14A - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 21, 2001 FRIDAY Focus 4 Afghans The Washington Post ready for holy war 4 SLAMABAD, Pakistan - In a war against Afghanistan, the world's only superpower would be algningthe most sophisticated, high-tech military weaponry ever developed against mud barracks, mountain caves, a few hundred artillery pieces and a savvy foe able to melt into the khaki folds of an already devastated landscape. In all the war-gaming of military academies and Pentagon planners, the U.S. armed forces would be hard-pressed to have invented a more intractable military scenario than waging combat operations in this impoverished, bedraggled land against a radicalized uerrilla force and its most infamous resident --Saudi fugitive and accused terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden. U.S. officials have pointed to bin Laden as the chief suspect in last week's terror attacks in New York and Washington. Afghanistan is an ethnically fragmented coun- try with some of the most rugged and isolated terrain the world, an infrastructure that has been almost completely devastated by two decades of continuous war, and a population struggling to survive in the face of drought, famine and end- less cycles of violence and bloodshed. Unlike the multinational coalition attacks on Belgrade and Baghdad over the last decade, fought with high-precision weapons aimed at selected targets, there are few major command and control networks to be hit in Afghanistan, where guerrilla battles are usually fought with artillery barrages and mortar fire. Neither require the sophisticated orchestration of First World combat. The militant Islamic Taliban. movement, which controls 90 percent to 95 percent of the country, has amassed an eclectic arsenal of aging tanks and other equipment left over from the Soviet Union's failed occupation. It also nabbed some overused aircraft from various warring Afghan factions defeated since the Taliban began its takeover of Afghanistan in 1994. More recently, new weapons, mostly automatic rifles, machine guns and mortars, have been supplied by bin Laden and other wealthy Saudi benefactors. The U.S. military learned during the Persian Gulf War that months of bombing destroy only a fraction of the Iraqi military hardw arrayed across a flat desert, a lesson that co apply to Afghanistan as well. "Carryingc large-scale bombing of Afghanistan would b mistake," Nikolai Kovalyov, former head oft Russian Federal Security Service, a succes agency to the KGB, said in an interview Moscow. "We must learn from the lessons history - we have not been able to solvet problems of terrorism by large-scale bombin There are enormous logistical hurdles to attack on the Taliban and bin Laden. In Afghanistan, U.S. surveillance satell will see no sizable power grids, no vast m tary bases, no major bridges and highwayn works as targets: There are none. Spec forces would land in a war zone that h changed little from the desert country nomadic tribes and medieval-looking villa British troops invaded more than two centur ago. Land forces, with virtually no access local supplies, would be treading througho of the most densely mined countries ont globe amid a hostile population. While Pakistan has given the United Sta permission to use its airspace for miss assaults and aerial bombardment Afghanistan, the easiest military targ yed 'are uld out e a the sor iin of the ig. an ites lili- net- ,ial has of ges ries AP PHOTOS ABOVE: Taliban soldiers on patrol in the city of Mazar-e-Sharif in this May 27, 1997, file photo. According to the zealous Taliban, who have ruled in Afghanistan since 1996, fidelity to Islam requires unprecedented harshness. BELOW: Vendors work at a roadside market which emerged recently to fulfill the demand of Kabul's residents to stockpile food yesterday. People are fearing strikes by the United States forces on Afghanistan in retaliation for terrorist attacks in the United States on Sept. 11. "For every train ful o explosives, perhaps threem _ guerrillas at most wil die. The country is filled ' with caves and crevices in which to hide. - Nikolai Kovalyov, former Russian security chief Focus on Afghanistan Afghanistan is mountainous and filled with many places to hide. Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect in last week's attacks, is thought to be harbored there by the Taliban regime. As a result, the country fears reprisals. Training camps/militia bases ATaliban army bases )C Military and/or civilian airfields ) Intl. Airpo to already have disappeared, according to Pak- one istan intelligence reports. the The Taliban has emptied its training bases, arms depots, command and government head- ates quarters and has scattered its military hard- ile ware. Bin Laden has gone into even deeper of hiding than usual and has dispatched his family ets members to a variety of locations, Pakistani intelligence sources said. The U.S. military failed to kill bin Laden on a previous attempt in 1998 when it launched missile attacks on his training bases and sus- pected hideouts in Afghanistan in the aftermath rt of two U.S. embassy bombings in Africa. Even if the military destroys the Taliban's empty training centers - most of which are tA relatively unsophisticated complexes of con- crete or baked-mud buildings that accommo- date a few hundred men at a time - they could be rebuilt with relative ease and would do little damage to the movement's military apparatus, which is accustomed to training under Spartan conditions. The problems of locating useful targets and destroying them in air assaults would pale when compared with the complexity of trying to land special forces or send ground troops into the country, according to U.S. and Pak- istani military planners. "The first mistake would be a large-scale land operation," said former Russian security chief Kovalyov. "In the mountains there, it is impossible to determine where or what to destroy. For every trainful of explosives, per- haps three guerrillas at most will die. The country is filled with caves and crevices in which to hide." The Taliban is estimated to have no more than 45,000 troops, including up to 12,000 for- AP eign troops - Pakistanis, Arabs, Uzbeks and others, according to most estimates. Pakistani military officials said they are uncertain how large an arsenal the Taliban has assembled but said the militia is armed with Soviet T-59 and T-55 tanks left-over from the 1980s, as well as artillery guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers, antiaircraft and antitank missiles, aging Soviet MIG and Sukoi fighter planes and thousands of small arms and mortars. But it is the guerrilla tactics of the Taliban that make the militia more formidable than its numbers might indicate. Those tactics were instilled in what is now Taliban leadership by Pakistan, with CIA backing during the rebels' successful attempt to oust the Soviets, and more recently honed by bin Laden's Arab soldiers. Senior Pakistani military and intelligence officials - whose officers have have advised, coordinated and in many cases participated in combat in Afghanistan with various factions over the past 20 years - said they are warning U.S. war planners of the daunting challenges. "You yourself (the United States) trained them to be the best guerrilla force in the world," said a former Pakistani intelligence official who said he advised Islamic freedom fighters under CIA-sponsored programs during the rebels' war with Soviet forces in the 1980s. "Some of these Taliban were the CIA's superstars." Invading forces have been attempting to con- quer Afghanistan and tame its feuding tribes for centuries. And in every instance, it was the politically charged ethnic divisions that under- mined efforts to unify the country. It is a legacy that may not only govern how the U.S. military would plot attacks, but also the problems it would generate to fill the void created if the military objective is to dismantle the Taliban government. Afghanistan's population, estimated to be about 25 million; is a volatile mixture of ethnic groups: about 38 percent Pashtun, 25 percent Tajik, 6 percent Uzbek, 19 percent Hazara, along with small numbers of Aimaks, Turkmen and Baloch. Most of the population speaks an Afghan form of Persian called Dari, Pashtun, or one of more than 30 other minor languages. The language barriers alone offer a vivid example of problems land forces or follow-up efforts at rehabilitation of the country would pose, according to military planners. While the warlords and military commanders who controlled each of these groups were united in their effort to dislodge Soviet forces. But when Moscow withdrew its troops in 1989, a power- sharing government composed of the former rebel leaders quickly disintegrated into civil war, with the defense minister and president assem- bling their own army to fight the prime minister. It was the brutality and destruction of those wars that led to the formation of the Taliban in 1994, though the movement's rise can also be traced to ethnic and religious animosities going back three centuries. a I SOURCES ESRI Jane's;GlobalSecuty org compiled from AP wire reports Opposition is trained to fight ali ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - After five years of mili- tary losses to the Taliban, Afghanistan's opposition has found a powerful new ally in the United States, which is threatening to attack Afghanistan to flush out Osama bin Laden. The opposition controls barely 5 percent of Afghanistan, but is deeply familiar with the rugged terrain and would have invaluable intelligence for the United States. Many of its fighters were warriors in the U.S.