RETRANSMITTED TO CLARIFY THAT RADIO BROADCASTS ARE NOT PART OF "RADIO FREE AFGHANISTAN," WHICH HAS NOT YET BEEN CREATED--This photo shows U.S. leaflets that were dropped by U.S. aircraft in Charikar, 40 kilometers from the Afghan capital Kabul, Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2001. The top leaflet reads: ''Do you want your wife to live like this?'' The second one shows times and frequencies for radio broadcasts in the Pashtun and Dari languages. The United States has been broadcasting anti-Taliban statements into Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Marco Di Lauro)
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Plumes of gray smoke rise from the Taliban-controlled village of Rahesh on the Shomali plain, 65 km (40 miles) from Afghanistan's capital Kabul, Friday, Nov. 9, 2001, after two U.S. aircraft strikes. (AP Photo/Marco Di Lauro)
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An aircraft flies over Bagram, 30 kilometers from the Afghan capital Kabul, after releasing its load of bombs on Taliban positions in front of Bagram airport, Saturday, Nov. 10, 2001. U.S. military strikes continued Saturday as part of the U.S. attempt to help the northern alliance to advance toward the capital and other key areas. (AP Photo/Marco Di Lauro)
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Plumes of gray smoke rise over a Taliban-controlled village after a U.S.-led aircraft bombed the frontline near Rabat, near Bagram, 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the Afghan capital Kabul, Monday, Nov. 12, 2001. Taliban fighters fled positions north of the capital Monday, as truckloads of northern alliance troops advanced as far as Mir Bacha Kot, about 12 miles from Kabul, an opposition spokesman reported. (AP Photo/Marco Di Lauro)
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A northern alliance rocket-launcher fires towards Taliban-controlled positions from the frontline village of Rabat, near Bagram, 50 km (30 miles) from the Afghan capital Kabul, Monday, Nov. 12, 2001. Truckloads of northern alliance troops advanced as far as Mir Bacha Kot, about 12 miles from Kabul, as Taliban fighters were fleeing positions north of the capital, an opposition spokesman reported on Monday. (AP Photo/Marco Di Lauro) |
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