-Caveat Lector-

Afghanistan: A Nightmare Battlefield

By Molly Moore and Kamran Khan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, September 17, 2001; Page A01

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Sept. 16 -- In a war against Afghanistan, the world's only 
superpower would be aligning
the most sophisticated, high-tech military weaponry ever developed against mud 
barracks, mountain caves, a few
hundred artillery pieces and a savvy foe able to melt into the khaki folds of an 
already devastated landscape.

In all the war-gaming of military academies and Pentagon planners, the U.S. armed 
forces would be hard-pressed
to have invented a more intractable military scenario than waging combat operations in 
this impoverished,
bedraggled land against a radicalized guerrilla force and its most infamous resident 
-- Saudi fugitive and
accused terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden. U.S. officials have pointed to bin Laden 
as the chief suspect in
last week's terror attacks in New York and Washington.

Afghanistan is an ethnically fragmented country with some of the most rugged and 
isolated terrain in the
world, an infrastructure that has been almost completely devastated by two decades of 
continuous war, and a
population struggling to survive in the face of drought, famine and endless cycles of 
violence and bloodshed.

Unlike the multinational coalition attacks on Belgrade and Baghdad over the last 
decade, fought with
high-precision weapons aimed at selected targets, there are few major command and 
control networks to be hit
in Afghanistan, where guerrilla battles are usually fought with artillery barrages and 
mortar fire. Neither
requires the sophisticated orchestration of First World combat.

The militant Islamic Taliban movement, which controls more than 90 percent of the 
country, has amassed an
eclectic arsenal of aging tanks and other equipment left over from the Soviet Union's 
failed occupation. It
also nabbed some overused aircraft from various warring Afghan factions defeated since 
the Taliban began its
takeover of Afghanistan in 1994. More recently, new weapons, mostly automatic rifles, 
machine guns and
mortars, have been supplied by bin Laden and other wealthy Saudi benefactors.

The U.S. military learned during the Persian Gulf War that months of bombing destroyed 
only a fraction of the
Iraqi military hardware arrayed across a flat desert, a lesson that could apply to 
Afghanistan as well.
"Carrying out large-scale bombing of Afghanistan would be a mistake," Nikolai 
Kovalyov, former head of the
Russian Federal Security Service, a successor agency to the KGB, said in an interview 
in Moscow. "We must
learn from the lessons of history -- we have not been able to solve the problems of 
terrorism by large-scale
bombing."

Vice President Cheney today identified Afghanistan as a possible target for a reprisal 
attack. "The government
of Afghanistan has to understand that we believe they have, indeed, been harboring a 
man who committed and
whose organization committed this most egregious act," Cheney said of the airplane 
attacks on the Pentagon and
the World Trade Center.

But there are enormous logistical hurdles to an attack on the Taliban and bin Laden.

In Afghanistan, U.S. surveillance satellites will see no sizable power grids, no vast 
military bases, no major
bridges and highway networks as targets: There are none. Special forces would land in 
a war zone that has
changed little from the desert country of nomadic tribes and medieval-looking villages 
British troops invaded
more than two centuries ago. Land forces, with virtually no access to local supplies, 
would be treading
through one of the most densely mined countries on the globe amid a hostile population.

While Pakistan has given the United States permission to use its airspace for missile 
assaults and aerial
bombardment of Afghanistan, the easiest military targets already have disappeared, 
according to Pakistan
intelligence reports.

The Taliban has emptied its training bases, arms depots, command and government 
headquarters and has scattered
its military hardware. Bin Laden has gone into even deeper hiding than usual and has 
dispatched his family
members to a variety of locations, Pakistani intelligence sources said.

The U.S. military failed to kill bin Laden on a previous attempt in 1998 when it 
launched missile attacks on
his training bases and suspected hide-outs in Afghanistan in the aftermath of two U.S. 
embassy bombings in
Africa.

The problems of locating useful targets and destroying them in air assaults would pale 
when compared with the
complexity of trying to land special forces or send ground troops into the country, 
according to U.S. and
Pakistani military planners.

"The first mistake would be a large-scale land operation," said former Russian 
security chief Kovalyov. "In
the mountains there, it is impossible to determine where or what to destroy. For every 
trainful of explosives,
perhaps three guerrillas at most will die. The country is filled with caves and 
crevices in which to hide."

