Pubdate: Thu, 27 Sep 2001
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Copyright: 2001 San Francisco Chronicle
Contact:  http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Anna Badkhen

UNLIKELY U.S. ALLIES IN AFGHANISTAN

Anti-Taliban Coalition Is Motley Band With Shady Past

Dushanbe, Tajikistan -- Until President Bush signaled that the U.S. 
campaign against terrorism would start in Afghanistan, the West paid little 
attention to the cluster of fighters who have opposed the country's Taliban 
regime for the past five years -- the Northern Alliance.

Although the Bush administration says ousting the Taliban regime would not 
be the goal of attacks against terrorist havens in Afghanistan, alliance 
leaders say U.S.-led attacks would afford them an opportunity to do 
precisely that.

America's newfound friends are potentially very useful: Alliance fighters 
know Afghanistan's difficult terrain, speak local dialects and control the 
Soviet-built Bagram air base north of Kabul. But they have a troubling 
history as well.

Russian border guards, who still man the 682-mile frontier between 
Tajikistan and Afghanistan, reported last year that the alliance pays for 
rocket launchers, helicopters and ammunition with precious stones and, 
occasionally, opium and heroin.

The U.S. State Department and the United Nation's top anti-narcotics 
official have said that drug traffickers operate freely in areas controlled 
by the alliance.

A motley coalition of 15,000 to 30,000 fighters, the alliance considers the 
ruined northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif to be its capital even though the 
Taliban recaptured it in 1998. Since then, they have set up their 
headquarters in Faizabad, although most decisions are made by alliance 
leaders in Dushanbe, the capital of neighboring Tajikistan.

The group consists of communists, anti-communists and moderate Muslims who 
have only one goal in common: to oust the Taliban. Outside of that aim, the 
coalition's members are so diverse that experts fear a new civil war if 
they manage to topple the Taliban.

While the Taliban are mostly Pashtuns, who represent about 60 percent of 
Afghanistan's population, the Northern Alliance consists largely of ethnic 
Uzbeks, Tajiks and Hazaras, who represent only about 15 percent of the 
populace.

Afghanistan plunged into civil war soon after the Soviets withdrew in 1989 
and left their despised puppet regime, headed by Mohammad Najibullah, to 
fend off forces associated with several ethnic groups and Islamic factions. 
Najibullah was lynched by the Taliban in 1996.

In the past, the alliance has had trouble holding itself together in the 
face of devastating attacks by the estimated 30,000- to 50,000-man Taliban 
army. During the battle for Mazar-e-Sharif in 1998, for example, alliance 
forces commanded by the Uzbek Gen. Rashid Dostum simply abandoned the 
battlefield, and its leaders fled to Uzbekistan.

Barbaric Tactics

Dostum is known for his cruelty and reportedly has killed political foes by 
tying them to two tanks headed in opposite directions. During the chaotic 
conflict that ensued after the Soviet withdrawal, Dostum's forces rampaged 
through Kabul, destroying much of the city with rocket fire, looting 
businesses and terrorizing women and children.

The alliance's political leader is Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was driven from 
power by the Taliban but is recognized as Afghanistan's president by the 
United States and other Western powers.

His deputy prime minister, Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, is held responsible for the 
deaths of thousands of Shiite Muslims who reside mainly in northwestern 
Afghanistan, a minority he considers to be outside the pale of Islam.

Human rights groups have accused Sayyaf's troops of committing large- scale 
summary executions and rapes of Shiites during the 1992-96 civil war. 
Sayyaf also backed Iraqi President Saddam Hussein during the Persian Gulf 
War and has advocated war to remove U.S. troops from Saudi Arabia, the site 
of Islam's holiest shrines.

The Northern Alliance has dominion over one of the poorest regions on Earth,

partly because the area has been ravaged by warfare and deprivation for the 
past 22 years. It controls 2 million people in about 10 percent of the country.

Most endure with typhoid and dysentery all around them, and their drinking 
water is contaminated with hepatitis bacteria. Many eat bitter soup they 
make with the sparse grass they find in the mountainous desert.

Antiquated Arms

When the alliance wages war, it fights with rusty, outdated arms that the 
Soviet army left behind when it retreated after its ill-fated decade-long 
campaign, which killed a million Afghan civilians and left 15,000 Soviet 
soldiers dead and some 50,000 wounded.

During the war with the Soviet Union, future alliance leaders fought with 
U. S.-supplied weapons alongside Taliban forces and bin Laden.

But the Taliban and other hard-liners vowed to continue their resistance 
until an Islamic government had been installed in Kabul. In Mazar-e-Sharif, 
local militias soon joined the moderate mujahedeen, or holy warriors, to 
fight the southern Pushtun fundamentalists.

By 1996, the Taliban ruled 90 percent of the country, imposing strict 
Islamic rules on its 21 million people.

Ironically, post-Soviet Russia began arming its longtime enemies -- the 
very people who have become the Northern Alliance -- once the Kremlin 
decided to try to halt the Taliban's northward march to prevent the spread 
of Islamic fundamentalism into the former Soviet states of Central Asia. 
The alliance also has received support from Iran, which detests the 
Taliban's Sunni Muslim movement because it poses a potent threat to its own 
mainly Shiite Muslim theocracy.

In recent weeks, the rebels have stepped up their offensive against the 
Taliban. But their military leaders deny that the fighting has intensified 
because of the expectation that the United States will back them up.

Avenging Gen. Massood

They say they are simply avenging the Sept. 9 assassination of the 
coalition's charismatic leader, Gen. Ahmed Shah Massood, an ethnic Tajik 
who was considered the alliance's most brilliant military tactician. The 
group blames Osama bin Laden, the primary suspect in the Sept. 11 attacks 
that killed nearly 7,000 people in the United States, for Massood's death.

On Tuesday, President Bush said he will "ask for the cooperation of 
citizens within Afghanistan" to fight the Taliban and bin Laden. The 
Pentagon is well aware that only Afghan fighters are capable of staging and 
thwarting guerrilla attacks in the treacherous mountains of the Afghan 
Kush, taking cover and locating the enemy in highlands and gorges that 
would be totally unfamiliar to outsiders.

Saleh Muhammad Registani, the alliance's military attache to Moscow, 
suggested that the rebels could coordinate ground offensives while U.S. 
troops strike the Taliban from the air.

"We have been fighting against the Taliban for many years," said an 
alliance official in Dushanbe, who asked not to be named. "We are fighting 
because we want to see democracy in Afghanistan."

The history of many of the alliance's leaders, however, casts doubt on that 
claim.

The Northern Alliance at a glance: The fight for Afghanistan

- -- What is it? The Northern Alliance consists of the military wing of 
Afghanistan's pre-Taliban government.

- -- What is its influence? The alliance's role, at the moment, is relatively 
small; it controls less than 10 percent of the country.

- -- How big are its forces? The alliance claims to have 30,000 troops, but 
experts say the real number may be half that. Its arsenal includes tanks, 
fighter jets and helicopter gunships from the Soviet era.

- -- Who runs it? The alliance is headed by a 60ish scholar and poet named 
Burhanuddin Rabbani, who is still recognized as Afghanistan's president by 
the United States and other Western powers and holds Afghanistan's U.N. 
seat. The alliance suffered a huge blow earlier this month when its 
military leader, Gen.

Ahmed Shah Massood - a leader in the Afghan fight against Soviet occupation 
- - was assassinated.

- -- Who supports the alliance? The Taliban's enemies - Iran and Russia, 
among others.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth