait: Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE sign a regional defense pact.
Sudan: President Bashir, in office since 1993, is re-elected amidst opposition party boycotts.
United States: U.S. intelligence agencies begin collecting information about a potential al-Qaeda plot to attack the United States. CIA and FBI fail to share information with other government entities, which later leads to massive changes in American intelligence sharing protocol. Al-Qaeda operatives in United States.
Jan. 2001 Egypt: President Mubarak and Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat meet to discuss U.S. peace proposals prior to Arab League meetings.
Israel: Talks falter between Israel and Palestine. Israel resumes blockade of Palestinian territories after hostilities resume.
Turkey: French National Assembly recognizes the Ottoman Empire’s 1915-17 killings of Armenians as genocide sparking heated contention from Turkey.
Feb. 2001 Bahrain: A referendum is held concerning political reform, and citizens strongly call for a constitutional monarchy with an elected parliament and an independent judiciary.
Iraq: United States and Britain conduct bombing raids to try to disable Iraq’s air defenses. The bombings have little international support.
Yemen: Contested municipal elections and referendum extend presidential term and powers; at least 40 people killed in election-related violence.
Mar. 2001 Jordan: King Abdullah inaugurates the connection of electrical grids between Egypt and Syria.
Apr. 2001 Qatar: Qatar settles border disputes with Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.
Algeria: Security forces violently clash with native Berber protesters, resulting in many deaths. The Algerian government opens negotiations and grants concessions, including official recognition of the Berber language.
May 2001 Libya: Troops support Central African Republic against an attempted coup.
Syria: Pope John Paul II visits Syria, becomes first pontiff to enter a mosque.
Jun. 2001 Iran: President Khatami is re-elected.
Syria: After Lebanese criticism of Syrian troop presence, soldiers vacate Beirut and redeploy in other parts of Lebanon.
Sep. 2001 United States: Al-Qaeda terrorists hijack four U.S. commercial airline planes and conduct suicide attacks. Two planes fly into the World Trade Centers in New York, one partially destroys the Pentagon, and the remaining hijacked flight is sabotaged by civilian passengers who crash the plane in rural Pennsylvania. 2,996 people are killed. USA and an international coalition respond by invading al-Qaeda strongholds in Afghanistan to topple terrorist regime.
Tunisia: 14th Mediterranean Games held in Tunis.
Oct. 2001 Kuwait: Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, a Kuwaiti Islamist, emerges in Afghanistan as a spokesman for Osama bin Laden. He was convicted in March 2014 for conspiring to kill Americans and providing material support to terrorists.
Oman: Oman and Britain conduct military exercises in Omani desert to prepare strikes against Taliban in Afghanistan.
Nov. 2001 Bahrain: The Al-Wefaq opposition movement is founded.
Morocco: Morocco reaches agreement on climate control to set mandatory targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Sudan: United States continues unilateral sanctions against Sudan, citing record of terrorism and human rights violations.
UAE: Government freezes the accounts of 62 individuals and organizations suspected of funding terrorism.
Western Sahara: Moroccan King Mohammed VI tours Western Sahara, stirring controversy with Sahrawi opposition groups.
Dec. 2001 Lebanon: Lebanon, Egypt, Syria, and Jordan agree on a $1 billion oil pipeline project.
Palestine: Israeli troops surround Ramallah after wave of Palestinian attacks inside Israel.
Saudi Arabia: King Fahd proclaims that terrorism is forbidden according to Islamic Law. Saudi Arabia extends women’s rights by granting female citizens ID cards.
Jan. 2002 Iran: U.S. President George W. Bush declares Iran, Iraq, and North Korea an “axis of evil.” The statement incites outrage in Iran and is rebuked by both reformists and conservatives.
Libya: Libya and United States begin discussions to mend years of hostility over suspected local terrorism support.
Saudi Arabia: Unemployment rate remains around 15%-20%.
UAE: UAE successfully enrolls 98% of all female students eligible for school resulting in a 60% female student population.
Feb. 2002 Algeria: Civil war comes to an end. The decade of war comes to be known as the “Black Decade.”
Bahrain: Through May, the country is now constitutional monarchy with an elected lower parliament, and also allows women to stand for office. Elections are held and over 50% of the country votes, despite local Islamists’ call for a boycott.
Yemen: Government cracks down on al-Qaeda by expelling more than 100 foreign Islamic clerics.
Mar. 2002 Egypt: U.S. President George Bush and President Mubarak agree on necessity of Middle East peace initiative, although no framework for achieving that goal is announced.
Israel: After series of Palestinian suicide attacks in Israel, Israel launches Operation Defensive Shield in the West Bank, the largest Israeli military action in the area since 1967.
Lebanon: The Beirut Declaration, more widely known as the Arab Peace Initiative, is endorsed by the Arab League to bring cooperation between Arab states as well as a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israel rejects the resolution plan.
Palestine: Israel launches Operation Defensive Shield on West Bank. The Arab League proposes to recognize Israel in return for its full withdrawal from occupied territories since 1967.
Qatar: Preparations begin at the al-Udeid air base for a potential U.S. transfer of Central Command officers to location as a part of Operation Enduring Freedom and in anticipation of combat in the Middle East.
Apr. 2002 Kuwait: The United Nations raises almost $1 billion for Kuwait in compensation for Iraq’s 1990 invasion.
May 2002 Western Sahara: UN inspectors record that local Polisario Front has been holding 916 Moroccan prisoners for more than 20 years, the longest-held POWs in the world.
