Afghan opposition commanders have warned that increased international support and tougher US action against the Taliban will be needed to overthrow the radical militia that controls Afghanistan.
Interviews with opposition figures, ranging from top politicians in the Northern Alliance to leading veterans of the 1979 to 1989 Soviet occupation, have highlighted fears that the Western powers are underestimating the Taliban.
PHOTO: AP
"We need support from the international community, financial and military support, to enter Afghanistan and launch an organized movement against the Taliban," said Haji Muhammad Zaman, also known as `Commander Zaman,' a fighter since the 1980s.
Zaman has returned from Europe to set up a base in the Pakistani border city of Peshawar, where many Afghan exiles now live and are planning a post-Taliban future for their country -- if the US military campaign is successful.
The US started air strikes on Oct. 7 in a bid to force the Taliban to hand over Osama bin Laden, the suspected mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington.
The US insists its attacks are crippling the Taliban, while it faces mounting criticism over the lack of visible results and civilian casualties.
Afghan opposition leaders say the US air strikes are working, but too slowly. They insist a more aggressive effort is needed.
Zaman, an ethnic Pashtun like most of the Taliban, was pessimistic about US air strikes.
"I am not expecting a collapse of the Taliban system in the near future. The bombing will not get rid of the Taliban. It could even strengthen them."
Zaman said he was ready to fight again in Afghanistan if the opposition is united.
"As long as we do not overthrow the Taliban and these foreigners who back them, the Arabs who support them, blood will continue to flow and the country will continue to live in torment."
But he does not want the Northern Alliance, which is dominated by Afghanistan's minority ethnic Uzbeks, Tajiks and others, to return to power.
"All those who destroyed the country while in power are now in the ranks of the Northern Alliance," Zaman said, calling for a UN force to enter Afghanistan after any downfall of the Taliban.
Out in the battlefield fighting the Taliban, a Northern Alliance commander Alou Zeki believes the US strikes are necessary but they are not enough to beat the Taliban.
The 33-year-old, who is in charge of part of the front line on the Shomali plain, 50km north of Kabul, said: "According to military criteria, these strikes are 50 percent effective. They are inflicting losses on the Taliban, but they are too irregular."
Zeki wants the Americans to carpet bomb the area for three days to open up a route to Kabul.
A similar feeling goes right up through the ranks of the North Alliance.
Abdullah Abdullah, foreign minister for the loosely grouped alliance, said there must be intense attacks on the front lines north of Kabul where the Taliban have concentrated an estimated 6,000 fighters, many of them Arab volunteers loyal to bin Laden.
"Round-the-clock bombing is needed. Intense bombing, carpet bombing," Abdullah said.
"If the enemy cannot sleep, that would change everything. How could they resist in the event of an attack?"
Abdullah said the US will not win the war through air strikes alone.
"There are two messages: the United States has to be patient, and things could have been done better and can be done better," he said at Jabul Seraj, the alliance headquarters in northern Afghanistan.
"We were optimistic when we were fighting the terrorist groups alone, before the September 11 attacks. We knew that it was very hard, we know that it will be time-consuming. But we knew we were going to win."
The CIA has a message for Chinese government officials worried about their place in Chinese President Xi Jinping’s (習近平) government: Come work with us. The agency released two Mandarin-language videos on social media on Thursday inviting disgruntled officials to contact the CIA. The recruitment videos posted on YouTube and X racked up more than 5 million views combined in their first day. The outreach comes as CIA Director John Ratcliffe has vowed to boost the agency’s use of intelligence from human sources and its focus on China, which has recently targeted US officials with its own espionage operations. The videos are “aimed at
STEADFAST FRIEND: The bills encourage increased Taiwan-US engagement and address China’s distortion of UN Resolution 2758 to isolate Taiwan internationally The Presidential Office yesterday thanked the US House of Representatives for unanimously passing two Taiwan-related bills highlighting its solid support for Taiwan’s democracy and global participation, and for deepening bilateral relations. One of the bills, the Taiwan Assurance Implementation Act, requires the US Department of State to periodically review its guidelines for engagement with Taiwan, and report to the US Congress on the guidelines and plans to lift self-imposed limitations on US-Taiwan engagement. The other bill is the Taiwan International Solidarity Act, which clarifies that UN Resolution 2758 does not address the issue of the representation of Taiwan or its people in
US Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral Samuel Paparo on Friday expressed concern over the rate at which China is diversifying its military exercises, the Financial Times (FT) reported on Saturday. “The rates of change on the depth and breadth of their exercises is the one non-linear effect that I’ve seen in the last year that wakes me up at night or keeps me up at night,” Paparo was quoted by FT as saying while attending the annual Sedona Forum at the McCain Institute in Arizona. Paparo also expressed concern over the speed with which China was expanding its military. While the US
SHIFT: Taiwan’s better-than-expected first-quarter GDP and signs of weakness in the US have driven global capital back to emerging markets, the central bank head said The central bank yesterday blamed market speculation for the steep rise in the local currency, and urged exporters and financial institutions to stay calm and stop panic sell-offs to avoid hurting their own profitability. The nation’s top monetary policymaker said that it would step in, if necessary, to maintain order and stability in the foreign exchange market. The remarks came as the NT dollar yesterday closed up NT$0.919 to NT$30.145 against the US dollar in Taipei trading, after rising as high as NT$29.59 in intraday trading. The local currency has surged 5.85 percent against the greenback over the past two sessions, central