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US launches huge military operation to capture bin Laden
By Mike Head
1 March 2004
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In a desperate bid to produce a public relations success
in the war on terrorism before the US presidential election, the
Bush administration is orchestrating a major land and air military
offensive on both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, with
the professed aim of capturing top Al Qaeda leaders, including
Osama bin Laden.
With Bushs poll ratings plummeting, the White House is
anxious to register an apparent victory, no matter how illusory,
in order to divert the deepening hostility to the destruction
of jobs and social conditions at home, and to the worsening quagmire
confronting US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But its stepped-up aggression is likely to further fuel popular
resistance to US forces in Afghanistan, as well as the tottering
puppet administration headed by Hamid Karzai in Kabul and the
widely hated Pakistani military regime of General Pervez Musharraf.
According to US military officials, the spring offensive will
climax in April or May. It seeks to create a hammer-and-anvil
effect to trap Al Qaeda fighters between US forces operating from
the Afghan side and Pakistani troops advancing from the semi-autonomous
tribal lands that extend along the north-western Pakistan border.
Lieutenant-Colonel Matthew Beevers, a US military spokesman
in Kabul, told journalists last week that a renewed sense
of urgency is firing the search for bin Laden. His comments
followed earlier military claims that bin Laden had been forced
across the border from Pakistan, was now boxed in
and would be captured before the end of the year.
On the Afghan side of the mountainous border region, the Pentagon
is deploying elements of the 11,000 troops it has in Afghanistan
as well as a secret commando unit from Iraq. Known as Task Force
121, it consists of Army Delta Force soldiers and Navy SEALs,
transported on helicopters from the 160th Special Operations Aviation
Regiment. Military sources have credited the unit with last Decembers
seizure of Saddam Hussein. They told reporters its assigned task
is to move into the mountains, practice missions and wait for
military and CIA intelligence to provide the locations of targets.
Coalition troops have already begun house-to-house searches
in the town of Khost and its outskirts, with reports appearing
in the regions media that many suspects have been rounded
up. The main immediate targets of the operations are said to be
Afghan resistance leaders Jalaluddin Haqqani and Saifullah Mansoor
and their followers, estimated to number between 2,000 and 2,500,
spread across the Khost, Paktia, Paktika and Gardez areas of north-eastern
Afghanistan.
Citing well-placed sources, Asia Times has
reported that in coming weeks, the operation is gradually
expected to increase in intensity and size and spread to
all major Afghan cities including Jalalabad, Asadabad, Gardez,
Zabul and Kandahar. The newspaper described it as a looming all-out
war.
Reports in Britains Sunday Express claimed that
US and British troops were also hunting for bin Laden and Taliban
leader Mullah Omar in an area across the border near Pakistans
Baluchistan province. Pakistans armed forces rejected suggestions
that any foreign troops were operating in the country. Residents
of Pakistans North West Province, however, have witnessed
US spy plane flights over the region, giving credence
to media reports that Musharrafs government has allowed
the US to use air bases, including Kohat and Bannu, for surveillance
purposes.
Villages face collective punishment
Under intense pressure from Washington, Musharraf has massed
more than 70,000 troops along the 2,500-kilometre border region,
escalating attacks on local villages and preparing for a large-scale
assault. The mobilisation includes paramilitary forces, regular
soldiers and specially trained commandos, Pakistans military
spokesman General Shaukat Sultan said. Their current searches
are focussed on South and North Waziristan, two of the seven tribal
regions that have for years been virtual no-go areas
for Pakistans military.
In a glimpse of what is to come, the US military praised the
Pakistani army for a sweep through three villages, Karkai, Kaloosha
and Azam, near the town of Wana, some 250 kilometres west of Pakistans
capital Islamabad, last week. Troops, backed by artillery and
helicopter gunships, conducted house-to-house searches and blew
up houses to punish uncooperative villagers who refused to hand
over suspects.
Commandos detained 25 alleged Al Qaeda and Taliban supporters,
and interrogated them throughout the night. Pakistani authorities
later disowned initial reports, citing diplomatic sources, that
a son of Ayman al-Zawahiri, one of bin Ladens associates,
was among the detainees.
The Pakistani military said the operation was launched after
militants had ignored a February 20 deadline to surrender. Musharrafs
regime is using methods pioneered by the British army and colonial
authorities during their military campaigns in Afghanistan in
the 19th and early 20th centuries. Whole tribes have been threatened
with repercussions for failing to give up fugitives, a variant
of tactics used by the British.
Opposition politicians condemned the raid, accusing Musharraf
of breaking a longstanding understanding to respect the autonomy
of the tribal territories and of compromising national sovereignty
to appease Washington. Liaqt Baloch, deputy president of the conservative
Islamic party Jamaat-I-Islami, said: It is very dangerous.
We always think that in the tribal regions we can depend on [local]
loyalty, but after this action they could turn against Pakistan.
Baloch echoed the belief of many Pakistanis that the military
assault is designed to produce an intelligence success ahead of
the US elections in November. Theres a strong link
between the activity in the tribal areas and the US election,
he said. This isnt anti-terrorism; its just
a political action to bolster support for Bush in the United States.
