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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Troops mass on Afghan border

By Christopher Kremmer, Gay Alcorn and Mark Riley, Herald Correspondents

Afghan and Pakistani troops were reported to be massing on the border between
the countries as the United States issued an ultimatum to the ruling Taliban
in Afghanistan to give up Osama bin Laden and prepared for a dirty war
against terrorists.

The Taliban deployed between 20,000 and 25,000 troops just across the border
from the Khyber Pass into Pakistan, a Pakistani army officer reported late
yesterday.

At the same time, reinforcements of Pakistani troops had fanned out along the
1,400 kilometre western border with Afghanistan, Captain Ahmed Bahtti said.

"We are also forming our forces, but there has been no firing," he said at a
military base in the Khyber Pass, about 200 kilometres west of the capital,
Islamabad.

The United States will review its intelligence operations to allow presidents
to order assassinations and the recruitment of criminals as spies in the hunt
for those behind the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

As the country prepares for massive military strikes against the Taliban
militia, the Vice-President, Mr Dick Cheney, said it had to "work the dark
side" of intelligence if it was to win its declared war on terrorism.

"It is a mean, nasty, dangerous, dirty business out there and we have to
operate in that arena," he said. "We also have to work the dark side. We have
to spend time in the shadow."

In other developments:


Pakistani officials were preparing for crisis talks with the Taliban
militia's supreme leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, in a desperate bid to avert
war between Afghanistan and the US.


The US demanded that the Taliban hand over bin Laden, the prime suspect in
the attacks, within the next few days or face military attack.


Rescuers at the World Trade Centre shifted their focus to recovering bodies
as a fourth consecutive day passed with no survivors found. The number of
dead or missing there reached 4,957, while the death toll in the Pentagon
attack stood at 188.


Australian investors, spooked by fears of a plunge in New York, yesterday
wiped more than $30 billion off the value of Australian stocks. The All
Ordinaries index closed at its lowest in 18 months.


At one stage the insurance company QBE lost about 40 per cent of its market
value after it admitted that its exposure to the New York attacks was higher
than first anticipated.

In the US, Mr Cheney made clear that the planned assault on terrorism would
be far broader than military strikes and the Secretary of State, Mr Colin
Powell, said the Administration was "examining everything" related to
intelligence, including removing the ban on assassinations.

Mr Cheney said the CIA needed to recruit "very unsavoury characters" if it
was to infiltrate terrorist groups.

The intelligence community has come under intense scrutiny after its failure
to detect that terrorists planned to hijack commercial planes and crash them
into major landmarks last week.

Mr Cheney said he had "no doubt" that bin Laden was behind the attacks but
warned that other groups, including the Egyptian Jihad, may have been
involved.

Opinion polls show that Americans support the assassination of bin Laden, and
when Mr Cheney was asked if he would like the suspect's head "on a platter",
he replied: "I would take it today."

However, many lawyers say state-backed killings would breach international
law and send a signal that the US is abandoning its stance as a beacon for
democracy and legal process.

The country was on a full war footing yesterday, with Mr Bush preparing
Americans for a long "crusade" against terrorism and warning them of possible
future attacks on US soil.

"We will rid the world of the evil-doers," he said. "They have roused a
mighty giant and make no mistake about it, were determined."


US sources say that if the Taliban turns over bin Laden and shuts his network
of training camps in Afghanistan, it will be allowed to stay in power. But US
officials said the chances of the Taliban agreeing were "very poor".

The head of Pakistan intelligence, Lieutenant-General Mehmud Ahmed, arrived
in the southern Afghan town of Kandahar early yesterday and met senior
Taliban officials. He was expected to call on Mullah Omar to appeal for the
handing-over of bin Laden.

Lieutenant-General Mehmud was reportedly accompanied by Islamic scholars to
bolster efforts to persuade the Taliban that surrendering bin Laden would not
transgress religious principles.

Unconfirmed reports said he was also carrying evidence, provided by
Washington, of bin Laden's involvement in the attacks.

The former Pakistan interior minister and retired general Naseerullah Babar,
who is widely credited with creating the Taliban movement, said he believed
Mullah Omar could be persuaded to see reason.

But a former Pakistan foreign secretary, Mr Niaz Naik, said he feared the
mission to Kandahar would fail. "I don't think we will succeed because we are
dealing with people who live in prehistoric times, who are very committed to
their views and don't see modern logic or reason," he said.

The Taliban has justified providing refuge to bin Laden by saying there is no
hard evidence against him, and that in Afghan culture guests must be
protected.

It has said in recent days that bin Laden is under tight Taliban control and
could not have had a role in the attacks. But observers cite strong evidence
that the multi-millionaire has become one of the movement's main financial
backers.

Mullah Omar, a former mujahideen rebel who fought against communist-backed
forces during Afghanistan's civil war, has summoned religious leaders to
Kandahar to consider declaring jihad, or holy war, against the US if attacked.





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