[iwar] Afghan campaign goes from bad to worse

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Date: 2001-10-26 22:49:18


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Date: Sat, 27 Oct 2001 05:49:18 -0000
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Subject: [iwar] Afghan campaign goes from bad to worse
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Execution of opposition leader makes mockery of US ground strategy

By Muhammad Sadik, ArabNews.com Staff


WASHINGTON/KABUL, 27 October — Things appear to be going from bad to 
worse for the US and its campaign to oust from power the Taleban and 
Al-Quaeda network in Afghanistan, and civilians are again the ones 
paying the price. US forces yesterday snuck into Kabul Abdul Haq, a 
key opposition figure, apparently so he could persuade Pashtun 
tribesmen to join moves to create a broad based alternative Afghan 
government.

Such small-scale operations are supposed to form the foundation of 
the US strategy in the ground offensive. This time, it all went 
horribly wrong when the Taleban captured, tried and executed Haq, and 
sent at least one US soldier scurrying for his life. A US search-and-
rescue operation to bring him out was repelled. At the same time, US 
airstrikes continued unabated, and continued to be devastatingly 
inaccurate — destroying civilian homes and yet another Red Cross 
warehouse.

Haq was an ally of Afghanistan's exiled king said to have returned 
from exile to foment rebellion against the Taleban regime. Haq's 
brother confirmed that he had been captured and an aide to exiled 
King Muhammad Zahir Shah said in Rome that it appeared he had been 
killed.

US jets began a 20th straight night of bombing, and the Red Cross 
confirmed that US bombs had hit one of its aid depot for the second 
time in ten days, destroying three of the remaining warehouses in the 
Afghan capital and wiping out stocks of food and cooking oil intended 
for widows and the disabled people. The warehouse was ablaze, with 
trucks upturned and sacks of humanitarian supplies such as wheat and 
peas scattered among the debris.

The International Committee of the Red Cross spokesman Mario Musa 
said at least two warehouses were directly hit by bombs or missiles, 
but three were destroyed in the fire. He said there were no reports 
of casualties. Mulla Muhammad Omar, supreme leader of Afghanistan's 
ruling militia, called on the supporters of the militia to hold 
worldwide rallies within 72 hours. Taleban forces said they seized on 
a break in US bombing of their front lines north of the capital Kabul 
to recapture the town of Marmul from Northern Alliance opposition 
fighters.

Along with fresh reports of widespread civilian casualties in the 
bombing and controversy over the US use of cluster bombs, yesterday's 
errors are a public relations nightmare for the US as it pursues 
its "war on terrorism". Taleban information official Abdul Hanan 
Hemat said that Haq and two others were spreading US propaganda 
and "trying to encourage people to rebel."

"Based on a Ulema warrant which calls for the death penalty for 
anyone spying for the United States, they were shot dead," the 
official told AFP. Taleban officials said that Haq had been cornered 
in the eastern town of Azro, in Logar province, and arrested after a 
two-day standoff.

"After a while, two helicopters and one American jet came into the 
area and started firing rockets," Hemat said, "The helicopters tried 
to land and rescue them but they failed." Hemat said Haq had been 
carrying several satellite phones a large amount of cash, in dollars, 
and documents containing the names of his supporters.

In the Pakistani city of Peshawar, Abdul Haq's older brother Haji Din 
Muhammad confirmed Haq's capture. A Taleban spokesman told the Afghan 
Islamic Press that another 50 of Haq's supporters — 
including "foreigners" — had also been surrounded. "We have not 
arrested any foreigners but there is a possibility that there may be 
some foreigners among the 50 people under siege," he told AIP.

US special forces and intelligence agents are known to be working 
with some Afghan opposition leaders. Abdul Haq won fame and respect 
in the fight against the 1979-89 occupation by the Soviet Union. He 
is not a member of the main opposition force, the Northern Alliance, 
which is dominated by Afghanistan's Uzbek and Tajik minorities. But 
he is a hero to Pashtuns, Afghanistan's largest ethnic group which 
supplies the bulk of Taleban forces.

Opposition officials and a foreign intelligence source said he had 
returned to Logar province to set up a tribal revolt against Taleban 
rule. "Abdul Haq was very close to us," said Zalmai Rassoul, private 
secretary to Zahir Shah in Rome. "He went into the region to contact 
the tribes and to gather them around the peace plan."

