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Paintball Forums > General > Chit Chat > Politics > The Bush Legacy: Taliban Back and Recruiting in Afghanistan

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Gandalf Grey
[1] Posted by Gandalf Grey 07-14-2003, 08:36 PM
 
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Quote
from the July 14, 2003 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0714/p07s02-wosc.html

Arid Afghan province proves fertile for Taliban
Some disaffected villagers in Zabul Province now offer shelter and
assistance to militants.

By Owais Tohid | Special to The Christian Science Monitor

KALAT, ZABUL, AFGHANISTAN - Toor Jan is ostensibly a farmer, but he's also a
spy. Jan roams the streets and gathers information about the movements of US
and Afghan forces and passes it on to Taliban guerrillas.

"I cannot fight face to face with Americans but I am helping mujahideen on
the other front," says Jan, not his real name, at a meeting behind a
roadside shop in a village of southern Afghanistan's Zabul province.

Some villagers in Zabul - a hardscrabble and deeply conservative corner of
Afghanistan - now offer shelter and assistance to Taliban insurgents. As the
militants exploit both the mountainous geography and the political
grievances of the Pashtuns here, the province is increasingly becoming a
no-go area for foreign aid workers and a permanent irritant for US-led
coalition forces.

Pashtuns in this region feel unrepresented by the Kabul government, despite
the fact that President Hamid Karzai is a Pashtun. Raids and house searches
by US troops in the area have only furthered hostility among residents.
Meanwhile, a drought has covered the already arid region with dust,
depriving many of their livelihoods. And there is no sign of international
reconstruction work to better their lot.

Disaffected villagers "are like a poppy crop for the Taliban, a form of hard
currency and a great weapon against Americans," says Akbar Khan, an educated
young man of Zabul.

Jan's village of Deh lies in the belly of the Barei Mountains, now a hub for
hundreds of Al Qaeda and Taliban guerrillas who operate from mountain caves
and mingle with the local population.

The lifestyle and traditional beliefs of the population support the
insurgents. Even today, bearded old men wear the black turbans favored by
the ousted Taliban regime. Women cover themselves with burqas, and no music
is played in the roadside hotels and cafes. Most belong to the same tribe as
former Taliban ruler Mullah Omar.

"I help the mujahideen by providing shelter in the villages. I help them
transport their weapons through children when US forces launch any
operation," says Jan. "These goras [white men] search our houses. Entering
the houses of Pashtuns is disrespectful to us and to our women," he says
angrily.

Villagers talk of at least three recent search operations by Americans and
Afghan forces in towns and villages. Jan recalls one such operation.

"I became very angry when American soldiers entered our village ... asking
about the Taliban and Al Qaeda," Jan says. "I calmed myself and cleverly
gave wrong information about the wanted Taliban leaders. I shook hands with
them and also said hello to them."

Last week, a fierce gun battle between hundreds of Afghan troops and a group
of Taliban guerrillas in Zabul, left 11 Taliban fighters dead. Five were
captured alive.

The captured Taliban fighters are locked up in an iron container lying
within a huge compound of the Zabul governor's house.

Abdul Naseer is one of them. While fighting for the Taliban for the last
several months, he has slept in caves and taken shelter in villages. He says
every group has eight to 10 fighters, but form a large group of 40 to 50
before any attack.

"I fire rockets at Americans' check- posts. I targeted their slaves [Afghan
forces] to cleanse our land of infidels," says the bearded fighter, Mr.
Naseer. The firmness of his belief was clearly reflected in his tone,
despite being handcuffed and shackled. "We will kill gora Americans. They
have occupied our land."

Naseer's colleague, Abdul Wali, says he is a new recruit and joined the
guerrilla fighters after hearing Taliban elders preaching in the name of
Islam.

"I was a farmer. Only a few days ago, four Taliban came to our village and
announced the decree that Muslims should wage jihad against the Americans,"
he says. "They gave me 5,000 Afghanis [$116] to leave with my family before
joining them for jihad."

Only 2-1/2 months ago, about 200 Taliban fighters captured nearby Chopan
district, fleeing only when US forces launched an air strike against them.
When they took control of the area, thousands of villagers shouted slogans
in favor of the Taliban and vowed to usher in another Islamic revolution in
Afghanistan.

And Sunday, Afghan forces seized 300 rocket-propelled grenades and dozens of
antitank mines in a raid on a Taliban hideout near the Pakistan border.

Foreign aid workers are now too afraid to go to Zabul, which lies on the
Pakistan border and is sandwiched between Kandahar, the Taliban's former
headquarters, and Uruzgan, the home province of the Mullah Omar. After
sunset, sources say the villages become hideouts for the insurgents, and
Afghan forces based in the main city of Kalat are restricted mainly to and
around the governor's house.

"There is a game of death every day," says Zabul's governor and former
mujahideen commander, Abdul Hameed Torkhi. "They try to kill us and we try
to kill them." Mr. Torkhi warns that he is losing his soldiers to lack of
pay and support. "The Karzai government gives us a very little amount; don't
even ask me it is not worth mentioning," he says.

One of Torkhi's soldiers, Sardar Khan, says: "It is not an ideological
battle against the Taliban as it was against the Russians, so why should I
fight for free?"

Afghan security officials accuse Pakistan of providing training and funding
to the Taliban fighters in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, a charge
denied by officials in Islamabad.

"They are being trained in Pakistan, provided with funds, and sent back to
Afghanistan to fight," says the commander of Afghan forces in Zabul, who
identified himself only as Abdullah. "We keep on making them run and they
keep on coming back with a new lease of life from Pakistan. It is
frustrating."

Meanwhile, Zabul's poor farmer finishes his spying "task" for the insurgents
and heads to a mosque for prayers. There, he says, he will meet his
comrades.

"We have pledged that we shall not sit idle until we throw out the Americans
from here," he says.



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FAIR USE NOTICE: This post contains copyrighted material the use of which
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Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107

"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so
long as I'm the dictator." - GW Bush 12/18/2000.

"To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that
we are to stand by the president right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic
and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public."
---Theodore Roosevelt

"Feels Good!"
---George W. Bush on the Brink of Declaring War on Iraq.


 
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