REPORT RE AMERICAN KILLED IN TALIBAN PRISONER REVOLT - Not confirmed, may be speculation

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American G.I.s Battle the Taliban

A revolt by P.O.W.s pits American ground forces against the Taliban; Time's Alex Perry reports from Mazar-i-sharif via satellite phone as the fighting goes on

Sunday, Nov. 25, 2001 On Saturday, 800 Taliban soldiers surrendered to the forces of Gen. Rashid Dostum, a leading commander of the Northern Alliance. But on Sunday, the prisoners decided to rebel, grabbing weapons from an armory at the local fort and attacking the Northern Alliance. At least two American soldiers were trapped in the fort when it happened and at least one is dead. [Fox is saying this is speculation so far, they think. OG] American and British forces have now joined in trying to quell the attack. Time’s Alex Perry is on the scene and provided these details via satellite phone to newsdesk editor John Flowers as the fighting raged.

How far are you from the fighting now?

200 yards

These are taliban troops that surrendered yesterday from Kunduz?

Yeah. That's right. Drove over toward Mazar laid down their weapons and were taken by Dostum's people. They laid down their weapons, then they were taken in trucks to Kalai Jangi on the West of Mazar-i-Sharif.

How many are involved in this fight right now?

800 [all]

How many American troops are fighting?

There's British and American. They're fighting together. There's a hand-full of them. I would say 12. They came in two jeeps.

12 Americans and British total?

Yes. There's British SAF and American Air Force uniforms they've got on. The British Air are in plain clothes, the Americans are in uniform.

They're not fighting all 800 of these men are they?

Yeah. They are. With the Northern Alliance.

So this is 12 alongside the Northern Alliance?

But the Americans are running the show.

What do you mean by "running the show?"

Well the Americans and the British are coordinating airstrikes from their positions inside the fort on another part of the fort. And they're also directing the commanders inside when to tell their men to attack.

Are they exchanging fire as well?

Yeah, they are. They are. [gunfire] Jesus. Some guy's just letting off a gun for no reason. Part of the American forces and the British forces are coordinating airstrikes. there's a group of ... six who are coordinating the airstrikes. Those are the guys I was with. And then there are another six or seven who are fighting the Taliban on the West side of the fort. The southwest side. The Taliban are holed off in a pocket on the southwest side. The bomb spotters are on the southeast side, on the roof of a two-story building.

The reason they're here is that earlier when the Taliban grabbed some guns and started fighting, there were two American soldiers inside the fort: one of whom was disarmed and killed -- he was called Mike -- and another one was also in trouble; he was out of ammunition, had managed to sort of hold off the Taliban with his pistol but he was out of ammunition when the main body of American and British people arrived. There's no word on his fate yet. But the Americans were mounting a rescue operation.

And this is all happening inside the fort?

Yeah, it's all inside the fort

Explain how this transpired.

They were brought to KJ in pickup trucks and nobody searched for guns that might have not been in the open on their body. Then last night one of them pulled out this grenade, denotated it and killed himself ... and there's two commanders now dead [referring to grenade] and a British journalist [from ITN] was slightly injured in that explosion as well. Very minor.

Did they decide to search them after that?

I'm not sure. I don't know about that. And then this morning some more journalists came. There was a guy from ... London and a woman. They were interviewing Taliban prisoners when the Taliban suddenly just pounched on them. They beat the British guy quite badly, but he was rescued and taken out of the fort. But that's when the Taliban grabbed guns off the Northen Alliance, overpowered them, killed at least twenty and the Northern Alliance lost control of the fort and had to withdraw from the fort.

Do you know what set them off?

Actually I think it was probably the British journalist. It's merely the sight of a Western face. They're here to fight a jihad; they see a western face; they assume that's who they've come to get.

Would being interviewed by a woman also have anything to do with it?

No. She was outside.

This happened when they talked to the British journalist?

Yeah. That's right.

Now is he OK? You said they beat him up pretty badly.