The Taliban is estimated to have no more than 45,000 troops, including up to 12,000 
foreign troops --
Pakistanis, Arabs, Uzbeks and others, according to most estimates. Pakistani military 
officials said they are
uncertain how large an arsenal the Taliban has assembled but said the militia is armed 
with Soviet T-59 and
T-55 tanks left over from the 1980s, as well as artillery guns, rocket-propelled 
grenade launchers,
antiaircraft and antitank missiles, aging Soviet MIG and Sukoi fighter planes, mortars 
and thousands of small
arms.

But it is the guerrilla tactics of the Taliban that make the militia more formidable 
than its numbers might
indicate. Those tactics were instilled in what is now the Taliban leadership by 
Pakistan, with CIA backing
during the rebels' successful attempt to oust the Soviets, and more recently honed by 
bin Laden's Arab
soldiers.

Senior Pakistani military and intelligence officials -- whose officers have advised, 
coordinated and in many
cases participated in combat in Afghanistan with various factions over the past 20 
years -- said they are
warning U.S. war planners of the daunting challenges.

"You yourself [the United States] trained them to be the best guerrilla force in the 
world," said a former
Pakistani intelligence official who said he advised Islamic freedom fighters under 
CIA-sponsored programs
during the rebels' war with Soviet forces in the 1980s. "Some of these Taliban were 
the CIA's superstars."

"Doesn't the CIA remember they were the ones who gave the Afghans the best lessons in 
the world in how to
humiliate a great army?" said another former Pakistani intelligence official, who has 
advised the Taliban in
military operations for the past five years.

Taliban leader Mohammad Omar fought under one of the CIA's most prized rebel 
commanders, Yunis Khalis,
according to the former operative.

Invading forces have been attempting to conquer Afghanistan and tame its feuding 
tribes for centuries. And in
every instance, it was the politically charged ethnic divisions that undermined 
efforts to unify the country.
It is a legacy that may not only govern how the U.S. military would plot attacks, but 
also the problems it
would generate to fill the void created if the military objective is to dismantle the 
Taliban government.

Afghanistan's population, estimated to be about 25 million, is a volatile mixture of 
ethnic groups: about 38
percent Pashtun, 25 percent Tajik, 6 percent Uzbek, 19 percent Hazara, along with 
small numbers of Aimaks,
Turkmen and Baloch. Most of the population speaks an Afghan form of Persian called 
Dari, Pashto, or one of
more than 30 other minor languages. The language barriers alone offer a vivid example 
of problems land forces
would face in fighting or follow-up efforts to rehabilitate the country, according to 
military planners.

The warlords and military commanders who controlled each of these groups were united 
in their effort to
dislodge Soviet forces. But when Moscow withdrew its troops in 1989, a power-sharing 
government composed of
the former rebel leaders quickly disintegrated into civil war, with the defense 
minister and president
assembling their own army to fight the prime minister.

It was the brutality and destruction of those wars that led to the formation of the 
Taliban in 1994, though
the movement's rise can also be traced to ethnic and religious animosities going back 
three centuries.

While the Taliban easily won control of the largely Pashtun southern deserts and 
mountains that border
Pakistan, opposition forces managed to cling to small pockets of territory in the more 
isolated and
beautifully rugged valleys and mountain lands bordering Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

One commander was most responsible for fending off the Taliban near the Tajik border: 
the rail-thin Ahmed Shah
Massoud. Only this year he had managed to persuade other ethnic commanders from the 
anti-Soviet days to return
to northern Afghanistan in a loosely organized group called the Northern Alliance.

On Sept. 9, Massoud, 48, was hit in a suicide-bomb attack by two men posing as Arab 
journalists at his
headquarters. Though Pakistani and U.S. intelligence reports indicated he died within 
hours of the explosion,
his family only confirmed the death on Thursday.

Now, it is unclear whether his successor will be able to maintain the same loyalty 
commanded by Massoud, who
enjoyed almost legendary stature in his home Panjshir Valley.

Pakistani military officials note that inserting ground forces into Afghanistan from 
Pakistan would force them
through the region of Afghanistan that would be most hostile to foreign forces 
attempting to drive out the
Taliban.

They say more sympathetic entry points would be along the northern borders through 
Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
While the United States has been holding an increasing number of joint military 
training exercises with those
and other Central Asian nations in recent months, the Northern Alliance has been 
heavily supported by Iran and
Russia, two countries with strong concerns about the presence of Western forces in the 
region.

Correspondent Susan B. Glasser in Moscow contributed to this report.

� 2001 The Washington Post Company

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