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AP
Photo
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| In
this January 1, 2002 photo a guard shows a bomb hole in Mullah
Omar's compound in Kandahar, Afghanistan. One of the bombs dropped
by U.S. forces in October created the hole. |
WASHINGTON – About 200 U.S. Marines searched a former Taliban and al-Qaeda
compound in southern Afghanistan today as the hunt for Taliban leader Mullah
Mohammed Omar continued.
The Marines left their base in the southern city of Kandahar late Monday
night in a convoy of vehicles, headed for the compound in Helmand province, said
Maj. Brad Lowell, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command. They and anti-Taliban
Afghan forces were searching the fenced compound of about 14 buildings for
information about the radical Islamic militia and the al-Qaeda terrorists they
harbored, Lowell said.
Another group of about 100 soldiers left the Kandahar base aboard Marine Sea
Knight helicopters Monday evening. Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan's interim prime
minister, said the troops were Marines helping in an operation to try to capture
Omar, who has been missing since Kandahar fell to Karzai's forces in early
December.
U.S. officials have refused to say who those soldiers were or what their
mission was. Lowell said Tuesday he had no information about them. U.S. special
forces would likely be involved in any search for the Taliban leader, helping to
direct airstrikes and advising Afghan forces on tactics.
The Marines searching the former Taliban compound did not come under hostile
fire, although they were equipped for combat and supported by strike
helicopters, Lowell said. Tuesday's intelligence-gathering missions was the
latest of about a dozen such missions the Marines have undertaken in the past
several weeks, Lowell said.
Meanwhile Tuesday, 25 suspected al-Qaeda members captured in Pakistan arrived
at the detention center on the U.S. base in Kandahar, Lowell said. They had been
captured after heavy fighting last month drove them out of Afghanistan's Tora
Bora region – where U.S. officials believe bin Laden had stayed.
The new arrivals brought to 189 the number of Taliban and al-Qaeda prisoners
at the Kandahar base. Another 12 prisoners are being held by the United States
at the Bagram air base north of Kabul, and U.S. forces have one prisoner in the
northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Eight prisoners, including American John Walker Lindh, are being held aboard
U.S. Navy ships in the Arabian Sea. On Monday, they were moved from the USS
Peleliu to the USS Bataan, Lowell said.
The Peleliu is home to the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, whose members are
preparing to leave Kandahar and return to their ship. Soldiers from the Army's
101st Airborne Division will take over for the Marines at the Kandahar base.
Other Marines at the Kandahar airfield are members of the 26th Marine
Expeditionary Unit, which is based on the Bataan.
On Sunday, a U.S. spy drone crashed while returning from a mission in support
of the war in Afghanistan, a Central Command statement said. The unmanned plane
was not shot down, and its wreckage will be recovered, the statement said.
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