Afghanistan: US rules out
                 surrender and turns Tora Bora
                 into a killing field
 
                 By Peter Symonds
                 17 December 2001
 
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                 The US military is continuing its relentless bombing of
                 the Tora Bora area of Afghanistan after sabotaging a
                 surrender deal negotiated last week between Afghani
                 militia leaders and pro-Taliban fighters holed up in
                 cave complexes in the rugged mountains. Claiming that
                 it now has Osama bin Laden and other senior Al Qaeda
                 figures cornered, the US is conducting what amounts to
                 a systematic slaughter.
 
                 Under pressure from Washington, thousands of
                 Pakistani troops backed by armed helicopters have shut
                 the Afghanistan border to prevent any escape. On the
                 ground, around 300 US and British special forces units
                 are operating alongside three militia groups to hunt
                 down Al Qaeda members. In the air, the US has
                 concentrated its massive firepower on the Tora Bora
                 area, using sophisticated bunker-busting bombs to seal
                 or destroy caves and annihilate any opposition.
 
                 The latest reports indicate that the US-backed militias
                 have taken many of the cave complexes in the area and
                 hundreds of pro-Taliban troops are on the run. One
                 militia commander said there were many bodies, and
                 “they are in pieces from the bombing”. According to the
                 BBC, another local militia leader, Hazrat Ali, claimed
                 his troops had killed 200 Al Qaeda fighters and
                 captured 35.
 
                 Last week Ali and other militia commanders had
                 attempted to negotiate a surrender to end the weeks of
                 US aerial bombardment that has already claimed the
                 lives of dozens of local villagers and led thousands
                 more to flee the area. On December 12, however, as a
                 deal appeared to be imminent, US military advisers
                 intervened to block the arrangement and pressure their
                 Afghan allies to continue the attack. Ali commented
                 bitterly: “The Americans won’t accept their surrender.
                 They want to kill them.”
 
                 The militia leaders were in no position to argue.
                 Comprising poorly armed and equipped peasants, these
                 groups are led by local warlords who are motivated in
                 large part by the huge $25 million reward that the
                 Washington has placed on bin Laden’s head. The
                 fighters themselves are little more than cannon fodder
                 in the US operation. A number have died in misdirected
                 air strikes.
 
                 The International Herald Tribune reported that,
                 according to one of those present, there were several
                 bargaining sessions, each lasting about half an hour or
                 so, and the lead US negotiator was a middle-aged man
                 in civilian clothes. “The Americans were strongly
                 pressuring us. In the end, the commanders agreed, but
                 reluctantly, to press the attack on Qaeda,” the
                 unidentified Afghan participant in the talks told the
                 Herald.
 
                 The surrender deadline on December 12 passed, as did
                 a reset deadline for the following day—at least in part
                 because the US refused to halt its bombing campaign.
                 Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke stated: “The
                 [bombing] activity is still going on. There wasn’t a
                 pause, there isn’t a pause. As we get targets of
                 opportunity we will pursue them.”
 
                 Militia field commander Amin Jan angrily explained
                 that bloodshed could have been avoided. “They [Al
                 Qaeda fighters] were happy to surrender. They made
                 fires at night and had assurances they could go freely,
                 but when the bombs started they became confused...
                 [Now] it is impossible to surrender to us.”
 
                 Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld baldly denied that
                 the US opposed the surrender. “Of course, I want them
                 to surrender and be captured and interrogated so that
                 we could also know their organisation and plans in
                 other countries,” he said. But he also made clear that
                 there would be no negotiations and that any surrender
                 would be unconditional and to US forces.
 
                 The pro-Taliban fighters, particularly non-Afghanis,
                 were justifiably fearful of their fate if they surrendered
                 to US forces or pro-US militia. Hundreds of foreign
                 Taliban POWs were massacred at Mazar-e-Sharif
                 following an alleged uprising at the Qali-i-Janghi
                 fortress last month. Foreign fighters at Tora Bora said
                 they would only surrender to the UN in the presence of
                 diplomats from their country of origin.
 
                 The US has repeatedly insisted on taking control of any
                 captured or surrendering Al Qaeda leaders and troops.
                 But the size of the prison camp being built by US
                 marines underscores the preference of the Bush
                 administration—estimates put the number of Al Qaeda
                 troops in the Tora Bora region as high as 2,000,
                 whereas the US detention centre will hold a maximum
                 of 300.
 
                 The character of the US Special Forces units at Tora
                 Bora also indicates that Washington is intent on killing
                 most of the Al Qaeda fighters. As well as teams
                 identifying targets for air strikes, specialist “snatch”
                 teams, trained to either kill or capture particular
                 individuals, and snipers armed with high-powered
                 rifles have been dispatched to the area.
 
                 The US airforce is using Tora Bora as proving ground
                 for its newest types of ordinance, particularly so-called
                 bunker-busting bombs designed to attack heavily
                 fortified positions. A new cruise missile—the
                 AGM-86D—is designed to sense its surroundings and
                 detonate at a pre-determined depth, doubling the
                 penetrating ability of earlier weapons. The US military
                 is also utilising the Israeli-made AGM 142, which is
                 guided by remote control into the mouths of caves.
 
                 Up until December 12, the US airforce had dropped an
                 estimated 1.8 million kg of explosives on the Tora Bora
                 area—three times the amount used to bomb the German
                 city of Dresden during in 1945. Since then the bombing
                 has intensified using B-52s, B-1s and carrier-based
                 jets. Several massive fuel bombs—7.5 tonne Daisy
                 Cutters—have also been dropped. AC-130 gunships
                 have been deployed to strafe troops caught out in the
                 open.
 
                 Rumsfeld, who has been touring Central Asia—making
                 a brief stopover in Afghanistan—bragged to
                 accompanying journalists that 400 bombs had been
                 dropped on Tora Bora in just two days. “It’s been very
                 heavy, and it’s obviously working,” he enthused.
                 Having penned in the pro-Taliban troops and vetoed a
                 surrender, Rumsfeld and the military top brass are
                 carrying out a one-sided massacre, not a military
                 campaign.
 
                 See Also:
                 More evidence of US war crimes in Afghanistan:
                 Taliban POWs suffocated inside cargo containers
                 [13 December 2001]
                 The Geneva Convention and the US massacre of POWs
                 in Afghanistan
                 [7 December 2001]
                 After US massacre of Taliban POWs: the stench of
                 death and more media lies
                 [29 November 2001]
                 US atrocity against Taliban POWs: Whatever happened
                 to the Geneva Convention?
                 [28 November 2001]
                 US war crime in Afghanistan: Hundreds of prisoners of
                 war slaughtered at Mazar-i-Sharif
                 [27 November 2001]
                 Afghanistan: US sets stage for a massacre in Kunduz
                 [22 November 2001]
 
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