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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, September 29, 2001 |
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U.S. decision on arming Northern Alliance soon
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, SEPT. 28. Even while maintaining that it is sensitive
to the political compulsions of Pakistan vis-a-vis the Northern
Alliance, the Bush administration has made no bones about the
fact that it is in touch with many factions of Afghanistan,
including the Alliance.
``I would just say that we are in regular contact with the whole
variety - with the whole gamut - of Afghan factions, including
the Northern Alliance,'' says the State Department spokesman, Mr.
Richard Boucher, adding that the contacts are with individuals
within Afghanistan and outside.
There are credible reports that the U.S. military has begun to
help the Northern Alliance. And the administration is on the
verge of taking a decision on whether or not to arm this
opposition force as a way of putting the heat on the Taliban.
The Washington Times, for instance, quoting official sources,
said that at present, assistance to the Northern Alliance was
coming by way of advice and discussion on the needs of the group.
The administration feels that the Alliance is of critical
importance, especially in the context of special forces in the
ground attempting to hunt down the Saudi dissident, Osama bin
Laden, and his cohorts.
The U.S. military, on the one hand, wants some kind of
association with the Northern Alliance demanding that this should
come about in a quick and decisive fashion.
The State Department, on the other, feels that rushing to help
the Alliance or deepening any involvement with that outfit will
create problems with Pakistan. In fact, Islamabad has made its
point on the Northern Alliance in no uncertain terms - it simply
cannot have a hostile regime on its borders.
There are two problems with respect to the Alliance: its close
relationship with Russia and its track record on narcotics and
drug-trafficking.
In all the warnings to the Taliban, the Bush administration has
hoped that the ``moderates'' in this extremist outfit will break
ranks. There is a view that talking of dissensions or factions
within the Taliban will actually create conditions for a split.
After all, if the desire is really for a ``broad-based
government,'' it would have to come from within and there has to
be a Taliban component to it.
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