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India-Pakistan
Tribesmen take cash, count ’blessings’ from Al Qaeda
2003-10-30
Looks like this is still the place...
At sunset, a bevy of four-wheel- drive Land Cruisers screech to a halt in a Wana town market. A group of tribesmen with shoulder-length hair wearing belts strapped with grenades and toting their trademark Kalashnikovs jump out and start loading huge quantities of rice, cooking oil, and other groceries onto the trucks. They drive off in minutes. "After every week or two they come and go," says a young tribesman, Zahid Khan. "Every person in town knows who these people are and where the food goes." These tribesmen are the powerful local agents of Al Qaeda fighters, who ferry food supplies to the "Arab mujahideen" in the tribal belt of Pakistan on the Afghan border. Groups of Al Qaeda and Taliban, numbering more than 300 and perhaps including the elusive Osama bin Laden, are buying out local criminals, recruiting unemployed young men, and making the region their fortress against US forces and their Pakistani proxies.

Pakistan’s regional commander announced Saturday that more than 230 Al Qaeda suspects have been rounded up since the Army entered the tribal areas following Sept. 11, 2001. Lt. Gen. Ali Mohammad Aurakzai also enumerated the significant Pakistani forces devoted to the hunt: four brigade headquarters, 10 infantry and three engineering battalions, and one special services battalion. Early this month, hundreds of Pakistani commandos fought a pitched gun battle with Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters in the village of Baghar, a few miles from the border with Afghanistan. They killed eight Al Qaeda men and captured 18; among the dead were Chechens and Arabs. But local sources say that hours before the raid, a group of 40 Al Qaeda fighters slipped away to nearby towns and mountains.

Officials term the recent operation "successful" but now admit that an Egyptian-born Canadian, Ahmed Said Khadr, believed to be an Al Qaeda leader, escaped the raid. This past week, at least two Al Qaeda men, who had fled the raids in South Waziristan, have been arrested in Pakistan’s Punjab region. Seventy local tribesmen have also been captured in an effort to pressure residents to cut off support and hand over wanted Al Qaeda fighters. "Waziristan is paradise for Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters," says Bukhar Shah, a Peshawar-based analyst. "They have the support of religious tribesmen, the mountains as their hideouts, and finances to survive and regroup. The success of the US-led forces in Afghanistan mainly depends on the success of operation in the tribal belt."

A tribal fortress
The remote and inaccessible terrain of these forbidding mountains renders operations against Al Qaeda logistically complicated. There are few proper roads, and residents travel on narrow trails and paths. But local support may be the fugitives’ strongest defense. "Osama and his men are heroes for locals," says tribal elder Haji Behram Khan. "They are treated as honorable guests. They don’t harm tribesmen, stay for a couple of nights, and pay 10,000 to 20,000 rupees [$175-$350] before they leave." Hordes of Al Qaeda fighters fled Afghanistan after the ouster of the Taliban and took shelter with their families in South Waziristan, where they also capitalized on the tribal tradition of defending their guests with the last drop of their blood. According to tribal sources with ties to Pakistan’s intelligence and police services, hundreds of the fighters have used the tribal belt as a corridor to either hide in various cities and towns of Pakistan or flee to Gulf countries via Iran. The sources also say that over 300 have stayed put in South Waziristan to continue their fight against the US-led forces in Afghanistan. "After the Tora Bora fighting, they were here everywhere," says a local tribesman. "Their red-colored Land Cruisers, satellite phones, horses, dollars - everything was visible. Now they are visible only to the locals. Most of the Land Cruisers are painted different colors now, but locals recognize all of them. Even their local agents now have dozens of Land Cruisers and roam around with bags full of cash," he says.

These Al Qaeda local agents and supporters are known as "Pakistani Al Qaeda" among tribesmen. They often wear sports shoes or sneakers, scarves, and have long hair. Their presence has been a boon to the local economy. "They have a huge quantity of arms and ammunition and are continuously buying arms from the market, where the weapons are readily available. That has resulted in prices shooting up," says a tribesman. "Prices of Kalashnikovs have risen almost 100 percent and a Russian bullet, known as Zahrilla [meaning ’deadly’], now costs 300 percent more." As the consumption and demand for weapons has increased in the tribal areas, so have the attacks against US and Afghan forces across the border in Afghanistan. "They have set up expensive wireless [phone] sets, [hooked up] computers in the towns for [international] communication, and attack the US forces from the mountains," says a young supporter, Dilawar Khan, who helped them set up the accessories for the equipment. Despite their largesse, these men also foster a climate of fear. On the slightest suspicion, anybody suspected of passing information to the authorities can end up dead. It is widely believed that these "Pakistani Al Qaeda" men are behind some recent murders, including the April killing of an official of Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence (ISI). Sher Nawaz was shot dead in Wana market in broad daylight. Some five months ago a local man, Mohammad Noor, was shot dead in the nearby town of Tara Yawar by suspected Al Qaeda agents. He was believed to have been spying for the Americans. Local residents also talk about the death of another man, saying a note attached to his body read: "Agent of America. This will be the fate of American agents."

Pakistani officials in the tribal region maintain that the fighters are buying out local criminals to gain strength, but do not have widespread support on the ground. "It is just a greed of money. Only the drug addicts and [thieves] are attracted to the terrorists," says senior local administrator Pir Anwar Ali Shah. "But we are tightening the circle around the terrorists and their supporters." Many villagers, however, do not share the global hostility against Al Qaeda and Mr. bin Laden. Some claim to have seen and cheered him and his associates shortly after US forces bombed the Tora Bora mountains in Afghanistan during the winter of 2001. "It was when Americans were bombing in Afghanistan. We were all in the fields when we saw Osama walking towards the Suleman Mountains," claims Noor Zaman. "We raised slogans of ’Hero of Islam, Osama, Osama.’ He stopped, shook hands with us, blessed us, and continued walking towards the mountains."

