Taliban fighters back in caves of Tora Bora 


By Tom Coghlan
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/06/18/wafghan218.x
ml

Last Updated: 1:08am BST 18/06/2007



Insurgents backed by al-Qa'eda have opened a new "front" on the eastern
border of Afghanistan, re-occupying the Tora Bora cave complex from which
Osama bin Laden escaped the closing net of US forces in 2001.

The "Tora Bora Front", as Taliban propaganda calls it, borders the province
of Nangahar and has been active for about three weeks. The complex of deep
caves, which proved impervious to US bombing in 2001, sits on an
infiltration route from the Spin Ghar mountains between Nangahar province
and Pakistan's lawless Tribal Areas, where bin Laden is still thought to be
hiding.

Western officials and local government authorities confirm that Taliban
insurgents backed by al-Qa'eda have reoccupied the complex.

They believe that one of the group's leaders could be Amin ul-Haq, a close
associate of bin Laden. One western official also named Maulvi Anwar ul-Haq
Mujahed as a commander of the group. He is the son of Younis Khalis, one of
the most famous Islamist leaders in the Afghan jihad against the Soviets.

Initial estimates of the Tora Bora force by local Afghan officials put the
number at between 200 and 250, including Arab, Chechen and Pakistani
fighters.

"They have reoccupied the old base," said Haji Zalmai, the district governor
of Khogiani, which borders the Spin Ghar mountains at Tora Bora.

"We feel the effect directly here. They want to extend this front and to
establish their control in these two or three districts on this side of the
border in the way that they did in parts of Uruzgan, Helmand and Kandahar."

Khogiani district is a dusty plain dominated by the imposing rampart of
peaks that make up the Spin Ghar mountains and the border with Pakistan.
Governor Zalmai survived an assassination attempt two weeks ago that blew up
his car and the district, which has never been secure, has experienced a
recent rise in insurgent activity.

The area, which is also notorious for poppy production and smuggling, has
had three governors in a year. Zalmai's predecessor was killed and the
governor before him was injured and swiftly left the post.

A Taliban propaganda blitz across southern Nangahar has led to "night
letters" being dropped in villages boasting of the new front. They warn
Afghans of the dire repercussions for supporting the government or western
forces.

Officials in Kabul believe that the move is part of a more general strategic
shift in the focus of Taliban operations away from their previous epicentre
in the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, where a series of
offensives by British troops supported by US and other Nato forces has left
the Taliban with a battered command structure and weakening morale.

The death of the notorious Mullah Dadullah Akhund in May was only the most
high-profile success of a little-publicised campaign, largely conducted by
both British and American Special Forces, to decapitate the leadership of
the Taliban in the south.

There also appears to be a shift in tactics, with the insurgents turning
more to terrorist tactics such as yesterday's suicide bombing in Kabul.

Al-Qa'eda has been retrenching its influence in Pakistan's tribal belt since
the signing of a peace deal between the Pakistani government and Taliban
militants in South Waziristan in September 2006.

The area has proved a heartland of support for al-Qa'eda's brand of
religious extremism and western officials in Kabul are concerned by the
spread of Talibanisation from across the border in Pakistan into
Afghanistan.

One senior western diplomat in Kabul told The Daily Telegraph that Gen Dan
McNeill, the commander of Nato forces in Afghanistan, was reviewing whether
to shift Nato's "Theatre Reserve", which is made up of troops from the US
82nd Airborne division, from Helmand and Kandahar provinces to areas along
the eastern border.

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