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Wednesday,
October 31, 2001
Some
U.S. troops inside Afghanistan
Rumsfeld
acknowledges ground presence in north, south areas
By
Matt Kelley
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
The United States has a modest number of
troops inside Afghanistan, Secretary of Defense Donald H.
Rumsfeld said Tuesday in the Pentagons clearest acknowledgment
yet of the American ground presence in the anti-terror war.
The
troops are doing liaison work with anti-Taliban fighters and
helping with resupply for those groups, as well as pinpointing
targets for U.S. bombers.
We
do have a modest number of troops in the country, Rumsfeld
told a Pentagon press conference. He declined to be more specific
about the number.
He
said some of the uniformed American troops are in the north,
where the main Taliban opposition is fighting, and that others
have come in and out of the south of Afghanistan.
About
half of the U.S. bombing effort also is going to help the
opposition, Rumsfeld said. Tuesday, 80 percent of the effort
was aimed at front line Taliban troops arrayed against opposition
known as the northern alliance.
Meanwhile,
in the air campaign, U.S. planes swept through the skies over
the front lines north of the Afghan capital throughout the
day Tuesday. A huge explosion at front lines about 25 miles
north of Kabul sent a mushroom cloud at least 1,000 feet high.
The origin was not clear, since no airplanes could be seen
overhead.
Gen.
Tommy Franks, commander of U.S. operation in Afghanistan,
met Tuesday with officials in Uzbekistan, where about 1,000
soldiers with the Armys 10th Mountain Division have
been deployed at an air base at 90 miles from the northern
Afghan border.
In
the subject of ground troops, Rumsfeld has only hinted previsouly
at their presence in Afghanistan. And he and others have said
repeatedly that it would take more than an air offensive to
go after Osama bin Laden and Taliban leaders who support him.
Officials also have said future U.S. commando raids or other
ground fighting against Taliban and al-Qaeda troops might
be based from an airfield inside Afghanistan.
On
Monday, Pentagon officials said setting up a U.S. base at
an Afghan airfield is one of several possibilities the Defense
Department is considering.
Troops
on the ground probably will be needed to deal with bin Laden
and other leaders of his al-Qaeda terror network, but past
wars in Afghanistan notably the former Soviet Unions
failure after 10 years of fighting have shown the high
cost of a conventional large-scale ground invasion.
Appearing
with Rumsfeld, British Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon said it
would be unwise to announce in advance whether there will
be a pause or limiting of air strikes during the holy month
of Ramadan.
Rumsfeld
on Monday cast doubt on whether the United States would heed
some of its Muslim allies request to wrap up the Afghanistan
campaign before Ramadan.
Hoon
has said previously that a pause was under consideration.
And Islamabads daily newspaper The News said that in
a meeting with Pakistan officials, Gen. Tommy Franks offered
some assurances that bombing during the Muslim
holy month of Ramadan could be stopped or limited to Taliban
targets away from civilian areas.
As
head of the U.S. Central Command, Franks is running the campaign
in Afghanistan.
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