Posted on 09/30/2001 9:04:23 AM PDT by janus
Frontpage Breakfast with the killers
Matthew Leeming describes his unnerving encounter in Afghanistan with the murderers of General Massoud
Every year theres one place in the globe worth going to where things are happening, says Basil Seal to his mother, immediately before stealing her jewels to fund such a trip. The secret is to find out where and to be on the spot at the time.
This summer that place was Afghanistan, from where I have just crossed, disguised as a woman in a shapeless burqa, over the 16,000ft Shai Salim pass into Pakistan. I met a number of people who, by English standards, were decidedly weird one man asked me if it were true that in England women could marry their dogs so the two Moroccan journalists with whom I shared a house in the Panjshir seemed almost normal.
It was not until after they had killed themselves and General Ahmad Shah Massoud, the commander of the Afghan anti-Taleban forces, a week later that I realised I had spent five days living with two of Osama bin Ladens kamikaze fighters.
Foreigners in Afghanistan tread a fairly well-worn path, usually a triangle between the acting capital in Faisalabad, the Panjshir valley and the governments military base, Khawja Bahauddin, in the north. Transport is either by Jeeps that cost $200 per day, or for the really reckless the governments ropy, Russian-built helicopters.
I had heard that if there is a Shangri-la it is the Panjshir in August, a narrow, fertile valley surrounded by arid mountains from which the Afghans have for centuries shot at their invaders. It ends at Kabul, which is now one of the main battle-fronts between the government and the Taleban. I arrived, after a torturing road journey from Khawja Bahauddin, between the mulberry and grape harvests, and as I walked along the road groups of men and children invited me to join them for lunch. It was a spongers paradise.
I was an official guest of the government, and now my guide, Qhudai, took me to the government guest house, opposite the governments helicopter base, before leaving me to recover. I was woken before dawn every morning by the shriek of helicopter engines starting up, and would take my breakfast watching soldiers embarking for the flight to another front.
No expense has been spared on the house itself, nor on the bill for staff, and I was comfortable for the first time in a month. (I had been sleeping in chai khanas, which are a cross between a night shelter for the homeless and a boarding school.) For two days I was served enormous meals of mutton and rice, alone in a dining-room designed to seat 30. This changed when the Moroccan journalists arrived.
I first saw them pacing up and down in front of the house. They did not return my hello. That evening I was served dinner on the floor of my room as the Moroccans made free with the dining-room. They spent all the next day in their bedroom with the door open, lying on their beds and staring at the ceiling.
On Qhudais return, I delegated him to make inquiries from the staff. They are Arabs, he reported, with some disgust. They are very unfriendly.
The next day I determined to break the ice. Im not eating in my room, I told the major domo. I shall eat with the journalists. At eight p.m. sharp I presented myself in the dining-room. Both journalists had already started on the bread. There was a definite hierarchy between them. The first sat at the head of the table. He was large and dark, but his most curious feature were two blackened indentations on his forehead, which looked like the result of torture with an electric drill.
I asked him where he and his companion came from and he said Morocco, but they lived in Brussels. I tried to have a polite conversation about holiday destinations in Morocco, but he was unforthcoming. There was something about his manner that prevented me from asking exactly where he lived in Brussels. His companion said nothing, but ate his way through the rice and mutton with a hearty appetite.
The next day the senior Moroccan saw me using a satellite phone, and he became a good deal more amiable. Satellite phones are status symbols but also basic necessities for travel in Afghanistan, and mine had got me out of a number of scrapes already. He approached me, and asked if I had the phone number of Bismillah Khan, the military commander of the Panjshir. I did, and volunteered the services of Qhudai to help.
We are doing a television documentary about Afghanistan, and we need to get on a helicopter to Khawja Bahauddin, he told me.
The person to arrange this was the commander of the Panjshir, Bismillah Khan. As it happened, I had met him several days before and knew his telephone number. But he didnt answer.
Do you have General Massouds number? asked the senior Moroccan. I was slightly staggered.
No. I dont think he gives it out. You see, the Russians can find out where you are from a satellite phone and send a missile in to kill you. That was how they got Dudaev.
Qhudai looked slightly menacing.
Why do you want to meet Commander Massoud? I asked the Moroccans. I remember them exchanging glances.
For our TV film, he said.
Afterwards Qhudai said to me, I think they are spies.
But everyones a spy in Afghanistan, I said. Youre a spy.
But they are Arab spies. There seems little love lost between Persian speakers and Arabs, so I put this down to racial prejudice.
Continued at URL above
http://www.spectator.co.uk/frontpage.php3?table=old§ion=current&issue=2001-09-29
I hope when we finally nuke the hell out of the bastards, that they are surrounded by "journalists"!
I must have missed the part of the article where Leeming mentions he knew what the terrorists were up to.
Yikes. I'm afraid I would need to order extra special sauce for that...
Why was he even there in the first place?
It's old and it's already been posted ... by me.
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