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U.S.
takes upper hand as more troops enter area
BY
STEVEN GUTKIN
Associated Press
BAGRAM AIR
BASE, Afghanistan U.S.-led coalition troops have gained the
upper hand after killing at least half the al Qaeda and Taliban
forces holed up in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan in the biggest
joint offensive in the war, the U.S. commander said Wednesday.
Several hundred
more American troops were deployed in the rugged terrain of Paktia
province bringing their number to more than 1,000
as were fresh forces from their Afghan allies. Working at altitudes
sometimes about 10,000 feet, they engaged in continuous firefights
with al Qaeda fighters and cleared several enemy caves.
Weve
got confirmed kills in the hundreds, Maj. Gen. Frank L. Hagenbeck
told a press conference Wednesday at Bagram air base north of the
capital Kabul. We truly have the momentum at this point.
Still, the Pentagon
admitted resistance from the fighters holed up in the hills of the
Shah-e-Kot mountain range was strong. Five Marine attack helicopters
entered the fight Tuesday to bolster the aerial strike force after
Army Apaches were damaged by intense fighting.
U.S. officials
have said the coalition of troops fighting in Operation Anaconda
number about 2,000. Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of the five-month-old
Afghan war, said 200 to 300 more American troops had been deployed
in the battle zone in the past two days, in addition to 800 who
were already there.
But Franks told
reporters at the Pentagon that the new deployment was not due to
stiffer-than-expected resistance and said there was no surprise
at the size of the al Qaeda forces.
We expected
that they would put up a fierce fight and they have and they are,
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld told reporters in Washington.
He said the fighters were very hardened elements of al Qaeda.
But he said the outcome was reasonably assured: that
the fighters would surrender or be killed.
When the operation
began Friday, 150 to 200 enemy fighters were believed to be hiding
in the area, Hagenbeck said. But by Wednesday, as many as 600 to
700 al Qaeda and some Taliban troops had filtered into the territory,
he said.
Conservatively
speaking right now, Im convinced from the evidence Ive
seen that weve killed at least half of those enemy forces,
he said. We own the dominant terrain in the area.
In other developments:
Anti-aircraft
missiles left by the ousted Taliban militia exploded as peacekeepers
were trying to defuse them in the Afghan capital, Kabul, killing
three German soldiers and two Danish soldiers.
Paktia
provinces intelligence unit offered a $4,000 reward for the
capture of any al Qaeda warrior, passing leaflets in Gardez and
making announcements from loudspeakers.
Afghanistans
main regional commanders gathered Wednesday for meetings with interim
leader Hamid Karzai and U.N. officials on security and forming a
national army. Cooperation among them is considered important because
Karzais interim government has little power outside the capital.
Regional warlords control much of the land and it remains unclear
if they will be willing to cede influence to the central authority.
Allied Afghan
commanders said they were bringing in new units into the Shah-e-Kot
battle for a final push against the al Qaeda fugitives.
There
are 5,000 soldiers collecting in Shah-e-Kot for a final offensive
on the al Qaeda to finish them off, said Commander Ismail
Khan, who brought in extra soldiers from his base in Jaji, northeast
of Paktias capital, Gardez.
U.S. officials
returning from the front Wednesday predicted the offensive would
be wrapped up soon, thanks to increased firepower and progressing
ground operations.
I think
really in a couple of days it will be over, said Maj. Ignacio
Perez of the 101st Airborne Division.
Hostile fire
Monday brought down one Chinook helicopter and damaged another,
killing seven U.S. troops the worst casualty toll in a single
offensive operation of the 5-month-old war.
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