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THE TIMES


FRIDAY JANUARY 25 2002

Taleban army rises again to face US

FROM TIM REID IN KANDAHAR

A RENEGADE army of 5,000 Taleban soldiers with 450 tanks, armoured carriers
and pick-up trucks is locked in a tense stand-off with American special
forces in Afghanistan.
The troops fled Kandahar with their commander and more than 100 senior
Taleban figures in December after reneging on a surrender agreement. They
have regrouped among villages in the mountainous region of Ghazni province,
northwest of Kandahar.

Amid growing concern that powerful pockets of resistance loyal to Osama bin
Laden remain in Afghanistan, an American soldier was wounded in the foot and
15 Taleban and al-Qaeda guerrillas were killed yesterday in a gunfight north
of Kandahar. 

The clash, which occurred during a US special forces "search and destroy
mission", was triggered when Arab fighters opened fire on the US patrol, US
officials said. About 30 men were captured.

The Americans said that most of the detainees were Afghans and appeared to
be Taleban, not al-Qaeda, fighters. Officials described them as members of
the leadership but would not comment on whether the US had acted on
intelligence that Mullah Muhammad Omar was hiding in the area.

In tough negotiations with American forces, leaders of the renegade army in
Ghazni are demanding millions of dollars and the guarantee of an amnesty
before they will give up their arms. "Extremely delicate and tense"
negotiations are under way between representatives of Gul Agha Sherzai,
Kandahar's new Governor, US special forces and the Taleban commander in
charge of the unit.

"They disappeared the day that Kandahar fell," a senior aide to Mr Sherzai
said. "They took with them 450 tanks and vehicles, rocket-propelled
grenades, machine-guns and rifles. At present, the Americans do not want to
use force, as they are spread among the local people. But there are real
fears that if there is one incident of revolt which takes place against the
government (of Kandahar, we fear it will have a snowball effect."

In Kandahar's football stadium yesterday Mr Sherzai addressed 15,000 people
after calling a Loya Jirga (National Council). He pledged allegiance to
Zahir Shah, the former Afghan King, but renewed attacks on Iran and its
growing infiltration with arms and money. It was seen as the first test of
Mr Sherzai's popularity in post-Taleban Kandahar. The stadium was, however,
only three-quarters full, with 3,000 of the audience being schoolchildren.

Afghan troops from Kandahar province are on high alert for possible military
action against the allegedly Iranian-backed forces of Ismail Khan, the
veteran warlord and Governor of the western city of Herat. Tensions between
Mr Sherzai and Mr Khan in Herat remain extremely high and are causing grave
concern to the Americans.

The growing number of US troops in the country - more than 3,000 are based
at Kandahar airport and in Kabul - are being drawn into provincial
rivalries. While many in the country welcome the stabilising influence of
American troops in the short term, a long-term deployment would be bitterly
resented, particularly in the Pashtun south, where Taleban sympathies are
still strong. 

Mr Sherzai's commanders, and US Intelligence, have accused Iran of
funnelling cash and arms to Mr Khan and his allies to stir up opposition to
the new interim administration of Hamid Karzai in Kabul, and to the US
presence in the region.

Mr Khan is accused of persecuting Pashtuns in Herat, with reports from
refugees leaving the area of Pashtuns being robbed of trucks, jailed and
killed. Mr Khan and Tehran deny the allegations.

In the north reports continue of fighting between forces loyal to General
Abdul Rashid Dostum - a man who switched sides no less than six times during
the Afghan civil war - and Mohammed Daoud, two rival members of the Northern
Alliance, over a remote district near the Tajikistan border.

The conflict has led two other warlords who claim a role in the city -
Commander Mohaqaq, a Hazari, and Commander Uftad Ata, a Tajik, to arm
refugees loyal to them. "The camps are now punctuated by small-arms fire as
rival groups, armed by the warlords, battle each other for territory,"
Haneef Ata, of the International Rescue Committee, said.

A UN security officer, who asked not to be named, said that the same
practice had spread to other cities. The camps around the eastern city of
Jalalabad contained large numbers of young men being armed by warlords who
were keen to fill the power vacuum outside Kabul, the official said.

Under the terms of the agreement establishing the interim administration
there was no provision for the deployment of peacekeeping troops beyond
4,500 in Kabul. 

General Ghulam Nassery, Afghan minister in charge of peacekeeping, said:
"Unless the camps are disarmed, Afghanistan could once again slide into
civil war. I am ashamed to say, we need men who are not Afghans. We need
more than 100,000 of them."

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