DATE=4/20/2002
TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
TITLE=AFGHANISTAN / AL-QAIDA / THREAT (L-ONLY)
NUMBER=2-288932
BYLINE=ALISHA RYU
DATELINE=BAGRAM, AFGHANISTAN
INTERNET=
CONTENT=
INTRO: British military officials in Afghanistan say they believe Osama
bin Laden's al-Qaida network is planning suicide attacks on foreign troops providing security in the country and against the Afghan interim administration. V-O-A's Alisha Ryu has details from the coalition air base in Bagram.
TEXT: British Army spokesman, Tom Rounds, says intelligence gathered over
the past two weeks strongly suggest that al-Qaida terrorists are scheming to
enter coalition military bases and government installations by posing as
journalists, a tactic used to kill former Northern Alliance commander Ahmed Shah Masood.
/// FIRST ROUNDS ACT ///
If you recall, Masood was killed by a suicide bomber with a camera. And
current intelligence indicates that is highly likely one of the ways they
will try to infiltrate.
/// END ACT ///
Two days before the September terrorists attacks in the United States, two
men - posing as a Belgian television crew - detonated a bomb in front of
Ahmed Shah Massood, the former mujahedin leader and revered commander of the anti-taleban Northern Alliance. The attackers are believed to have been
al-Qaida members sent to deal a blow to the Northern Alliance command
structure.
Squadron Leader Rounds says while last month's U-S-led military operation
may have fractured the terrorist network's fighting force in the mountains
of eastern Afghanistan, the organization still has cells in various places
around the country.
/// SECOND ROUNDS ACT ///
What we're seeing and experiencing out there are smaller bands of fighters
moving out and being engaged. We need to be on our guard. It is a very real threat.
/// END ACT ///
Coalition officials believe the former king, Mohammed Zahir Shah, could
also be a target of an al-Qaida attack. Zahir Shah returned to Afghanistan
two days ago from nearly 30 years in exile - primarily to open the grand
council meeting - the Loya Jirga - in June to select a new government.
Opponents of the Loya Jirga have reportedly made death threats against the
former monarch, who has become a symbol of Afghan unity.
All journalists in Afghanistan are now subject to intense scrutiny and must
carry proper identification with them at all times. Americans in
Afghanistan have also been warned that al-Qaida has renewed its offer to pay
a 50-thousand dollar reward for every American captured alive. It will pay
30-thousand dollars for every Westerner who is killed.
In Kabul, gunmen again targeted international peacekeepers during a routine
patrol. Spokesmen for I-SAF - as the peacekeeping force is known - say four
men fired on French peacekeepers Friday night near the airport - leaving one
soldier slightly wounded. The gunmen escaped.
I-SAF - in recent weeks - has been the target of multiple shootings and a
rocket attack. It is not clear who was behind the latest attack, but
peacekeepers believe common criminals and opponents of the political process
in Afghanistan are responsible for the on-going security problems in the
capital. (Signed)
NEB/AR/KBK