|
|
U.S. warplanes attack Afghan convoy
12/22/2001
By DEBORAH HASTINGS Associated Press Writer
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — U.S. warplanes
on Friday attacked a convoy that the Pentagon said was carrying Taliban or
al-Qaida leaders in Afghanistan. But an Afghan official said the trucks
were bringing tribal leaders loyal to the new government to the capital.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said many were killed in the
strike. The Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press news agency reported 65
dead.
AC-130 gunships and
fighter aircraft attacked the convoy of 10-12 trucks near Khost in eastern
Afghanistan, Gen. Peter Pace told reporters in Washington. He said they also hit
a compound with command-and-control facilities from which the trucks departed.
``The intelligence that we gathered at
the time indicated to us that this was in fact leadership, and we struck
the leadership,'' said Pace, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff.
``It was a large convoy, and there were a lot of people
killed and a lot of vehicles damaged or destroyed,'' Rumsfeld said.
But an Afghan official in Kabul said the convoy was carrying
members of the shura — or tribal council — for Paktia province, invited to
the capital to attend the inauguration of Afghanistan's interim government
on Saturday.
The official, who was involved in inauguration
preparations and spoke on condition of anonymity, said the trucks took a
secondary road because loyalists of Jalaluddin Haqqani, a Taliban official
and close ally of al-Qaida, wanted to stop them from getting to Kabul.
The Afghan Islamic Press quoted a local leader, Sayed
Yaqeen, saying at least 65 people were killed in the strike. Yaqeen also
said the convoy was carrying guests for Saturday's ceremony.
Maj.
Brad Lowell, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, said officials checked
into the claims and were sure the targeted convoy was composed of Taliban
leaders.
``We've checked all means possible and confirmed this was
a military convoy,'' Lowell said.
Lowell said the convoy was
attacked about 24 miles west of Khost in an area called Karezgay. He said
the command and control center that was attacked was in an area called
Asmani, about 22 miles west of Khost.
Lowell said the
convoy heading to Kabul was far north of the U.S. attack.
Taliban training camps and two al
Qaida camps were known to be located in Khost, in eastern Paktia province. In
1998 the United States fired Tomahawk cruise missiles at the al-Qaida camps
there in retaliation for the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania,
blamed on Osama bin Laden's terror network.
|