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Hunt For Bin Laden Moves To Pakistan's Mountains
Christian Science Monitor | March 10, 2003 | Owais Tohid

Posted on 03/10/2003 11:07:06 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen

Al Qaeda's No. 3 is being probed for clues in Afghanistan, says an intelligence official.

By Owais Tohid, Special to The Christian Science Monitor

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN - A quiet but urgent manhunt is under way - stretching from the arid deserts on the borders of Afghanistan near Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province, to the forbidding mountains in the country's north - for the world's most wanted man, Osama bin Laden.

Forces in Pakistan and Afghanistan are following clues provided by Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, who was arrested March 1. At least they say they are following the clues.

Some analysts suggest that regardless of the quality of the information coming from Mr. Mohammed, US and Pakistani officials are hoping Mr. bin Laden will fear his location has been compromised and make a dash into the open.

"[Mohammed's] arrest has given a new life to the hunt for Osama," says Pakistan's Interior Minister Faisal Saleh Hayat. "He has given vital and invaluable information that can help us break the Al Qaeda network domestically and internationally," the minister boasted.

A Pakistani intelligence official says Mohammed is currently being interrogated by US officials at Bagram airbase, north of Kabul, Afghanistan. Mohammed was flown out of Pakistan after three days of joint Pakistan-US interrogations, according to Pakistani officials.

They say handwritten letters by bin Laden in Arabic were recovered from Mohammed suggesting that bin Laden is alive. "He said he had met bin Laden a few months ago near a hilly terrain but did not know the exact area," a senior security official says.

"I don't think he talked lies," says Mr. Hayat. "Initially he gave contradictory statements about Osama but then surrendered before the interrogators. Even if he is misleading, we have to follow the leads,"

Mohammed had fled Balochistan after the arrest of Mohammed Abdur Rehman, an Egyptian Al Qaeda member, in mid-February, and it is generally believed he met bin Laden shortly before that.

On Saturday, US officials at Bagram said they have arrested seven suspected Al Qaeda men in Helmand, Afghanistan. Pakistan and US officials denied reports that two of bin Laden's sons had been captured.

But two Pakistani intelligence officials based in southwest Balochistan province insist that US forces captured two of bin Laden's sons on Thursday in Ribat. "They were injured and are being held in the hospital there," says one. He adds that five others were killed in the operation. He says that one of the sons was named Saad bin Laden.

Bin Laden does have a son named Saad, believed to be 23 years old, who is also on the American most-wanted list and has been called a rising star in the terror network. Senior Pakistani and US officials have denied that the reports are true. "These are simply rumors," says Shoaib Suddle, the inspector-general of police in Balochistan.

Bagram spokesman Col. Roger King also said Saturday that no US-led coalition force had operated in Ribat during the previous 72 hours. That denial, say some observers, left open the door to a CIA paramilitary operation in the region.

With reignited hopes of catching bin Laden, American helicopters are dropping leaflets in the border towns of Afghanistan in the south, offering a $25 million reward for help in the arrest of bin Laden and the Taliban's spiritual leader, Mullah Omar.

On the Pakistani side, troops guided by US intelligence experts are searching in Balochistan's western areas bordering with Iran and along the northwestern borders near Afghanistan.

While publicly denying it, a Pakistani military official says that Pakistan's paramilitary troops have been put on alert on the checkposts along the porous Pakistan-Afghanistan border in the remote areas of Chaghi district, in the inaccessible hills of Helmand provinces, and in Dalbandin and Sandak, which open into the Rabat desert of Afghanistan's Nimroz province.

This area converges into a triangle between Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran, infamous as the route of Afghan drug smugglers.

The search for bin Laden and his lieutenants is also continuing in the northwest border with Afghanistan in the mountainous Chitral region, north of the tribal belt, facing Afghanistan's northeastern Nooristan and Kunar provinces. There are reports of US troop movements on the Afghan side of the border.

"We do not know the exact whereabouts of Osama, but he is not in Pakistan," Hayat insists. "But with the arrest of Khalid Sheik Mohammed we will be able to end the active or sleeper cells in Pakistan."

Pakistani officials claim that they have a "great" relationship with US intelligence agencies, but observers say Americans have minimum trust for Pakistan's intelligence agencies.

"Mainly the arrest of Al Qaeda leaders has been possible with the interception of phone calls and with the help of the sophisticated communication system of Americans," says a Pakistani official on the condition of anonymity. "At times, Americans inform Pakistani officials minutes before the raid on Al Qaeda suspects fearing the information might be leaked."

The former chief of Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence Agency (ISI), Hameed Gul, who headed the agency during the Afghan War in the 80s, says: "Security agencies are a part of the ethos of the country and now the national ethos is hatred against America. What America is doing in Pakistan is unlawful," he says.