We passed him in a taxi. [gunfire again] He was kind of sitting up. He looked pretty shocked. I'm going to see him a bit later. I think he's got sort of flesh wounds. i don't know if he's got any broken bones. I could tell he was beaten quite badly.

So the shock of seeing his face, they rose up, they overcame their captors and took the gun from the Northern Alliance.

That's right. The NA lost control.

So those two Americans. They happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time?

Absolutely. There were also some Red Cross workers in there. They told me that one American Special Forces broke into their meeting, said they had to get out of here, out of the fort, because the situation was out of control.

And then they got out?

Yeah. They jumped over the wall.

Now have there been any other injuries as far as the alliance. One confirmed death and one possible?

Among Northern Alliance, there were at least twenty dead in the initial, when the taliban overpowered their alliance guards. I've heard there's probably 3, 400 hundred Taliban [dead] now. The mission by the Americans and Northern alliance is to kill every single one of them now.

These are among the thousand that surrendered yesterday, correct?

Yeah 800. They're all here. There's wild rumors that this must have been a plan, in fact, to surrender and then try and take the fort from the inside. That's NA speculation.

Now have they completely taken over the fort or is the battle happening inside the walls the fort?

This is happening inside the fort. They never took the entire fort.

How big is this fort?

It's about half a kilometer long and half a kilometer -- it's half a kilometer square. It's pretty big. Ooooohhhh, big explosion.

Are these mainly automatic and semiautomatic rifle fire, or is there anything heavier?

No, there are two tanks inside, two NA tanks that are being used. and the Americans have made nine air strikes so far. It's an incredible thing to watch. You can see the missiles coming in.

So you're 200 hundred yards away from these missiles striking down.

When I was with the special forces I think I was about 50 yards [he begins to laugh]

Right now you're 200 yards away from the taliban or where the fighting is?

From the fighting. We're outside the fort. Right outside the city walls.

So this revolt and is being staged entirely within the confines of the fort and as far as dostum and the rest of the na know has nothing to do with taking over kunduz?

Nothing to do with any of that. I think that the Taliban are pretty much convinced that they're going to get killed I think. Dostum has fairly fearsome reputation. He's run over his prisoners with tanks before now.

During this engagement or back in the late '90s?

I think it was '96-97 he was doing that. He's given them the assurance that they'll be safe but they're unlikely to trust him. If they get any opportunity to fight I think some of them are going to take it. There are supposed to be as well as Afghans, some Arabs and Chechens and some al-Qaeda operatives [gun firing again]

What about al-Qaeda operatives?

There are supposed to be some with the group fighting.

Are most of these Afghans?

Yeah. I think they're mostly Afghans. But no one knows to be really honest. The prisoners aren't saying. They'll say that they are all Afghans so that they're treated a little bit better than if they said they were Pakistani or Saudi or something.

Now is the plan just to go in and sweep them out?

Yeah. The American mission is two-fold. It's to wipe them out. And it's also to get -- they've got one last [American] in there they're trying to get out. As far as I could hear, they were still alive when I was there. They were organized

---

How long ago was that?

Half an hour ago. They were trying to organize air strikes and cover fire so that he could make a run for it.

I'm still hearing the occasional shot. Is it dying down now or is it still going on?

No, no. It's still going on. It's not as fierce as it was. Earlier we were hearing a lot of AK-47 fire and a lot of M-4 fire, the American Special Forces rifle. So there was probably some hand to hand combat, but that's not happening at the moment. But there's still shots and explosions -- There's another one. A of tracer fire [as tracer fire goes overhead]

What could have gone wrong?

Well, as much as I hate to say it, letting journalists in among Taliban. He [The UK guy] was surrounded by taliban. When I've been talking to them, I've been keeping at least three or four meters distance and the Northern Alliance with me have been extremely nervous about letting me get close. They say that the Taliban are likely to try and kill me.

So there were none or few NA guards?

