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Tuesday,
November 6, 2001
U.S.
jets target Taliban positions in northern Afghanistan
By
Kathy Gannon
Associated Press
KABUL,
Afghanistan B-52s hammered away at Taliban positions
outside a town near the northern border with Tajikistan and
along the Kabul front Monday in hopes of helping the opposition
gain ground before winter.
Taliban
diplomats in Islamabad, Pakistan, also reported American air
attacks Monday in the northern provinces of Samangan and Balkh
against positions defending the Taliban-held city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Opposition
and Taliban forces were fighting in the area of Mazar-e-Sharif
on Monday, both sides said. But an opposition offensive launched
there a day earlier was reported faltering hours after it
began.
B-52
bombers struck at three separate sites about 30 miles northeast
of Taloqan, near the Tajik border. Also, U.S. jets pounded
Taliban positions to the east of the town, Mohammed Abil,
a spokesman for the opposition northern alliance, said in
a telephone interview.
Taloqan
served as the opposition capital until Taliban troops overran
it in September 2000, a major setback for the northern alliance.
The alliance is seeking to reclaim the town, but has not been
able to make any major advances despite the U.S. bombing campaign,
now in its fifth week.
Two B-52s
dropped a total of nearly 20 bombs Monday morning on a Taliban
base at Estarghech part of Taliban defenses north of
Kabul. Huge clouds of black smoke rose after the raid.
Two loud
explosions were heard on the outskirts of Kabul around 5 a.m.,
while artillery and heavy machine gun fire reverberated from
Taliban posts in the hills surrounding the Afghan capital.
In a
sign of stepped-up U.S. activity in the region, a team of
five U.S. military personnel landed at Golbahar, about 40
miles north of Kabul near the front lines, to help coordinate
efforts in the war, opposition interior minister Yunis
Qanoni told The Associated Press on Monday.
The men
arrived Sunday from Tajikistan in a small twin-engine plane
and were expected to study the new dirt landing strip to see
if its ready to handle supply shipments. If so, that
would bolster opposition forces, whose mountainous supply
route from Tajikistan has already been snowed over.
Air Force
Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
said Sunday on NBCs Meet the Press that
more U.S. special forces had entered the country to help the
opposition.
The Americans
also carried out strikes in the Talibans southern stronghold
of Kandahar after a four-day lull, the Afghan Islamic Press
reported.
The Taliban-controlled
Bakhtar News Agency claimed bombs killed 10 people and injured
15 others in a village outside Mazar-e-Sharif. Five people
died and seven were wounded in a raid near Kandahar, it said.
The reports
could not be independently confirmed. The Pentagon has repeatedly
dismissed the Talibans claims of widespread civilian
casualties as lies.
President
Bush ordered the airstrikes Oct. 7 after the Taliban repeatedly
refused to surrender Osama bin Laden, chief suspect in the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon.
Meanwhile,
Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf a key ally
in the U.S.-led campaign will meet with British Prime
Minister Tony Blair in London on Thursday, Blairs office
said. The meeting will come a day after Blair flies by supersonic
Concorde to Washington for talks with Bush.
Blair
has been playing a leading diplomatic role in maintaining
international support for the campaign against terror.
On Sunday,
an attack by anti-Taliban forces outside Mazar-e-Sharif was
reported faltering only hours after it was launched, raising
questions about the ability of the opposition to exploit U.S.
airstrikes without the assistance of American ground troops.
Mazar-e-Sharif was lost by the rebels to the Taliban in 1998.
Retaking it would open a major supply route for the northern
alliance from Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
In Islamabad,
Taliban Ambassador Abdul Salam Zaeef said the U.S. bombing
had driven thousands of people from their homes. He said the
situation had been made worse because Pakistan will not allow
refugees into its territory. He called on the United Nations
to help the people of Afghanistan inside Afghan territory.
The
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan commits itself to cooperating
with the United Nations operation in this respect to prevent
any further problems, Zaeef said.
The United
Nations has been reluctant to operate inside Afghanistan because
of security concerns and has been trying to persuade Pakistan
to open its borders to more refugees who could be cared for
on Pakistani soil. U.N. officials have also complained of
Taliban fighters harassing aid workers and looting supplies.
Zaeef said the only threat to U.N. operations in Afghanistan
was American bombs.
In Jabal
Saraj, near Gulbahar, political leaders of the opposition
northern alliance including deposed Afghan president Burhanuddin
Rabbani reviewed troops Monday and said they were ready to
strike at the capital.
Flags
flew and old Soviet tanks fired practice rounds into arid
hillsides in a display of strength.
This
is military preparation that shows our highest level of readiness,
said Gen. Mohammed Fahim, the northern alliances military
commander. He evaded questions about when the opposition would
move on key Taliban positions.
U.S.
military planners are concerned that opposition forces will
get bogged down with the onset of winter in the weeks ahead.
Bad weather will soon make roads impassable, obstructing the
resupply of front-line troops.
Bad weather
is believed to have caused the crash Friday night of a U.S.
helicopter inside Afghanistan on a mission to rescue a sick
soldier. The helicopter was identified as an MH-53, probably
an Air Force Pave Low special forces troop carrier.
Four
crew members aboard the downed craft were injured, none critically,
and were taken out by a second helicopter on the mission.
The ill soldier was rescued Saturday.
Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, on a tour of front-line states
in the war against terrorism, sought to dispel fears that
the air campaign was failing to crack the Talibans grip
on Afghanistan.
In Pakistan
on Sunday, Rumsfeld said the Taliban are no longer functioning
as a government and were not making major military
moves.
On Monday,
Rumsfeld was in India, where he said the military operation
in Afghanistan was becoming more effective every day and would
not take years to complete.
U.S.
officials, however, have said the campaign against terrorism
is global and could last well after the eventual end of fighting
in Afghanistan.
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