Afghan leader condemns U.S. anti-terror tactics
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New terror tape June 22: Four U.S. soldiers were killed in Afghanistan, shortly after a new al-Qaida video appeared. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports. Today show |
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U.S.-Pakistan agreement on targets Nov. 16: The Washington post reports on a U.S.-Pakistan agreement that allows terror suspects to be targeted inside Pakistan. |
'Significant violence' ahead
The posting of al-Zawahri’s video on an Islamic Web site followed a coalition warning Wednesday that “significant violence” lies ahead in southern Afghanistan where the joint offensive by coalition and Afghan forces is concentrated.
The message was al-Zawahri’s sixth this year and was posted on a Web site known as a clearing house for al-Qaida and other militants’ statements. Al-Zawahri and al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden were hosted by the Taliban before their ouster. They both are believed to be hiding in the rugged border frontier between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
“I am calling upon the Muslims in Kabul in particular and in all of Afghanistan in general and for the sake of God to stand up in an honest stand in the face of the infidel forces that are invading Muslim lands,” said al-Zawahri, wearing a white turban and sitting in front of a black backdrop with an automatic rifle next to him.
The Egyptian-born fugitive also called on “the young men of Islam, in the universities and schools of Kabul, to carry out their duties in defense of their religion, honor, land and country.”
Civil unrest after truck crash
The 3½-minute video, titled “American Crimes in Kabul,” appears to have been made the day after a May 29 accident in which a U.S. military truck crashed into traffic in Kabul, killing up to five people. The incident sparked anti-foreigner riots in Kabul that left about 20 people dead — the worst unrest in the capital since the fall of the Taliban.
“I direct my speech today to my Muslim brothers in Kabul who lived the bitter events yesterday and saw by their own eyes a new proof of the criminal acts of the American forces against the Afghani people,” al-Zawahri said on the video.
Unlike al-Zawahri’s previous messages, which appeared aimed at Americans, the latest has no English subtitles. He spoke in Arabic, and Web sites carried translations in Pashtun and Farsi, two languages widely spoken in Afghanistan.
Asked about the new video, Karzai blamed al-Zawahri for Afghanistan’s massive suffering before and after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
“He is first the enemy of the Afghan people, and then the enemy of the rest of the world,” Karzai said. “He killed Afghans for years — thousands — and then he went to America and destroyed the twin towers.”
“We in Afghanistan want him arrested and put before justice.”
In the latest violence, four U.S. soldiers were killed and another wounded Wednesday while trying to block the movement of insurgent forces in the eastern Nuristan province, the military said. Ground troops and attack planes were called in to keep up the assault through the night, but it was unclear whether there were any militant casualties.
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