2001 World History
Yasir Arafat (1929–2004)
Ariel Sharon (1928– )
Mohammad Khatami (1943–)
World Trade Center
Hamid Karzai (1957– )
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2001
- Congo president Laurent Kabila assassinated by bodyguard (Jan. 16). In final days of presidency,
Bill Clinton issues
controversial pardons, including one for Marc Rich, billionaire fugitive
financier (Jan. 20). George W. Bush is sworn
in as 43rd president (Jan. 20). Earthquake kills thousands in
India (Jan. 26 et seq.). Libyan convicted in Flight 103
bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland
(Jan. 31). Right-winger Ariel Sharon wins
election in Israel (Feb. 6). U.S. submarine Greeneville
sinks Japanese fishing boat, killing 9 (Feb. 9). FBI agent Robert
Hanssen is charged with spying for Russia for 15 years (Feb. 20).
The long-simmering resentment of Macedonia's ethnic Albanians erupts
into violence (March 15 et seq.). British livestock
epidemic, foot-and-mouth disease, reaches crisis levels (March 23). Bush abandons global-warming
treaty (Kyoto Protocol), angering European leaders (March 30).
U.S. spy plane and Chinese jet collide. The 24 crew members of the U.S.
plane are detained for 11 days; U.S. issues a formal statement of regret
(April 2 et seq.). Race riots in Cincinnati continue for
several days following a shooting of an unarmed black man by a white
police officer (April 7 et seq.). U.S. millionaire Dennis Tito becomes first
space tourist, visiting the International Space Station aboard a Russian
booster (April 28). Former Klansman Thomas E. Blanton convicted
of 1963 murder of four black girls in Birmingham, Ala. (May 1).
After a Palestinian suicide bomber kills 5 and wounds more than 100 in a
Netanya shopping mall, Israeli warplanes retaliate by bombing West Bank
and Gaza strip (May 18). Four are declared guilty in 1998
terrorist bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania (May
29). Balance of the Senate shifts after Jim Jeffords of Vermont
changes his party affiliation from Republican to Independent. The move
strips Republicans of control of the Senate and gives Democrats the
narrowest of majorities (50–49–1) (June 5). Bush
signs new tax-cut law, cutting taxes by $1.35 trillion over 11 years,
the largest tax cut in 2 decades (June 7). Mohammad Khatami, Iran's
moderate president, is reelected in a landslide (June 9).
Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh executed
(June 11). Syrian forces evacuate Beirut area after decades of
occupation (June 19). Former Yugoslav president Slobodan
Milosevic is delivered to UN tribunal in The Hague to await war-crimes
trial (June 29). Without U.S., 178 nations reach agreement on
climate accord, which rescues, though dilutes, 1997 Kyoto Protocol
(July 23). Bush allows stem cell research, approving federal
funds for studies using existing strains of stem cells (Aug.
9). After six months of fighting, a peace agreement is signed
between rebels and the Macedonian government (Aug. 13). Budget
surplus dwindles; some blame the slowing economy and the Bush tax cut
(Aug. 22). Terrorists attack United
States. Hijackers ram jetliners into twin towers of
New York City's World Trade Center and
the Pentagon. A fourth hijacked plane crashes 80 mi outside of
Pittsburgh. Toll of dead is more than 3,000. Within days, Islamic
militant Osama bin Laden and the al-Qaeda terrorist network are identified as the parties behind
the attacks (Sept. 11). Anthrax scare rivets
nation, as anthrax-laced letters are sent to various media and
government officials. Several die after handling the letters (October
5 et seq.). In response to Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, U.S.
and British forces launch bombing campaign against Taliban government
and al-Qaeda terrorist camps in Afghanistan. Bombings continue on a
daily basis (Oct. 7 et seq.). Irish Republican Army announces that it has begun to dismantle its weapons arsenal, marking a
dramatic leap forward in Northern Ireland peace process (Oct.
23). Plane crash kills 260 in Queens, N.Y. (Nov. 12). Afghani
factions create a post-Taliban government (Nov. 27). Enron Corp.,
one of world's largest energy companies, files for bankruptcy (Dec.
2). Israel condemns the Palestinian Authority as a
“terror-supporting entity” and severs ties with leader
Yasir Arafat following
mounting violence against Israelis. The Israeli Army begins bombing
Palestinian areas (Dec. 4 et seq.). Taliban regime in
Afghanistan collapses after two months of bombing by American warplanes
and fighting by Northern Alliance ground troops (Dec. 9). Hamid Karzai, new interim
Afghan leader, is sworn in (Dec. 22).
Fact Monster/Information Please®
Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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