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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/archives/2001/12/30/0000117866 Bush vows no end to manhunt REUTERS, WASHINGTON AND KABUL, AFGHANISTAN Sunday, Dec 30, 2001, Page 1
US President George W. Bush on Friday heaped scorn on bin Laden but also urged Americans to remain on the alert in case of new attacks by bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, blamed for carrying out the Sept. 11 suicide hijack attacks. Rising tensions between Pakistan and India are also worrying the US. As the nuclear-armed rivals build up troops along the border in disputed Kashmir, Washington fears Pakistani troops are being diverted from the hunt for bin Laden and fleeing al-Qaeda fighters. Afghan officials have said bin Laden was probably in Pakistan. In disdainful comments, Bush said the US did not know bin Laden's fate or location but the Saudi-born Islamic militant was a man on the run who in three months had swapped control of a country for control of a cave. Afghan Defense Minister General Mohammad Fahim on Friday added his voice to others saying bin Laden may be in Pakistan. "After fleeing from Tora Bora [in eastern Afghanistan] there is a strong probability that Osama is in Peshawar [Pakistan]," he said. The mountainous Tora Bora region was thought to be the last redoubt of bin Laden's al-Qaeda network before they were blasted from the region's myriad of caves. Fahim said there would be no need for US bombing once a few remaining border areas were cleared of final resistance. The US, though, said it had received no request to stop the bombing, and declined to make such a promise. Bush and his military commander in charge of the Afghan operation said they were keeping all their options open. "We don't know whether he's in a cave with the door shut, or a cave with the door open. We just don't know. There's all kinds of reports and all kinds of speculation," Bush said of bin Laden. "But one thing is for certain: He's on the losing side of a rout." With General Tommy Franks at his side at his Crawford, Texas, ranch, Bush said he expected US forces to remain in Afghanistan "for quite a long period of time."
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