Of the reported execution he said: "It's very difficult to confirm, 
but the convergent information points to that." A foreign 
intelligence source in northern Afghanistan told AFP: "If he has been 
captured, it is a huge setback to this idea of dividing the Taleban." 
A Pentagon spokeswoman refused to comment on the reports.

In Kabul, US bombers killed five civilians yesterday. Warplanes 
dropped up to 10 bombs in night raids on the capital, killing five 
people and terrifying residents who cowered in their homes, witnesses 
and a Taleban official said. The Taleban's intelligence chief warned 
leaders such as Haq who support Zahir Shah not to enter the 
country. "We advise the supporters of Zahir Shah not try to enter 
into Afghanistan and to give up your nefarious motives. Otherwise you 
will face dangerous consequences," AIP quoted intelligence chief Qari 
Ahmadullah as saying.

In Quetta, near Pakistan's border with Afghanistan, doctors told AFP 
they were treating between 60 and 70 injured civilians every day as 
beleaguered Afghans streamed out of their cities to escape the US 
bombardment. The Taleban claim that more than 1,000 civilians have 
been killed in the US strikes, a claim hotly denied by Washington.

The regime attempted to capitalize on disquiet over the US use of 
cluster bombs in their air campaign after a UN spokeswoman said 
Thursday that an attack had killed nine civilians and forced 
villagers out of their homes. "The international human rights 
organizations should put pressure on the Americans not to use cluster 
bombs," Taleban Education Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi told reporters.

"They are contaminating our farm lands and destroying our villages. 
It is very dangerous for civilians to try and remove these bombs." At 
least one of the civilians who died on Monday did so after picking up 
an unexploded bomblet left by a strike near the western city of 
Herat, UN spokeswoman Stephanie Bunker said.

Former Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar claimed yesterday to be in 
talks with the Taleban and his one-time enemies in the Northern 
Alliance on a united front to "defend" Afghanistan from the US 
campaign. 

"We are in negotiations with the Taleban, in Kabul, Kandahar, Baraki, 
Jalalabad, but also in Peshawar (Pakistan) to create a united front. 
(Taleban leader) Mullah Omar is being kept up to date on the 
progress," said the head of the hard-line Islamist Hezb-e-Islami, who 
lives in exile in Tehran. "We are also in contact with the Northern 
Alliance forces, with all those in the interior and exterior of 
Afghanistan, who are involved in the conflict. The leaders of the 
Northern Alliance had hoped for the collapse of the Taleban in the 
first days, even the first hours, of the American attacks," he said.

"They have now understood that was not easy." Hekmatyar added that 
the "object of these discussions was to rally all those who want to 
defend our country," but did not explicitly name which opposition 
leaders he had contacted. 

"It is not a question of already distributing ministerial posts (in a 
post-Taleban government), or of who will control the region," he said.

Cluster bombs

European Parliament President Nicole Fontaine was among those who 
criticized the use of cluster bombs. She warned that international 
support for the US campaign, "is not a blank check and could be 
weakened if this type of weapon continues to be used."

UN Mine Action Program Afghanistan technical adviser Peter Le Sueur 
told reporters the bombs had a notorious history of killing 
civilians. 

"Afghans have never seen these types of weapons before," he 
said, "They are a bright yellow color and look quite innocuous so 
they are very attractive for children... Just picking them up could 
cause them to detonate."

The US Defense Department has not confirmed the incident reported by 
the UN but has acknowledged using cluster bombs in its campaign 
against the Taleban. 

The United States had earlier launched its campaign in a bid to hunt 
down Osama Bin Laden.

US President George W. Bush yesterday signed into law an anti-
terrorism bill that expands police and surveillance powers in 
response to Sept. 11 attacks. "This legislation is essential not only 
to pursuing and punishing terrorists but also preventing more 
atrocities," Bush said before signing the measure, dubbed the "USA 
Patriot Act," in a White House ceremony.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation yesterday released Saudi student 
Khaled Sami Hasanain without bail after the FBI had picked him up 
from a Santa Monica college. An official source at the Saudi 
Consulate in Los Angeles told Asharq Al-Awsat that the release showed 
that there was no case against him.





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