|
Al-Qaida remains elusive in
Afghanistan
Kabul -
U.S. troops and their allies are finding it tough to pin down Taliban
and al-Qaida remnants, a fact driven home by fighting that sputtered
out this week with little indication of who the enemy was or what
gains, if any, had been made.
The military says the fighters were
loyalists of rebel warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. But former Taliban
officials and other Afghans in Kandahar province, site of the
fighting, say the men were remnants of the Taliban. They even name
leaders: Sirajuddin and Abdul Rahman.
Western intelligence, the United
Nations and the rebels themselves say opponents of the United States
and President Hamid Karzai have stepped up their recruiting and
efforts to reorganize.
Former Taliban even report the
emergence in Pashtun-dominated areas of a new administration of
Taliban, the Islamic militants who seized most of Afghanistan in the
mid-1990s. Their government was toppled by a U.S.-led coalition
because it harbored Osama bin Laden.
The warren of caves in southeast
Afghanistan where hundreds of U.S and Norwegian forces fought about 80
rebel fighters this week may have been a staging area, supply depot or
hub, said Lt. Col. Michael Shields, operations officer for the
Coalition Task Force, 82nd Airborne Division.
Eighteen rebels were killed in what
the U.S. military called its biggest assault since Operation Anaconda
in March 2002.
In the end, the caves didn't turn up
any weapons, and the fighters escaped, their identities still
uncertain. Soldiers found mules, lanterns, blankets, food, fuel, water
and vitamins in the cave.
"We have concrete evidence that
forces were in that particular area at least to seek sanctuary,"
Shields said.
The problem facing the U.S. and its
two dozen allies in Afghanistan may be growing: Fresh recruiting may
have attracted thousands to a more coordinated guerrilla opposition.
Militants interviewed by The
Associated Press say they are united against the coalition forces in
Afghanistan. So-called "night letters," or political
pamphlets, call for jihad, or holy war, against the international
forces.
Foes of the coalition and Karzai's
government now appear to be operating small, mobile training camps in
the mountains along the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Al-Qaida
operatives appear to be doing the training.
Pakistani militant groups are aligned
with al-Qaida and the Taliban. The backbone of the so-called Pakistani
Taliban are the groups Jaish-e-Mohammed, Harakat-ul Mujahedeen and
Lashkar-e-Tayyaba.
Their coordinator is Qari Akhtar, a
graduate of an Afghan training center, said a former member of the
Taliban who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The Uzbeks, Chechens and Tajik rebels
in Afghanistan are led by an Uzbek rebel Qari Tahir Yaldash, a deputy
of slain Uzbek leader Juma Namangani, say rebel fighters.
The Taliban also have a new, secret
administrative structure in ethnic Pashtun areas, former Taliban say.
They say former high-ranking Taliban
commander Mullah Brader, of Deh Rawood in Uruzgan province, is the
Taliban military head, appointed by fugitive leader Mullah Mohammed
Omar.
Brader's deputies are Akhtar Mohammed
Uzmani, a former Taliban governor; Dadullah, a one-legged Taliban
commander who escaped heavy fighting in Kunduz province; and Abdul
Razzak, the former Taliban interior minister.
Pashtun-dominated areas of
Afghanistan have been divided up among former Taliban who are
recruiting disgruntled young men. Saif-ur Rahman, who commanded Afghan
soldiers fighting coalition forces at Operation Anaconda, is in charge
of Ghazni, Paktia, Paktika and Gardez provinces.
Razzak and Uzmani are the men
organizing Kandahar, Uruzgan, Helmand and Zabul provinces. Eastern
Nangarhar, Kunar and Laghman provinces are being organized by Maulvi
Abdul Kabir, the Taliban's No. 3 man. Taliban commander Anwar Dangar
is organizing the central provinces of Parwan, Kapisa, Wardak, Logar
and Kabul.
"There is an administrative and
military structure in place in these provinces," said a former
member of the Taliban who didn't want to be named but has close
contact with former intelligence officials in the hardline regime.
The United States has had broad
support for the operations it continues to lead in Afghanistan.
Britain, Poland, Italy, Canada,
Spain, Norway and several other countries have contributed small
military contingents in Afghanistan engaged in engineering,
mine-clearing and other tasks. Australia, Jordan, Germany and several
Scandinavian countries also have at times placed special forces units
in the country.
In addition, the international
peacekeeping force that patrols Kabul has included troops from
Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Great Britain, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway,
Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey. --
Washington Post
Brudirect.com
|