By
Hafeezullah Haqqani, IOL Correspondent
KANDHAR,
November 25 (IslamOnline) - Afghanistan International Airport has been
turned into one of the biggest U.S. military bases in the war-torn
country, with only U.S. warplanes allowed in and out of the former
civilian airport, reported IslamOnline Monday, November 25.
"Kandhar
airport is now one of our most important bases, but I do not know
exactly how many troops are stationed therein," said Karl
Birceno, a U.S. officer in the airport.
Kandhar
residents say that the former international airport is used only by
U.S. military planes. The same meaning was emphasized by Birceno.
"Kandhar airport is under the control of U.S. forces only, no
international forces, no peace keepers, no one but us," he said.
The
airport, the biggest in Afghanistan, lies southeast of Kandhar, on
Kandhar-Boldok road, which is a part of Tehran-New Delhi international
road. The U.S. made it a military base since the fall of Taliban
regime.
It
represented one of the symbols of Taliban power. The Islamic regime,
in the past, allowed leaders of al-Qaeda network to make it a center
for their activities. According to Kandhar residents, "Osama bin
Laden and other senior al-Qaeda leaders lived in the airport, and
established centers for educational and military training for al-Qaeda
members".
However,
no Afghani is now allowed into the facility, even senior officials of
the Afghani transitional government, unless they go through strict
security measures carried out by "vigilant and even on the alert
U.S. troops".
Such
measures are clear upon approaching the main entrance of the airport
where there is a roadblock and a checking point, manned by Afghani
soldiers. After being thoroughly searched and stripped of belongings,
such as mobiles, cameras or any other items deemed suspicious by the
Americans, visitors (reporters, senior officials…etc) proceed to
other security points.
The
Afghani security point is just an outer security belt, inside the
gates of the airport, checking points, manned by U.S. forces, ready to
shoot at any one they deem suspicious or posing a threat, and all
kinds and methods of search (dogs, hi-Tec apparatus and so on).
Inside
the former international airport, visitors see nothing but military
equipment; tanks, guns, military vehicles, and military planes taking
off and jetting in to load or unload logistic support items (for the
U.S. forces).
All
these security measures, however, failed to breathe a sense of safety
into the U.S. forces inside the base, according to visitors and the
looks on the faces of U.S. guards.
"I
have come to the airport a couple of weeks ago, my job is to help
civilians visiting it. So far, I have not seen Kandhar city, even
though I want to," said Birceno, from New York.
"We
came to Afghanistan to root out al-Qaeda fighters, however, their
operations seem endless. We do not want to stay here forever, we want
to go home, our families are stiff worried. I do not how long we will
stay here, but I think it won't be less than a couple of years,"
he added.
Dead
or alive, members of al-Qaeda still pose a threat to U.S. forces in
Afghanistan, in general, and in the airport, in particular.
"The
corpses of many Arabs are still under the debris of the airport
buildings, this spreads a sense of fear inside the U.S. troops in a
strange way," said Mohamed Anas, Administrative Manager of
Kandhar province