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Thursday,
November 15, 2001
Taliban
fighters could be regrouping
By
Matt Kelley
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Taliban fighters fleeing northern Afghanistan and heading
south may be trying to find refuge in caves held by their
home tribes and regroup for more combat, a Pentagon spokesman
said Wednesday.
It
would appear to us they are abandoning cities they previously
had control over, said Rear Adm. John Stufflebeem. Its
not clear why theyre doing that. It may be that theyre
regrouping.
Stufflebeem
told reporters at the Pentagon that southern Afghanistan is
home to 23 or
more Pashtun tribes, many of which appear to be turning against
the Taliban. The militia forces have been fleeing the capital
of Kabul and Stufflebeem said there was fighting around the
airport in their stronghold of Kandahar.
The
are a number of Pashtun tribes in the south who would appear
now to be opposing Taliban. Whether or not theyre working
in concert, we do not know.
Whether
or not they are organized to work together, we do not know,
he said.
Stufflebeem
said that while the U.S.-led war against the Taliban and Osama
bin Ladens al-Queda terrorism network has made tremendous
gains in the past few days, it is too early to declare victory.
We
dont have enough factual information to assume that
this war in Afghanistan is about to end, he said. We
still have the job of finding and getting al-Queda, we still
have the job of finding and getting Taliban leadership.
Earlier,
Vice President Dick Cheney said the military defeats inflicted
on the Taliban mark a good beginning to the longer-term struggle
against terrorism, and jabbed at domestic handwringers
who recently criticized the war effort.
If
anybody has any questions about whether or not were
determined to carry through ... all they have to do is go
to Afghanistan today and interview members of the Taliban
if they can find any, Cheney said in a speech
before the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce.
At
the Pentagon, senior defense officials said the sudden shift
of fortunes had prompted Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of U.S.
forces in the war, to prepare a new military plan for tracking
down and eliminating leaders of the al-Queda and the Taliban
regime that supports them.
The
officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that
in the meantime, limited U.S. bombing will continue targeting
pockets of Taliban resistance in areas of the north like Kunduz,
as well as caves and other mountain redoubts in the south
where al-Queda leaders are believed to be hiding.
The
Taliban is in retreat virtually all over the country,
the vice president said, and took the opportunity to mock
the pundits in the nations capital.
I
guess there are a couple of lessons in that for folks, the
handwringers who a week or two ago were saying, its
not going to work, youre not doing enough, youve
been at it for three or four weeks, my gosh, the war is not
over yet.
Despite
the advances on the ground, Cheney said the United States
will pursue its objectives. These include a desire to wrap
up the al-Queda network, dismantle their command and
control structure and track down bin Laden, the suspected
mastermind behind the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
It
is a very good beginning to whats likely to be a long
struggle, he said.
Bin
Ladens capture would be a singular accomplishment, and
American intelligence believes he and Mullah Omar, the Talibans
senior official, are still in a region of Afghanistan not
under northern alliance control, according to a U.S. official.
This official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said
the two are believed to be moving around, but not together.
The official said it is viewed as unlikely that bin Laden
will try to leave the country because those movements could
expose him to capture.
Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, visiting the site of the World
Trade Center in New York, said efforts continue to track down
key Taliban rulers.
Some
have been killed, others are hiding, and there are no particular
reports of senior leadership having been located, Rumsfeld
said. His visit was intended to illustrate why the United
States is fighting in Afghanistan.
He
said U.S. special forces are watching key roads in southern
Afghanistan as Taliban
militia forces flee southward.
They
have been interdicting the main roads that connect the north
to the south to see whats going on and to stop people
that they think ought to be stopped, Rumsfeld said during
a brief news conference with New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
We still have a ways to go in the hunt for the
Taliban and Osama bin Ladens al-Queda network, Rumsfeld
said. The Taliban, some pieces of it, are melting into
the countryside because they have decided to toss in the towel.
In other cases, they may be simply waiting to counterattack
at some other time.
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