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War year

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   http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/nm/20011221/ts/attack_dc_1137.html

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/nm/20011221/ts/attack_dc_1137.html

Friday December 21 8:51 PM ET

Bush Predicts 'War Year' in 2002

By Peter Graff and Charles Aldinger

KABUL/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A provisional government on which the
world has pegged its hopes for a peaceful Afghanistan prepared on Friday to
take power, but U.S. President George. W. Bush warned that 2002 would still
be a ``war year.''

A disputed U.S. attack on a convoy of suspected Taliban or al Qaeda leaders
marred the run-up to a ceremony on Saturday that would mark the first orderly
transition of power in two decades in the central Asian nation.

Pashtun tribal chieftain Hamid Karzai was to be sworn in as leader of a
government molded by the United Nations and charged with rebuilding the
war-shattered nation whose ousted Taliban rulers sheltered Osama bin Laden
and his fighters as they allegedly plotted the Sept. 11 attacks on America that
killed nearly 3,300 people.

Some 75 British Royal Marines, the vanguard of an international peacekeeping
force expected to swell to at least 1,500, touched down in Kabul while the
United States stepped up its hunt for bin Laden in the cave-riddled mountains
of eastern Afghanistan.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said U.S. forces had begun searching al
Qaeda caves and tunnels and that more troops would be sent to press the hunt,
as Washington left the ''nation-building'' mission to its European and Muslim
allies.

The Pentagon also rushed into battle a new bomb designed to kill people in
caves and tunnels with a higher-energy blast than standard explosives.

CONVOY BOMBED

U.S. defense officials announced AC-130 gunships and Navy fighters had
attacked and destroyed a convoy in Afghanistan believed to be carrying
``leadership'' of the Taliban or al Qaeda.

But reports from the region said the convoy instead comprised Afghan tribal
elders on their way to Kabul to attend the inauguration of the interim
government, killing about 65 people -- something the Pentagon rejected.

``There is no doubt in their (U.S. military's Central Command) mind that they
hit what they wanted to hit and that it was the bad guys,'' Marine Lt. Col. Dave
Lapan, a Pentagon spokesman, told Reuters.

Bush, in an interview with reporters in Washington, said great progress had
been made in his ``war on terrorism'' but warned that peace was not at hand.

``Next year will be a war year as well because we're going to continue to hunt
down these al Qaeda people in this particular theater, as well as other places,''
he said.

Bush said the United States would be willing to send U.S. special forces or
logistical support to countries that ask for help. Washington has identified more
than 60 countries with al Qaeda cells in them in the wake of the Sept. 11
attacks on New York and Washington.

``Our war against terror extends way beyond Afghanistan. And at some point
in time maybe some president will come and say you have the expertise that we
don't, would you mind maybe have some of your troops with ours. And the
answer is, 'you bet,''' Bush said.

ON TO IRAQ?

A majority of Americans support extending the military campaign to Iraq,
according to the latest opinion poll.

Secretary of State Colin Powell warned that military success in Afghanistan did
not guarantee a similar result in Iraq, proposed by Washington's hawks as the
next target in the war on terrorism.

``They are so significantly different that you can't take the Afghan model and
immediately apply it to Iraq,'' he said.

Bush admitted that the whereabouts of bin Laden was unknown, but repeated
his promise the wealthy Saudi-born militant would be caught.

``I haven't heard much from him recently, which means he could be in a cave
that doesn't have an opening to it anymore, or could be in a cave where he can
get out, or may have tried to slither out into neighboring Pakistan. We don't
know. But I will tell you this: We're going to find him,'' Bush said.

Pakistani security forces were holding hundreds of prisoners captured fleeing
Afghanistan. After a mass escape of al Qaeda fighters, they searched cars and
checked women wearing the all-enveloping burqa in case they were male
fugitives in disguise.

Bin Laden ally Mullah Mohammad Omar, the reclusive head of the ousted
Taliban movement, also has eluded capture and was said by a former Taliban
minister to be safe at an unknown location in Afghanistan.

Mullah Abdul Shakour, ex-minister of communications and reconstruction, said
all the Taliban leaders were safe, and threatened retaliation against any country
that extradited members of the Taliban leadership to the United States.

PROVISIONAL RULERS TO BE SWORN IN

The Taliban, whose five-year hold on power crumbled quickly under assault
from the United States and the Afghan opposition group Northern Alliance,
was to be replaced on Saturday by a 30-member government formed under
United Nations guidance during meetings in Bonn, Germany last month.

It will rule for six months while a Loya Jirga, or traditional assembly of elders,
forms another government to run the fractured country until elections two years
later.

The new government's task will be difficult. The World Bank and United
Nations said in a report unveiled in Brussels that Afghanistan will need $9
billion in aid over the next five years to rebuild after two decades of war.

The United States appeared ready to help, saying it would immediately
recognize the new government. U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan James
Dobbins told reporters in Kabul he had delivered a message of support from
President Bush to Afghan leader designate Karzai.

The prospect of a new era in Afghanistan was dampened by the renewal of old
hostilities between neighboring Pakistan and India.

India said it was recalling its envoy to Pakistan for what it termed Islamabad's
failure to act against terrorism following an attack on the Indian parliament last
week. There were big troop movements close to the border between the two
nuclear rivals.

BUSH URGES PAKISTAN CRACKDOWN

Bush joined India in urging Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf to crack
down on Pakistan-based militants blamed in the attack in which 14 people
died.

``As President Musharraf does so, he will have our full support,'' Bush said in
statement.

The shock waves from the Sept. 11 attacks continued to reverberate around
the world.

Somali police arrested four Iraqi Kurds and a Palestinian for questioning over
possible links to al Qaeda network or other extremist groups. Somalia has
been talked of as a possible new target of the ``war on terror,'' and has come
under strong U.S. pressure to act against militants.

Yemen's President, Ali Abdullah Saleh, ordered his forces to use an ``iron fist''
in the hunt for bin Laden supporters after 22 people died in a battle with
suspected al Qaeda militants.

Chinese police arrested nine Muslims for ``illegal preaching'' in China's restive
western province Xinjiang, which borders Afghanistan, saying the roundup was
part of a campaign against ``separatists, terrorists and religious extremists.''

Iran said it opposed the deployment of foreign forces in neighboring
Afghanistan. Conservatives in Tehran accused the United States of being
``drunk with superficial victory in Afghanistan'' after the U.S. navy intercepted
an oil tanker carrying Iranian fuel in the Gulf.

The U.S. Justice Department said it had nearly completed questioning 5,000
foreign men in the United States in a controversial attempt to find out more
about militant activities. It said it had generated leads useful in the nation's
anti-terrorism campaign.

New York City firefighters and police met troops of the U.S. Army's 10th
Mountain Division at an air base north of Kabul and buried a piece of the
World Trade Center in honor of comrades who died in the September 11
attacks.



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