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Thursday,
November 8, 2001
Taliban
denies losing territory
By
Don Pathan
Associated Press
JABAL
SARAJ, Afghanistan Aided by heavy U.S. bombing, opposition
forces said they seized a district near Mazar-e-Sharif from
Taliban forces Wednesday and were closing in on the key northern
city.
U.S.
officials said the northern opposition alliance was making
advances in the area but that the situation was very
fluid and information hard to come by. In some cases,
they said, opposition forces were attacking on horseback against
Taliban tanks.
Northern
alliance spokesman Ashraf Nadeem said opposition troops took
control of Shol Ghar district, about 30 miles from Mazar-e-Sharif,
and some units were just eight miles south of the city.
The Taliban
denied they lost Shol Ghar and said they would move 500 fresh
fighters into the area by Thursday despite raids by U.S. warplanes.
A Taliban
official said the opposition was lying and that its claims
were baseless, the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press reported.
It did not identify the official.
It said
the official, speaking in the eastern city of Jalalabad, acknowledged
opposition forces had earlier seized Zaray one of three
districts south of Mazar-e-Sharif that the opposition said
it controlled Tuesday after a pre-dawn attack.
The Taliban
captured Mazar-e-Sharif in 1998, and losing it would seriously
weaken the Islamic militias position in northern Afghanistan.
You
have had one or more of your American service members, who
are in harms way over there, reporting back about cavalry
charges, and this is opposition forces, riding horseback into
combat against tanks and armored personnel carriers.
U.S.
jets played a critical role in Wednesdays opposition
advance, targeting several pickup trucks packed with departing
Taliban troops as well as hitting fortified positions, Nadeem
said by satellite telephone.
U.S.
warplanes also bombed behind Taliban positions on the Kabul
front Wednesday. Witnesses said they heard no anti-aircraft
fire from Taliban fighters, who have periodically tried to
shoot down U.S. jets since the bombing began exactly a month
ago.
American
jets dropped dozens of bombs late Tuesday and throughout the
day Wednesday around positions about 30 miles north of Kabul,
the capital. Some explosions were followed by up to 30 smaller
detonations.
One blast
sent up a huge streak of gray smoke that spread into a white
mushroom cloud. U.S. planes circled overhead.
An opposition
commander, Qand Agha, 30, said a U.S. jet hit a Taliban tank
northeast of Kabul and that a B-52 bomber dropped 20 bombs
around the front line in one hour Wednesday afternoon.
It
is improving but it is not enough, Agha said of the
bombing. I would like to see the Americans drop at least
200 bombs a day.
Abdul
Maaruf, a 17-year-old opposition fighter with blue, sparkling
heart stickers decorating his Kalashnikov, said Taliban artillery
fire had diminished in recent days, possibly because gunners
were choosing to hold their fire.
If
they dont see any planes, they fire on us, Maaruf
said. Taliban trucks have recently arrived with supplies,
he said.
Agha
said the Taliban were saving their ammunition, possibly expecting
an opposition offensive. Four of his fighters watched the
front from a rooftop lookout while the other dozen members
of the unit played volleyball as the sun set over the plain.
A warmer
spell was melting snow on the surrounding Hindu Kush mountains,
and opposition fighters said trucks might be able to cross
again soon, at least until the next snowfall. But they predicted
the passes will snow over by the end of the month, choking
off supply routes until spring.
In villages
surrounding Jabal Saraj, about 45 miles north of Kabul, fliers
that witnesses said were jettisoned from a B-52 bomber tumbled
from the sky. Children and adults scrambled to pick them up.
The fliers
showed a picture of a radio and antenna, and detailed times
and frequencies for radio broadcasts in the local Pashtun
and Dari languages. The United States has been broadcasting
anti-Taliban statements into Afghanistan.
The Talibans
Bakhtar News Agency said bombs north of Kabul, in the eastern
city of Jalalabad and the western city of Herat on Tuesday
and Wednesday killed at least 23 people and injured several
dozen others. The report could not be independently confirmed,
and the Pentagon has denied Taliban claims of widespread civilian
casualties.
Bakhtar
said that U.S. planes dropped food packets before launching
bombing raids, but that angry residents burned the aid.
On Tuesday
at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said
Tuesday that an assessment of the opposition claims of gains
outside Mazar-e-Sharif would have to wait until the dust
settled.
But after
seesawing battles south of the city in recent weeks, the opposition
said intense strikes by American planes had opened the way.
The alliance had complained earlier that U.S. bombing was
not heavy enough.
Nadeem
said 500 Taliban soldiers had crossed over to the opposition
side. The Taliban have previously denied reports of defections
from its ranks.
The Pentagon
has said small numbers of American special forces teams are
working with northern alliance forces to train and equip them,
provide them with additional ammunition and weaponry, and
identify targets for U.S. strike aircraft.
But with
winter is closing in, bad weather could choke off supply routes
for troops. The Pentagon says it intends to start delivering
cold-weather clothing to the northern alliance.
President
Bush launched airstrikes against Afghanistan on Oct. 7 after
the ruling Taliban militia refused to hand over Osama bin
Laden for his alleged role in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
on the United States.
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