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Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
5 December 2002 23:24 GMT
With runners and whispers, al- Qa'ida outfoxes US forces
By Robert Fisk
06 December 2002 Internal links With runners and whispers, al-Qa'ida
outfoxes US forces
Conciliatory Saddam says let inspectors do their work
The Americans take them shackled and hooded on to transport aircraft
to Kandahar. They live
in pens of eight or 10 men. They are given cots with blankets but no
privacy. They are forced to
urinate and defecate publicly because the Americans want to watch their
prisoners at all times.
But United States forces have not only failed to hunt down Osama bin
Laden while they are
preparing for war in Iraq: they are finding it almost impossible to
crack the al-Qa'ida network
because Bin Laden's men have resorted to primitive methods of communication
that cut
individual members of al-Qa'ida off from all information.
This extraordinary, grim scenario comes from an American intelligence
officer just back from
Afghanistan who agreed to talk to The Independent – and to supply his
own photographs of
prisoners – on condition of anonymity. His prognoses were chilling
and totally at variance with
the upbeat briefings of the US Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld.
Even in Pakistan, he says,
middle-ranking Pakistani army officers are tipping off members of al-Qa'ida
to avoid
American-organised raids.
"We didn't catch whom we were supposed to catch," the officer told
me. "There was an
over-expectation by us that technology could do more than it did. Al-Qa'ida
are very smart.
They basically found out how we track them. They realised that if they
communicated
electronically, our Rangers would swoop on them. So they started using
couriers to hand-carry
notes on paper or to repeat messages from their memory and this confused
our system. Our
intelligence is hi-tech – they went back to primitive methods that
the Americans cannot adapt
to."
The American officer said there were originally "a lot of high-profile
arrests". But the al-Qa'ida
cells didn't know what other members were doing. "They were very adaptive
and became much
more decentralised. We caught a couple of really high-profile, serious
al-Qa'ida leaders but they
couldn't tell us what specific operations were going to take place.
They would know that
something big was being planned but they would have no idea what it
was."
The officer, who spent at least six months in Afghanistan this year,
was scathing in his
denunciation of General Abdul Rashid Dostam, the Uzbek warlord implicated
in the suffocation
of up to a thousand Taliban prisoners in container trucks. "Dostam
is totally culpable and the
US believes he's guilty but he's our guy and so we won't say so."
Gen Dostam uses Turkish military intelligence men as bodyguards. "There
was concern in the
Isaf [International Security Assistance Force] that the Turks who run
it would create ethnic
problems, which is one reason the Turkish army does not share the Kabul
Isaf compounds with
other Isaf troops. But one of the things we failed to do was create
a real government. We let the
warlords firmly entrench themselves and now they can't be dislodged,"
he said.
According to the same officer, American security agents in Karachi
were looking for the
murderers of US journalist Daniel Pearl but there, as in many other
cases, they would find their
arrest "targets" had fled because of secret support within middle ranks
of the Pakistani army.
"We would go with the Pakistanis to a location but there would be no
one there because once
the middle level of the Pakistani military knew of our plans, they
would leak the information. In
the North-West Frontier province, the frontier corps is a second-rate
army – they are a lot
more anti-Western in sentiment than the main Pakistani army. In the
end we had to co-ordinate
everything through Islamabad."
As for the hundreds of prisoners taken in Afghanistan, the American
officer insisted that none
were beaten "now" although he claimed ignorance about earlier evidence
that soldiers based in
Kandahar had broken the bones of captives after their initial arrest.
"Only prisoners who were
likely to be violent or unco-operative are hooded and their hands are
tied behind their backs
with plastic restraint bands. Sometimes we would take the hoods off
prisoners when they were
travelling in our helicopters, at other times not.
"In Kandahar, in what we call their living areas, the prisoners are
given cots with blankets and
Adidas suits and runners, but they have no privacy. There are no sides
to their living areas
because we have to see them all the time. They have no privacy in the
bathroom. Some of them
masturbate when they are looking at the female guards. Our guards had
no reaction to this.
They are soldiers. When the interrogations take place, the prisoners
are allowed to sit. I don't
want to get into specifics about the questions we ask them.
He said: "There was non- co-operation at the beginning. But they had
a misconception that ey
were going to be treated the way they treated each other. When they're
not tortured, I think this
has a lot to do with changing their opinion."
But the Americans were even short of translators. "We recruited Farsi-speakers
who can speak
the local version of Persian in Afghanistan, Dari. They would be civilians
hired in the US. But
they had to go through full security procedures and out of every five,
only one or two would be
given security clearance."
The American officer also had a low opinion of the Western journalists
he met at Bagram.
"They just hung around our base all day. Whenever we had some special
operation, we'd offer
the journalists some facility to go on patrol with our special forces
and off they'd go – you
know, 'we're on patrol with the special forces' – and they wouldn't
realise we were stringing
them along to get them out of the way." |