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US War in Afghanistan
Kandahar: the Talibans last stronghold in Afghanistan
falls
By Peter Symonds
11 December 2001
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The Taliban have abandoned their last remaining stronghold
in southern Afghanistan in a deal brokered by the countrys
interim prime minister Hamid Karzai. Last Friday militia groups
from rival Pashtun tribes began taking over Kandahar, Afghanistans
second largest city, as well as other towns in the region.
The fall of Kandahar, which was the first major city seized
by the Taliban in November 1994, effectively marks the end of
the regime. Less than a month ago, the Taliban held an estimated
90 percent of Afghanistan. Since the loss of the northern city
of Mazar-e-Sharif in early November, it has been forced to abandon
every major city, including the capital Kabul.
Heavily-armed US marines backed by attack helicopters are hunting
down groups of Taliban fighters who fled Kandahar, in particular
targetting the Taliban leaders and any foreign supporters. Around
1,300 marines along with US, British and Australian special forces
troops are operating from a base 80 kilometres south of the city
to seal off the entire area and turn it into a killing ground.
A spokesman, Marine Captain Stewart Upton, left no doubt as
to what was intended. If the mission has changed, it is
that we are looking for Al Qaeda, instead of Taliban. We hope
the Taliban realises that if he doesnt drop his arms and
raise his hands, he dies, he said. US soldiers have been
issued with photographs of senior Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders
who are to be either captured or killed.
An article in the latest Time magazine details the ghoulish
function of the intelligence fusion cell based at
the US Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Florida where a
running scorecard is maintained on top Al Qaeda or
Taliban leaders. Most of the names accompany colour photographs
of varying quality. When good news comes in, a fresh version is
printed with a bold INJ or KIA (injured or killed) printed across
the picture. If there is nothing there, says a Pentagon
official, it means he is a work in progress.
An estimated 200 foreign Taliban fighters are reportedly surrounded
at Kandahar airport by militia loyal to the former Kandahar governor
Gul Agha Shirzai. A CNN reporter described the scene as he entered
Kandahar over the weekend. As we pass the airport, we could
hear gunfire. Theres a lot of destruction, a lot of destroyed
vehicles, a lot of dead bodies on the roadside. Aghas
troops had the Taliban forces surrounded and were intending to
starve them into surrender.
Details of fighting in the Kandahar area are scanty. US Cobra
helicopters and fighter aircraft attacked a Taliban convoy including
Soviet-era military vehicles on November 27 as it reportedly moved
towards the US Marine base. The US military also announced that
its troops had killed seven Taliban soldiers in fighting last
Friday. At the behest of the US, the Pakistani military has reinforced
the border with extra troops and surveillance flights to prevent
Taliban fighters from crossing.
There are few reports of the conditions inside Kandahar. The
city has been subject to weeks of continuous US bombing, aid supplies
have been halted and thousands of people have fled towards Pakistan.
At least five people have died in fighting between rival militia
groups battling for control of the city. While Agha claimed the
right to resume his post as governor, the surrender deal negotiated
by interim prime minister Karzai was for the Taliban to hand over
their heavy weapons and the city to another tribal warlord Naqibullah
Alokozai.
For Karzai, who had been nominated to head the UN-sponsored
interim administration in Afghanistan just days before, his reputation
was at stake. His claim to represent the ethnic Pashtun in the
Afghanistan government rested on his ability to seize and control
Kandahar. A meeting of tribal leaders convened by Karzai over
the weekend worked out a temporary arrangementAgha was to
be interim governor and Naqibullah his deputy. But the situation
was still uncertain yesterday.
The same chaotic pattern has emerged throughout the country
as rival warlords, militia commanders and tribal leaders each
seek to stake out their old territories. Part of the impetus for
the formation of the Taliban was the anarchy that existed in the
Kandahar area in the early 1990s. The fundamentalist Taliban or
students won a certain sympathy among local people
for dishing out vigilante justice to militia commanders and petty
warlords who were notorious for their brutality and corruption.
Now these same militias have reemerged.
The British-based Independent reported rival groups
establishing checkpoints on the road from Pakistan to Kandahar.
The road to the city was said to be littered with dead bodies
and the remains of smashed cars. There are already 15 checkpoints
set up by rival groups on the way from the nearby Pakistani border
crossing to the city, according to aid organisations that tried
to reach the city. Several convoys passed through, but all said
they were robbed of their humanitarian supplies.
A report in the Sydney Morning Herald described the
situation at Spin Boldak on the Pakistani border: Now armed
gangs of tribal fighters cruise the streets where Taliban and
Al Qaeda militants were the day before, while their elders are
still arguing over the spoils of victory. There is unchecked looting
and sporadic gunfire. A relief convoy with urgently needed food,
medicines and blankets is stalled on the Pakistani side after
one truck was hijacked as soon as it crossed the border.
See Also:
US war crime at Mazar-i-Sharif prison:
new videotape evidence
[11 December 2001]
Why Britain should be indicted for war
crimes: The SAS role in the Qala-i-Janghi massacre
[10 December 2001]
The Geneva Convention and the US massacre
of POWs in Afghanistan
[7 December 2001]
After US massacre of Taliban
POWs: the stench of death and more media lies
[29 November 2001]
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