[iwar] [fc:Taliban.leader.cites.help.by.China]

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Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2001 22:18:18 -0800 (PST)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Taliban.leader.cites.help.by.China]
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Taliban leader cites help by China
By Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

     A Taliban military commander said in a published interview that China
is secretly assisting the ruling militia in Afghanistan.
     Taliban commander Maulvi Jalaluddin Haqqani told an Urdu-language
newspaper in Pakistan that the ruling militia's strategy is to conduct a
long war aimed at entrapping U.S. forces on the ground.
     Asked about the Taliban's relations with China, Mr. Haqqani said:
"China is a good country. Taliban are in contact with it even now.
     "China is also extending support and cooperation to the Taliban
government, but the shape of this cooperation cannot be disclosed," Mr.
Haqqani said in the interview published Oct. 22 in the newspaper Islamabad
Pakistan.
     A day later, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Sun Yuxi in Beijing
dismissed the commander's statement as "a complete fabrication."
     A U.S. official said China's contacts with the Taliban have been
"limited" and "of questionable value," primarily related to economic
matters.
     Mr. Haqqani also said the United States is revealing its strategy
"little by little" and that China will react to U.S. attempts to keep forces
in the region.
     The United States has set up a military base in Uzbekistan, a move that
undermined China's goal of organizing several Central Asian nations under
the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
     A representative of the Northern Alliance Afghan opposition said China
has been supplying weapons to the Taliban for several years, primarily small
arms.
     Publicly, China's government has not opposed U.S. military action in
Afghanistan but has said strikes should be limited to avoid civilian
casualties.
     China's Foreign Ministry said in response to a report in The Washington
Times earlier this month that China "has not established any kind of
official relations with the Taliban."
     The comments were made in response to intelligence reports disclosed by
The Times that two Chinese companies have been building a telephone
switching network in Kabul for the past 21/2 years.
     The Taliban also helped Chinese government agents recover pieces of
U.S. cruise missiles fired during the 1998 U.S. raids on terrorist training
camps in Afghanistan. The Chinese government denied getting the cruise
missile technology.
     An earlier Foreign Ministry statement of Sept. 15 said China closed its
embassy in Kabul in 1993 because of safety concerns and has no "resident
personnel" there.
     Mr. Haqqani said the Taliban is braced for a long war against the
United States and has a "sufficient stock" of arms left behind by the Soviet
Union and from the United States. "We have shifted all these weapons from
our garrisons to the mountains," he said. "Let the Americans drop their
commandos and you would see how many casualties they suffer."
     Asked about widespread international support for the United States' war
against terrorism, Mr. Haqqani said it was "due to the coercion and
terrorism of the United States."
     However, he said some nations such as Russia, Japan, Iran, China and
Libya want to see the United States stuck in a long conflict in Afghanistan.
"These countries want Afghanistan to become the graveyard for the American
soldiers," he said.
     Mr. Haqqani said U.S. bombing and missile strikes have not been
successful and that most casualties are civilians. There has been "no
tangible military loss" to the Taliban, he said.
     "We have evolved strategy for a long war and the United States will not
be able to conquer Afghanistan even after fighting for two years," Mr.
Haqqani said. "The fate of the United States will be worse than Russia. Our
real war will begin the day the U.S. troops would land in Afghanistan."
     About 20 to 25 Taliban soldiers were killed and a military helicopter
and two passenger planes of the Ariana Airlines were damaged "while the rest
of our planes and helicopters are safe," he said.
     The Pentagon has displayed numerous bomb-damage photographs and video
showing many more Taliban military facilities and equipment have been
destroyed.
     Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden
and other commanders "are safe and performing their duties," Mr. Haqqani
said.
     "This is because the American planes are dropping bombs from a very
high altitude and they cannot dare to fly low," he said.
     Mr. Haqqani said he was in Pakistan as part of his role as Taliban
minister for tribal and border affairs. 

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