Le fils de Massoud aux obsèques de son père. Lors des funérailles de son père Ahmad Shah Massoud, Ahmed, le fils de Massoud salue la foule immense venu se recueillir. Ce film est réalisé par Ariana sur les funérailles du commandant Massoud, assassiné le 9 septembre 2001 et enterré dans sa ville natale de Djanalak au cœur de la vallée du Panjshir.
This Film is directed by Ariana on the funeral of Commander Massoud, assassinated Sept. 9, 2001 and buried in his hometown of jangalak the heart of the Panjshir Valley.
It was fundamentally America's project that attacked to Afghanistan in year 2001 without Ahmad Shah Massoud existence and his sovereignty, I know, you know this, and the world considered that as long as Massoud is alive taking over is impossible ever.
And I ask you people that why did the US couldn't invade to Afghanistan before his assassination?
The answer for this question is: There wouldn't be any kind of power able to invade Afghanistan if Ahmad Shah Massoud was alive now or if hadn't been assassinated. He was himself strict defender of his soil along with his allies till last drop of their bloods.
Ahmad Shah Massoud would have opposed the U.S. mission to invade of Afghanistan or would have not let foreign troops to stay longer in Afghanistan. And Massoud could have done resistance anytime against the enemies of Afghanistan.
On September 9, 2001, two days before the cataclysmic attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, Ahmad Shah Massoud, commander of the United Front guerrilla opposition to Afghanistan's Taliban regime, was assassinated in the Afghan town of Khvajeh Bahauddin by two Arab men posing as journalists. Both of the assassins died -- one in the attack itself, blown up with his own bomb along with Massoud, and the other, it seems, was shot while trying to escape shortly afterwards.
Journalists commonly attribute the murder either to al Qaeda or to the Taliban. That seems logical enough. Massoud's United Front was fighting a war against the Taliban at the time. The Taliban were in turn protecting al Qaeda, an organization blamed for a number of sophisticated terrorist attacks, including those on 9/11. Simple as these explanations may be, Massoud's murder has never been solved. The details of the assassination, which included an explosive charge disguised as a battery pack for a video camera, the acquisition of stolen passports, and the death of both assassins, at different times and by different means -- suggest a sophisticated conspiracy. Dead men tell no tales, and in this case, neither have the living. The Taliban, for their part, have denied any involvement in Massoud's death.
![](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/W3RfHkjSV6Y/mqdefault.jpg)