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Politics : America Under Siege: The End of Innocence -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lola who wrote (10395)11/13/2001 11:25:44 AM
From: Tadsamillionaire  Respond to of 27666
 
A Great Article from Peggy Noonan.

opinionjournal.com



To: Lola who wrote (10395)11/13/2001 11:38:12 AM
From: blue_lotus  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 27666
 
NA in control of Kabul; Taleban confirms fall

Muhammad Najeeb in Islamabad

Northern Alliance troops on Tuesday took control of
Kabul amid scenes of chaos and looting, even as
reports said that the militia's supreme leader, Mullah
Mohammed Omar, had fled to Pakistan.

Mukhitdin Mekhti, a senior representative of the
Northern Alliance's government, was quoted as saying that Mullah Omar
had fled Afghanistan for Pakistan.

In a dramatic overnight advance, opposition units entered the Afghan
capital after Taleban fighters fled towards their southern stronghold of
Kandahar.

"Northern Alliance forces are also near Kandahar and have taken control
of some strategic positions," a senior Taleban embassy official, who
defected to the Alliance, told Indo-Asian News Service.

United States President George W Bush had urged the Northern Alliance
not to enter Kabul until an agreement was in place for a broad-based
government representing all ethnic groups in the country.

The militia, according to another Taleban official, did not offer any
resistance and vacated Kabul to avoid bloodshed, as "we don't want any
further bloodshed in the Afghan nation".

The official, however, said, "The leadership vacuum created by the retreat
of the Taleban forces could lead to anarchy."

He said that the Taleban, with the help of Osama bin Laden and his Al
Qaeda network, would wage a guerrilla campaign from the Afghan
mountains.

Reports said that as they retreated, the Taleban took with them eight
foreign aid workers -- four German, two Australian and two Americans --
accused of spreading Christianity in Afghanistan.

Ironically, television pictures of the entry of the Northern Alliance forces
into Kabul could not be transmitted as the Kabul office of the
Qatar-based Al-Jazeera television took a direct hit from a US bomb
overnight. The building was destroyed, but the staff managed to leave the
building.

"The atmosphere along the road into Kabul was festive, with cheers and
shouts of death to Mullah Omar," the embassy official said.

Looting soon broke out in Kabul and some Arab volunteers serving with
the Taleban were summarily shot. Some foreign journalists were also
attacked and their luggage and equipment commandeered, the official said.

"There is a vacuum of authority in the city after the Taleban withdrew and
until now the Northern Alliance has not announced their government," the
official said.

Music was heard on the radio soon after the takeover. The Taleban had
banned the playing of music on radio since they took control of Kabul in
1996.

The official said that Northern Alliance Defence Minister General
Mohammad Fahim and Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah also made
announcements on the radio that the people could celebrate the victory.
"Afghanistan is free of polluters now," Abdullah was quoted as saying.

The ministers did not claim of establishing any government in Afghanistan,
the official said, adding, "probably they have been stopped from doing so
by the Americans."

rediff.com