- BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan
(Reuters) - Hundreds of U.S. soldiers launched a major operation in eastern
Afghanistan in the rugged hinterlands near the Pakistani border in search
of al Qaeda remnants, U.S. military officials said Monday.
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- Maj. Richard T. Patterson, U.S. spokesman at Bagram Air
Base just north of Kabul, said that elements of the 82nd Airborne Division
had been conducting "large scale operations" in the Bermal Valley
in the Paktika province near the village of Shkin.
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- Shkin, which has been the focus of U.S. special forces
operations in recent months, is linked by easy transport routes to the
Waziristan region of Western Pakistan where many senior Qaeda members have
possibly taken refuge.
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- The operation, code-named "Champion Strike,"
has been undertaken "to capture or kill al Qaeda (members) and deny
them the ability to conduct operations in that area," he said.
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- It is the latest in a series of U.S.-led missions in
the east and southeast of Afghanistan which have yielded mainly stockpiles
of old weapons, some dating back to the Soviet occupation of the 1980s.
There have been a small number of arrests.
-
- Battles with remnants of the ousted Taliban regime, and
the Qaeda network it sheltered, have been rare. Many, if not most, of the
survivors of the U.S. air assaults of late 2001 are believed to have crossed
the porous Afghan-Pakistan border.
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- Patterson declined to specify when the operation had
begun and when it was expected to end.
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- He said that U.S. troops had uncovered several arms caches
and detained several people for "screening," but he declined
to say how many.
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- U.S. troops were involved in one firefight with unknown
attackers since the latest operation began, but there were no reports of
any casualties on either side.
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- Patterson declined to specify why U.S. forces had chosen
the valley for the sweep, noting only that all operations were based on
"multiple intelligence sources."
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- Shkin is some 135 miles south of the capital Kabul.
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- The adjoining Paktia and Paktika provinces are among
the most conservative regions of Afghanistan, and locals have become increasingly
vocal in their opposition to the presence and tactics of U.S. troops in
their area.
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- Fighting over the weekend in the city of Khost, part
of Paktia, underlined the lawlessness and local rivalry in many areas of
the country where central government control is weak.
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- More than 15 people were reported killed and more than
51 wounded in the clashes between a renegade warlord, who has rejected
the leadership of President Hamid Karzai, and the local governor.
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- Karzai survived an assassination attempt last Thursday
in the southern city of Kandahar, once the Taliban's stronghold.
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- Around 8,000 U.S. troops are leading a coalition of forces
against remnants of the ousted Taliban regime and the Qaeda network it
sheltered. Al Qaeda has been blamed for the Sept. 11 attacks on the United
States which killed more than 3,000 people.
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