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KABUL, Sept. 11 (Xinhuanet£¬by Abdul Haleem) -- Three years have elapsed since the historic 9/11 terror attack on the United States, but the whereabouts of the alleged masterminds of the attack Osama bin Laden and his Afghan host -- the Taliban's leader Mullah Omar has been
haunting many as an enduring puzzle.
At the very first day of the Doomsday-like attack
which claimedover 3,000 lives, a terrified US President George W. Bush promised
his nation as well as the whole world to bring to justice Osama and his one-eyed
host Mullah Omar for the crime.
The angry leader of the uni-polar world's superpower
in his attempts to catch the "big fish" announced 50 million US dollars head
prize for each of the fugitives beside launching a heavy military campaign that
ousted their regime in late 2001.
The Taliban's fundamentalist hierarchy has gone; the
US-dominated coalition troops and NATO-led multinational forces have been
deployed in the post-Taliban nation to root out terrorists besides ensuring
security here.
For several times over the past nearly three years,
the mighty US army claimed cornering Osama in tribal areas between Afghanistan
and Pakistan but failed to deliver.
The inability of the US army and the consecutive
failures of its advanced high-tech reconnaissance facilities to pinpoint the
king of terror and his host created questions in the inquisitive mind of many
across the world.
"How is it possible to oust a regime, consolidate
your control but fail to nab its runners," questioned Afghan educationalist
Noorul Haq Khan.
The US-led 20,000-strong force has been combing
frequently the rugged border areas near Pakistan for the last nearly three years
to find Osama and Mullah Omar but all ended in vain.
On the other hand, Pakistan, the frontline ally of
United States in the ongoing war on terror has been busy in an unabated clean up
operation against the suspected Taliban and al-Qaeda in the Pashtun-belt tribal
areas along the border with Afghanistan.
Hundreds of terrorists including many foreigners have
been killed or arrested in Pakistani army operations since early 2002
particularly in south Wazirustan agency.
Pakistan has also handed over to America several
hundreds of suspected Taliban and al-Qaeda terrorists including some noted
figures.
"Both Osama and Mullah Omar either are a drama or
living somewhere in connivance with the US military," maintained the observer.
Around 800 civilians, Taliban and al-Qaeda
operatives, supporters of former Prime Minister and renegade commander Gulbudin
Hekmatyar, US troops, Afghan soldiers and aid workers have been killed in
increasing insurgency since late last year.
"The situation will be deteriorated if the government
fails to check the increasing militancy in southern Afghanistan," maintained
retired Brigadier Jahangir Khan.
Hundreds of civilians have been killed in erroneous
bombardmentby US army in its hunt down operation against Mullah Omar and his
guest Osama over the past nearly three years.
In one of the worst attacks on a wedding party to
eliminate thefugitive leader of Taliban in his hometown Uruzgan province in
2002, 48 civilians including women and children were killed while another seven
lost their lives in a similar attack in eastern Kunar province some two weeks
ago.
Ayman-Al-Zawahiry, second-in-command of al-Qaeda
network in a videotape aired by an Arabic television channel this week termed
the US as a trapped one in the quagmires of Iraq and Afghanistan and warned of
more violence against its troops in both countries.
"Osama is losing support, the Taliban is losing
support. They are losing the fight here for population," US military spokesman
in Afghanistan Major Scott Nelson said Saturday.
"The population and Pakistan and Afghanistan are
stronger enough and remain aggressive," Nelson told a questioner about the
possible arrest of al-Qaeda and Taliban's leaders.
However, he downplayed Taliban and al-Qaeda's threat
saying that the "Taliban and al-Qaeda are no longer significant security threat
to Afghanistan."
In the meantime, the Taliban's leader Mullah Mohammad
Omar, Osama as well as Hekmatyar vowed to continue Jihad or holy war until the
US-led foreign troops leave Afghanistan. Enditem |