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Al-Qaeda reorganizing forces to help Taliban
AL-QAEDA is pushing foreign fighters back into Afghanistan, in a bid to retake the battlefield from which it launched its seminal September 11 attacks against the United States four years ago, western and local sources said.

The terror network is providing training and support for a comeback by the Taliban, the Islamic regime deposed by US forces in the aftermath of 9/11 for harbouring al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, they said.

"We really thought we had won, but we are seeing more and more fighters coming over the border from Pakistan and this presents a long-term security problem for us," a top Afghan official who declined to be identified, said.

Islamabad strenuously denies the charge, pointing out it recently moved 9,500 extra troops along the border and has captured a string of key al-Qaeda operatives.

Regardless of where they come from, experts say the presence of foreign fighters amongst Taliban remnants in undeniable.

"We do feel that there is a foreign fighter presence in Afghanistan," US military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Jerry O'Hara said.

US and Afghan officials were not long ago predicting the Taliban and al-Qaeda were a spent force, after last October's Afghan presidential elections passed with little bloodshed.

But with US forces already battling an al-Qaeda-linked insurgency in Iraq, analysts and officials suspect the organisation may be trying to open a "second front" in Afghanistan.

It is already proving a thorn in the side of international efforts to rebuild the country after a quarter century of war, and to prepare for landmark parliamentary elections which are due to take place next week.

While the carnage is far less intense than that in Iraq, there are many similarities in the way Afghanistan's new crop of insurgents operate, officials said.

The Taliban, who enforced medieval Islamic laws across Afghanistan from 1996-2001, have sometimes in the past presented a shambolic and disorganised force.

But there has been a rise in suicide bombings, a tactic notoriously favoured by Iraqi insurgents and previously rarely seen in Afghanistan, while the militants' roadside bombings are increasingly accurate.

"Fighters are coming in with better skills and we are seeing a transfer of skills from Iraq," a Western security source in southern Afghanistan said on condition of anonymity.

"The insurgency is much worse this year."

Last month, Al-Arabiya television aired a video purportedly depicting foreign militants in Afghanistan, including Europeans, Arabs and others, preparing to attack US troops and Afghan officials.

"These foreign guys are pretty well-armed," said a US paratrooper on patrol in Orgun-E, an area in south-eastern Paktika province, where six US soldiers have died in the bloodiest year yet for the US military in Afghanistan.

"They have expensive weapons you can't get in this country."

The video went on to claim al-Qaeda's responsibility for the worst blow ever suffered by the US military in Afghanistan, the shooting down of a giant Chinook helicopter in June that killed all 16 people on board.

While Afghanistan's fledgling 30,000-strong army is using embedded trainers from the US to hone their skills, experienced Islamic fighters from Iraq and elsewhere are doing the same for Afghan insurgents.

The militants "do have foreign nationals operating with them, but they are instructors.

"The operational leaders remain Afghan," Christian Willach, security coordinator for the Afghan Non-governmental Organisation Security Network, said.

al-Qaeda training camps which moved into Pakistan's lawless tribal areas on the border with Afghanistan after the US invasion may now have crossed back after a crackdown on militants by Islamabad, he said.

The Western security source said there had been "an increase in foreign fighters: Chechens, Arabs, Middle Easterners".

"We can see this from the dead bodies but also from the radio traffic we pick up in different languages," he said.
Posted by: Dan Darling 2005-09-10
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=129176