Osama as ’woodcutter’
A few suspect that Osama may have been hiding in the disguise of a woodcutter on the mountains surrounding South Waziristan. "Only a couple of months ago, when we went up on the mountains, there were strangers cutting wood and another group of around 30 people were encircling five or six hooded men. They did not let us go near those masked men. We could see their eyes only," says Jhand Karikhel, a woodcutter. "They gave us 5,000 rupees [around $85] each and said ’pray for us.’" Stories aside, tribal elders say it is highly likely that bin Laden could have hidden in South Waziristan after he fled from Afghanistan, and believe that footage released by Al Qaeda last month, showing him and his No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was filmed in their tribal region. "The footage I saw on a local TV channel, looked to me like our area," says tribal elder Haji Behram Khan. "Osama was wearing a Waziristani round woolen cap, shalwar kameez, and a scarf on his shoulder. The dress is of here and the terrain familiar; I have walked these mountains all my life." For some residents, hosting the foreign fighters is seen as a sacred event. "A few months ago, an Arab mujahid stayed at my cousin’s house. When he left the house, my cousin’s family members sprinkled the water used for washing his clothes all over the house as a blessing," says Mr. Zaman. "My cousin is now very well respected among villagers because he provided shelter to a mujahid."
Posted by:tu3031

#12  I'm provincial as hell.... but I'm still curious about the massive use of cooking oil in the ME, these folks absolutely seethe when the grease is decreased. What do they use it for? Is butter halfal? I mean where I live Wesson is not one of the first things you think of after a hurricane.
Posted by: Shipman   2003-10-30 8:47:03 PM  

#11  O.P.,
Good Comment, and good points.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2003-10-30 7:01:05 PM  

#10  Osama may have been hiding in the disguise of a woodcutter on the mountains surrounding South Waziristan

What is this turning into: The Peshawar Chainsaw Massacare?
Posted by: Mike   2003-10-30 2:52:52 PM  

#9  I wouldn't doubt the validity of this article. It's difficult to find ANYBODY in mountainous terrain. Time for some very SERIOUS reconnaissance, using heat-sensitive imaging systems. Problem is, the best ones we have operate too high to pick out individual people, and aren't designed to operate at low altitudes - what you get below say 25,000 feet is a huge smear.

Almost impossible to send anyone into those mountains, as the Russians learned. The people that live there would discover them in two minutes. There are only two ways to fight this crowd - the way we're doing, and by making it too expensive to aid Al Qaida. That requires bombing to dust anyone that shelters or helps them, and the village they came from. We just don't think that way, and that option's off the table.

Right now, we're building up a database, inch by inch, mountain by mountain. Within say two years, we'll know every bit of that territory almost as well as the natives, and will be able to see anything that's out of place. THEN we can target individual caves, hideouts, and gathering points. In the meantime, we keep doing what's worked so far, whacking the bad guys where and when we can, and trying to build up Afghanistan to where it can start whacking on its own. It won't be a rapid success - we may need to be there ten or twelve years. In the end, though, if we don't pull out and run, we'll win. There's no other option, and anyone that wants to furce the US to pull out should be hanged from a DC lamp post.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2003-10-30 2:00:05 PM  

#8  Unless of course this man is talking out of his ass to make Al-Q seem 'bigger'.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2003-10-30 1:31:49 PM  

#7  "They have a huge quantity of arms and ammunition and are continuously buying arms from the market, where the weapons are readily available. That has resulted in prices shooting up," Evidently AQ's steady purchases are enough to drive the price up. THe huge quantity they HOLD is effectively off the market. The weapons may be "available" but evidently not in unlimited quantities at steady prices.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-10-30 1:10:35 PM  

#6  If the market is awash in arms the price shouldn't be going up, it should be going down...
Posted by: Yank   2003-10-30 12:10:48 PM  

#5  Sounds like those bags of rice and supplies are just begging for a GPS to be thrown in with them...
Posted by: CrazyFool   2003-10-30 11:54:29 AM  

#4  Where the hell is the CIA when you need them? These convoys beg for ambushing. Or, follow them and see what a few "errant" MOABs can do.
Posted by: Spot   2003-10-30 11:43:31 AM  

#3  Uncle Sam is offering 1,450,000,000 rupees for Osama's washwater...
Posted by: seafarious   2003-10-30 11:30:44 AM  

#2  'They have a huge quantity of arms and ammunition and are continuously buying arms from the market, where the weapons are readily available. That has resulted in prices shooting up," says a tribesman. "Prices of Kalashnikovs have risen almost 100 percent and a Russian bullet, known as Zahrilla [meaning ’deadly’], now costs 300 percent more."'

well at least somebody is discussing the price of kalishnikovs in (or near) Peshawar!!

Seriously, this is a difficult situation. OBL is surrounded by rings of defense - his 300 loyalists, then the local hired gunnies - all mixed in with a civilian population that includes lots of sympathizers - and the remainder too intimidated to inform for the Paki police - though from this it at least seems the Pakis are trying. You could go in and level the place - but the destruction of so many civilians would threaten the fragile Paki state. So instead you try a game of attrition - difficult, cause the baddies are killing anyone who collaborates with you - and the informants are your best asset. So you keep trying to build up an intel net anyway, and you kill baddies whenever you can find them, and you build roads to make the area more accesible. A long slog, as it were. Yet the noose tightens.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-10-30 11:30:16 AM  

#1  Sounds like Waziristan needs some attention from Super Hose, metaphorically speaking. Sprinkling washwater around for a blessing. That's rich! There should also be a price to pay for harboring the riff-raff rat club mujahideen.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2003-10-30 11:14:04 AM  

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