There were a few Northern Alliance guards and they were the only ones that had the weapons, but by simple sheer force of numbers the Taliban could overwhelm them. That was a very bad I think. And then we saw a lot of Northern Alliance soldiers fleeing, some of them dropped their guns. I should also say that there are two Reuters journalists trapped inside there.

Any others trapped?

Maybe some Northern Alliance people as well. Well, almost certainly. It's gone quiet now. Suddenly. But the trouble was that the Taliban had gotten themselves into a position in the fort where they had access to the armory.

Were they kept close to the armory?

I don't know where they were kept. I think they were kept in the basement. Then stormed out of the basement and stormed Southwest part of the fort where there were six or seven jeeps full of ammunition. That was, in fact, what the Americans were trying to hit. To destroy their supplies [and] provide one almighty explosion that would kill a lot of them.

The NA don't keep their weapons under lock and key?

No, they're incredibly casual with their weapons. They just lay them against the wall, lie them on the ground. They're always on their sholder or just knocking against the back of a chair [Gun shot]. When you leave in the morning, you put your shoes on, put your hat on and get your gun.

We keep hearing that if the taliban surrender, the NA would be glad to have them on their side. Do you think that's going to change now?

Well, this particuarly group have no chance of survival. They are going to get wiped out. If the Americans don't do it, then the Alliance are going to execute them. We saw some Taliban dead today. There were some who had managed to break out of the fort and they'd been shot between the eyes. As for the grand plan, it's certainly going to undermine it, but in some sense it's the only option if Afghanistan is going to have any chance at peace.

If push comes to shove

Right. But you've got to say that this isn't the most auspicious start for that push for peace.

What time did this begin?

The firing started about 11:30 [in the morning]. It's now a quarter to six. You can see fires burning. But I can't hear any more weapons. American planes are still searching overhead though. The Americans arrived at about 2.

Where were they before this?

The British said they were in Mazar. The Americans I think came from Samirghan. Certainly one of them did. I saw him. He was on his way there and he came back today.

The fighting started at 11:30 and the americans came at 2, but there were two americans trapped there. They were trapped at 2 or 11:30? They got trapped in there about 11:30. There was one guy who was trapped. They were Special Forces. They were probably going to have a meeting with the commander; I'm not quite sure why they were there. One of them was trapped. The other one wasn't initially trapped, because he advised the Red Cross workers to leave. And he was with them and they got out. He stayed behind to try and help his friend.

Which one was mike again?

Mike was the dead one.

Do you know the name of the other one?

No, I don't.

What's going on now?

There's great clouds of smoke rising from the fort, from bombing and from fires burning. The fort itself is of mud walls. The walls are about 20 meters high, but you can scale the side. [more gun shots] I wish that guy would stop doing that.

Is some guy just shooting his rifle off next to you?

It's a local farmer. He occasionally just fires his gun into the fort for no apparent reason.

Is there a town inside the fort?

There is a little town here, outside the fort. The civilians were evacuated. And we're sort of just sitting in a ditch now with a bunch of Northern Alliance guys taking cover.

That sounds good

We've got tracers going over our head. We're going to have to go get a taxi because they stop running at night.

-- Anonymous, November 25, 2001

Answers

Sunday November 25 12:00 PM ET

U.S. Strikes Quell Afghan Jail Riot

By BURT HERMAN, Associated Press Writer

MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AP) - Northern alliance forces and U.S. airstrikes put down a prison riot Sunday by foreign pro-Taliban captives from the northern city of Kunduz, U.S. and alliance spokesman said. Alliance spokesmen said hundreds of foreign fighters were killed.

Yahsaw, a spokesman for northern alliance commander Mohammed Mohaqik, said the foreign fighters - mostly Pakistanis, Chechens and Arabs - staged a riot at the compound where they were being held, 10 miles west of the northern town of Mazar-e-Sharif.

The prisoners - many believed loyal to Osama bin Laden - broke down the doors and tried to escape, then battled all day with guards at the Qalai Janghi fortress, Yahsaw said. The compound is under the control of northern alliance commander Rashid Dostum.

