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US rallies the west for attack on Afghanistan 
Nato drawing up plans for invasion 

Julian Borger in Washington, Richard Norton-Taylor and
Ewen MacAskill in London and Ian Black in Brussels
Thursday September 13, 2001
The Guardian

The US yesterday mobilised support from Britain and
its other western allies for a crusade against Islamic
terrorism in the wake of Tuesday's devastating
terrorist attacks on New York and Washington in which
thousands of people died. 

For the first time in its 52-year history, Nato last
night invoked Article 5 of its charter, which declares
that an attack on any member state is an attack on
all, implying automatic European backing for US
retaliation. 

Nato is now drawing up an emergency plan for a massive
attack on Afghanistan if proof emerges that Osama bin
Laden, the wanted Saudi-born terrorist sheltered by
Afghanistan, was responsible for the attacks. 

US justice department officials said yesterday that
there was a growing body of evidence pointing towards
his involvement. However, many US experts on
terrorism, including the former CIA director, James
Woolsey, and the former Nato commander in Europe,
Wesley Clark, said they believed that Tuesday's
terrorist operation also had state sponsorship, and
mentioned Iraq as a suspect. 

US defence officials stressed that the culprits would
be punished. "We have a very large hammer that can be
brought to bear in a number of ways at any time," one
official said. "That's not a threat, it's a fact." 

By invoking Article 5, Nato has committed each member
to take "such action as it deems necessary, including
the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the
security of the North Atlantic area". 

Investigators believe that four separate cells were
involved in the hijackings, including trained pilots
who had learned their skills at private flying schools
in the US. 

Nato's historic move came amid reports that the
intended targets for one of the hijacked aircraft were
the White House and the presidential aircraft, Air
Force One. 

The ruling Taliban government in Afghanistan will now
come under intensive pressure from Washington to hand
over Bin Laden or face the consequences. Until now the
Taliban has steadfastly refused to extradite him. 

Under contingency plans being prepared, an assault
would involve tens of thousands of ground troops,
equivalent to the scale of the force deployed in
Kosovo, Nato defence sources said last night. 

Such a taskforce, which might take weeks to assemble,
would not preclude an initial US cruise missile
attack, they said. The Nato sources said any
multinational offensive would almost certainly involve
British forces. It would also require the active
support of Russia. 

President George Bush warned Americans that they faced
a long, hard struggle against their terrorist enemies,
but promised that the country would not stand alone.
He promised to "rally the world. We will be patient.
We'll be focused, and we will be steadfast in our
determination," he said. "This battle will take time
and resolve, but make no mistake about it, we will
win." 

Colin Powell, the US secretary of state, said that
Washington wanted to build a "global coalition" to
fight terrorism that would include not only Nato and
Russia, but China and Muslim states. 

Mr Bush spoke to Tony Blair during the day, and
indicated there would be no knee-jerk reaction. Mr
Blair and Mr Bush concurred that the vital thing was
to move forward together in a united action. 

Mr Blair recalled parliament from its recess to debate
the crisis on Friday. He said the attacks were "not
only on America, but on the free and democratic
world", adding that he expected the number of Britons
who died in the World Trade Centre to run into
hundreds. 

Early today 1,500 rescuers were forced to evacuate the
World Trade Centre site after fears that a 54-storey
building was about to collapse. 

Teams of heavily armed FBI agents detained several
people for questioning after raids in Boston and
Florida on the trail of evidence left behind by the
hijackers. The FBI's new director, Robert Mueller,
said no arrests had been made, but justice department
officials explained that a number of "material
witnesses" had been taken into custody to help the FBI
with the inquiry. 

Some of the detainees were seized from a hotel in
Boston where several of the hijackers are believed to
have stayed the night before the attacks. 

Police in Providence, Rhode Island, were reported to
have stopped and searched a train heading south from
Boston and held three passengers. 

In Florida the investigation centred on two flying
schools, in Venice and in Coral Springs, where some of
the hijackers were enrolled as students. One called
himself Mohamed Atta. Another reportedly went by the
name Mohamed al-Shahid (Mohamed the martyr). 

Last year both men took a flying course at Huffman
Aviation school in Venice. The school's president and
owner, Rudy Dekkers, said the FBI was looking at
student records at the flight school, including copies
of passports from the men. 

A flight instruction video, Arabic aviation manuals, a
Koran, and a fuel consumption calculator were found in
abandoned cars at Boston airport, the point of
departure of the two flights which crashed into the
World Trade Centre. 



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