Posted on 12/15/2001 10:58:38 AM PST by Registered
By MATT KELLEY, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - American forces heard Osama bin Laden (news - web sites) giving orders over short-range radio in the Tora Bora area of eastern Afghanistan (news - web sites) last week during all-out assaults on the rugged mountains and caves where he is believed hiding, a U.S. official said Saturday.
Afghan fighters aided by U.S. and British soldiers advanced Saturday against al-Qaida holdouts while U.S. airstrikes supported the ground troops, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said during a visit to several former Soviet republics.
Afghan commanders said they believed their troops had bin Laden trapped in one of the area's many caves - a claim American officials have not confirmed.
The voice on the radio was identified as bin Laden's through comparisons with his voice from several videotapes, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Americans have several ways to listen in on such radio transmissions, including gear carried by special operations forces and instruments on aircraft and satellites.
U.S. Marines are building a prisoner of war camp at the airport in the southern city of Kandahar to hold as many as 300 detainees, and there were plans to interrogate about 50 al-Qaida fighters who had been captured but were not yet under U.S. control. It was not immediately known if al-Qaida leaders were among the prisoners.
Evidence found in caves and deserted al-Qaida sites - along with information developed elsewhere in the investigation into the Sept. 11 attacks - has led to several arrests in foreign countries of suspected al-Qaida operatives, Rumsfeld said. Officials offered no details.
American officials say bin Laden could have escaped from the Tora Bora area after making the intercepted radio transmissions - whose existence was first reported Saturday by the Washington Times - though evading detection would be difficult.
The al-Qaida forces are concentrated in two valleys that cross the border into Pakistan to the south. The Afghan forces are moving in from the north, and Pakistani troops are guarding their border. That puts the al-Qaida between ``a hammer and an anvil,'' as the war's commander, Army Gen. Tommy Franks, put it.
Escaping would mean traveling through a dense forest and over high mountain ridges, probably either on foot or on a horse or donkey. That would expose bin Laden to U.S. or Pakistani surveillance, which is scrutinizing the area around the clock. The surveillance includes instruments that detect body heat - which is much easier to spot when the ground is cold and snowy.
Bodyguards and aides who might accompany bin Laden would make his party easier to spot. Concealing a vehicle would be even harder, while air travel is hazardous over the mountains.
U.S. officials say there is a chance that tunnels in the Tora Bora area could provide an escape route. U.S. forces do not know how many tunnels there are or where their entrances and exits are, defense officials said.
Rumsfeld, during a visit to Azerbaijan, said Saturday it was too early to say whether the operations around Tora Bora area would end soon. He also said once information gathered from the interrogation of prisoners is ``accumulated and correlated, judgments are made as to its accuracy or a lack of accuracy, and then we shall proceed to next steps.''
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EDITOR'S NOTE: Associated Press writers John J. Lumpkin in Washington and Sally Buzbee in Baku, Azerbaijan, contributed to this report.
btw, GREAT job on this:
Osama debuts in a feud with Geraldo Rivera...
What show? [RIP-OFF OF REGISTERED'S THREAD]
Is Geraldo on drugs??
Uhhhh, it looks like rocks in the picture.....
NeverGore :^)
Nah, it couldn't happen, couldn't happen, it'd be like the end of the world...Geraldo double taps Bin Laden???? That almost wouldn't be worth having him taken out.
Almost.
'Voice of bin Laden' detected on hand-held radio
US forces have reportedly detected the voice of Osama bin Laden on hand-held radios around Tora Bora.
The Washington Times quotes unnamed US officials as saying he was giving orders to his al-Qaida troops.
Electronic monitoring is being carried out by special forces troops on the ground and by spy planes and satellites.
Officials say the voice has been positively matched to known recordings of bin Laden, reports The Washington Times.
"They have picked him up on very short-range radio," the newspaper quotes a senior US official as saying, adding that al-Qaida members have been recorded responding.
US officials say there are a lot of al-Qaida in the mountains between two parallel valleys, Agam and Wazir, leading to Jalalabad in the north and the Pakistan border in the south.
Officials believe bin Laden is moving between the valleys with an entourage of troops, according to the newspaper.
Story filed: 17:22 Saturday 15th December 2001
Or try clicking .
It's time for bin Laden to pull out the frozen body diguise
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