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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Revealed: British plan for Afghan onslaught


Kamal Ahmed in London, Peter Beaumont in Washington and Ed Vulliamy in New
York
Sunday September 23, 2001
The Observer

BRITISH troops will lead an international coalition alongside America to wage
war on Afghanistan in the next 10 days as security and intelligence sources
indicated last night that the net was tightening on Osama bin Laden, the
prime suspect behind the terrorist attacks on America.
With an attack now imminent and American warplanes arriving in neighbouring
Uzbekistan ahead of the first wave of strikes, security sources in Britain
and America said that they were now concentrating their investigation into
bin Laden and the al-Qaeda terrorist organisation in the north and west of
Afghanistan.

Five terrorist camps around Jalalabad will be the focus of the military
campaign, which Ministry of Defence officials last night revealed was now in
the 'final stages' of planning.

Sources said that any action by ground troops would be preceded by bombing in
the terrorist camps' region. There were unconfirmed reports last night that
Special Air Service (SAS) troops were already in northern Afghanistan,
working with the anti-Taliban alliance that controls the area.

With America now on a war footing and Britain emerging as its most potent war
partner, 13 British warships travelled through the Suez canal yesterday and
steamed for the Gulf .

In the largest military mobilisation since the Gulf War 10 years ago, the
White House also revealed that a third aircraft carrier, B-52 bombers and
warships capable of launching ground-attack Tomahawk cruise missiles had
moved into the area to prepare for attack.

Yesterday Bush chaired a National Security Council meeting to complete plans
for military action, which could come as early as Thursday. Later today the
President will join advisers from the special operations arm of the US
Marines at the presidential retreat at Camp David.

It is believed that the coalition force will be led by America with military
support and troops from specialist units in Britain and France. Russia will
provide logistical support. Tony Blair is on the verge of signing the order
agreeing to the use of British troops.

Britain and America now believe that bin Laden is still in Afghanistan,
contrary to reports that he had fled to China or Chechnya. 'Bin Laden is in
Afghanistan,' the Prime Minister's official spokesman said. 'We know he is
there, put it that way.' His words reflected those of Colin Powell, the US
secretary of state and key military planner in the White House, who said that
there was a 'presumption' that the man who has become a hate figure for many
in the West was still in the country.

Although British officials said that the ultimatum to the Taliban authorities
that bin Laden must be expelled from Afghanistan was 'open ended', it was
made clear that with winter approaching military action needed to be rapid.

It is believed that bin Laden is hiding in a network of camps in the
north-west of Afghanistan. The camps at Darunta, Bhesud, Jaji-Maydan, Khost
and Tani are well known to the CIA and could be bombed from the air. Senior
Whitehall sources said that military programmes could only be put in place
when 'the outcome was clear', a reference to Bill Clinton's policy of bombing
Afghan camps with cruise missiles in 1998 - which failed to capture or kill
bin Laden.

Downing Street said that any action would now take a 'twin track' approach,
with the first phase concentrating on finding bin Laden and breaking down the
al-Qaeda organisation, and the second phase concentrating on the fight
against world terrorism.

In a clear indication that the Government is planning to put Britain onto a
war footing, Downing Street has sent a request to all departments asking them
to draw up legislation in case of 'national emergency'. Plans are being
prepared in the areas of extradition, anti-terrorism legislation and crime to
allow the Government to act more swiftly against people suspected of being
linked to terrorist organisations.

The move reflects similar action taken during the Gulf War when internment
powers were used to imprison up to 100 Iraqis and Palestinians. Many later
successfully sued the Government for wrongful imprisonment. The disclosure of
the allied plans for war came as tensions in the region heightened
dramatically yesterday.

Despite earlier contradictory statements, officials from Afghanistan's ruling
Taliban said they had established that their forces had downed a pilotless
drone aircraft over Tashkurghan with machinegun fire as well as a helicopter
near Dara-i-Suf.

