LA Times is interesting these days.
latimes.com
The Spies Who Called the Shots An Afghan network of Taliban foes risked their lives to gather information for expatriate leaders and U.S. bombers.
By ERIC SLATER, Times Staff Writer
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- Shivering in the dark outside his uncle's mud house, Nazak punched a number into a $1,500 telephone, angled the phone's antenna south toward a communications satellite over the Indian Ocean, and pressed "OK."
"Salaam aleikum," rumbled a voice on the other end. "Peace be with you."
"Salaam aleikum," the skinny, fine-featured 22-year-old replied in the Afghan style. "I have some coordinates."
"Go ahead," the voice said.
Nazak gave readings from a global positioning system that indicated the exact locations of several buildings housing Taliban fighters, munitions and armor on the west end of Kandahar. He detailed the approximate dimensions of the barracks and storage sheds and of the open spaces between them. He drew a verbal picture of the surrounding neighborhood of mud-and-straw huts.
The men said goodnight and hung up. It was Oct. 5.
Forty-eight hours later, U.S. bombs rained down, leveling much of the compound on the first night of the war in Afghanistan.
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