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U.S. Plans New Attacks, Continues Search of Al-Qaeda Caves
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Coalition
forces continue search al-Qaeda caves.
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BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan, March 17 (IslamOnline & News
Agencies) - As the U.S. military and its allies are planning new
attacks on several pockets of Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters,
believed to be hiding in southern and eastern Afghanistan, hundreds
of coalition soldiers are continuing to pursue and search their
hideouts in their last known stronghold, a U.S. military spokesman
said Sunday.
The Washington Post quoted Army Maj. Gen. Franklin Hagenbeck
as saying that intelligence-gathering planes were flying
around-the-clock focusing on two or three areas "where the
Al-Qaeda and Taliban movements began and where they historically
have had support."
Refusing to disclose when the new attacks would begin, Hagenbeck
said the information would be used to aid U.S. and allied forces
weigh decisions about how to conduct the attacks, the Post
said, including using mainly allied Afghan forces, involving mainly
U.S. Special Forces or one consisting only of airstrikes.
Presently, U.S.-led forces in the region continue to "destroy
Al-Qaeda and Taliban extremists ... disrupt terrorist support
mechanisms and exfiltration routes" around the Shahi Kot valley
in eastern Paktia province, Major Bryan Hilferty told reporters at a
U.S. base, north of the capital Kabul.
Operation Anaconda, the current U.S.-led offensive against diehard
Al-Qaeda and Taliban troops launched on March 2, is winding down,
but 500 soldiers continue to search a network of caves and secure
the area, Hilferty added.
"Our Afghan allies occupy the Shahi Kot Valley, while U.S. and
Canadian infantry troops occupy the ridge line known as 'The Whale'.
"We have found and exploited more than 20 caves, with
ammunition caches, food, clothing and numerous sensitive items... We
will continue to seek out and destroy and attack Taliban terrorists
and Al-Qaeda extremists in Afghanistan."
Hagenbeck told the Post he believed Al-Qaeda and Taliban
forces were warned of Operation Anaconda. "We didn't have . . .
operational surprise," he said." There are no secrets in
Afghanistan," saying that poor weather forced him to delay the
attack for two days, until March 2, leaving his troops assembled and
ready for battle for some time before they moved. When he gave the
order to attack, he said, "I was convinced that by then that
many people knew the operation was coming."
Asked what objectives had been achieved, Hilferty said: "So far
we have destroyed their command and control, we've destroyed their
caches, we've killed hundreds of the Al-Qaeda terrorists, who will
not be around now to kill innocent men, women and children.
"This has been a great success so far."
Most of the troops still taking part in the operation were now
Canadian, while 150 Afghans were also involved.
Despite fierce aerial raids and close combat, the mountainous
landscape and a vast labyrinth of caves, a senior military official
said Saturday that the operation had managed to wipe out the core
military leadership of Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network and few
fighters had managed to escape.
Hagenbeck emphatically rejected reports by journalists, who toured
the Shahikot Valley and expressed skepticism about U.S. statements
that as many as 700 Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters were killed in the
battle. Afghan commanders have also questioned the casualty count,
reported the Post.
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