Both areas are in Samangan, about 150 miles north-west of Kabul, where the
anti-Taliban commander General Rashid Dostum reported that his force of
minority Uzbek fighters had made advances against the Taliban.

Mystery surrounded the origin of the spy plane. A spokesman for Afghanistan's
opposition North ern Alliance confirmed the helicopter crash, but blamed it
on a mechanical fault. 'The helicopter seems to have gone down because of
technical reasons,' the spokesman, Mohamed Ashraf Nadeem, said, adding that
the fate of those on board was unknown.

The Taliban's ambassador in Islamabad, Mullah Abdul Saleem Zaeef, said the
spyplane had been downed while taking pictures over northern Afghanistan.

Washington frequently uses 'drones' to fly spy missions over Iraq, but the
aircraft do not generally have defensive capabilities and make up the
majority of planes shot down by Baghdad since the Gulf War. A Pentagon
spokesman in Washington would not comment on the report.

With America determined to press ahead with military action after more than
6,800 people were killed in twin attacks on New York and Washington, Blair's
aides signalled that Britain would stand firmly behind Washington.

His resolve will be bolstered by a poll in today's Observer that shows 65 per
cent of Britons support surgical air strikes against countries harbouring
terrorists, and 63 per cent of voters believe that Britain is 'at war'
already against terrorists. Blair is likely to recall Parliament in an effort
to keep the broad political coalition between the main political parties that
has so far backed his stance.

There is increasing concern in government quarters that a left-wing backlash
against any military action could damage Blair's standing. He is said to be
furious that Clare Short, the Cabinet Minister and Secretary of State for
International Development, has spoken out against the militaristic language
used since the atrocity. She criticised Bush's use of the word 'crusade' as
'very unfortunate' and said that America was using 'lots of planes and guns
to make everybody do their bidding'.

Blair was briefed by key security and intelligence officials for an hour as
he travelled to New York and Washington last week, increasing speculation
that military action was days away.

One of the officials was thought to be General Tom Piggott, head of opera
tional advice at the MoD. Blair was also accompanied by Sir David Manning, a
Foreign Office adviser.

An administration official in America said that the President would soon sign
an executive order naming terrorist organisations and specific terrorists
around the world and freezing their US assets. Oxfam said yesterday that
Afghanistan was facing a humanitarian crisis as refugees fled south and north
to try to escape any military attacks.

The charity had ordered a 15,000 tonne emergency shipment of food to
Uzbekistan and was trying to move emergency food into Afghanistan, where
millions of people are threatened with starvation. 'Afghanistan hasn't been
totally shut off. Why is the world waiting? There is no need to wait. Aid can
be got in now,' said Alex Renton, an Oxfam spokesman.

The intensive build-up for war came barely 24 hours after Afghanistan's
ruling Islamic council of clerics said that they had asked bin Laden to leave
the country voluntarily, although they insisted that they would not hand him
over to the US authorities.

America yesterday faced its most serious difficulty in building a coalition
to date: envoys from Saudi Arabia - a crucial ally in the Gulf War of 10
years ago - told the State Department that the kingdom would resist granting
the US use of its crucial Prince Sultan air base, which the Pentagon was
planning to use as a command centre.

Even hesitation on the Saudis' part towards the campaign would entrench
divisions in Washington, and strengthen the hand of those wanting to get on
with the war rather than wait to build a consensus alliance.

The Saudi monarchy is - like Pakistan - also extremely concerned about the
domestic threat from its Islamic fundamentalists, who have been offended by
the kingdom's alliance with the US.

The US Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, yesterday argued that the US
should make immediate plans to shift its command centre to Turkey.

Rumsfeld and the Secretary of State, Colin Powell, spent the weekend in
Washington working on details of the deployment. Last night, Bush continued
to make his plans at Camp David in Maryland with his chief of staff Andrew
Card and his National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice.




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