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December 18,
2002
Soldiers
say U.S. let Taliban general go  By
Rowan Scarborough THE WASHINGTON TIMES
U.S. troops say that the military
mistakenly released one of the most-wanted Taliban leaders in
Afghanistan in the summer based on faulty intelligence.
U.S.
Special Forces soldiers said that in late July, a Green Beret
A-Team, backed by about 20 local Afghan fighters, apprehended Mullah
Akhter Mohammed Osmani as he left his compound at daybreak in a town
west of Kandahar. Soldiers identified him as Osmani, handcuffed him
and brought him by truck to
Kandahar. Osmani, among the top six
most-wanted Taliban, was flown to a detention center at Bagram air
base, north of Kabul, for interrogation, the Special Forces soldiers
said. He was one of the Taliban's top generals, leading thousands of
troops as coalition forces ousted the hard-line
regime. But, according to these
soldiers, Task Force 180 — the overall command in Afghanistan —
released Osmani a few weeks
later. U.S. government spokesmen
expressed skepticism about the soldiers' account in written
responses to The Washington
Times. The Times sources maintain
their account is accurate. Two Army soldiers and a senior
administration official said in interviews that a U.S. intelligence
report placed Osmani in another location after his apprehension.
This led to his release. Rather
than return to his village, Osmani quickly fled to Pakistan, where
he remains today, military officials
said. A spokesman for U.S. Central
Command, which runs operations in Afghanistan, declined to comment
on questions submitted by The
Times. Col. Roger King, chief
spokesman for Task Force 180 in Bagram, said, "We don't discuss
specifics of persons captured, neither names nor nationalities. I
will tell you that Osmani is one of those we
seek." Col. King quoted Lt. Gen.
Dan K. McNeill, the task force commander, as saying, "If we had
captured Osmani we would still have
him." Asked if a detainee by the
name of Akhter Osmani had been listed at the detention center in the
summer, Col. King referred to Gen. McNeill's
statement. The Defense Intelligence
Agency, which coordinates the distribution of information to
commanders, said in a statement, "DIA has no knowledge that Mullah
Akhter Mohammed Osmani was ever in U.S. custody in Afghanistan.
Given Osmani's high profile and our interest in detaining him,
misidentification by experienced personnel is
unlikely." The soldiers and the
administration official, however, are convinced that the United
States had Osmani, then mistakenly let him go. They asked not to be
identified for fear of reprisal from
superiors. Osmani is one of a
handful of top former Taliban leaders trying to organize a guerrilla
force of fellow militants to disrupt the U.S.-backed government of
Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan. The
list of the six most-wanted Taliban also includes former group
supreme leader Mullah Mohammed Omar; Mullah Omar's top aide, Tayeb
Agha; and top military commander, Jalaluddin
Haqqani. Mullah Omar is believed to
be in hiding in his native Uruzgan Province, an area riddled with
drug traffickers and Taliban supporters north of
Kandahar. Helmand Province, famous
for its poppy crop, also was a haven for Taliban fighters in the
summer, when informants told Special Forces soldiers that Osmani had
returned to his home in the
province. The former general was
living in a compound in the village of Sangin, west of Kandahar,
under the protection of Helmand power brokers, the Afghan informants
said. "Right after the sweep
through the country in the early spring, they ran," said one
soldier. "But after time when it became obvious we were not actively
looking for these people, they returned home or back to the areas
they lived in." A Special Forces
team traveled by night, via trucks, to the town. They kept the house
under surveillance until the man believed to be Osmani emerged to
walk to the local mosque. The man
carried some type of old Taliban identification card that contained
his picture and the name Osmani, and the name of Osmani's father. He
also had burn scars on his chest that matched intelligence data, the
soldiers said. His Afghan companion
was searched. Large amounts of cash in Pakistan's currency were
found in secret, sewed
compartments. The man identified as
Osmani refused to give his name, saying only in his native Pashtun,
"Praise is God." "He was on our
list of Taliban to kill, capture or disrupt, the HVT [high value
target] list," said one soldier. "He was in Osmani's house. His ID
said he was Osmani." The one
discrepancy was that he appeared too young. Intelligence reports put
Osmani at about age 40. This man was in his early 30s.
Still, soldiers said they believed
the intelligence in Afghanistan was sometimes shaky, and that the
estimated age could be incorrect. They took the man into
custody. "When I heard that the
scar was consistent, I think they had all the reason on earth to err
on the side of caution," said one Special Forces soldier. "Let's say
it was his kid brother, you don't release a guy like that,
either." Soldiers handcuffed the
man, loaded him on the back of a truck and drove back to base camp
in Kandahar. Osmani stayed there for a few days before he was flown
to Bagram. "All our Afghan fighters
kept their faces covered when they were around him," said a
soldier. A few weeks later, Osmani
was back on a flight, this time to freedom in Kandahar. Afghan
sources later told soldiers that he had fled to
Pakistan. "When they let him go,
this guy ran like a mad man for Pakistan. He hit the ground and was
gone," said the soldier. "Then I heard, everybody was like 'whoops.'
Maybe we should have kept our hand on
him." Some Special Forces soldiers
have expressed frustration with Task Force 180 for turning down
their written concept of operations, or "conops," to attack
suspected Taliban. The soldiers said in interviews that they gained
information on several occasions last summer on the whereabouts of
Mullah Omar. But, they said,
commanders turned down the missions, citing extreme risk.
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