"Islamic extremists have supported strategic and national interest of Pakistan. They did not do anything wrong," he says, reflecting the mindset of a section of the country's security agencies.

In any case, catching bin Laden won't be easy. Investigators believe that he does not use telecommunications and now relies on sending written messages through a chain of messengers.

"It seems that they do not have exact clues about bin Laden even now, but they are searching with a strong hope,"says Pakistani analyst Salim Shahid. "It is to be seen whether the Americans rely only on the help of greedy Afghan commanders lured by massive dollar rewards as in Tora Bora, or are acting on solid information gleaned after Khalid's arrest."

Gretchen Peters contributed from Quetta, Pakistan.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: obltrail

1 posted on 03/10/2003 11:07:06 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Lookee here what Osama's been doing.
2 posted on 03/10/2003 11:33:07 AM PST by Davis
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To: blam; Oldeconomybuyer
fyi......the story that won't die ping!
3 posted on 03/10/2003 11:37:06 AM PST by Dog (Courage is being scared to death... and saddling up anyway. ~John Wayne)
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To: Stand Watch Listen
This area converges into a triangle between Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran, infamous as the route of Afghan drug smugglers. being ungovernable by remote centralized authority since Alexander the Great.
4 posted on 03/10/2003 11:52:44 AM PST by RonF
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Does anybody figure that OBL is in Iraq, that we know, and that these stories are disinformation to make him think he's "in the clear" (and also the reason Bush can't provide specifics on why we will attack Iraq)?
5 posted on 03/10/2003 11:56:12 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: Stand Watch Listen
If we haven't caught him by now, we've lost him....I think this a way of flushing out informants within his ranks. A shake-down within his organization after Khalid Mohammed was captured....
6 posted on 03/10/2003 11:59:14 AM PST by Maringa
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To: Stand Watch Listen
I just got the following e-mail and this seems like an OK place to ahare it.

It was 1987! At a lecture the other day they were playing an old news video of Lt.Col. Oliver North testifying at the Iran-Contra hearings during the Reagan Administration.

There was Ollie in front of God and country getting the third degree, but what he said was stunning!

He was being drilled by a senator; "Did you not recently spend close to $60,000 for a home security system?"

Ollie replied, "Yes, I did, Sir."

The senator continued, trying to get a laugh out of the audience, "Isn't that just a little excessive?"

"No, sir," continued Ollie.

"No? And why not?" the senator asked.

"Because the lives of my family and I were threatened, sir."

"Threatened? By whom?" the senator questioned.

"By a terrorist, sir" Ollie answered.

"Terrorist? What terrorist could possibly scare you that much?"

"His name is Osama bin Laden, sir" Ollie replied.

At this point the senator tried to repeat the name, but couldn't pronounce it, which most people back then probably couldn't. A couple of people laughed at the attempt. Then the senator continued. Why are you so afraid of this man?" the senator asked.

"Because, sir, he is the most evil person alive that I know of", Ollie answered.

"And what do you recommend we do about him?" asked the senator.

"Well, sir, if it was up to me, I would recommend that an assassin team be formed to eliminate him and his men from the face of the earth."

The senator disagreed with this approach, and that was all that was shown of the clip.


By the way, that senator was Al Gore

Also:

Terrorist pilot Mohammad Atta blew up a bus in Israel in 1986. The Israelis captured, tried and imprisoned him. As part of the Oslo agreement with the Palestinians in 1993, Israel had to agree to release so-called "political prisoners."

However, the Israelis would not release any with blood on their hands, The American President at the time, Bill Clinton, and his Secretary of State, Warren Christopher, "insisted" that all prisoners be released.

Thus Mohammad Atta was freed and eventually thanked the US by flying an airplane into Tower One of the World Trade Center. This was reported by many of the American TV networks at the time that the terrorists were first identified. It was censored in the US from all later reports.

7 posted on 03/10/2003 12:02:00 PM PST by Samwise
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To: Samwise
This email has been passed around on this site before, however it was proven to be urban legend. The referenced terrorist was not Osama Bin Ladin, but Abu Nidal....the guy who hijacked the cruise liner Aquili Lauro (spelling?), and went on to other terrorist activities. Also the senator present was not Al Gore, but someone else (can't remember). Look up urban legends page verify information. I fell for email at first as well...
8 posted on 03/10/2003 12:07:08 PM PST by Maringa
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To: Davis
Lookee here what Osama's been doing.

He's been doing the same thing as Beethoven -- decomposing.

9 posted on 03/10/2003 12:33:03 PM PST by steve-b
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To: Maringa
Right you are. I did search Free Republic before I stuck it in the link. I never thought to Google. I forget there are sources other than FR. :^)

This is why I never post articles. sigh.

Thanks for the info! I forwarded the Urban Legand URL to the source of the e-mail, too.
10 posted on 03/10/2003 1:11:45 PM PST by Samwise
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