Al-Qaeda is Re-Establishing Camps Across the Border from Afghanistan to Pakistan, Time Reports
21.10.2002, 08:51
NEW YORK/LONDON 21. 10. 2002 (ots/APROTEXT) - Saudi Dissident
Says Those in al-Qaeda Circles Talk of Second Big Attack.
Before 9/11 Bin Laden said: 'The first attack is going to be
this size,' pointing to the tip of his finger, 'and the next is
going to be this size,' indicating the whole length of his
finger.'
U.S. Looking into Port of Assab in Eritrea as Naval Base to
Keep Eye on Traffic Between Yemen, Sudan and Somalia.
U.S. security sources in Afghanistan tell TIME that there is
now clear evidence that al-Qaeda is re- establishing camps across
the border from Afghanistan in Pakistan. TIME's cover story, "Al-
Qaeda: Alive and Ticking," will be on newsstands Monday, October
21.
On a recent trip, a TIME reporter accompanied paratroopers
from Task Force Panther, based in southeastern Afghanistan, as
they patrolled the frontier. Capt. Patrick Willis of the 82nd
Airborne, says camps in Pakistan around the town of Mirim Shah
are training men in bombing and the use of mines. "They have the
same infrastructure they had in Afghanistan," says Willis. "A lot
of it has just moved east. They continue to recruit from the
young impressionable men in the area." U.S. military intelligence
believes al- Qaeda has built the new camps intentionally small so
as not to provoke a clampdown from Pakistan's government.
From the camps, convoys of trucks go up well-maintained roads
that seem to lead nowhere. In fact, they end in tiny Afghan
villages just across the border, where the trucks dump ammunition
and weapons in safe houses. Later, according to U.S. Army
officials, small groups of between four and a dozen terrorists
from the camps cross the border amid the flow of civilian
traffic. Once inside Afghanistan, the Americans say, the
terrorists are assisted by abettors who provide money, pass on
information about U.S. troop movements and safeguard supplies.
Loaded with equipment and intelligence, the al-Qaeda forces then
move out to harass American troops. Since the U.S. forces cannot
cross into Pakistan, they can only try to catch the terrorists
after they re-enter Afghanistan.
Saad al Fagih, a London-based Saudi dissident, says those in
circles close to al-Qaeda these days talk with "strange
confidence" about a second big attack against the U.S. "Before
September 11, bin Laden would talk in general terms about a
major attack coming and a major, major attack following," says al
Fagih. "He would say, 'The first attack is going to be this
size,' pointing to the tip of his finger, 'and the next is going
to be this size,' indicating the whole length of his finger."
Sources also tell TIME that the U.S. is looking to use the
port of Assab, in Eritrea, as a naval base to keep an eye on
traffic between Yemen, Sudan and Somalia.
go to
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,366218,00.html
For further information or interview with TIME journalists
please contact:
Emma Gilpin
Heather Tomlinson Director of Public Affairs
PR Manager TIME Europe
TIME Europe T: +44 (0) 207 322 1193
T: + 44 (0) 207 322 1034 M: +44 (0)7802 955243
M: + 44 (0) 7734 072662 Email: emma.gilpin@timeinc.com
Email: heather.tomlinson@timeinc.com
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