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From
http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/

}}}>Begin
September 23 2001
TERRORISM: LEAD STORY


Special forces and rebels hunt Bin Laden
US airborne forces gather on border
Britain working on new anti-terror laws



©
Prepared for action: US marines on a training exercise near Camp
Pendleton, California, as America continues to build up its forces
for the expected attack in Afghanistan. Photograph: Mike Blake
SAS troops clash with Taliban unit deep inside Afghanistan
James Clark, Tony Allen-Mills
and Stephen Grey, Washington

SAS troops in Afghanistan have been fired upon by Taliban soldiers in
the first clash of the campaign against global terrorism.
Nobody was hurt, military sources said, adding that the gunfire had been "more 
symbolic than directed". They suggested that the small SAS team had "spooked" Taliban 
soldiers near Kabul, who had fired indiscriminately befo
re fleeing.
However, the incident marks an escalation in what has so far been only an intelligence 
war. The Taliban are in a high state of alert for coalition forces waiting to enter 
their country.
It is rare for Ministry of Defence insiders to confirm that their forces have been 
involved in skirmishes, but a source close to the SAS said there had been a clash late 
on Friday.
SAS troopers, together with members of MI6 and the CIA, are working with the 
anti-Taliban Northern Alliance in the search for Osama Bin Laden, the Saudi-born 
millionaire believed to have masterminded the suicide hijacker
attacks on America 12 days ago in which 6,818 are feared to have died.
They are seeking intelligence about Bin Laden's whereabouts, the location of mines, 
routes he might take out of the country and the help of guides for later operations.
Unlike their American counterparts, SAS troopers specialise in long-term operations 
behind enemy lines, making them ideal for intelligence-gathering missions in 
Afghanistan.
The soldiers involved in the clash with the Taliban were believed to be from a 
four-man unit that had crossed the border, possibly from Tajikistan.
The SAS men on the ground are communicating with commanders via RAF Nimrods from the 
secretive 51 Squadron, using state-of-the-art "squirt" radios to transmit large 
amounts of data in seconds, helping avoid either interce
ption or pin-pointing by the enemy.
American forces are also on the move. Advance units of two United States army 
divisions are on the Afghan border preparing for strikes against the Taliban regime.
Units of the 82nd Airborne and 101st Air Assault Divisions arrived at bases in 
Pakistan, near the border towns of Quetta and Peshawar, as a huge build-

up of ships, aircraft and troops ordered to the region by President George W Bush 
continued. A Pentagon official declared that the military was ready to respond "the 
second the president pushes the button".
US military aircraft carrying reconnaissance equipment landed yesterday at a base near 
Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan. It also emerged that US attack helicopters are 
still stationed inside Uzbekistan after recent joi
nt military exercises. Northern Alliance rebels were reported to be advancing towards  
Mazar-i-Sharif, a possible bridgehead into Afghanistan for American forces.
The coalition operation inside Afghanistan coincided with intelligence reports that 
any further terrorist action would be radically different from the suicide hijackings 
that led to three passenger planes being crashed in
to the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon. "They've been there and done 
that," said one US government adviser. "The real fear now is chemical."
It was revealed last night that crop-spraying planes had been grounded in America 
after police found evidence at a suspected terrorist hideout suggesting that plans 
were being made to disperse biological or chemical agent
s. In Britain, the security services believe the main threat could be the release of 
poisons into the air or the contamination of water.
Proposals for emergency anti-terrorist legislation were presented to Tony Blair 
yesterday amid pressure from opposition MPs and some ministers for an early recall of 
parliament.
Ministers and MI5 officials are concerned that any crackdown on terrorist suspects 
could fall foul of human rights legislation. They are pressing for a new "judge-proof" 
law to be rushed through parliament.
David Blunkett, the home secretary, who has secured agreement for a European 
Union-wide arrest warrant and a faster extradition process, wants stronger powers to 
freeze or confiscate terrorist assets.
American officials, who offered a $5m reward and protection for anyone providing 
information about the terrorist attacks, said yesterday that the threat of further 
assaults would not divert them from hitting Bin Laden's A
fghan allies hard. "They are about to see what the wrath of God feels like," said one 
intelligence source.
Military tension was heightened by reports in Pakistan that an unidentified 
reconnaissance drone had been shot down over Afghanistan. If the aircraft was 
American, the incident would indicate that US forces have launched
scouting missions.
The crisis was complicated by the arrival of Pope John Paul II in the Kazakh capital 
of Astana on a long-planned visit. Kazakhstan is close enough to Afghanistan for the 
Pope's security to be a concern should hostilities
break out.
At the presidential retreat in Camp David, Bush held a "council of
war" with senior advisers. He was expected to sign an executive order
identifying terrorist groups and placing a freeze on their assets.
Today he will preside over a flag-raising ceremony when the Stars and
Stripes will formally be hoisted back to full mast, signalling the
end of official mourning for the victims of the attacks on September
11.
US officials said the military campaign would fall into two phases:
an opening salvo of missiles and aerial bombing restricted to targets
inside Afghanistan, followed by a potentially protracted ground
campaign spearheaded by American and British special forces.
Early targets are expected to include the airport at Kabul,
communications towers and power supplies. Terrorist targets in other
countries might be considered once all US forces heading for the
region are in place, the sources said.
In the latest deployments, the US amphibious ship Essex left the
Sasebo naval base in Japan, followed by the nuclear-powered
submarine, Bremerton. The two vessels departed a day after the USS
Kitty Hawk's aircraft carrier battle group left its home port near
Tokyo. More than 100 warplanes, among them B-1 and B-52 bombers, are
also believed to be ready to begin flying missions.
Concern that Saudi Arabia was reluctant to let American commanders
run an air assault from the Prince Sultan airbase near Riyadh receded
when the US said its operation was "up and running".
At home, Americans struggled to resume normal lives.
A full programme of American football games was under

way, with F-15 fighters ready to enforce no-fly zones over stadiums.
Documents left behind by the hijackers had indicated some kind of
follow-up action on September 22 - yesterday. The sense of unease was
heightened by last week's economic free-fall on Wall Street, which
suffered the worst one-week losses since the Depression of the
1930s.
Israeli tanks entered a Palestinian-controlled part of the Gaza Strip
last night and exchanged fire with Palestinian gunmen, a Palestinian
official said.
The exchange was apparently in response to mortar bombs fired at a
nearby Israeli settlement, and is the most serious breach of the
Middle East ceasefire insisted upon by Bush in the wake of the
terrorist attacks.
Next page: Worldwide moves to take the fight to Bin Laden




Next: Worldwide moves to take the fight to Bin Laden

Copyright 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd.

End<{{{
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