Bagram, 25 miles north of Kabul as Taliban beef up defences with its global extremists as a showdown between Northern Allioance and Taliban is in the making..
..read in telegraph..Iqbal Latif Torkham Pakistan..
The air raids around Kabul so far have only targeted one Taliban frontline position near Bagram, hitting the strategic Mount Safi. On the key front at the bombed-out airbase of Bagram, 25 miles north of Kabul, Arab militants from bin Laden's al-Qaeda network are arriving in convoy at night to form the first line of Taliban forces, according to informants returning to the opposition Northern Alliance headquarters.
The global core extremists of Al-Qaeda are forming the front line in Bagram.
However US is reluctant to bomb so far, this reluctance to strike in the area signals that the US does not want the Northern Alliance to march on the capital before it can. US does not want to wage another war to flush out Northern Alliance. Taliban realising this has moved the troops right to the front so as avoid the attacks, the front is the safest places so far.
The Taliban armoury is also understood to include several hundred anti-aircraft missiles - including Blowpipes secretly supplied by Britain to the anti-Soviet mujahideen rebels during the 1980s - that could bring down US and British helicopters.
The Taliban are reinforcing their forces around Kabul in front of Bagram, Islamic extremists and adicals from Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Egypt, Sudan and Chechnya have been assigned a crucial role in the Taliban's military operations. Bin Laden, the exiled Saudi multi-millionaire accused of ordering the September 11 suicide attacks on America, is pooling the resources of his terrorist operation with militia forces led by his close friend, Mullah Mohamed Omar, the Taliban supreme leader.
SEVERAL thousand fanatical Arab fighters have been deployed as vanguard troops near Kabul and in northern Afghanistan as Taliban commanders draw up plans for a bloody fight against American ground forces and attack helicopters.
The foreign troops were dispatched to the frontline last week by Taliban leaders and their ally Osama bin Laden. Their commanders believe that they are more willing to sacrifice their lives and less likely to defect than Afghan soldiers, many of whom are newly conscripted youths.
"The Arabs have no choice: they must either stay and defend Kabul or die. This is not their country and they cannot run away.
Many of the senior commanders are Arab associates of bin Laden, while students recruited from madrassas (religious schools) comprised a significant chunk of the Taliban's manpower even before the current crisis.
AMERICAN fighter-planes have began attacking Taliban ground forces with cluster-bombs and laser-guided bombs in daylight raids that confirmed their domination of the skies above Afghanistan. The close-up nature of the raids, which went on for several hours in the morning and resumed at about 9pm with virtually no ground fire, confirmed the Pentagon's belief that, after almost a week of steady pounding, Taliban air defences are close to being knocked out.
Reports from inside the country said that American jets were "flying at will" in the Afghan skies. But front lines still remain very safe for the hardliners, they are all escaping to the front from heart of the command and control centers.
As the world's most sophisticated firepower rained down on Afghanistan, the stand-off between Taliban forces and Alliance troops resembled scenes from a century ago. On the windswept Shomali Plain, where the two sides have fought for five years over a few hundred yards of rugged terrain, the stand-off is typical. Less than half a mile and a bend in the river separate identical-looking mud-and-stone villages clinging precariously to the hillsides, but they are on either side of what is now the world's hottest frontline.
After suffering heavy military setbacks over the last two years and the assassination of its military leader Ahmed Shah Masood last month, the Northern Alliance is in a poor position to launch an offensive without US air support. Fighters scurried along mountainside trenches dug by spade and fired off bursts of automatic rifle fire at an enemy just a few hundred yards away.
At Bagram, the two factions exchanged tank and artillery fire under the gaze of young fighters manning heavy machine guns in the pockmarked control tower. Then, as dusk fell on Friday evening, Gen Jan, a jovial portly 42-year-old, invited us to stay for the night and follow the impact of American bombing raids.
Through the tower's shattered windows, we watched as the clear starry sky over Kabul was lit in the early hours of yesterday by sharp white flashes from the latest US air strikes, followed by orange bursts of anti-aircraft fire.
Under thick woollen blankets pulled like shawls across their fatigues and baggy tunics as protection against the chill wind, Gen Jan's men watched the explosions. Despite the bombardment, however, they are not launching their own offensive as they remain heavily outnumbered, with just 2-3,000 troops at Bagram against a Taliban force that has just been strengthened from 7,000 to 10,000.
In many places, the two sides are so close that they swap pleasantries or trade insults by walkie-talkie. In Kapisa, we sat cross-legged on cushions in the commander's room as one of his men chatted to a Taliban officer in Pashtu. "How are things?" asked the Alliance fighter, an ethnic Tajik. "Fine. And you?" came the good-humoured reply.
Elsewhere the exchanges are not so polite. "You are not mujahid (holy warriors). You are the sons of America," came the crackling message from Taliban soldiers to the opposition troops crouched in trenches dug out of shale on the mountains of the Ghurband Valley. "You are the terrorists, the sons of bin Laden," Abdul Khaliq radioed back.
Gen Jan believes that the US raids had struck their intended military targets in and around the capital, the impact was less than claimed as the Taliban had moved men, tanks and artillery out of their bases to camouflaged sites in woods and valleys in the run-up to the offensive.The move came as there were indications that the US was preparing to send in special forces backed by Apache and Black Hawk helicopters to pursue bin Laden.
Despite planning for a protracted war on terrorism, Washington is keen to make rapid progress before the weather worsens and to ease domestic pressure on Pakistan, its reluctant ally. |