TIME: Where Danger
Lurks
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."
Afghanistan's "postwar" era is hardly a peaceful one.
Last Thursday U.S. special forces engaged in a major
fire fight, one of the largest in the conflict so far,
near the village of Hazar Qadam, 60 miles north of
Kandahar. The good news is that no American soldier
died; one was slightly wounded in the foot. The bad
news is that Hazar Qadam's was only the latest of
several recent clashes between U.S. personnel and
al-Qaeda and Taliban resistance. To date, only two
Americans, including one from the CIA, have been killed
by enemy fire (17 have died in accidents, including one
who may have been a suicide). But the potential for
mayhem remains huge and, by some Army assessments,
growing as Americans confront what General Tommy
Franks, head of U.S. Central Command, estimates to be
about a dozen ever shifting pockets of resistance.
Those dangers are exacerbated as American forces are
drawn into local feuds and warlord ambitions. As the
double-bang plot against the embassy illustrates, it is
the multiplicity of perils and the long list of
suspects that make Afghanistan one of the world's
biggest booby traps.
Who carried out the embassy attack? The Arab members of
Osama bin Laden's terrorist network have long since
cleared out of Kabul, but many members of their Afghan
cohort are at large, according to intelligence sources
in the government of Prime Minister Hamid Karzai. The
attack might also have been the work of Taliban
fighters who still roam the city--in beardless
disguise--acting on their own instead of with al-Qaeda.
A third possibility is that the bomber was an Afghan
who wanted payback for a bomb the U.S. mistakenly
dropped on his home.
Of the 4,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, 3,000 occupy
Kandahar airport and 500 are stationed at the air base
in Bagram. Al-Qaeda elements "probed" the Kandahar
airport to test its security apparatus and were sent
fleeing. At Bagram, just keeping watch over 50
detainees, among them Pakistanis, Moroccans, Chechens
and British Muslims, is hazardous duty for the 65th
Military Police company. Inmates have been found with
razors, money and pens sewn into their clothing even
after repeated searches. If a suspected terrorist
should manage to get beyond the 8-ft.-high razor wire,
the procedure is simple. "We tell 'em three times to
halt," says Specialist Tim Vernon, 22, of Sumner, Wash.
"And if they don't, we open fire. No way we're going to
chase them through the minefields."
Initiated missions always seem to bring the biggest
perils. Last week's fight near Hazar Qadam was the
result of a raid by Green Berets--acting, unusually in
this war, without the aid of local militias--on two
suspected al-Qaeda hideouts that turned out to be
Taliban ammunition dumps. The invaders killed 15
Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters, took 27 prisoners and,
with the help of an AC-130 gunship, destroyed the
ammunition. According to one account of the battle, the
two sides engaged in hand-to-hand combat amid the
shooting. "The fact that so many died shows us they're
still willing to put up quite a fight," says a Pentagon
official. The "nests" the Green Berets attacked were
just two of many the U.S. is watching across
Afghanistan. "You're going to see more attacks like
this," says the Pentagon official, "or at least you're
going to hear about them after they've happened."
However, in Tarin Kowt, the capital of the province
where the raid occurred, different and confusing claims
are circulating. One allegation is that the U.S. made a
mistake, attacking and killing provincial government
soldiers who had gone to the area to accept a Taliban
surrender and had been guarding the munitions stored in
a local school and the district headquarters. A man
claimed that two bodies were found with hands bound and
shot in the head; furthermore, that 22 to 40 soldiers
and a number of civilians were killed in the raid. The
fear in Tarin Kowt is that the U.S. may have acted on
information from local warlords who wanted to get hold
of the Taliban munitions for themselves.
For the U.S., a huge challenge is not to slide into the
miasma of Afghanistan's impossible politics. Diplomats
say an ambush of U.S. special forces earlier this month
in the province of Khost, in which Green Beret Sergeant
Nathan Chapman was killed, may have been in reprisal
for the U.S.'s backing an unpopular local warlord
there, Pacha Khan Zadran. Zadran has enemies within his
own tribe, including one who claims to be Khost's new
governor and whose 500 fighters captured part of Khost
last week. Twice now, Zadran's foes say, he has called
in U.S. air strikes on his enemies, claiming they were
al-Qaeda and Taliban fugitives. (Zadran denies the
charge.)
Marine General Peter Pace, Vice Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, insists that the U.S. "will continue
to work with each of the tribal leaders to get to the
point where the things that we are doing in Afghanistan
alongside them are good for both the U.S. and
Afghanistan." But he concedes that all of Afghanistan
is a battlefield. And, he said, "the battlefield will
continue to be fluid."
--With
reporting by Mark Thompson/Washington and Michael
Ware/Tarin Kowt