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AP
Photo
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Northern
alliance fighters prepare fire their Soviet-made howitzer against
Taliban positions just outside the village of Ai-Khanum, near
Qalai-Dasht, northern Afghanistan, Saturday, Nov. 10, with the
traces of American jets above. The fall of the key northern
city of Mazar-e-Sharif boosted opposition morale on the
other main front north of Kabul. |
By STEVEN GUTKIN
Associated Press Writer |
JABAL SARAJ, Afghanistan — The Taliban acknowledged early Saturday that it
lost the city of Mazar-e-Sharif to opposition forces in northern Afghanistan.
American officials confirmed opposition forces were in the city and said
fighters of the ruling Islamic militia were fleeing.
The Taliban's Bakhtar News Agency said fighters of the Islamic militia had
been forced to retreat with their weapons and equipment because of sustained
bombing by U.S. warplanes.
``For seven days continuously they have been bombing Taliban positions. They
used very large bombs,'' said Bakhtar chief Abdul Henan Hemat.
The capture of Mazar-e-Sharif on Friday was the biggest success since
President Bush launched airstrikes Oct. 7 to punish the Taliban for refusing to
hand over Osama bin Laden, chief suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on
the United States.
If the opposition can hold the city — which in the late 1990s changed hands
several times and was the site of bloody massacres — it would open a land bridge
to neighboring Uzbekistan, allow a flood of weapons and supplies to the
opposition alliance and give U.S.-led forces their first major staging ground in
Afghanistan for the campaign against the Taliban.
In Washington, Secretary of State Colin Powell said he couldn't confirm the
fall of the city. But other U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of
anonymity, said it was clear that the opposition had entered Mazar-e-Sharif and
that at least some Taliban troops were on the run.
A senior defense official in Washington said reports from the area indicated
that the anti-Taliban forces have taken the entire city and that large numbers
of Taliban fighters have switched sides. But he stressed that the U.S. military
had not been able to confirm those reports.
He added that the city could change hands again if, for example, Taliban
forces found reinforcements for a counterattack.
The commander of the USS Theodore Roosevelt said scores planes from the
aircraft carrier took off late Friday to attack Taliban troops retreating from
Mazar-e-Sharif.
``We thought this would be a very slow advance on the city, (but) it appears
the Taliban have fallen back and over the course of the day, we've seen numerous
convoys coming out of that area,'' Rear Adm. Mark Fitzgerald said.
Alliance envoy Haron Amin said in Washington that alliance generals had
``confirmed the liberation of Mazar-e-Sharif.''
He said forces under three commanders occupied strategic high points near the
city and the Taliban fled to the east and west of the city, many in pickup
trucks and sport-utility vehicles.
``They are going to be in our territory,'' he said. ``We will be able to cut
them off.''
A spokesman for one of those commanders, Gen. Rashid Dostum, claimed American
Green Berets took part in the battle. But a senior defense official in
Washington said he couldn't confirm the claim.
Philip Smith, Dostum's Washington representative, said the U.S. special
forces along with CIA operatives and Turkish troops were also working with
Dostum, a Uzbek commander who once controlled Mazar-e-Sharif.
Smith, who said he was in touch with Dostum via satellite phone, said the
battle involved nearly simultaneous assaults on two fronts, which crumbled the
Taliban lines.
Dostum claimed 1,500 Taliban soldiers were captured and many of them
volunteered to fight for the alliance, Smith said.
Earlier opposition reports said about 3,000 Taliban fighters had been in the
city, and claimed 500 of them died and 500 were captured.
In London, British Prime Minister Tony Blair said there had been
``substantial progress'' at Mazar-e-Sharif and there was no doubt ``that the
military momentum is now moving against the Taliban.''
Vice President Dick Cheney said the city's loss would be a serious blow to
the Taliban because they had worked so hard to protect it since the bombing
began.
``It's a significant development,'' Cheney said in a telephone interview with
The Sun newspaper of London. ``It would be perceived, I think, as a significant
defeat.''
Mazar-e-Sharif has a population of about 200,000 — most are ethnic Uzbeks and
Tajiks, the same as the opposition. Most Taliban are Pashtuns, the largest
ethnic group in Afghanistan.
In other developments:
— Islamic fundamentalists in Pakistan burned tires, blocked transit routes
and clashed with police in a nationwide strike Friday to protest their
government's pro-U.S. policies on Afghanistan. Four demonstrators were killed.
— Bush said the worldwide coalition against terrorism has never been stronger
and added, ``now is the time for action'' on military, diplomatic and other
fronts.
— Britain plans to release a dossier of evidence against bin Laden next week,
a senior official said Friday. British officials have expressed concern that
public support for the U.S.-led military campaign in Afghanistan has wavered.
Mazar-e-Sharif has a large airport that could be refurbished for American and
allied aircraft to conduct humanitarian missions and mount attacks against the
Taliban. And the city controls a supply route from Uzbekistan, 45 miles to north
— a passage that does not get blocked by winter snowfalls, a key concern for the
opposition alliance.
Losing Mazar-e-Sharif would also isolate Taliban units in northwestern
Afghanistan.
An opposition spokesman, Ashraf Nadeem, said northern alliance fighters
overran Mazar-e-Sharif's airport and then entered the city through Taliban lines
at the Pul-e-Imam Bukhri bridge on its southern edge. Taliban forces appeared to
have abandoned Mazar-e-Sharif in the face of the assault, he said.
``The whole city is now under control of our forces,'' Abdullah, foreign
minister of the Afghan government-in-exile, reached by telephone from Jabal
Saraj.
``The air support from the United States helped our forces make their
advance,'' said Abdullah, who uses only one name. Reporters have no access to
the area around Mazar-e-Sharif, and telephone links to the city have been cut.
The opposition announced an amnesty for anyone who formerly supported the
Taliban, Nadeem said by telephone from Dar-e-Suf. The opposition directed the
drive on Mazar-e-Sharif from Dar-e-Suf, about 50 miles to the south.
Human rights groups say the opposition put as many as 2,000 Taliban to death
in Mazar-e-Sharif when they took the city back from the Islamic militia in 1997.
In 1998, when the Taliban recaptured the city, they were accused by the same
groups of massacring several hundred people, many of them Shiite Muslims.
Elsewhere, U.S. jets struck Taliban front line positions about 30 miles north
of Kabul. The jets and B-52 bombers repeatedly hit Taliban targets overnight and
early Friday north of Kabul and around Kandahar.
The opposition has said it intends to launch an offensive to take Kabul, but
so far has not tried to move against the heavily entrenched Taliban lines there.
Powell told reporters it would be best if the opposition did not move
immediately, since Kabul's population is likely to be hostile to it.
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