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----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, January 16, 2003 8:01 PM
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>From: "hani bargooti"
>To: "hani"
>Subject: Emailing: viewarticle
>Date: Thu, 16 Jan 2003 19:58:54 -0500
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> Taliban, Al-Qaeda using low tech to beat high tech
> 2003-01-16 15:25:35
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>
> Daily Times (Pakistan)
> 16 January 2003
>
> The Taliban have gone low- tech, using donkeys and motorcycles
instead of their signature four- wheel drive sports utility vehicles, according
to US intelligence sources.
>
> In a recent speech at the Brookings Institution, Joint Chiefs of
Staff Chairman Gen Richard B Myers said, "Since the Taliban have fallen, since
the Al Qaeda has scattered, mainly to the border region between Afghanistan and
Pakistan, and other places in the world, for that matter in the region, since
then, they've adapted their tactics, and we've got to adapt ours."
>
> Use of donkeys and motorcycles is part of the Taliban's "changed
tactics" but Gen Myers did not say if the US forces were also now using donkeys
and motorcycles in their bid to chase and capture the remnants of the once
triumphant Afghanistan movement.
>
> According to a report in the Washington Times Wednesday, the
Taliban now travel alone at night so as not to draw surveillance. They also move
alone in cities, blending in with friendly Afghans. "A Taliban could walk right
past and you wouldn't know it," said an Army Green Beret who walked the streets
of Kandahar, the former Taliban stronghold in southern Afghanistan. The soldier
estimates that there are still 100 former Taliban leaders who need to be killed
or captured to prevent them from organising a rebel war against Afghanistan's
US-backed president Hamid Karzai.
>
> Al Qaeda fighters have learned to discern the distinctive sound
of the four-engine AC-130 gunships. Early in the war, these "flying battleships"
had great success in attacking enemy troops. They have also learned to detect
the more muffled sound of unmanned Predator spy planes and rapidly moved for
cover to avoid deadly Hellfire missiles. "At night, when these groups heard a
Predator or AC-130 coming, they pulled a blanket over themselves to disappear
from the night-vision screen," Maj Gen Franklin L Hagenbeck, who led US forces
in Afghanistan, told the Army's Field Artillery magazine. "They used low tech to
beat high tech."
>
> According to the report, Al Qaeda leaders have greatly reduced
their time on telephones and radios after realising American technical ability
to monitor voice communications. During the summer, the US military found a
large cache of unused brand-new satellite phones. This signalled that Al Qaeda
fighters had found other ways to talk without being detected, a Pentagon
official said.
>
> Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters have paid teenage Afghans to act
as spies. The agents position themselves outside known US special- operations
bases near Kandahar and near Khost in eastern Afghanistan and notify their
handlers when special operations patrols leave the compounds. In two incidents,
Green Beret teams have confronted armed Afghan men who appeared to be following
the soldiers. In one case, an officer shot an Afghan who raised his weapon as if
to fire. A spokesman for Task Force 180, which commands US military operations
in Afghanistan, said that the incident was investigated by the Army.
>
> Defence Secretary Donald H Rumsfeld has taken steps to tighten
the noose around Al Qaeda fighters, given the green light to a new
counter-terrorism war plan that seeks to speed reaction time so that their
targets do not have days to adjust.
>
> Last week, he also announced a major promotion for US Special
Operations Command giving its first battle staff new authority to plan and carry
out covert strikes. He also gave the command certain classified intelligence
assets that will help it find terrorists and carry out missions within minutes
or hours rather than days.
>
> Marine Corps Gen John F Sattler, who commands a new
counter-terrorism task force on the Horn of Africa, says, "We feel very
confident that by virtue of breathing down their neck, looking at them through
multiple intelligence sources and collecting on them through multiple sources,
that we are in fact disrupting, keeping them off balance until we can go to that
next phase, which is defeat."
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