US denies Taliban shot down helicopter in Afghanistan 

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia_china/story.jsp?story=100961

By Andrew Buncombe in Washington
23 October 2001

An exchange of claim and counter-claim took place between Washington and
the Taliban after the regime said it had recovered wreckage from a
downed US helicopter inside Afghanistan.

Taliban fighters posed for television pictures next to aircraft wheels
which the Taliban regime claimed had been taken from the wreckage in
Helmand province, close to the southern city of Kandahar. The Al-Jazeera
network showed the pieces of wreckage that the Taliban said were
stencilled with words written in English.

But the Pentagon dismissed the claims, saying that none of its
helicopters had been lost inside Afghanistan. The only helicopter crash,
it said, was the accident in the early hours of Saturday when a Black
Hawk, on standby for search and rescue for a special forces operation,
came down inside Pakistan. Two US personnel were killed in the crash,
which officials say may have been caused by a storm of dust created by
the helicopter's blades.

"We have not lost any helicopters in Afghanistan. If they found
helicopter wreckage it wasn't ours," a Pentagon spokeswoman said. Her
comments appeared to suggest that a helicopter - possibly flown by the
Northern Alliance - could have crashed.

Exactly what the Taliban may have found and then displayed on Al-Jazeera
remained unclear last night. The Qatari satellite television station
showed close-up footage of what the Taliban described as new aircraft
wheels and a piece of metal stencilled with the English words "Shock.
Loud Engineering".

A US company, Loud Engineering & Manufacturing Inc, based in Ontario,
California, makes parts for the CH-47 Chinook helicopter. The company's
chairman, Mark Lee, said it was investigating the claims.

The Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) quoted the Taliban's consul in the
Pakistan city of Peshawar, Maulawi Najibullah, as saying he had been
informed of the discovery of the wreckage. "Right now I have been
informed by Amirul Monineen's office that they have discovered pieces of
an American helicopter in Baba Sahib hills ... some burned tyres and
parts and traces of blood," he said.

Amirul Monineen, or leader of the faithful, is the title given to the
Taliban supreme leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar, who the US has been
targeting for his refusal to hand over Osama bin Laden. The Taliban's
ambassador to Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, told a news conference
in Islamabad that other US helicopters had tried to retrieve the
wreckage in Helmand but were driven away by Taliban fighters.



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THE END

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