Hot on the trail of al-Qaeda
By Syed Saleem Shahzad 

KARACHI - The high-profile arrests of al-Qaeda operatives in Pakistan, the
most recent being Abu Faraj al-Libbi, have led to intense speculation that
the really big names could be next: Tahir Yuldash of the Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and the biggest catch of them all, Osama bin
Laden. 

But Asia Times Online investigations reveal that these top figures in the
international struggle against the US are not together in one place, and
remain a step ahead of their pursuers. 

Pakistani intelligence agencies indicate that Shabkadar (a town near
Peshawar in Pakistan's North West Frontier province), and Bajur and Mohmand
agencies (two federally administered tribal areas) have been under close
surveillance for more than a month as strong information emerged about bin
Laden being in the vicinity, or in adjoining areas - Nanghar and Nooristan -
across the border in Afghanistan. 




In Shabkadar and Bajur especially, the Pakistani military increased its
presence and conducted exhaustive search operations. These activities did
not meet with any resistance as the local tribals, though sympathetic to
Arab fighters, would not put themselves in a conflict situation with the
Pakistani army. (This in stark contrast with the South and North Waziristan
tribal areas, where similar military intervention has met with fierce and
bloody resistance.) Al-Qaeda sympathizers, nevertheless, might have spread
the word in advance of the operations. 

According to analysis based on information extracted from detainees and
ground checks in the Pakistani tribal areas, bin Laden was likely recently
in Nooristan in Afghanistan for meetings with close aides. Nooristan is a
rugged, remote mountainous region where the population is Salafi. The area
was previously the stronghold of a famous commander of the anti-Soviet
resistance of the 1980s, Abdul Aziz Nooristani, who later also fought in
Bosnia. Veteran Afghan mujahideen leader and former Afghan premier Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar also dwelled in Nooristan for some time after returning from exile
in Iran in 2002. 

Ever elusive 
That al-Qaeda's top members remain on the loose can in some ways be
attributed to the training cadres receive. They are well versed in
withstanding interrogation and in engaging their interrogators by appealing
to their religious sentiments - at least in the short term. This buys other
members vital time to change their positions, an intelligence operator told
Asia Times Online. 

Meanwhile, there have been reports that Yuldash was sighted in the Afghan
region of Birmal, where he is believed to have grouped dozens of guerrilla
fighters of Chinese, Pakistani, Afghan, Uzbek, Chechen and Arab origin. They
have been engaged in acts of sabotage in Paktika province, notably a recent
attack on Argon in which two US soldiers were killed. US convoys and their
military bases are constant targets. 

Some of the world's most difficult terrain starts at Argon and continues to
Birmal and then Shawal (part of which is in Afghanistan and part in
Pakistan). It is wholly pro-Taliban. Guerrillas carry out attacks and then
melt into the local population, either in Birmal or in the thick forests of
North Waziristan across the border. Recent US bombing in North Waziristan
followed guerrillas being chased by US gunships and fighter aircraft - some
stray bombs and missiles landed in Pakistani territory. 

Zawahiri, bin Laden's deputy, has also reportedly been seen in different
places in the past few weeks, from Zabul (Afghanistan) to South Waziristan.
Both foreign and Pakistani intelligence agencies conclude that the frequent
sightings indicate that Zawahiri is acting as the main go-between among
Arab, Uzbek, Chechen, Pakistani and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. 

These intelligence agencies believe that Khost, Paktika, Paktia and Zabul
will emerge as the key hotbeds of the Afghan resistance. About a dozen
murders in and around South Waziristan of pro-government tribal leaders
indicate that the nerve center is again near South Waziristan. 

 <http://atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/GF07Df01.html>
http://atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/GF07Df01.html

 



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