Sudan: Sudan People’s Liberation Army and the government end 19-year civil war, and south of Sudan can now seek separate statehood after six years. African agriculturalists in the Darfur region protest unfair treatment from the Arab government and launch attacks; state responds with aerial bombings.
Syria: U.S. Under Secretary for State for Arms Control and International Security, John Bolton, states that Syria is acquiring weapons of mass destruction. Read his presentation to the Heritage Foundation about the threats of Axis of Evil states and beyond.
Tunisia: President Ben Ali wins referendum on constitutional changes, ending term limits and raising age requirement
Jun. 2002 Afghanistan: With U.S. toppling of the Taliban, the Grand Council elects Hamid Karzai as interim head of state.
Algeria: Elections are marred by violence and low turnout. Four different political parties, two of which are Berber, boycott them as a sham.
Israel: Starts construction of barrier wall in and around the West Bank, ostensibly to stop armed Palestinians from entering Israel, breaking pre-1967 ceasefire agreements.
Jul. 2002 Morocco: Morocco and Spain agree to U.S.-led negotiations concerning a dispute over the island of Perejil in the Mediterranean Sea. Previously, Moroccan troops planted a flag on the uninhabited island, and Spain responded by sending soldiers to take the island back.
Sep. 2002 Iran: Russian technicians start construction of Iran’s first nuclear reactor at Bushehr despite strong objections from the United States.
Iraq: U.S. President Bush tells world leaders at UN General Assembly to confront the “grave and gathering danger” of Iraq or to stand aside as the United States acts.
Oct. 2002 Jordan: Senior U.S. diplomat Laurence Foley is fatally shot in the capital city of Amman; Al-Qaeda claims responsibility but denies Foley was the target.
Nov. 2002 Oman: Extends voting rights from tribal leaders, intellectuals and businessmen to every citizen over the age of 21.
Turkey: Islamist Justice and Development Party (AK) secures majority in Turkish elections.
Feb. 2003 Morocco: Through May, Casablanca jails three al-Qaeda members, eliciting a wave of terrorist bombings that kill more than 40 people.
Qatar: Qatar-based U.S. Central Command takes the lead in the U.S.-led Iraq War. Qatari voters also approve of a new constitution in which two-thirds of the parliament is elected, and the remaining one-third is appointed by the emir.
Mar. 2003 Sudan: Two Darfur rebel factions rally jointly to destroy a Sudanese air base. Government responds by enlisting the Janjaweed militia (Arab), who target civilians and proceed with ethnic cleansing. This marks the beginning of what becomes internationally recognized as genocide.
Egypt: Leaders of the League of Arab States, led by Bahrain, convene in Sharm el-Sheikh to strongly oppose a potential Iraq war and call for Saddam Hussein to comply with UN WMD inspectors.
Iraq: United States invades Iraq under premise of capturing weapons of mass destruction from Saddam Hussein and toppling his Ba’athist Party, one of the tools by which he maintained tight control of the country.
Kuwait: Tens of thousands of soldiers mass at northern border to aid in U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Libya: President Gaddafi blames Saudi Arabia and Kuwait for U.S. intervention in the Middle East.
Palestine: Mahmoud Abbas, an advocate for Israeli-Palestine peace, is elected as prime minister of Palestine.
Apr. 2003 UAE: At Arab League summit in Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt, UAE calls for Saddam Hussein’s resignation and exile as a possible resolution to the crisis; response from Arab leaders is divided.
Syria: USA threatens sanctions, alleging that regime is developing chemical weapons and aiding Iraqi fugitives.
Yemen: 10 suspects in the bombing of the USS Cole in 2001 escape from prison. Two are recaptured by 2004.
May 2003 Algeria: The capital city, Algiers, and the surrounding countryside are hit by a powerful earthquake, resulting in 2,000 casualties.
Bahrain: Thousands of citizens who claim to have been tortured petition the king for the right to sue previous torturers.
Jun. 2003 Iran: Thousands of students protest in Tehran against restrictive clerical rule.
Jul. 2003 Turkey: Through July, in ongoing appeal to gain EU membership, parliament eases restrictions on freedom of speech and Kurdish language rights; AKP moves to reduce military influence on politics.
Kuwait: Islamist and pro-government candidates gain traction over liberal party in parliamentary elections.
Aug. 2003 Afghanistan: NATO conducts security operations in Kabul in its first non-European operational deployment.
Jordan: Jordanian embassy in Iraq is attacked, killing 11. Jordan’s Central Bank releases frozen accounts of Hamas leaders. First parliamentary elections under King Abdullah II take place.
Sep. 2003 Israel/Lebanon: Hezbollah and Israel exchange artillery attacks, bombings, and gunfire, 3 years after Israel retreated from southern Lebanon.
Oct. 2003 Oman: First elections to the Consultative Council with little change to political make-up of the house.
Nov. 2003 Western Sahara: UN proposes referendum plan between Western Sahara and Morocco, fails.
Iran: Government allows tougher UN inspections of its nuclear reactors. IAEA concludes there is no evidence of weapons program.
Saudi Arabia: King Fahd grants the national Consultative Council the ability to propose legislation without his permission.
Dec. 2003 Libya: Government states that it will no longer pursue weapons of mass destruction.
Iraq: After a nine-month manhunt, Saddam Hussein is found hiding in his hometown of Tikrit and is captured.

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