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Anti-Taliban forces hunt bin Laden

Taliban forces push tribal fighters back from airport

JALALABAD, Afghanistan -- Anti-Taliban troops hunting for Osama bin Laden said they clashed Tuesday with al Qaeda fighters near their mountain hide-outs in Afghanistan. Elsewhere, Taliban forces pushed tribal fighters back from the airport near the former ruling militia's last bastion, Kandahar. \nIn Germany, Afghan factions negotiating a post-Taliban government agreed to form a 29-member council to run the country and set to work on the difficult task of determining who will hold the major posts. \nHundreds of anti-Taliban fighters piled into trucks and set off Tuesday for the White Mountains south of Jalalabad, where local officials believe bin Laden and hundreds of his al Qaida fighters are hiding. Provincial security chief Hazrat Ali said he was assembling a force of about 3,000 fighters to join the hunt for bin Laden. \n"This fight has just begun," Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs of staff, said in Washington. \nAli said a patrol of about a dozen men clashed briefly with a group of al Qaida fighters, who abandoned a tank and scurried off to higher ground. There were no casualties. \nMohammed Zaman, defense chief here in Nangarhar province, estimates up to 1,200 al-Qaida fighters are hiding in the White Mountains of eastern Afghanistan, which include the Tora Bora cave complex. \nAli said days of intensive bombing have driven al-Qaida fighters from the main Tora Bora complex and into the higher mountains, where they have split up into groups with as few as 10 men. \nZaman claimed an airstrike late Monday killed bin Laden's finance chief, known variously as Ali Mahmoud or Sheik Saiid, and injured bin Laden's chief lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahri. U.S. officials were skeptical of the claim. \nDefense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld would not discuss whether American ground troops were actively involved in the hunt for al-Qaida in the Jalalabad area. But he said the Americans "have been actively encouraging Afghan elements to seek out" al Qaida leaders. \nGen. Tommy Franks, commander of U.S. forces in the Afghan conflict, has confirmed that the search for bin Laden, sought in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, has focused on the mountains south of Jalalabad and around the Taliban's southern base at Kandahar. \nMarine reconnaissance units out of a U.S. base outside Kandahar have begun probing deep in the desert, moving in off-road vehicles and Humvees. \nCapt. David Romley, a spokesman for the Marines' Task Force 58 at the base, did not specify the teams' mission, saying only that they were "looking for threats. ... Any threat is going to be a target." \nThe more than 1,000 Marines at the base, set up at an airfield just over a week ago, have not gotten involved in fighting as anti-Taliban tribesman advance from three directions on Kandahar, the last city under Taliban control. \nA coalition official, speaking in Pakistan on condition of anonymity, said the Marines were "obviously not a big enough force to take Kandahar," but would join efforts to prevent Taliban escaping. \nThe Taliban have vowed to defend the city, where their movement was organized nearly a decade ago. \nTribesmen loyal to former Kandahar governor Gul Agha fought their way onto the airport compound a few miles south of the city Tuesday but were pushed back two miles by about 500 al Qaida fighters, according to Abdul Jabbar, a tribal spokesman in Pakistan. \nJabbar said U.S. special forces were calling in airstrikes in support of Agha's fighters. The Taliban admitted the U.S. bombing was taking its toll. \nIf not for the airstrikes, "people like Gul Agha wouldn't be a problem for us," said Mullah Qasim, a Taliban commander south of Kandahar. "We could push him back not in days, but hours." \nAnother tribal force under Hamid Karzai, the leading candidate to head Afghanistan's interim government, is pushing toward Kandahar from the north and met its first resistance Tuesday, according to a senior U.S. official. \nThe official, speaking in Pakistan on condition of anonymity, said Karzai's men battled Taliban defenders at a bridge 10 miles north of Kandahar. It was unclear if the Taliban were still holding the bridge. \nIn other developments: \n• The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said some 200,000 people have fled Afghanistan since the airstrikes began on Oct. 7. Ruud Lubbers said he had feared much worse and credited specifically targeted bombing. \n• At a women's summit in Belgium, leaders from Afghanistan and around the world pledged to cooperate to make sure women have a say in any new Afghan administration. \n• In Koenigswinter, Germany, outside Bonn, four Afghan factions presented U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi with a list of 150 candidates for 29 ministerial posts in a new interim authority. A consensus on the Cabinet could trigger a speedy transfer of power in Kabul, with Dec. 22 envisioned as a target date, and secure billions in promised aid.

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