Second Anglo-Afghan War During the
second Anglo-Afghan War, British forces led by
Lord Roberts entered the province. Approximately 8,000
raiders from the
Mangal tribe, which had a long tradition of resisting outside control, launched several attacks on weakly protected British supply
convoys in Khost Province. In
reprisal, Lord Roberts ordered his forces to attack eleven Mangal villages which had launched raids that murdered several
camp followers, resulting in them being sacked and burnt. As the news of the reprisals spread over Britain, his political opponents in the
British parliament criticized Lord Robert's actions. At the end of the conflict, British forces withdrew from the province.
Khost rebellion (1924–1925) In 1924, the province of Khost, then known as the
Southern province, was the site of a rebellion against
Emir Amanullah Khan by the
Mangal tribe. The rebellion began in March 1924 when Mulla Abd Allah accused a local official of violating
Sharia by forbidding a marriage in accordance with a new family law as the father of the bride in question had pledged her to another man whilst she was an infant. As a result, Mulla Abd Allah issued a
fatwa against Amanullah Khan, condemning him as a
kafir(infidel) and launching
Jihad after a failed attempt was made by mediators to justify the new laws. The rebels were soon joined by the son of the former king
Yaqub Khan,
Abd-al Karim, who managed to escape British surveillance and moved to Khost, where he was crowned king by the rebels. Rebel forces then conquered the city of
Gardez, which is adjacent to Khost. By late July, the rebels had captured Hisarak, which was 12 kilometres far from the capital,
Kabul. However, the rebels didn’t try to seize the capital and instead returned to Khost, taking the spoils of war with them. The
Deobandi-trained council of ’ulama’ issued a fatwa denouncing Mulla Abd Allah as a rebel and began to provide Amanullah Khan with levies after he allowed them to alter the constitution so that it would align with their interpretation of Sharia. In August,
Shah Wali Khan attacked the rebels in
Logar whilst the
Afghan Air Force were simultaneously bombing rebel positions. By early October, government forces had regained possession of the city of Gardez. Two months later, tribal leaders from Khost travelled to Kabul with the aim of initiating a peace process, only to be thrown in jail. Mulla Abd Allah, along with his three sons, were eventually captured and executed, and the rebellion was quelled in January 1925. Shah Wali Khan burned and looted more than 300 homes in Khost and brought 600 female captives back with him to Kabul, where they were distributed amongst the
Mohammadzais as war booty. In the aftermath of the government’s victory, Amanullah Khan decided to construct a victory pillar in Kabul to commemorate his vanquishing of the rebels. The new pillar was meant to demonstrate the “triumph of knowledge over ignorance”.
Soviet–Afghan War in 1985. In April 1978, the
Communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan staged a
coup d'état against the then president
Mohammed Daoud Khan, ending the
Republic of Afghanistan and establishing the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan under the rule of
Nur Muhammad Taraki, who would later be overthrown and killed by
Hafizullah Amin in 1979. The coup is also known as the
Saur Revolution. In late 1978, a rebellion occurred in the remote region of
Nuristan, but it didn't spread to the other parts of the country due to its isolation. The new communist government strived to eliminate illiteracy and implement agrarian reforms by sending literacy campaigners and agrarian reformers to various provinces, including Khost. Following a rebellion by the
Zadran tribe, a Pashtun tribe native to
Loya Paktia, president Hafizullah Amin decided to launch a full scale military operation in
Paktia. The operation was a "crushing defeat" and it, alongside the ousting of former President Taraki, was one of the reasons why the Soviets decided to intervene in December 1979, thus starting the
Soviet–Afghan War. At the end of July 1983, the forces of
Jalaluddin Haqqani laid siege to two towns in Khost and the Tani, Mangal, Zazai and Waziri tribes began taking an active part in the fighting, despite being passive up until then. All of the aforementioned events coincided with the appeal of former King
Mohammed Zahir Shah for a united front, which caused rumours about the Royalists intending to establish a
provisional government in a liberated Khost. However, Khost wasn't captured and by October, the Tani tribe had withdrawn from coalition due to a tribal rivalry with the Zadran. Many rebels also returned home as winter came on. By the end of December, government forces arriving from
Gardez ended the siege of the two towns and recaputered
Zazi Maidan. Khost was considered a "bastion of the
regime" during the
Soviet–Afghan War and its loyalty to the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan allowed it to be granted a
de facto provincial status in 1986. This provided the province with a force of paid provincial staff and an annual budget that was separate from the neighbouring provinces. Khost was upgraded from a Loy Wuluswali (within Paktia) to a full province in 1985.
1993-present Khost Province saw the
Battles of Zhawar and part of
Operation Infinite Reach. Khost Province was captured by the
Taliban during the
2021 Taliban offensive on August 15, 2021. On 16 April 2022,
Pakistani airstrikes targeted several villages in
Spera District, including Afghan-Dubai, Pasa Mela, Mir Sapar, Mandata, and Kanai, and struck refugee camps belonging to
internally displaced persons from
Waziristan, killing at least 41 people, mainly women and children, and wounding 22 others, according to the Taliban interim government. Pakistan claimed it struck TTP camps. On 22 June 2022, a
magnitude 5.9 earthquake struck the province. In Spera District, approximately 500 homes were destroyed, and 40 people were killed, with 95 others injured. Many houses constructed primarily of mud and wood were razed to the ground. ==Geography==