BAGRAM
AIR BASE, Afghanistan, May 18 (IslamOnline News Agencies) - Hundreds
of coalition troops blocked off an area of southeast Afghanistan as
part of a major new operation. This followed Taliban leader Mullah
Omar threat against the U.S. and assertion that Bin Laden was still
alive, according to press reports.
U.S.
spokesman Major Bryan Hilferty told reporters Saturday that
"approximately 10" people had been killed in an attack by an
AC-130 gunship early Friday on an uninhabited ridge north of Khost.
Apparently,
Hilferty was referring to the U.S. warplane that bombed a village
Friday, May 16, in the eastern Afghan province of Khost, killing at
least 10 people and wounding many others at a wedding ceremony.
The
bombing, which occurred overnight in Bal Khel village in Sabari
district, 30 kilometers northeast of Khost, targeted a wedding that
was in progress in the village, according to Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
During
the wedding, people fired into the air in traditional celebration and
U.S. claimed the helicopters flying over the area could have allegedly
mistaken it for hostile fire.
A
U.S. aircraft later bombed the area for several hours, AFP added.
The
terrified residents were confined to their homes by fear and had not
been able, according to AFP, to remove dead bodies and evacuate the
injured to hospitals for some time after the attack.
However,
Hilferty, who refused to give the exact location of the ongoing
Operation Condor, denied that those killed had been celebrating a
wedding.
"It
was not a village, it was an uninhabited ridge line. There were people
on that ridge line firing at us," he said, AFP reported.
Asked
how he could be sure that the 10 victims were fighters, Hilferty
replied: "Usually people who are firing at you are your enemy...
I cannot tell you for sure, but they were firing heavy machine guns at
us in a known al-Qaeda, Taliban area."
For
his part, British spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Ben Curry said the
Australian forces had been fired on and pursued for around five hours
on Thursday afternoon.
"Given
the nature of the attack - the fact that they were fired upon by heavy
machine-gun power and RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) rounds, also the
length and duration of the attack - the initial assessment was that
this was a well-armed force."
Curry
said around 500 Royal Marine commandos had been flown in to the
mountainous area, making the bulk of a 1,000-strong force deployed
there.
U.S.
and Afghan fighters had also joined the mission, while the Australian
troops remained on the ground.
"We
are conducting clearing operations with the coalition and combat air
support. I can confirm that there have been no combat
casualties," Curry said.
He
said British troops had yet to encounter any al-Qaeda or Taliban
troops but that one suspected opposition fighter had been killed by
the Australians on Thursday.
Hilferty
said coalition troops had "blocked off escape routes" in an
area described as tens of square kilometers.
"We
have people blocking the area. You can say the area is
surrounded." He confirmed that civilians were within the cordon
and added that a village was around two kilometers (over a mile) from
the scene of the initial exchanges.
Meanwhile,
the supreme leader of Afghanistan's ousted Taliban warned the United
States that "fire will engulf the White House" and said that
al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was still alive, according to a daily
a newspaper.
"The
battle (in Afghanistan) has (just) started, its fire has been kindled
and it will engulf the White House, seat of injustice and
tyranny," Mullah Mohammad Omar was quoted as saying by the
Saudi pan-Arab daily Asharq Al-Awsat.
As
to Bin Laden, whose al-Qaeda network is accused by the United States
of carrying out the September 11 attacks, "Sheikh Osama is,
thanks be to God, still alive, to the horror of Bush," Omar said.
Bush
"is promising his people to kill Osama, unaware of the fact that
it is God the Almighty Who gives life or takes it away," he said.
Asharq
Al-Awsat said Omar, who has eluded U.S. forces since the fall of
the Taliban's last bastion of Kandahar last year, was hiding in the
mountains of Afghanistan and had answered its questions,
submitted in writing, via his information adviser.
The
paper said it ascertained that the interview, the first with Omar since
the U.S.-led war on Afghanistan ended five years of Taliban
rule, "was conducted in accordance with the professional
standards it adheres to."
"We
do not consider the battle to have ended in Afghanistan, or even in
Palestine or other Muslim lands ... (The United States) launched a war
against Islam and Muslims without any legitimate justification, and I
am confident that God (will grant Muslims) victory," Omar was
quoted as saying.
Asked
if he stuck to his past view that Bin Laden was not behind last
September's attacks in New York and Washington, Omar said:
"The attacks that occurred in America are undoubtedly important
events in history and played a major role in reshuffling the cards of
international politics .
"There
are reasons behind these great actions, and America, which knows these
reasons full well, should strive to eliminate them, so that (such
attacks) do not recur."
The
Taliban leader vowed that the United States would encounter "hell
and a resounding defeat" in Afghanistan, "as happened to the
Soviet Union and British colonialism before that."
He
said the Taliban had pulled back to the mountains "to start a
guerilla war" there and thus spare the lives of the Afghan
people, but "our jihad (holy war) will continue ... until
victory."