-backed insurgency against the former Soviet Union. "We have 15,000 people ready to fight. They are trained to fight the Taliban," A.G. Ravan Farhadi, the opposition's envoy in the United Nations, said earlier this week. The United States has told the Taliban it must hand over bin Laden, whom they blame for last week's suicide attacks in New York and Washington, or face military retaliation. The opposition could provide U.S. forces with informa- tion on locations and geography inside Afghanistan, and a U.S. special forces team could use opposition-held territory as a staging ground for any assault, analysts say. According to diplomatic sources in Pakistan, the United States has already begun meeting with opposition leaders. It wasn't clear where the meetings were being held. There were also reports that U.S. personnel were in north- Explaining the Taliban The Islamic militia that controls Afghanistan has called on all Muslims to wage a holy war on the United States if attacked. Identity The Taliban (or "students") emerged in 1994 with many followers who had attended conservative Muslim schools in Pakistan. They rose to power on promises of peace in a country ravaged by a decade- long war with the Soviet Union and subsequent fighting Taliban men at a Sept. 15 press between Islamic factions. In conferencein Islamabad, Pakistan 1996, the Taliban took the capital Kabul, and now control 95 percent of Afghanistan. Leadership Mullah Mohammed Omar, the reclusive leader, is supported by a circle of eight to 10 colleagues. Veterans of the war against the Soviets fill their fighting ranks. Rules are enforced by the Ministry of Virtue and Vice, a religious police force. Principles "No other Islamic country comes close," says Afghan Scholar Amin Tarzi, to the Taliban's extreme variant of Islam. Many of the rules which they base on their interpretation of the Quran, including an end to schooling for girls past the age of 8, have alienated them from Muslims outside Afghanistan. Support and opposition The Organization of the Islamic Conference refused to admit the regime and only three of the 56 member nations (Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates) have granted it full diplomatic recognition. SOURCES: AP wire reports; Federation of American Scientists AP ing stuffed with explosives blew up, killing Massood's spokesman and eventually Massood. No one has been able to link the assassination and the ter- ror attacks, but some opponents of the Taliban say it was intended to weaken the opposition ahead of an expected retaliatory assault by Washington against Afghanistan. Taliban has weaknesses that could be exploited Los Angeles Times PESHAWAR, Pakistan - To get their hands on Saudi mili- tant Osama bin Laden, U.S.-led forces likely would have to first deal with his hosts, Afghanistan's Taliban fighters. And as military planners probe for weak spots, they would find sever- al to exploit. Compared to the modern armies that the United States and its allies defeated in Iraq and Yugoslavia over the past decade, say experts here, the Taliban's weapons, training and organiza- tion are almost as poor as the country that the fundamentalist Islamic movement controls. Although the Afghans are tough opponents in combat, as British and Soviet occupiers discovered in the past, the U.S. and allied forces could knock the Taliban government off-bal- ance by going after its key leaders rather than launching heavy airstrikes. Then the Afghan people might well finish the job by rising against the unpopular regime, Afghan and Pakistani experts suggest. "In the Taliban, you have a force which is a ragtag army of the defeated late 19th-century type" said Rasul Bakhsh Rais, a political science professor at Islamabad's Quaid-i-Azam University, who has studied Afghanistan's wars for 20 years. "Frankly speaking, they literally are in a hopeless situation," added Rais, who is convinced the Taliban's days are numbered even if the regime turns over bin Laden, viewed by U.S. offi- cials as a prime suspect in last week's attacks-on New York and the Pentagon. "In no way are they going to save their I AP PHOTO Family members sit around a newly constructed bomb shelter in the courtyard of a house In the southern parts of the city of Kabul Wednesday. Taliban leaders, warning of a possible U.S. attack, urged them to prepare for a holy war. protection of bin Laden turned American officials away. The Bush administration faces risks of its own. The United States was badly stung before by underestimating its enemies, most recently during a 1993 debacle in Somalia, when the death of 18 American soldiers in one street fight brought criti- rimnt Panm.,a nrl nrrnAaA itht -xfrnwil ol f i QnCncsrcacancrc _1