Hamid Gul, a retired general who headed Pakistans Inter-Services
Intelligence Agency during the late 1980s, said Musharraf was
giving up some of Pakistans sovereignty in the hope of preventing
US troops from being used in hot pursuit across the Afghan border.
Pervez Musharraf is trying to preempt [hot pursuit] by showing
the US: Look were doing everything we can here.
In an attempt to ward off such criticism, Musharraf made a
remarkable comment last week, alluding to the pressure being applied
by Washington. He told religious leaders that Pakistan had to
cooperate with the US to avoid becoming a target of the war on
terrorism. Here was a risk that the US would start bombing
Pakistan if the country continued to be perceived as one that
harboured terrorists, he said.
His remarks point to the backroom intimidation and bullying
being employed by the Bush administration in order to push Musharrafs
already unstable regime into launching the unprecedented military
operations throughout the frontier region. Four previous military
operations in the tribal lands in the wake of September 2001 met
stubborn resistance.
Musharrafs complicity in the US operation helps explain
why the White House has thus far continued to support the Pakistani
military following last months statement that its chief
scientist, Abdul Qadeer Khan, had marketed the countrys
nuclear weapons technology to countries such as Iran, Libya and
North Korea.
Some in US ruling circles have berated Bush for his blatant
double standard in invading Iraq, ostensibly to halt the proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction, while excusing Pakistan. A February
6 editorial in the Washington Post expressed disbelief
that Bush had not imposed sanctions on Pakistan. Stopping
Pakistans proliferation is vital to US security, it
insisted. It cannot be left to Mr Musharraf to decide how
or whether it will be done.
But, as the Post editorial observed, Bushs dilemma
is that he has banked his entire policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan
on Musharraf.
Conditions unravelling in Afghanistan
The timing of the US-instigated military campaign appears to
be driven by several factors. One is the deteriorating security
situation in Afghanistan, where attacks by Taliban and other resistance
groups are escalating. Recent months have seen an upsurge in attacks
on aid workers and reconstruction contractors, with more than
550 civilians killed since August. Large areas of the south and
west are under Taliban or warlord control, forcing Western agencies
to confine their activities largely to Kabul and Kandahar.
Last Wednesday, just a day after the launching of the raids
on either side of the border, five people working on a UN-sponsored
election project were killed in an ambush about 25 kilometres
north of Kabul. Two gunmen stopped a car carrying eight employees
of the Sanayee Development Foundation, a non-government organisation
(NGO) that had been working in the area for six months to set
up a local shura, or consultative forum, as part of efforts to
stage elections across the country in June.
A UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) spokesman Manoel
de Almeida e Silva described it as one more of these security
incidents that are absolutely unacceptable. Barbara Stapleton,
advocacy officer of the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief,
said: This is an extremely serious incident which is very,
very shocking to the NGO community.... This is very worrying in
the lead up to elections that seem to be being pushed ahead, come
what may, in a society which is highly militarised and in which
a security vacuum exists.
It was the worst such attack since the overthrow of the Taliban
government in late 2001, and came just hours before US Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld arrived in Afghanistan for talks on
security issues with US commanders, NATO peacekeeping officers
and acting president Karzai.
Despite Washingtons claims to be making progress in Afghanistan,
Rumsfeld flew into Kandahar and Kabul under tight security. His
C-130 aircraft made steep tactical descents to avoid
possible threats from shoulder-fired missiles, heavily-armed Apache
helicopters circled overhead and military vehicles blocked off
roads.
Two days earlier, armed groups opened fire on a helicopter
crew and passengers working for the Louis Berger Group, a US aid
contractor, near the southern city of Kandahar, killing the Australian
pilot, Mark Burdorf. Bergers major contract is the repair
of the 500-kilometre road from Kabul to Kandahar, a project that
is vital for military as well as civilian purposes. According
to eye-witness accounts, the gunmen acted with the evident support
of local residents.
The lack of security is further exposing the fraud of the Bush
administrations claims that democratic president and parliamentary
elections will be conducted in June. Voter registration is meant
to be taking place under the guns of US troops, augmented by 6,000
NATO peacekeepers who are helping to prop up the beleaguered
Karzai administration. But public support is so low that since
December UN agencies have registered only about 1 million of the
countrys 10.5 million eligible voters.
In Januarys State of the Union address, setting the tone
for his re-election campaign, Bush declared that almost two-thirds
of the known leadership of Al Qaeda had been either captured or
killed. His boast was central to his assertion that the war on
terrorism had made the world a safer place. The bid
to capture or kill bin Laden is clearly aimed at providing a further
boost to Bushs electoral fortunes.
Washingtons war on terrorism was never about
making the world a safer place. The Bush administration utilised
the September 11 attacks on the US to advance longheld ambitions
to dominate Central Asia and the Middle East through the occupation
of Afghanistan and Iraq. In the process it has only heightened
the danger of further conflict and war and enabled Islamic fundamentalists,
such as bin Laden, to exploit the deep-seated hatred felt by many
in the region to US militarism and neo-colonialism.
See Also:
Rising death toll undermines
the White Houses rosy picture of Afghanistan
[31 January 2004]
US forces kill 11 more civilians
in Afghanistan
[20 January 2004]
US-imposed democracy
in Afghanistan
Loya jirga rubber-stamps autocratic regime
[8 January 2004]
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