Al Qaeda in Afghanistan Zapping Foreign Lands
BANGKOK, Thailand -- During the first days of America's
bombardment
and invasion of Afghanistan 20 years ago, the
Taliban government
collapsed in panic, abandoning Kabul
in November 2001.
Simultaneously, their Arab allies
including Osama bin Laden and other
al Qaeda fighters
fled their expensive homes and weapons-stocked
training
camps in Kabul, Kandahar, Jalalabad and elsewhere.
In
Jalalabad, 88 miles east of Kabul, bin Laden and al Qaeda
abandoned
all sorts of things during their rushed
escape.
In their former homes and schools, I found
bullet-punctured targets of
silhouetted heads, foreign
passports, forged visas, hand-drawn
bomb-making
instructions, and freshly printed news
clippings
downloaded from the Internet reporting about
the hijackers who crashed
planes into the World Trade
Center and Pentagon.
Today, the US and other countries
fear a possible return of al Qaeda
Islamists -- perhaps
renamed and much more secretive -- and a
continuation of
their previous deadly behavior which went far beyond
the
9/11 attack.
Startling evidence of their byzantine
international reach, especially
into Europe and the
Middle East, and history-changing assassinations
and
terrorist successes lay in their abandoned homes.
Today's
new, victorious Taliban regime promised not to allow al
Qaeda
to shelter in Afghanistan again, but many people in
the world fear
they could.
"Osama bin Laden spent a lot
of time here in Jalalabad during his stay
in
Afghanistan," Nangarhar Province's Police Chief Hazrat Ali
said in
an interview in November 2001.
"More than 5,000
or 6,000 Arabs were living in this city, and they
had
their own bases and training camps. Jalalabad was
very much used by
the Arabs during Taliban
time."
Exploring al Qaeda's abandoned homes in Jalalabad
revealed chilling
aspects of how they prepared to kill
their enemies while dwelling in
an otherwise dull
provincial capital.
After the 2001 US invasion secured
Jalalabad, anti-Taliban troops with
Kalashnikov rifles
guarded these valuable homes.
Kitchens, living rooms and
inner courtyards were littered with
documents, notebooks,
and other random evidence left behind by
fleeing
people.
Half-eaten food still lay spread on dining tables.
Inside one sprawling white-walled complex,
a notebook's handwritten
French displayed a student's
attempt to learn military lessons and how
to stage
attacks.
"Airplanes. Number one: Bomb with big explosive
power for immediate
explosion," read one entry in
French.
"Protect yourself from cannons and missiles. Avoid
missiles after they
hit the target because they can
explode later," another entry
suggested.
A page torn
from a cheap notebook listed chemical formulas
including
explanations written in Arabic next to the
initials TNT and RDX -- the
initials of trinitrotoluene
and royal demolition explosive.
Several pages were
illustrated with hand-drawn schematics of large
bombs and
detonators, complete with "on" and "off" switches.
In
2022, if there is a resurgent al Qaeda in Afghanistan, they
would
presumably upgrade their computer skills to forge
visas, which in
those days were often
rubber-stamped.
They may also continue to use Pakistan and
other countries for
fallback positions.
Amid backyard
debris someone repeatedly hand-printed a
rectangular
rubber stamp which said, "Consul General,
High Commission for
Pakistan, London" and a circular
rubber stamp for the "High Commission
of Pakistan,
London."
They also repeatedly printed a rubber stamp for
"Islamabad
International Airport, Islamabad, Pakistan"
confirming an "entry" on
"10 Aug 2000".
Entry and exit stamps for Istanbul, Turkey were also printed on scraps of paper.
A photographic negative, cut from a larger sheet of
film, showed an
official departure stamp from Jordan's
international airport, with a
blank space where a date
could be filled in.
Al Qaeda members and their families
also left clothing, Islamic
textbooks, tape cassettes,
and personal letters.
That information showed why the US
was frequently baffled when hunting
key al Qaeda
insurgents, and how the Islamists' loyalty to each
other
often depended on marriages.
For example, a
discarded personal letter displayed the address,
written
in pencil, of Fatma Sliti in Brussels, Belgium.
Fatma's father was Amor Ben Mohamed Sliti.
He was reportedly a
well-known member of al Qaeda, born in Algeria
of
Tunisian descent.
A small, color headshot photo of
the black-bearded Sliti, sized for a
visa application,
showed a man with close-cropped hair, wearing a
dark
purple shirt, photographed in front of a white
background.
