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Taliban
and al Qaeda Still Resist
Northern alliance commanders handed over millions of dollars to
bribe Taliban battalion and company commanders to change the side.
The money was accepted, but for the most part, the bribed Taliban
officers went back to their units and ordered the men to use the
cash for more fuel and ammo to carry on the fighting.
1000 foreign fighters of Osama bin Ladens al Qaeda
network were reported holed up near Khanabad. Opposition forces
scooped up the towns of Mazar-e-Sharif, Herat, and Kabul, the capital.
Reports
averring that they have are on the point of collapse having lost
three quarters of the country should therefore be taken with a pinch
of salt. Despite of this triumphal progression, Taliban-al Qaeda
alliance was far from being a spent force.
The
number of foreign fighters, largely Arab and Muslim, was likewise
underestimated in intelligence reports. At Konduz alone, some 10,000
non-Afghans are fighting in Taliban ranks, plus another 2-3,000
imported al Qaeda troops.
The
outcome of that battle, in the next two or three days, will determine
whether the Taliban and al Qaeda retain control of northern Afghanistan
or lose it to the rebel forces, together with the gateway to the
Hindu Kush mountain range.
The
advancing forces circled round the Taliban-al Qaeda positions en
route. The Americans intended the Northern Alliance to double back
in the next stage of the combat and mop up pockets of resistance
remaining in captured territory. Those pockets were meant to be
mowed under this second strike maneuver or be wiped out from the
air.
According
to DEBKAfile s military sources, the
advance was swifter than planned, while the enemys responses
were wide of intelligence forecasts. The Taliban and their allies,
who seemed at first to be scattering in disarray in the face of
the rebel advance, quickly regrouped, with their heavy weapons intact,
in five places: Konduz and Khanabad in the north, Maidan Shahr in
the south, Uruzgan northeast of Kabul on the Kabul-Jalalabad highway,
Kandahar and four outlying provinces and most parts of the Hindu
Kush range and Pamir.
Jalalabad
and the tribal areas controlled by Pashtun, both pro- and anti-Taliban,
were never captured by the opposition.
As
for the immediate future, DEBKAfiles
military sources discern to major difficulties facing US and Northern
Alliance commanders:
The
Next Step:
The United States and opposition Afghan leaders are divided over
both war objectives and field tactics. The top American priority
was from the start the capture or death of top Taliban and al Qaeda
chiefs, starting with Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omer. The Northern
Alliances first aim is to take over Kabul from which to rule
the country - hence its precipitate dash for Kabul, in breach of
its deal with Washington. Weakening the Taliban and bin Ladens
army may be desirable but opposition leaders do not regard it as
feasible at this stage.
1.
These differing perceptions show up in the ground action in the
last few days. While US air bombardments over Konduz and Khanabad
focus on the Arab and Muslim soldiers of al Qaeda and the Taliban,
Northern Alliance commanders are concentrating on the Taliban, though
dividing their efforts between pounding them and seeking a negotiated
handover of the embattled areas, which the US opposes.
2.
Since the fall of Kabul, cracks on tribal lines are widening in
the high command of the Northern Alliance. The Uzbeks under General
Rashid Dostum, who hold the western front against Konduz, bitterly
resent the fact that although they bear the brunt of the fighting,
Tajik elements of the alliance headed by former president Burhanuddin
Rabbani strolled into Kabul after its fall and have taken over.
His lieutenant, Abdallah Abdallah has moreover stepped forward to
represent the entire
Northern
Alliance in negotiations for a post-Taliban administration. The
Shiite Hazara tribal militia leaders, led by Ismail Khan, who control
the southern city of Heart, are no better satisfied.
Even
amid the combat on the northern battlefield, Northern Alliance General
Dostum, who commands the western front of Konduz, and General Daoud,
on the eastern front, turned their attention away from the fierce
fighting long enough to bicker over who would enter the city first
that is if and when it falls.
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Kashmir Dispute Boiling
Over
·
Hunt
for Osama bin Laden without specific intelligence
·
Afghan
Under Russian Military Hands Again
· Flight
587 crash in New York link to Al Qaeda
· Al
Qaeda's nuclear bombs smuggled into the United States
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newsletter that goes behind current events. DEBKA
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well in advance. DEBKA
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