``They were all killed, and very few were arrested,'' said Zaher Wahadat, another alliance spokesman.

A Pentagon spokesman confirmed that U.S. airstrikes had helped Dostum's forces regain control of the prison. Some U.S. special forces were in the compound when the fighting broke out, and Lt. Col. Dan Stoneking said ``it appears all U.S. personnel are accounted for.''

Stoneking said the fighting involved about 300 ``hard-core Taliban'' prisoners, most of them from Pakistan and Chechnya. He said some of the fighters had smuggled weapons into the prison compound and began fighting northern alliance forces.

``There was general pandemonium,'' said Simon Brooks, head of Red Cross operations for northern Afghanistan, who was at the prison to check on the detainees' condition when gunfire rang out.

The prisoners disarmed some of their guards and seized an ammunition depot, using it to fight the troops who were quickly deployed to put down the unrest, Wahadat said.

Dostum brought in about 500 of his troops and quashed the riot with the help of airstrikes from U.S. forces, Stoneking said.

Explosions could still be heard from the compound Sunday evening.

Brooks said he fled from the compound by climbing onto the roof with northern alliance commanders, and when he returned in the afternoon he found three men with serious injuries making their way toward Mazar-e-Sharif.

He couldn't get close to the prison because U.S. airstrikes were targeting the southern part of the compound, where the prisoners were being held, he said.

The prisoners had surrendered outside of the nearby city of Kunduz, which the northern alliance claimed to have captured Sunday, under a deal aimed at ending a 12-day siege by the alliance. Under the deal, they were to be imprisoned and investigated for ties to bin Laden's al-Qaida network.

Foreign fighters in Kunduz had insisted on security guarantees following reports of summary executions by the northern alliance in Mazar-e-Sharif and Kabul.

-- Anonymous, November 25, 2001


US airstrikes helped subdue Taliban prison riot; no immediate reports of American casualties

By MATT KELLEY The Associated Press 11/25/01 3:36 PM

WASHINGTON (AP) -- American airstrikes helped subdue an uprising by Taliban prisoners of war at a fortress in northern Afghanistan, U.S. military spokesmen said Sunday. A U.S. special forces soldier inside the fortress was taped by a German television crew saying an American may have been killed.

"I don't know how many Americans there were," the U.S. soldier as taped at the scene as saying in English. "I think one was killed, but I'm not sure. There were two of us at least, me and some other guy."

Hundreds of foreign Taliban prisoners were killed, U.S. officials said.

The U.S. Central Command, which oversees the war in Afghanistan, declined comment on whether U.S. forces were in the fortress when the fighting broke out. Central Command spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Dave Culler said he "could not give any word at all on casualties."

The video from Germany's ARD network shows the soldier, who identified himself only as David, calling in U.S. airstrikes on the fortress near the city of Mazar-e-Sharif.

A spokesman for the Central Intelligence Agency, which has operatives working with anti-Taliban forces in Afghanistan, said he had no information about the incident.

The Taliban fighters, who had been captured near the militia's last northern stronghold of Kunduz, carried concealed weapons and tried to fight their way out of the fortress, said Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Dan Stoneking.

Both Culler and Stoneking said U.S. aircraft bombed the fortress during the fighting. Witnesses said the bombs hit an area of the compound where the Taliban fighters were.

The U.S. special forces troops in Afghanistan work with anti-Taliban military commanders, including Rashid Dostum, whose forces held the prisoners. The U.S. troops also carry radios and other equipment to call for and guide U.S. airstrikes against Taliban forces.

The Taliban soldiers appeared to have planned the battle, "which appears to be a suicide mission on their part," Culler said. Most of the Taliban fighters were not Afghans and were from Pakistan and Chechnya, Stoneking said.

Dostum brought in about 500 of his fighters to quell the uprising, Stoneking said.

Foreign fighters in Kunduz had insisted on security guarantees following reports of summary executions by the northern alliance in Mazar-e-Sharif and Kabul, the Afghan capital.

-- Anonymous, November 25, 2001


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