TIME: Karzai's New
Bunker
Monday, October 21, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE
On a Kabul street with no name but alive with honking
yellow taxis, something curious is happening. A new
construction site has sprung up just outside the
grounds of the presidential palace, with a formidable
wall of soil-filled shipping containers stacked two
levels high. The swarms of Afghan laborers say they
don't know what they're building. American engineers
shoo away anyone who asks about it. But members of the
palace guard, charged with protecting President Hamid
Karzai, say the construction sits above an aging bunker
complex and that U.S. forces from the 769th Engineer
Battalion are refashioning it for the President. "We're
building an underground bunker for Karzai," a member of
the battalion told TIME.
U.S. forces have been overseeing Karzai's security ever
since July, following the assassination of one of his
top ministers. But a September attempt to kill the
President has heightened concerns about his safety.
Karzai's U.S. backers worry about the threats posed by
Taliban and al-Qaeda remnants as well as by unyielding
warlords such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. And so the U.S.,
it appears, is helping the Afghan President dig in.
A map of the purported underground warrens, drawn for
TIME by an Afghan palace guard, shows a tunnel skirting
the stone walls surrounding the palace. Small chambers
run off the subterranean passageway. According to
palace guards, the refurbishment plans include not just
the underground presidential bunker but also a facility
for U.S. forces and barracks for the new Afghan
national army. Whatever the ultimate uses of the
bunker, work on it is proceeding at an urgent clip. "If
the U.S. engineers are not patrolling when we're
working at night, we can steal a little sleep," says a
laborer, Ghulam Sakhi. "But if they catch us, they kick
us awake. They're always pushing us to work very, very
hard, day and night."
--By Michael
Ware