A handful of similar visa-sized color
photographs of other bearded men
lay nearby. One image
showed a young boy.
A black-and-white photo portrayed an elegant unsmiling woman.
Severe-looking, glaring, turbaned men appeared in nearby scattered photos.
More photos were stuffed in a commercial Afghan Photo Studio envelope.
Al Qaeda's deadly personal relationships in Jalalabad were twisted:
"I've been investigating the key role Belgian
citizens played in
Masood's killing," a Belgian RTL
television journalist, Marie-Rose
Armesto, told me in
February 2002.
Ahmad Shah Masood was the famous
Western-backed mujahideen leader of
his Panjshir
Valley-based Northern Alliance, and other guerrillas.
Two
Tunisians, disguised as journalists, assassinated Masood
in
Panjshir Valley two days before September 11,
2001.
Masood had been leading his Northern Alliance
insurgents against the
Taliban regime.
If he had
survived the suicide bombing, Masood's expert
guerrilla
leadership would have been valuable for the US
invaders.
Even without Masood, the US used Northern
Alliance insurgents to help
Washington invade overland
from the north and seize Kabul in 2001.
Jalalabad-based Al Qaeda arranged Masood's assassination.
"The two [dead]
bombers were Tunisian citizens but they both lived in
my
city, just near my door," Brussels-based Armesto
said.
"One of these guys [the bombers' assistants] is Mohamed Sliti.
"The father of Fatma is a well-known terrorist.
"He [Sliti] was born in Algeria, but flew to
Tunisia before going to
Brussels -- where he married a
Belgian -- and then to Jalalabad.
"He lived in Jalalabad
with his Belgian wife and his children,"
including his
daughter Fatma.
"The father and the children have been
arrested a few days ago [in
February 2002] in Iran. They
flew from Afghanistan and entered Iran
illegally. This
family, [including] Sliti, have been arrested in
Iran
with 150 other al-Qaeda members.
"He was one of
the trainers in the Darunta camp," Armesto
said,
referring to an al Qaeda stronghold near Jalalabad
which invading US
forces repeatedly bombed from the
air.
Despite the heavy US assaults, some of Darunta's
mud-brick bunkers
were still stocked with rockets and
other ammunition at the end of
November.
A big rectangular sign set in white stone declared in Arabic:
"We Want to Show the Flag of Islam All Over the World."
Hundreds of thick, razor-sharp metal fragments
from US bombs lay
scattered all over the Darunta complex,
alongside unexploded
baseball-sized bomblets nestling in
the earth.
Before dawn on November 23, 2001, three big US
bombs hit the Darunta
complex with so much force that the
shockwaves killed two children,
angry villagers told me
near three deep craters.
US officials said the Darunta
complex was part of a network run by
Assadalah Abdul
Rahman and Abu Khabab.
Some US officials insisted "dead
dogs" had been photographed at the
Abu Khabab camp, amid
claims that al Qaeda tested "chemical weapons"
on the
leashed beasts.
Another camp at Darunta was reportedly run by Hezb-i-Islami.
US satellite photographs of Darunta
showed the area riddled with
"tunnel entrances,"
according to US officials.
Meanwhile, a Brussels court
convicted Sliti of being an accomplice --
alongside
another Tunisian-Belgian citizen -- in the assassination
of
Masood.
The US government's Voice of America (VOA)
news reported on March 6,
2002 that Belgian "police
arrested Amor Ben Mohamed Sliti on charges
of forgery and
conspiracy last week in connection with the
forged
passports used by Masood's two killers.
"The
assassins posed as Belgian journalists when they blew
themselves
up with Masood during a mock interview. The
passports found on the
bodies were stolen from the
Belgian consulate in Strasbourg and the
Belgian Embassy
in The Hague," VOA reported.
"On February 27, 2002, Amor
ben Mohamed Sliti -- the alleged leader of
an Al Qaeda
assassination team -- was arrested in the
Netherlands
after being extradited from Iran," the US
government's Congressional
Research Service
reported.
The Belgian court sentenced Sliti to five years in prison.
The case showed NATO facilities were also an al Qaeda target.
The court said Sliti's accomplice, Nizar
Trabelsi of Tunisia,
"admitted planning to drive a car
bomb into the canteen of Kleine
Brogel Air Base, a
Belgian military post that is used by NATO and is
the
home to a US Air Force munitions support squadron," the
Associated
Press reported.
Trabelsi received the maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.
