Monday, November 25, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE / ANGURADA with reporting by MARK
THOMPSON / WASHINGTON
On a remote stretch of Afghanistan's border with Pakistan
sits a thriving bazaar crammed with grimy shops and
simple houses. Locals know it as Angurada, but it might
as well be called al-Qaeda Town. In an audacious show of
force by an organization that is supposed to be on the
run, al-Qaeda, according to U.S. and Afghan officials,
has claimed the hamlet as its own and is using the
redoubt as a base for attacks on U.S. forces. Strangest
of all, this is happening in Afghanistan proper, where
the U.S. military has, in theory, freedom of action to
move against al-Qaeda.
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Monday, November 25, 2002
By NELLY SINDAYEN / MANILA; ANDREW PERRIN / BANGKOK;
SIMON ELEGANT / KUALA LUMPUR; LISA CLAUSEN /
SYDNEY;
MICHAEL WARE / KABUL;
TIM McGIRK / ISLAMABAD; MEENAKSHI GANGULY / NEW DELHI
At first sight, the video might be a routine tv ad for a
luxury hotel, the camera dutifully following a waiter as
he arrives at a room carrying a tray. But when the guest
opens his door, the waiter whips out a pistol and calmly
proceeds to blast the head off a papier-maché dummy. In
other scenes, masked fighters abseiling down the walls of
the "hotel" with grenades leave no doubt what this is: a
training manual for an assault on a resort complex. The
video, one of a batch of al-Qaeda tapes found outside
Kabul this month, is a chilling reminder of the range of
targets al-Qaeda and its proxies like Jemaah Islamiah are
preparing to attack. With each new arrest -- last week
Indonesian investigators nabbed Bali bomber Imam Samudra
while the U.S. announced it had apprehended al-Qaeda's
Persian Gulf chief Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri -- authorities
learn more about how to thwart global terrorism. TIME
consulted intelligence officials and security experts for
this survey of Islamic terrorist networks and the threat
level in Asia's possible target countries.
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Monday, November 18, 2002
By TIM McGIRK and MICHAEL WARE
If the U.S. has won the war in Afghanistan, maybe
somebody should tell the enemy it's time to surrender.
The bad guys are still out there, undetectable in the
rocky, umber hills of eastern Afghanistan--until they
strike, which they do with growing frequency, accuracy
and brazenness. These days American forward bases are
coming under rocket or mortar fire three times a week on
average. Apache pilots sometimes see angry red arcing
lines of tracer bullets rising toward their choppers from
unseen gunners hidden in Afghanistan's saw-blade ridges.
Roads frequented by special forces are often mined with
remote-controlled explosives, a new tactic al-Qaeda
fighters picked up from their Chechen comrades fighting
the Russians. With phantom enemy fighters stepping up
attacks and U.S. forces making little headway against
them, General Richard Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, felt compelled to acknowledge last week, "We've
lost a little momentum there, to be frank."
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Monday, September 30, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE / KABUL
The stomach-clutching thud of an explosion rolled across
Kabul at around 9pm last Saturday. It began with a flash
in a small garbage pile on a grassy common outside a
sprawling Soviet-era tenement. The building is home to
several hundred families in the suburb of Microyan, and
the detonation, only thirty yards from the ground floor
apartments, shattered every window facing the park in the
crumbling five-story block. Sleeping children woke
terrified, coated in shards of glass. A three-year-old
stood by her mother, her face laced with tiny cuts. Two
or three people were reported injured, none seriously.
For hours the tinkling of sweeping glass could heard up
and down the corridors.
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Sunday, September 22, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE
What is a president's life worth? In Afghanistan it may
prove to be as little as a pair of secondhand Toyota
Corolla hatchbacks. That's the payoff Afghan intelligence
officials believe was offered to Abdur Rehman, the man
who attempted to assassinate president Hamid Karzai
almost three weeks ago. The cars are said to have been
waiting for Rehman across the border in Pakistan should
he have succeeded and survived his bid to kill Karzai. He
did neither. Instead, Rehman was gunned down after
opening fire on the president's car on September 5,
missing his target but wounding a provincial governor and
a bodyguard.
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Saturday, May 18, 2002
Marion Hume talks to Time magazine foreign
correspondent Michael Ware
By
MARION HUME
MAY 8,
2002 : Former model turned actor Elle Macpherson
with Time Magazine journalist Michael Ware
in Sydney 08/05/02 during Australian Fashion
Week.
