|
Friday,
November 16, 2001
Terrorist
materials found in Kabul lab
By
Kathy Gannon
Associated Press
KABUL,
Afghanistan Materials left behind in a compound used
by Osama bin Ladens al-Queda network including
a booklet offering advice on how to survive a nuclear explosion
suggest the terrorist group may have been trying to
develop chemical arms and other unconventional weapons.
Foul-smelling
liquids and charred papers covered with chemical formulas
littered a makeshift laboratory in one al-Queda building in
the heart of Kabul. Maps, mines and computer manuals were
found in others.
Homeland
Security Director Tom Ridge said Thursday that the documents
are consistent with bin Ladens statements saying he
desired nuclear weaponry.
But papers
found detailing how to make a nuclear device were taken
off the Internet some years ago and couldve been
widely available to people other than the al-Queda terrorists,
he said.
U.S.
officials have said that they had no information to suggest
bin Laden has succeeded in gaining nuclear weapons.
But we
have to be prepared for all eventualities including a nuclear
threat, Ridge said.
The Kabul
compound appeared to have taken a direct hit from what northern
alliance soldiers said was a U.S. rocket.
The Times
of London newspaper reported Thursday that designs for nuclear
weapons, bombs and missiles written in Arabic, German,
Urdu and English were among the debris left behind.
There
are descriptions of how the detonation of TNT compresses plutonium
into a critical mass, sparking a chain reaction and ultimately
a thermonuclear reaction, The Times said.
Room
after room was filled with papers, formulas and maps, some
partially burned, some with handwritten Arabic notations.
There was a yellowed page from an old issue of Plane and Pilot
magazine a story titled A Flight to Remember.
At the
rear of the main house, one room contained mountains of papers,
some from training manuals showing diagrams of weapons. An
English-language book described how to use a recoilless rifle.
Small, anti-personnel mines littered the floor of another
room.
An alliance
soldier in camouflage dress, Mohammed Nisar, walked through
three houses pointing out pieces of paper with formulas, handwritten
diagrams, pictures of rockets and other weaponry. In the basement
of one house was what looked to be a laboratory.
In another
house where the al-Queda men resided, according to Nisar,
four different types of land mines were found. Northern alliance
troops had emptied two old railway cars parked in the yard
that its soldiers said had been packed with arms and ammunition.
Look,
you can see the land mines, Nisar said, moving to pick
one up. Its safe now; we have disarmed it.
Deep
beneath the house were what seemed to be bunkers, with a roof
of fresh cement. In one were parts of weapons, with the barrels
of anti-aircraft weapons propped up in the corner.
In the
yard and in the rooms were more papers and diagrams
some in Arabic, some in Persian, some in Urdu and maps
with large circles to mark locations.
Earlier
this year, The Associated Press acquired an 11-volume Encyclopedia
of Holy War, written in Arabic and dedicated to bin Laden
and the Taliban.
Another
sprawling al-Queda compound, built on a former Scud missile
base in the hills that surround Kabuls Darulaman Palace,
apparently served as training grounds.
We found lots of books and papers and newspapers,
said Haji Abdullah, a northern alliance commander. We
threw most of them out.
A laminated
certificate retrieved from the rubble identified the holder
as a military training instructor, alliance soldier
Jan Aga said.
The northern
alliance, which now controls the abandoned base, had one Pakistani
in custody, Naimad Ullah. Just 17, Ullah could only speak
Urdu. He looked terrified.
I
am afraid to say anything, they will take my head off,
he said in Urdu. The northern alliance soldiers said they
had kept him safe for three days and had captured him on the
front lines north of Kabul.
Ullah
said he was a student at a madrassa, or religious school,
in Pakistan and had come to fight with the Taliban during
his school holidays. His captors promised to keep him safe.
A letter
left behind by another Pakistani was addressed to a brother
in Peshawar, Pakistan.
Twelve
days into the air campaign, Mohammed Khaliq had written: Dont
worry about me. Pray for me five times a day. Our enemy is
not strong; we will win. If we die here, there is no greater
reward.
|