Sliti had
previously worked as a car mechanic in Brussels. He
became
an Islamist in the mid-1990s after being
radicalized by another
Belgian-Tunisian, Tarek Maaroufi,
who also became a jihadist.
"In December 2001, Tarek
Maaroufi was arrested for planning to bomb
the US
Consulate in Milan [Italy], and for his role in
the
assassination of Masood," the Congressional Research
Service reported.
In 1999, Sliti took his Flemish wife and
their five children to live
in Jalalabad where he joined
al Qaeda, according to Dutch journalist
Guy Van
Vlierden.
In Jalalabad, Sliti arranged his 13-year-old
daughter Habiba, also
known as Hafsa, to marry Muhammad
Ibn Arfhan Shahin, also known as
Hkimi, who was then a
Tunisian guerrilla in al Qaeda.
Shahin and Sliti's cousin
Hisham, also known as Hicham, were
eventually imprisoned
by the Americans in Guantanamo Bay.
Shahin served 13 years and Hisham received a 12-year sentence.
The anti-secrecy
website WikiLeaks published a November 4, 2007
US
Department of Defense "Detainee Assessment" document
from Guantanamo
about Shahin.
His aliases included:
Abel Bin Abhmed Ibrahim Hkimi, Abdel Khalek, Abu
Bilal al-Tunisi, Abu
Hind al-Tunisi, and Muhammad Bin
Erfane Bin Chahine.
Shahin had arrived in Afghanistan in
1997 and also settled in
Jalalabad in 1998, the
Guantanamo document said.
"He married a woman named
Habiba, the daughter of Omar Sliti, also
known as Abu
Nadir, and lived with his wife in the Istakhbarat
--
Taliban Intelligence -- section of Jalalabad until
after September 11,
2001."
Shahin "fled Afghanistan
after the US bombing campaign with a group of
al-Qaeda
and Taliban fighters led by [an] Osama bin
Laden-appointed
military commander in Tora Bora.
The
group crossed Nangarhar province and the Afghan-Pakistan
border in
mid-December 2001.
"Their Pakistani contact
convinced them to surrender their weapons and
gathered
the group in a mosque where Pakistani forces
immediately
arrested them."
Among a slew of charges against Shahin, the Guantanamo document said:
"Detainee also stated that he would kill President Bush if given the chance."
Sliti's wife meanwhile divorced him, gained
custody of their children,
and they successfully
reintegrated into Belgian society.
The Belgian government stripped Sliti of his citizenship in 2010.
Vlierden
reported Sliti then traveled to Syria in 2014, joined
Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), and lived in its
temporary capital
Raqqah as a tax collector, Habiba his
daughter told French journalist
Antoine Malo.
Malo
interviewed Habiba, identifying her as Hafsa, in a detention
camp
run by Syrian Kurds holding captured ISIS members
and their families,
Vlierden reported.
Kurds had captured her in 2018 when ISIS lost Raqqah.
Meanwhile
elsewhere in Jalalabad another housing complex included
a
small school for boys who studied Arabic and English
vocabulary, plus
Islamic subjects.
They abandoned several rabbits in a cage.
"A gun, a girl, a glass, a
goat," read a page from an illustrated
English-language
vocabulary book.
In a small backyard, on a square plank of
wood, black paint depicted
the silhouette of a person's
head and shoulders, for target practice.
About 100 bullet
holes peppered the target, mostly hitting the face
and
upper body.
Dozens of missed shots gouged the tan mud-and-straw wall.
In the housing complex's main yard, a
brick shed protected dangerous
stacks of rockets and
other live ammunition.
If al Qaeda returns to Afghanistan,
scattered, secretive houses and
other buildings could
become their sanctuaries, and attract an
occasional air
strike from the currently defeated US military.
Bin Laden,
born in Saudi Arabia, was suspected of helping to
finance
al Qaeda, an international insurgency and
terrorist network which
attracts other Arabs, Pakistanis,
Chechens, Sudanese, Somalians,
Europeans, and Afghan
Taliban.
Among their goals is a worldwide Islamic holy war
to oust the US from
Saudi territory, topple Riyadh's
royals, and end Israel's occupation
of Palestinian
land.
***
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based American
foreign correspondent
reporting from Asia since 1978.
Excerpts from his two new nonfiction
books, "Rituals.
Killers. Wars. & Sex. -- Tibet, India, Nepal,
Laos,
Vietnam, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka & New York" and
"Apocalyptic Tribes,
Smugglers & Freaks" are available
at
https://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com