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Wednesday, March 13, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE
No army exists in a vacuum. One reason the Taliban and
al-Qaeda forces holed up in their Shah-i-Kot stronghold
have been able to last so long is that they have had
crucial help from sympathetic locals. So this week, as
the assault by Afghan forces to move the terrorists out
of their base shifted into high gear, a team of
Australian commandos conducted a raid designed to cut off
some of that support. The mission came Monday, as an
Afghan force of more than 350 footsoldiers led by General
Zia Lodin and backed by six tanks and American air cover
stormed up the western reaches of the terrorists' domain.
Elements of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division swept down
from the north. The plan: to drive the remnants of
al-Qaeda's fanatical militia into the southern and
eastern killing fields set by U.S. and Australian Special
Forces along the most feasible escape routes.
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Monday, February 11, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE / URUZGAN with reporting by MARK
THOMPSON / WASHINGTON
At first the U.S. military was quite proud of what it had
done in this tiny hamlet tucked among orchards and
snowcapped ridges north of Kandahar. In what appeared to
be a perfect sneak attack, U.S. special-operations
soldiers on Jan. 24 stormed Sharzam High School in
Uruzgan. That same night, another unit conducted a
similar commando raid at a military compound a mile away.
In all, the soldiers killed 21 Afghans, who the U.S.
claimed were Taliban, captured an additional 27 and
destroyed troves of weapons and ammunition. All that, and
only one U.S. soldier was hurt--and just barely. It was
the most dramatic ground operation the U.S. has
acknowledged since the opening weeks of the campaign in
Afghanistan.
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Wednesday, February 06, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE / URUZGAN
Uruzgan nestles in a pristine valley ringed by
snow-capped peaks that form a natural fortress in the
mountains north of Kandahar. Its orchards climb
peacefully to the snowline, a spectacle of pastoral
tranquility that belies the village's emergence as the
site of the largest U.S. ground operation of the Afghan
conflict — and the most tragic.
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Monday, February 04, 2002
By TIM McGIRK / KABUL with reporting by MARK THOMPSON
/ WASHINGTON and MICHAEL WARE / TARIN KOWT
On an icy, still night in Kabul, two weeks ago, Marine
guards in full combat gear at the U.S. embassy were
startled by the whoosh of a fireball exploding underneath
wintry trees at the far end of the diplomatic compound.
The resident bomb-disposal expert decided to wait until
dawn before venturing out of the fortified embassy to
investigate. That's what makes him an expert. The
explosion was only a decoy. The real killer was a land
mine that was invisible in the dark but was spotted in
the daylight half buried. Says Corporal Matthew Roberson
of the Marine antiterrorist unit at the embassy: "It
looked like somebody did it so we'd come running out and
step on the mine."
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Saturday, February 02, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE / KANDAHAR
Afghan commander Abdullah Lalai knew he faced a fight to
the death as he waited outside a barricaded hospital
ward. Inside were six al Qaeda fighters, armed with hand
grenades and a pistol, whose seven weeks of defiance in
the heart of Kandahar had become an embarrassment to the
U.S. and anti-Taliban Afghan forces who controlled the
city. But they had resisted every offer of surrender, and
now it was left to Lalai and his American special forces
comrades to resolve the standoff.
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Wednesday, January 09, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE
In Kandahar, a dusty, ramshackle place swirling with
intrigue and all manner of scheming, a great Afghan
mystery envelops us all — where is Mullah Omar? To
foreign eyes the Muslim cleric who carried the Taliban
from this, their spiritual home, to rule the country
vanished with the fall of his regime five weeks ago.
There is no sign, no trace. He is invisible to our
technology.
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Thursday, January 03, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE
On Wednesday night the bandits came, brandishing rifles
and flashing knives. In Kandahar's outer suburb of Manan
Medical, 15 men smashed doors at one mudbrick house after
another. Shir Mohammed's weaponless neighbors were robbed
with blades to their throats. At 3 a.m. the thieves were
at his house, tying up his guest and demanding cash. A
businessman in a city of paupers, Shir admits "my guests
have money, as do I." Shir's relatives fought back. They
stirred into a one-family posse; the running gun battle
lasting until dawn. The morning sun chased the robbers to
their safe house — police headquarters.
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