From: "Jay Moore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2001 18:57:29 -0500
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:@charterpa.net;>
Subject: [R-G] U.S. Ground Troops

U.S. troops seen on ground near Kandahar

Reuters News Agency

Sunday, November 25 - Online Edition, Posted at 5:40 PM EST

Chaman, Pakistan - U.S. troops, shipped in on waves of helicopters, have
landed near the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, last stronghold of the
Taliban, officials of anti-Taliban tribes said on Sunday.

Since about 6 p.m. local time when tribal fighters took control of the
airport southeast of Kandahar, a stream of U.S. helicopters has been landing
at the air field, said Mohammad Anwar, spokesman for Gud Fida Mohammad, a
commander of the Achakzai tribe fighting at the airport.

Kandahar, the home of Taliban supreme leader Mullah Mohammad Omar, is the
last bastion of the fundamentalist movement, whose hold on the northern
redoubt of Kunduz crumbled in the face of a Northern Alliance advance on
Sunday.

Huge aircraft were circling in the skies and a stream of helicopters flew
constantly in and out of the airfield, Mr. Anwar told Reuters by telephone.

Some of the helicopters were described as Chinooks bringing in armoured
vehicles. If confirmed, these would be the first such U.S. armour to land in
Afghanistan since the United States launched its attacks on Oct. 7 in
pursuit of Saudi-born militant Osama bin Laden.

The tribal leaders, including Hamid Karzai, a supporter of former king
Mohammed Zahir Shah, and former pre-Taliban Kandahar governor Gul Agha,
involved in the action, had cut the main road to Kandahar at Takteh Pol,
some 45 kilometres from the town of Spin Boldak near the border with
Pakistan, Mr. Anwar said.

The commanders were moving toward the Taliban-held town of Spin Boldak to
try to clear the rear for the U.S. forces before any advance on Kandahar,
Mr. Anwar said.

The reports could not be independently confirmed and the Pentagon declined
to comment.

"We cannot discuss future or ongoing military operations or troop
movements," said Air Force Lieutenant-Colonel Ken McClellan, a Pentagon
spokesman.

In Kandahar, one resident said the roar of planes could be heard from the
direction of the airport and large flashes had been seen on the horizon from
near the airport, some 20 kilometres to the southeast of the ancient city.

At the airport, U.S. troops had secured the exterior of the airfield, a
target of intense bombing by U.S. warplanes since the raids began, Mr. Anwar
said.

Helicopters had been flying constantly into the base during the evening,
unloading U.S. soldiers loaded with packs and baggage, Mr. Anwar said.

The men appeared to be commandos, he added.

Mr. Anwar's commander, Fida Mohammad, was in talks with the Taliban militia
at Spin Boldak to try to persuade fighters there to surrender without
bloodshed.

Witnesses at Chaman said they could see some Taliban fighters beginning to
withdraw, although others - heavily armed - had gathered close to the fence
that marking the porous Pakistan frontier.

The sound of the aircraft broke the night silence around Spin Boldak for 30
minutes from around 1:30 a.m., said a Reuters correspondent on the border.

Dozens of pickup trucks - their lights extinguished - were driving out of
Spin Boldak and south into the southern Afghan desert, the correspondent
said.



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